Principles Of Good Pedagogy:
I Have Been Meaning To Write This
Post For A While, As A Condensed Conclusion From My Long Essays,Education’s Coming Revolution And In The Beginning Was The Conversation.
But The The Spark That Has Persuaded Me To Get It Down On Paper Was Given To Me
By A Twitter Conversation With Pete Bell, An ICT Examiner, Who Quoted J Bruner Saying
“Teaching Is The Canny Art Of Intellectual Temptation”. The Argument Of This
Post Is That Teaching Is A Lot More Than That.
I Propose The Following Five Key Principles Of Good Pedagogy:
§ Motivation;
§ Exposition;
§ Direction Of Activity;
§ Criticism;
§ Inviting Imitation.
These Principles May Of Course Overlap And/Or Be Sub-Divided Into
Sub-Principles.
Motivation
Motivation Is What J Bruner Was Talking About When He Says That
“Teaching Is The Canny Art Of Intellectual Temptation”. All Of The Other
Principles, If Applied, Will Also Contribute To Motivation By Delivering An
Effective And Engaging Instructional Process—But There Is A Sense In Which
Motivation Needs To Be Prior To The “Delivery” Of Instruction. Motivation Is
Likely To Be Dependent On The Personality Of The Teacher And His Or Her Ability
To Develop A Good Relationship With The Student, Understanding The Student’s
Current World View, Interests And Experience, And Framing The Learning To Be
Achieved In A Way That Makes Sense To The Student.
This Is What People Mean When They
Talk About Teaching Being “Relevant”—Although This Formulation Is Not
Satisfactory Because The Purpose Of Teaching Is To Move The Student Beyond The Limited
Outlook Of Ignorant Childhood, Raising Expectations And Revealing The Much
Greater Possibilities Offered By The World Outside Their Existing
Experience. Relevance To The Student’s Existing Experience Is A Good Starting
Point But Not A Good Outcome Of Education.
The Dependence Of Inspiration On The Relationship With The Teacher Means
That Computers Have Only A Supportive Role To Play In This Field.
Exposition
Exposition (“Chalk And Talk”) Gets A Bad Rap. It Is Transmissive, Casts
The Student In A Passive Role, And Can Often Be Dull. On The Other Hand, It Is
Relatively Cheap And Easy To Provide, If Well Done It Can Be Motivating, It
Gives The Teacher An Opportunity To Establish His Or Her Presence And
Personality, It Can Summarise And Articulate The Key Facts, Principles And
Learning Objectives. If Well Done And Done At The Right Time And The Right Way,
It Can Be An Important Ingredient In A Wider Mix—And For All The Criticism That
Is Made Of It, It Is Still Used Heavily By All Instructional Processes.
Good Exposition Requires An Ability At Public Performance Combined With
Good Subject Knowledge, Good Preparation And Often Good Supporting Props. Exposition
Is Easy To Do Badly: Hard To Do Well. It Is Not Essential That Exposition Is
Managed Solely By The Classroom Teacher: Online Video Delivered By E.G. The Khan
Academy May Provide A Useful Supplement To Classroom Exposition, Especially As
Online Video Can Be Accessed Anytime, Anywhere And Is Likely To Be Of Much
Higher Quality Than Classroom Exposition. That At Least Is The Vision Of The
Flipped Classroom.
Direction Of Activity
As “We Learn By Doing”, So Good Instruction Must Rely Heavily On
Activity. Pete Bell Dislikes The Term “Direction”, Considering It Too “Command
And Control”—So Let Me Break This Down Into Its Constituent Parts So We Can At
Least Agree What It Is We Are Talking About.
Learning Activity Design
The Design Of Activities That Deliver
Particular Learning Objectives In An Engaging Way Is A Skilled Business,
Particularly When The Medium Through Which Learning Activities Are Delivered
Becomes Digital (The Production Of Serious Games, Simulations And Creative
Tools Is No Trivial Matter). At The Moment, This Process Is Largely Performed
(Normally Not Very Well) By Front Line Classroom Teachers. It Is A Central Argument
Of Education’s Coming Revolution That
This Process Needs To Be Systematised And Centralised: Digital Learning
Activities Produced By Specialist Designers Need To Become A Commodity That Can
Be Bought Or Shared And Automatically Integrated With Learning Management
Software.
