Category Archives: Educational Resources

Links to educational resources for teachers, parents and students.

How teachers can use the Adult Learning Theory and Principles to help students

Become familiar with Adult Learning Theory and the six principles of adult learning

Adult Learning Theory

Part of being an effective educator involves understanding how adults learn best (Lieb,1991). Andragogy (adult learning) is a theory that holds a set of assumptions about how adults learn. Andragogy emphasises the value of the process of learning. It uses approaches to learning that are problem-based and collaborative rather than didactic, and also emphasises more equality between the teacher and learner.
Andragogy as a study of adult learning originated in Europe in 1950’s and was then pioneered as a theory and model of adult learning from the 1970’s by Malcolm Knowles an American practitioner and theorist of adult education, who defined andragogy as “the art and science of helping adults learn” (Zmeyov 1998; Fidishun 2000).

What do you mean by ‘adult learning principles’?

Knowles identified the six principles of adult learning outlined below.

  • Adults are internally motivated and self-directed
  • Adults bring life experiences and knowledge to learning experiences
  • Adults are goal oriented
  • Adults are relevancy oriented
  • Adults are practical
  • Adult learners like to be respected

How can I use adult learning principles to facilitate student learning on placement

Good question!! Here we will discuss some ways to facilitate learning by applying Knowles’ Adult Learning Principles:

1. Adults are internally motivated and self-directed
Adult learners resist learning when they feel others are imposing information, ideas or actions on them (Fidishun, 2000).
Your role is to facilitate a students’ movement toward more self-directed and responsible learning as well as to foster the student’s internal motivation to learn.
As clinical educator you can :
Set up a graded learning program that moves from more to less structure, from less to more responsibility and from more to less direct supervision, at an appropriate pace that is challenging yet not overloading for the student.
Develop rapport with the student to optimise your approachability and encourage asking of questions and exploration of concepts.
Show interest in the student’s thoughts and opinions. Actively and carefully listen to any questions asked.
Lead the student toward inquiry before supplying them with too many facts.
Provide regular constructive and specific feedback (both positive and negative),
Review goals and acknowledge goal completion
Encourage use of resources such as library, journals, internet and other department resources.
Set projects or tasks for the student that reflect their interests and which they must complete and “tick off” over the course of the placement. For example: to provide an in-service on topic of choice; to present a case-study based on one of their clients; to design a client educational handout; or to lead a client group activity session.
Acknowledge the preferred learning style of the student. A questionnaire is provided below that will assist your student to identify their preferred learning style and to discuss this with you.
2. Adults bring life experiences and knowledge to learning experiences
Adults like to be given opportunity to use their existing foundation of knowledge and experience gained from life experience, and apply it to their new learning experiences. As a clinical educator you can:
Find out about your student – their interests and past experiences (personal, work and study related)
Assist them to draw on those experiences when problem-solving, reflecting and applying clinical reasoning processes.
Facilitate reflective learning opportunities which Fidishun (2000) suggests can also assist the student to examine existing biases or habits based on life experiences and “move them toward a new understanding of information presented” (p4).
3. Adults are goal oriented
Adult students become ready to learn when “they experience a need to learn it in order to cope more satisfyingly with real-life tasks or problems” (Knowles,1980 p 44, as cited in Fidishun, 2000). Your role is to facilitate a student’s readiness for problem-based learning and increase the student’s awareness of the need for the knowledge or skill presented. As educator, you can:
Provide meaningful learning experiences that are clearly linked to personal, client and fieldwork goals as well as assessment and future life goals.
Provide real case-studies (through client contact and reporting) as a basis from which to learn about the theory, OT methods, functional issues implications of relevance.
Ask questions that motivate reflection, inquiry and further research.
4. Adults are relevancy oriented
Adult learners want to know the relevance of what they are learning to what they want to achieve. One way to help students to see the value of their observations and practical experiences throughout their placement, is to:
Ask the student to do some reflection on for example, what they expect to learn prior to the experience, on what they learnt after the experience, and how they might apply what they learnt in the future, or how it will help them to meet their learning goals.
Provide some choice of fieldwork project by providing two or more options, so that learning is more likely to reflect the student’s interests.
“Students really benefit from regular ‘teaching sessions’ – time spent going through assessments such as how to do a kitchen assessment, and having in-services presented on specific topics – such as Cognition or Perception” ” I find they understand more about a topic when it is directly relevant to the work context. This is invaluable as it ties theory to practice.” S. Bartholomai, OT clinical educator, Ipswich Hospital (personal communication, May 31, 2007)
5. Adults are practical
Through practical fieldwork experiences, interacting with real clients and their real life situations, students move from classroom and textbook mode to hands-on problem solving where they can recognise first hand how what they are learning applies to life and the work context. As a clinical educator you can:
Clearly explain your clinical reasoning when making choices about assessments, interventions and when prioritising client’s clinical needs.
Be explicit about how what the student is learning is useful and applicable to the job and client group you are working with.
Promote active participation by allowing students to try things rather than observe. Provide plenty of practice opportunity in assessment, interviewing, and intervention processes with ample repetition in order to promote development of skill, confidence and competence.
“I like to encourage students to select and use a clinical model, such as Chapparo and Rankin’s OPM, to apply to practice. It helps students to identify what performance components (e.g. endurance, tone, organisational skills) they want to assess for example, in a dressing task. This helps to reinforce why OTs do things, and how the link to occupation differs from other disciplines.” (S. Bartholomai, personal communication, May 31, 2007)
6. Adult learners like to be respected
Respect can be demonstrated to your student by:
Taking interest
Acknowledging the wealth of experiences that the student brings to the placement;
Regarding them as a colleague who is equal in life experience
Encouraging expression of ideas, reasoning and feedback at every opportunity.
It is important to keep in mind that the student is still developing occupational therapy clinical practice skills. However, with the theory and principles of adult learning in mind, you can facilitate the learning approach of the student to move from novice to more sophisticated learning methods. This facilitates greater integration of knowledge, information and experience; the student learns to distinguish what is important when assessing and working with clients; how to prioritise client needs, goals and caseload; when rules can be put aside and how/when the approach to occupational therapy practice and professional communication emerges from strict modelling of behaviour into a unique therapeutic and professional expression of self.
(Fidishun, 2000; Lieb,1991)

