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5E Learning cycle

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Setting high standards for teachers. Promoting continuous staff learning. ... distinctive cognitive stages of the tripod of expository, problem solving, and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 5E Learning cycle


1
5E Learning cycle with sample lesson
  • G. Donald Allen
  • Department of Mathematics
  • Texas AM University

2
Professional development goals
  • Improving all students learning.
  • Improving teacher effectiveness.
  • Setting high standards for teachers.
  • Promoting continuous staff learning.
  • Enhancing staff intellectual and leadership
    capacity.

3
Needs assessment.
  • Student TAKS grades in the areas of
  • number operations, (incl. fractions)
  • measurement and scaling
  • Emphasis on
  • Notation
  • Presentation
  • Terminology/vocabulary/definition
  • Methodology

4
Using the 5E learning cycle
  • The lesson plan components
  • Engage
  • Explore
  • Explain
  • Extend
  • Evaluate

It appears to be linearly ordered, but loops are
often desired or required.
5
Engage
  • The instructor initiates this phase by asking
    well-chosen questions, by a problem to be solved,
    or by showing something intriguing.
  • The instructor engages the student.

6
Explore
  • The exploration phase provides the opportunity
    for students to become directly involved with the
    key concepts of the lesson through guided
    exploration that requires them to probe, inquire,
    and question.

7
Explain
  • The instructor, acting as teacher and
    facilitator, gives further explanation, making
    mathematically precise the notions involved.
  • The instructor add additional meanings or
    information, or correct terminology.

8
Extend
  • Students expand and extend what they have
    learned.
  • The instructor expands and extends the basic
    ideas to related and perhaps more challenging
    problems.

9
Evaluate
  • Evaluation is ongoing, and by this time the
    instructor should know how the students have
    learned.
  • Traditional forms of assessment are administered.

10
Using the 5E learning cycle
  • In techno-babble it is a recursive cycle of
    distinctive cognitive stages of the tripod of
    expository, problem solving, and experiential
    learning.
  • Lessons can take several days or weeks to
    complete.

11
5E The Theory
  • A novice learner has loosely integrated knowledge
    maps.
  • A advanced learner or expert possesses tightly
    integrated knowledge maps.
  • The more loops a learner makes through the
    recursive cycle of expository, problem solving,
    and experiential learning, the tighter is the
    knowledge map and the greater is the chance for
    ascending the ladder of understanding.

12
The 5E Learning Cycle
  • What is it?
  • Who should use it?
  • When is it most effective?
  • When should it not be used?

13
5E What is it?
  • An organizational tool like tab dividers in a
    binder to involve students in the learning
    process
  • A teaching cycle based on the interactive
    exploration of a concept
  • A procedure that layers knowledge, partly
    discovered by students, and partly amplified by
    teachers.

14
5E What is it?
  • Students build on former concepts in order to
    place the new ideas into their working framework
    of knowledge
  • A learning cycle that supports the building or
    accumulation of knowledge based on previously
    learned concepts.

15
5E - Who should use it?
  • Teachers new to a subject as an organizational
    tool.
  • Teachers needing a programmed channel to their
    students.
  • Teachers wishing to give lessons as fully
    packaged presentations.

16
5E - When is it most effective?
  • For new concepts that are difficult to master.
    (e.g. What is a variable? The beginning of
    fractions? What is proportional? What is
    scaling?)
  • When the teacher has the resources and time to
    allow the engage and exploratory phases.

17
5E - When should it not be used?
  • During skills acquisition
  • When the new concept is closely related to an
    previously covered one
  • When the class is already highly motivated
  • When time is short

18
The 5E Instructional Method
  • How much time does a lesson plan take to develop
    - compared with another pedagogical method?
  • What is the learning time for teaching with the
    5e model.
  • Is there data on student performance when taught
    by the 5e model?

19
Example
20
5E Learning Cycle Lesson PlanSampleWhat
is an Angle? Understanding and measuring
adapted from Making connections with
Measurement Grade 6 ESC IV, Houston, TX, 2005
21
What is an Angle? - Engage
  • Begin with the angles worksheet
  • Distribute patty paper
  • Prompt students to identify larger or smaller of
    the angle pairs
  • Trace the larger angle on patty paper and compare

22
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23
What is an Angle? - Engage
  • Questions
  • How did you determine the larger angle?
  • What makes an angle larger?
  • How do the rays help your determination
  • Does the length of the rays impact your
    determination?

Expect varied answers.
24
What is an Angle? - Explore
  • Distribute unit angles (45o and 30o)
    transparencies.
  • Distribute Activity Worksheets (45o and 30o)
  • Ask students to measure the angles in terms of
    multiples of the unit angles, wrt each unit and
    worksheet

25
Activity Worksheet for 45o
26
Unit angles (45o and 30o)
27
Typical Questions - Explore
  • What do you notice about the number of 45o ,
    resp. 30o, required to measure each angle.
  • How do the numbers of units compare for each pair
    (A,B A,C A,D B,C etc)?
  • Which angles are twice another angle?

28
What is an Angle? - Explore
  • Distribute unit angles (10o and 5o)
    transparencies.
  • Distribute Activity Worksheets (10o and 5o)
  • Ask students to measure the angles in terms of
    multiples of the unit angles, wrt each unit and
    worksheet
  • Ask similar questions to previously.

29
What is an Angle? - Explore
  • Distribute protractors
  • You may also wish to use 45o , resp. 30o, unit
    protractors if time permits.
  • Distribute master activity sheet with assorted
    angles. (not just unit angles and multiples)
  • Ask similar questions to previously.
  • Ask students to construct angles of various sizes.

30
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31
What is an Angle? Explain
  • Can the protractor substitute for all the unit
    angles? Why?
  • Can the protractor measure angle we have seen?
  • Can the protractor measure every angle? Why or
    why not?
  • Explain/explore multiples of unit angles.

32
What is an Angle? Extend
  • Distribute the Many Angles worksheet.
  • Ask students to find angles that meet various
    conditions.
  • Angle less than 10o? Less than 25o? Etc
  • Pairs of angles complementary? Supplementary?
  • Which angles are greater than 60o? 180o?

33
Many Angles Worksheet
34
What is an Angle? Evaluate
  • Ask students to construct angles of various
    sizes.
  • Ask students to measure select angles.
  • Ask students to determine all acute (obtuse)
    angles within a collection.

35
Vocabulary
  • Angle
  • Unit Angle
  • Protractor
  • Acute angle
  • Obtuse angle
  • Complementary angles
  • Supplementary angles

36
Additional information
  • Time to complete lesson plan 90 minutes
  • TEKS 6.8C
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