I am interested in ways to reinforce effort and provide feedback in my classroom. If anyone has any ideas, comments or resources, I would appreciate your feedback.
The materials I’ve read covered the following:
Comparing
Classifying
Creating Metaphors
Creating Analogies
Theory and Research in Brief
I keyed in on items he mentioned, like the detail in identifying similarities and differences were explicit in the process of comparing and critical to classifying.
Later in the same reading he referred to the three types of strategies for reasoning processes. They were Teacher-Directed Tasks, Student-Directed Tasks, and Graph Organizers.
• The Teacher-Directed information refers to the teacher providing the items for comparison and also the characteristics for comparison.
• The Student-Directed information refers to the teacher providing the items for comparison, but the students are asked to identify the characteristics for comparison.
• Graphic organizers are simply described as another method students can understand, visualize, and use whatever thinking process they are using at the time.
The first 2 Directed items include comparison tasks, matrixes’, metaphors, analogies (complete and incomplete) and the like.
In the teaching of Life and Zoology science class with high school students (freshman and sophomore) and reading levels running somewhere around 5th and 6th grade, I tend to stick with Venn diagrams, hierarchical flow charts and graphic organizers. Venn diagrams work at so many levels, and I’ve pretty much adopted Inspiration 7 as a better de facto software program. I’ve purchased a copy of version 8 for a number of other reasons, but in this economy (and all the soup lines), very few administrators want to create a visibility factor that demonstrates spending on the future is a good investment and it’s better to tread cautiously.
In the “Theory and Research in Brief” section of my readings, a pretty straightforward area, the best comment I could make on the topic of differences and similarities would be: The more the students are familiar with the subject, project or presentation, the better they will see the general patterns that exist within. This remains same, whether it’s a Venn diagram, Comparison matrix, Column format, Inspiration or web format, metaphor, analogies, et al.
I applied my version of this Friday of this week by instead of having the students observe the microscope and label same, I simply asked them to draw the microscope in front of them and create a list of their own naming scheme and label it with the names they have agreed upon. Next step migrate their words to those of the textbook. Hopefully, two things will happen, I will learn something by observing and they will spend some time observing and learn something.