Want to know more?

Please take a moment to read the Reference Document 3.1: Basic Principles of Adult Learning which the QOTFC (2005) have applied to the role of clinical educator with students in clinical settings.
If you would like to know more about Adult Learning, you can access a very useful and thought-provoking resource called the Self-paced Adult Learning Module for Allied Health Professonals – CDrom (Allen, 2005) from the clinical education administrator, The University of Queensland ph: 07 3365 2792.

Learning Styles

Acknowledge the preferred learning style of your student

We have explored the general principles that apply to how adults learn. Bearing these principles in mind, we can also appreciate that as individuals, we all have different preferences on how we approach new learning. For instance, some people are active learners. They like to be constantly challenged, can think on their feet and enjoy the challenge of being thrown in the deep end, learning best ‘on the job’ through practical exposure, trial and error and direct experience. Other people are more reflective learners, they need time to plan, prepare, research and to have time to reflect on their learning before being confronted with a new challenge. They may like to be thoroughly briefed before proceeding. Some people are theoretical learners, and are stimulated by abstract ideas and concepts. They like to consider numerous viewpoints and theories and to analyse situations before selecting options and approaches to a task. They learn through observation, discussion, analysis, and enjoy logical and sophisticated reasoning. Whilst others are pragmatic learners, they enjoy learning from qualified demonstration, and need to see the practical advantage of all that they are doing. They need to know that what they are doing works and is realistic (Sample, 1999).

Learning styles can be influenced by past experiences, education, work and the learning situation. It is important to recognise that they are not fixed but may be adapted according to context and what is being learned. Nevertheless most people still favour one style of learning.

