Title: For NCW MSP
 1How Students Learn
  2Initial Learning Task
- A man in a restaurant asked a waiter for a juice 
 glass, a plate, water, a match, and a lemon
 wedge. The man poured enough water onto the plate
 to cover it."If you can get the water on the
 plate into this glass without touching or moving
 this plate, I will give you 100," the man said.
 "You can use the match and lemon to do this."A
 minute later, the waiter walked away with 100.
 How did the waiter get the water into the glass?
- Take one minute to think about a solution by 
 yourself.
- Discus your solution with a partner for one 
 minute.
- Collect material to attempt a solution with a 
 partner.
3Initial Learning Task (continued)
- Hint The glass will be upside-down when the 
 water is in it.
- Answer First, the waiter stuck the match into 
 the lemon wedge, so that it would stand straight.
 Then he lit the match, and put it in the middle
 of the plate with the lemon. Then, he placed the
 glass upside-down over the match. As the flame
 used up the oxygen in the glass, it created a
 small vacuum, which sucked in the water through
 the space between the glass and the plate.
4Reflect on Learning task
- Discuss the following questions with your 
 neighbor.
- Was this exercise easy or difficult? 
- What made it easy or difficult? 
- How could the instructor made the learning 
 experience easier?
- Discuss as a class 
- Think, Pair, Share 
- For about 30 seconds, write down some 
 characteristics of expertise.
- Talk to your neighbor about what each of you 
 wrote.
- Lets develop a class list. 
5The Nature of Expertise
- Expertise is on a continuum from novice to 
 expert.
- Expertise is typically field-dependent. 
- Characteristics of expertise 
- Expert learners have well-organized knowledge, 
 not just problem-solving strategies.
- Expert knowledge is organized to support 
 understanding, not just recall.
- An expert's fluency allows the easy retrieval of 
 relevant knowledge.
- There are adaptive experts and routine experts. 
6Challenges to Developing Expertise
- What are some challenges to developing student 
 expertise?
- Think, pair, share. 
- Novices typically don't know much of the content 
 so they have little to which they can relate what
 they're attempting to learn.
- Since novices typically don't grasp the 
 fundamental principles in a field, they tend to
 adopt an idiosyncratic organizational scheme for
 what they are learning.
- The expert's fluency can conceal the very 
 principles and strategies that the novice must
 learn in order to become more expert. These
 principles and strategies are often invisible to
 the expert because they are second nature.
- How do these points relate to the introductory 
 exercise?
7Creating Effective Learning Communities
- According to the cognitive research in How People 
 Learn , environments that promote learning have
 these characteristics
- Pay careful attention to the knowledge, skills, 
 attitudes, and beliefs that learners bring to the
 educational setting. (Learner-centered)
- Take seriously the need to help students learn 
 the well-organized bodies of knowledge that
 support adaptive expertise. (Knowledge-centered)
- Provide frequent formal and informal 
 opportunities for feedback, focused on
 understanding, to encourage and reward meaningful
 learning. (Assessment-centered)
- Foster norms for people learning from one 
 another, and continually attempting to
 improve. (Community-centered)
8Implications for Teaching
- Promote student thinking Have students engage in 
 activities that make visible the processes of
 their thinking, rather than just the conclusions
 of their thinking.
- Model expert thinking Be careful to make 
 explicit the strategies and techniques that are
 implicit in expert thinking.
- Be aware of knowledge level of students. The 
 knowledge (and misunderstandings) they bring with
 them into the class will shape what they learn in
 the class.
- Use contrasting cases as examples. Contrasting 
 cases--two examples whose differences highlight a
 particular point or set of points--can illustrate
 the points you are highlighting as a teacher and
 facilitate novice ? expert thinking. See
 http//ublib.buffalo.edu/libraries/projects/cases/
 case.html
9Relationship to Learning Progressions
Learning Progression Step Relation to How People Learn
Standard Teacher takes seriously the need to help students learn the well-organized bodies of knowledge that support expertise
What I need to know Teacher pays attention to what knowledge, skills, attitudes, and beliefs that learners bring to the educational setting
What skills I must show Teacher provide frequent opportunities for feedback, focused on understanding, to encourage and reward meaningful learning
What does this look like Relates to all three of the above plus the teacher foster norms for people learning from one another, and continually attempting to improve. 
 10Working through the methods of science
- You gathered a lot of scientific data today. Now 
 it is time to develop a plan for using that data.
- The thought process for the methods of science is 
 similar to developing a learning progression
- You will develop a testable question based on 
 some aspect of the data you collected this
 morning, a hypothesis, a prediction, and a list
 of steps needed to test the hypothesis.
- Testable questions 
- They should be formatted such as What will 
 happen if? and What is the relationship
 between?
- How and Why questions are not appropriate for 
 a short, testable experiment.
11An effective hypothesis
- Your hypothesis must involve a manipulated and a 
 responding variable.
- The manipulated variable is the one that you 
 decide to change (manipulate).
- The responding variable is the one that changes 
 (or not) because of the choices you made with the
 manipulated variable.
- General hypothesis format 
- If I change the manipulated variable in some way, 
 then the responding variable will change in this
 way because of this reason.
12Hypothesis vs. prediction
- The prediction is a specific choice based on the 
 hypothesis.
- Example from consumer science 
- Question Is there a relationship between paper 
 towel thickness and the weight it will hold?
- Hypothesis If I increase the thickness of the 
 paper towel I use, then the towel will hold more
 weight because there are more fiber connections
 within the towel.
- Prediction Paper towel B will hold the most 
 weight because it is the thickest.
13Using the methods of science
- Develop a testable question based on the data you 
 collected earlier in the day.
- Get feedback on your question from an instructor 
- Develop a hypothesis and prediction based on your 
 testable question.
- Get feedback on your question from an instructor 
- Create a short list of steps (a procedure) for 
 testing your hypothesis.
- If time and equipment permit, complete your 
 procedure and evaluate your hypothesis.
14References
- How People Learn Brain, Mind, Experience, and 
 School
- How People Learn Bridging Research and Practice 
- How Students Learn Science in the Classroom 
- All of these are available for purchase or to 
 read free online from the National Academy Press
 at http//www.nap.edu/.
- Many ideas for this presentation are from 
 http//www.vanderbilt.edu/cft/resources/teaching_r
 esources/theory/HPL.htm.