Improving Student Success by Scaffolding Learning David Steer
Improving Student Success by Scaffolding Learning David Steer Department of Geology & Environmental Sciences University of Akron July 31 - August 3, 2008
Practical Application Complete the Introductory Exercise found in your workshop notebook for the Improving Student Success by Scaffolding Learning session. Just note difficulty level. How did you decide difficulty?
Scaffolding Learning: Goal 1 To understand the features of Bloom’s Taxonomy - a framework for scaffolding learning. Level 0: I have never heard of Bloom’s Taxonomy (BT). Level 1: I can identify how many levels there are in BT. Level 2: I can place several levels of BT in correct order. Level 3: I can describe and name the six categories of BT. Level 4: I can explain how I might use BT in planning a lesson.
Conditions for Intellectual Growth Teaching and learning goals can be ordered using Bloom’s Taxonomy Text Remembering memorization and recall Understanding understanding Applying using knowledge Analyzing taking apart information Venn Diagrams Evaluating reorganizing information Evaluation Rubrics Creating generating, producing Planning Exercises Conceptests Open-ended questions can be used for all categories.
Scaffolding Learning: Goal 2 To analyze and generate exercises representing categories of Bloom’s Taxonomy Level 1: I understand where multiple choice questions and essay questions might place in BT. Level 2: I can classify a series of simple questions in BT. Level 3: I can analyze how to classify a series of exercises based on the categories of BT. Level 4: I can make up questions representative of the six categories of BT.
Practical Application Complete the Bloom’s Taxonomy Exercise found in your workshop notebook for the Improving Student Success by Scaffolding Learning session. Work with a partner
- Slides: 6