Very early on, I get [the students] to figure out their learning style by giving them examples and then we negotiate what approach will work best for them.

” J.Copley, OT clinical educator, multiple-mentoring model (personal communication, May 24, 2007)There are various classifications of learning styles that you may like to become more familiar with.

Here are some useful resources and references

The Manual of Learning Styles, by Peter Honey and Alan Mumford (1992).
Provides an introduction to learning styles with advice on how to administer and interpret the The Learning Styles Questionnaire.

Kolb Learning Style Inventory (LSI): Self-scoring and interpretation booklet. A statistically reliable and valid, 12-item questionnaire and workbook, developed by David A. Kolb (1976).

VARK (Visual, Aural, Read/write, Kinaesthetic). A guide to learning styles by Nick Fleming (1992) Website. http://www.vark-learn.com/english/index.asp

Index of Learning Styles.http://www.engr.ncsu.edu/learningstyles/ilsweb.html

Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) by (1993). These resources provide useful exercises in helping you and the student to identify preferred learning styles, as well as your preferred approach to teaching. You can then discuss and negotiate with the student learning strategies that will compliment their learning style and your teaching style, as well as the expectations of the placement and the setting.

One of my past students was very ‘hands-on’ ie the activist, and so thoroughly enjoyed being thrown in the deep end and was prepared to make a few mistakes [in order] to learn. I perceived early on that she learnt best through ‘doing’ and not so much from observing or reading“. N. Flynn, OT clinical educator, Mater Private Hospital 2007 (personal communication, June,6,2007).

Then you have the ‘information gatherer’ student, who gathers piles and piles of information, but has difficulty applying this information to practice. It is about enabling that student to turn the ‘pile’ into a program and to use the information to tune their clinical reasoning” K.Adam, OT clinical educator, workplace rehabilitation practice (personal communication, May,10, 2007).

Conflict can occur when the supervisor has an ‘activist’ style to teaching, whilst the student has a ‘theorist’ style to learning” OT clinical educator, PA Hospital (personal communication, May,25, 2007)

Flexibility and adaptability is the key to learning. There may be times when you need to adjust your teaching style to accommodate student needs, as in turn the student will need to accommodate your teaching style and the expectations of the context and situation in which they are learning.

It is important to recognise that you can’t always cater to the learning styles of each student, but you can try to accommodate them as much as is reasonable. For instance, if a student likes demonstration and practice prior to implementing an interview or assessment then, rather than you providing that demonstration all the time, you could encourage them to practice sometimes with the other students first. You can try to meet them in the middle ground” S.Bartholomai, OT clinical educator, Ipswich hospital (personal communication, May 31, 2007)

Difference of Approach

Here is a possible example of two different student learning approaches to delivering a staff in-service and suggestions on how teaching approaches could be modified to accommodate differences in learning style:

Active Learner : May write brief notes to self as prompts and then elaborate more spontaneously through active thinking on spot during in-service. May use immediate verbal and non-verbal feedback to adapt and modify performance behaviour during course of in-service – learning on the spot. May reflect on learning and performance through direct discussion immediately following in-service (with or without note-taking).

Possible teaching approach : Ask student to talk through their plan and rationale prior to action. Direct student to relevant and important resources, information or protocols to ensure attention is given to essential level of preparation. Allow plenty of active hands-on learning and regularly ask student to explain reasoning, background knowledge as it is happening. Encourage immediate reflection and feedback.

Reflective Learner : May make efforts to feel thoroughly prepared, in order to boost confidence and to accept goal as achievable. May prepare for in-service by collecting and reading large amounts of relevant (or sometimes broadly relevant) information relating to topic to gain a comprehensive understanding of the theme; and will prepare for delivery of in-service through memorising, rehearsing information delivery and preparing extensive or detailed notes (may be word for word) for reference during in-service delivery (may or may not be used “in-action”). May have prepared plan B for aspects of in-service discussions, and considered responses to possible questions. Will appreciate time to reflect on performance and outcomes afterwards, and may prefer to take some notes prior to discussing with supervisor.Possible teaching approach : Allow student time to plan, consult and research information relevant to task – within reason. Monitor student’s interpretation of information gathered to ensure that relevance and prioritisation of important information is effectively distinguished from less relevant – assists student to avoid overwhelming themselves with too much information. Encourage time for quiet reflection prior to providing feedback or joint reflection session.
(Sample, 1999)

Key points

Adults have preferred learning styles

  • Know your own style
  • Be aware of other learning styles
  • Acknowledge the preferred learning style of your student

This will assist to

  • Identify areas in need of improvement
  • Design strategies for enhanced learning

(Fitzgerald, 2007, March)

 

 See more at http://www.qotfc.edu.au/resource/index.html

Vermont’s Landmark College Workshop for College Ready Students at Berkeley!

Five-Day Intensive Workshop at UC Berkeley

Landmark College will offer a week-long Intensive Workshop for Success in College at the University of California Berkeley campus beginning August 5th.

Do your learning differences cause you to struggle with:

  • Recalling information for a test that you spent hours studying for
  • Organizing your thoughts and putting them into a clearly written paper
  • Focusing on reading/retaining what you’ve read
  • Managing your time and materials
  • Starting or finishing a task

If this sounds like you, don’t miss Landmark College’s five-day workshop:

Summer Intensive Workshop for Success in College
(for new & continuing college students who learn differently)
August 5 – 9, 2013 — University of California Berkeley
Cost $1,750

This non-residential* workshop will help you feel better prepared and more confident as you begin or return to college this fall…

Landmark College is the college of choice for students with learning disabilities, ADHD and ASD. In this workshop, our experienced faculty will help you discover:

What science shows us about what we can do to improve our attention, memory and motivation.
Specific strategies and technologies that can support your skills in note-taking, reading, writing, memory and organization as a successful college student.
Application & Brochure

* Single occupancy on-campus housing is available beginning Sunday, August 4th until Friday, August 9th for an additional fee of $550. This fee includes two on-campus meals a day; breakfast and lunch. Housing is available for enrolled students who are 18 years old or older and prepared for an independent living situation.

Questions?
802.387.6718
admissions@landmark.edu

– See more at: http://www.landmark.edu/academics/summer-and-january-programs/non-residental-intensive-programs/#sthash.Soe7HLyM.dpuf

Who Am I?

One question that I often hear asked of young women and men of the high school ages is
“What are you wanting to be when you grow up?”  Many look dumbfounded by this question as little time is spent discovering strengths, gifts, talents, and skills.  How do we enlighten ourselves as to how our brains work as individuals, what are personalities are like, how we are hard-wired, what makes us tick?  We have several resources that may help you lead toward “finding yourself”.  Watch for more resources to be added or updated as you try these inventories out for yourself:

IQ, Personality, Team Tests and Career – Learn more about yourself in order to best choose the career of best fit.

FIND YOUR STRENGTHS:  students find their areas of strengths. Are they Kinesthetic, Linguistic, Logical, Visual, Musical, Intrapersonal with self and/or others. Have students take this 56-question test to learn more about themselves.

FIND YOUR LEARNING STYLE:  students discover their learning modalities with this online inventory and information.

 FIND YOUR BRAIN DOMINANCE: The brain is split into four sections: Upper Left, Lower Left, Upper Right, Lower Right. Which is dominant for you?

Marzano Strategies for Implementing Best Online Teaching Practices


TBVA/PIE powered by Edgenuity is excited to share that we still love Marzano’s work and his input about online learning.  We share these views with Dr. Marzano.

Dr. Robert Marzano is a well-known educator that cofounded and is CEO of Marzano Research Laboratory (MRL).  As 21st century learning and technology continue to combine, the MRL has set up strategies for implementing best online teaching practices.

Best Practice:  Communicating course/assignment rules and procedures:

Strategies:

• Provide clear course policies and procedures at the beginning of the course/assignment.

• Provide clear information about the timeline for the course, including all assignments, assessments, and course activities.

• Provide clear information about methods of instructor-to-student communication and about all student course support resources.

• Ensure that all students have directions, resources, and a working understanding of how to navigate and successfully operate all student systems within the online learning environment prior to engagement with the course content.

Best Practice: Clearly presenting the goal/objective for each assignment

Strategy:

Provide or reinforce clearly stated course goals and learning objectives for each major concept within the course.

Best Practice: Providing students with all materials needed to complete an assignment

Strategies:

• Provide multiple learning resources with engaging and meaningful learning activities.

• Provide clear and complete instructions (how to proceed, assignment requirements, and assessment expectations) with rubrics for all activities. .

• Provide information about student course support resources.

Best Practice: Offering encouragement and positive feedback to students

Strategies:

• Begin interacting with students early in a course to affirm each student’s successful participation.

• Provide timely, supportive, individualized, and frequent feedback on student progress that emphasizes

the intended learning outcome.

• Analyze a student’s mastery level of standards content and provide additional instruction to help the student meet mastery level.

Best Practice: Allowing students to keep track of their learning progress

Strategies:

• Provide resources that allow students to self-monitor their academic progress throughout the course.

• Provide timely and meaningful feedback on assignments, assessments, and related course learning activities, allowing students to be continuously aware of their progress in the course.

Best Practice: Accessibility to students via electronic communication as well as face-to-face

Strategy:

Facilitate meaningful and timely communications (electronically and face to face).

Best Practice: Monitoring student work

Strategies:

• Closely monitor individual student data to guide instruction and provide intervention activities for unsuccessful learners.

• Identify and monitor course assessments that correlate to state high-stakes tests to assure mastery of those key concepts and provide additional learning experiences when needed.

Best Practice: Knowing every student by name and being able to recognize them outside of the online environment

Strategies:

• Communicate with each student prior to, or early in, a course to answer any questions and to build a

supportive instructor-to-student relationship.

• Provide a supportive and engaging learning community environment for all students.

Best Practice: Allowing students to progress through assignments at their own pace

Strategies:

• Ensure that the curriculum is at the correct level for students and has appropriate rigor.

• Provide multiple learning pathways based on student ability to achieve content mastery.

• Provide ample assessment styles throughout the course to monitor student mastery of content and provide remedial instruction when needed.

Best Practice: Providing help to understand and practice new knowledge

Strategies:

• Provide synchronous learning activities in large and small learning groups to support key concepts within the course content.

• Provide multiple opportunities for students to be actively engaged in content that includes meaningful and authentic learning experiences, such as collaborative learning groups, student-led review sessions, instructional games, analysis, discussions, case studies, etc.

• Provide a wide range of activities, assignments, assessments, and resources to allow students to demonstrate mastery of content.

• Provide high-level thinking and critical reasoning activities in increasing complexity throughout a course.

Best Practice: Allowing students to ask questions during online course/assignment

Strategies:

• Foster teacher-student and student-to-student interaction.

• Ensure students have accessibility through various communication methods.

Best Practice: Treating all students equally

Strategies:

• Provide multiple learning resources with engaging and meaningful learning activities to all students.

Best Practice: Adding external resources to assignments aligned to local objectives

Strategies:

•Adapt the course content to meet students’ needs by providing additional assignments, resources, and activities for remediation or enrichment during the course experience.

• Assure that course content, assignments, and assessments are of appropriate rigor and align to state standards.

• Augment, as needed, course content, learning activities, and assessments to meet all required standards within a course.

What’s New with THE BRIDGE VIRTUAL ACADEMY?

The Bridge Virtual Academy is moving toward Common Core Standards, rolling out new courses, sporting a new look, and adding many features over the next several months!  We also have new partnerships with NWEA (Northwest Evaluation Association) and NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) and have course approval from iNACOL!

NWEA partnership means that our courses have included computer adaptive assessments created by NWEA.  As students are assessed, the computer adapts to the need for more practice or moving forward in order to best meet student needs.

Partnering with NCAA means that taking our online courses can still receive college sports scholarships!

Some of our new features include tablet ability for students as well as the teachers.  E-notes are more advanced with spell check, ability to add symbols for math, sciences and different languages as well as the ability to add tables.  The new improved Glossary provides lesson vocabulary that can be spoken in any of the 17 provided languages and is more easily available on the lesson notes page.  Transcripts are available with each video lesson so a student can read along to what the teacher is saying.  Our courses now include Wet Labs as well as virtual labs and field trips so science comes to life!  We now offer Life Science, Earth Science, Physical Science, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, and Environmental Sciences.

New courses for middle school Career Exploration, Mathematics, ELA and World History are now available to all 6th – 8th graders.  High school courses include a new Physics class as well as a great set of Career Pathways where students can earn a certificate in Technology, Engineering, Digital Arts, Business and Health Science by passing classes and a test.

Our online high school courses are approved through a process and measured against standards of the International Association for K-12 Online Learning (iNACOL), a nonprofit organization of a diverse cross-section of pioneers at the forefront of the K-12 education, including teachers, charter schools, school districts, state education agencies, nonprofit organizations, colleges, universities, research institutions, and content and technology providers.  Online courses intending to receive “a-g” approval must be assessed against the iNACOL Standards for Quality Online Courses before submission to Universities of California.  The course will with be certified by California Learning Resource Network (CLRN) or the institution will conduct a self-assessment of the online course.  Students that want to insure that there classes are approved need to see if the school and/or the course providers are UC-approved if that is the direction their educational path is taking them.  The principal from the student’s home high school may certify a non-UC-approved online courses from an outside institution to satisfy the “a-g” requirements.  The UCs expect that the such certification follows a careful review of the curriculum.

The Bridge Virtual Academy is UC approved.  The Bridge Virtual Academy utilizes the teachers and the course curriculum from Education 2o2o (aka Edgenuity), which is included on this list for UC-approved providers and schools.  http://www.ucop.edu/agguide/online-learning/online-publishers/index.html

Look into The Bridge Virtual Academy as your online school option.http://www.passionineducation.com/?q=bridge-virtual-academy

 

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Summer School Is Just Around The Corner

Need to catch up or get ahead in school?  Check out online learning for your summer school option.  Sign up today! 

PRIVATE SCHOOL – AT HOME – ONE CLASS AT A TIME

BE PART OF THE EDUCATION’S 21st CENTURY LEARNING EXPERIENCE.  

GET ON THE BRIDGE TO YOUR BEST SUCCESS.

PERFECT FOR SUMMER SCHOOL CATCHING UP OR ADVANCEMENT

Click here to go to The Bridge Virtual Academy!

The Bridge Virtual Academy provides education for grades 6th – 12th+:

PRIVATE SCHOOL – AT HOME – ONE CLASS AT A TIME

BE PART OF THE EDUCATION’S 21st CENTURY LEARNING EXPERIENCE.  

GET ON THE BRIDGE TO YOUR BEST SUCCESS.

PERFECT FOR SUMMER SCHOOL CATCHING UP OR ADVANCEMENT

The Bridge Virtual Academy provides education for grades 6th – 12th+:

  • ACCREDITED – https://doorways.ucop.edu/list/app/home?execution=e2s5
  • University-Approved A-G Curriculum – http://www.ucop.edu/agguide/online-learning/policy-changes/index.html
  • iNACOL Approved – http://www.inacol.org
  • Partners with NCAA – http://www.ncaa.org
  • Partners with NWEA – http://www.nwea.org
  • Interactive Online Program to keep students engaged
  • Opportunities for Virtual Classroom Settings for Socialization
  • Access to a Real-time One-to-One Teachers/Mentors/Coaches
  • Learning Inventories to understand individual learning model
  • Certified Teachers to counsel and keep students on track
  • Flexible hours and days to meet needs of various situations
  • Parent Portal to view student progress
  • Open start and end times
  • 24/7/365 for work access