Learning Activity Delivery
Once A Learning Activity Has Been Designed, The Activity Needs To Be
Delivered. In The Non-Digital, Physical World, The Delivery Of Learning
Activity Can Be Summarised By The Term “Facilitation”. In The Digital World,
Delivery Can Largely Be Automated. In Practice, A Good Instructional Process
Will Represent A Blending Of Both Types Of Activity.
Learning Activity Selection And Sequencing
The Selection Of Learning Activities
Is A Critical Role Of The Teacher And Needs To Be Directed By Several Further
Sub-Principles. The Selection Of Activities (Or “Progression Management” As I Have
Called It In In The Beginning Was The
Conversation) Is Highly Suitable For Automation By Dedicated
Software Systems.
Analysing The Structure Of The Learning Objectives
Clearly, Learning Activities Should Be
Relevant To The Current Learning Objectives, Which Ultimately Are Not Set By The
Teacher. What The Teaching Process Does Require, However, Is The Disaggregation
Of Those Top-Level Objectives Into Smaller Prerequisite Steps, That Will Guide
The Student Through The Learning In A Logical Sequence. If You Want To Teach
Long Division, You Need To Ensure That The Student Is Proficient At Addition
And Subtraction First.
It Is Often Said That You Do Not Really Understand A Topic Until You
Have To Teach It. This Is At Least Partly Because To Teach Something Well, You
Need To Analyse The Essential Structure Of The Knowledge Being Taught.
This Analysis Is Required For Course Design Can Be Done By A Course
Designer, Who Does Not In Turn Need To Be The Same Person Who Designed The
Constituent Learning Activities Or The Same Person As The Classroom Teacher.
Responding To The Conceptual State Of The Student
This May Often Go Under The
Catch-Phrase Of Adaptive Learning. Not Only Does The Teacher Need At The
Beginning Of The Course To Select Learning Activities That Are Appropriate To
His Or Her Students, But The Teacher Also Needs Constantly To Monitor The
Extent Of Learning Achieved By Students At Each Stage Of The Course, Selecting
Activities That Respond To The Learning And Maybe Misconceptions Picked Up At
Previous Stages Of The Course. As Argued (With Reference To Dylan Wiliam)
In In The Beginning Was The Conversation,
Progression Management Is Often A Better Response To Student Misconception That
Negative Feedback.
Repetition And Review
Memory (Both Knowing That And
Knowing How) Tends To Degrade. Learning Activities
Therefore Need To Be Repeated Regularly At First In Order To Ensure That The
Learning Is Laid Down In Long-Term And Not Just Short-Term Memory. The Intervals
Of Review Can Becoming Increasingly Infrequent As The Learning Is Mastered.
Variation
Much Learning In Formal Systems Consists Of The Mastery Of Abstract
Principles. An Abstract Principle That Is Studied Only In Abstract Terms Is
Never Really Understood At All, As The Essence Of The Abstract Is The Ability
To Apply It To A Range Of Different Concrete Contexts.
Similarly, If An Abstract Principle Is Only Studied In A Single Context,
It Is Likely That The Student Will Learn Only About The Context In Which The
Principle Is Learnt And Not About The Abstract Principle. It Is Therefore
Important That The Teacher Selects Activities That Illustrate The Same
Principle In A Range Of Different Contexts, So The Student Can Practice The
Ability To Recognise And Apply The Abstract Principle In Unfamiliar Contexts.
Incremental Increase In Difficulty
It May Be Demotivating To Fail Too Often—Yet Ignoring Failure Is Likely
To Be Harmful As It Will Entrench The Undesirable Behaviours That Led To
Failure. One Way To Resolve This Paradox Is To Reduce The Chance Of Failure By
Sequencing Activities So That The Difficulty Increases In Small Increments,
Maximising The Chance Of Success At Each Stage. This Was The Approach Taken By B
F Skinner With Machine Learning. At The Same Time, Having To Progress At A
Snail’s Pace Through Material That The Student Finds Easy Can Also Be Highly
Demotivating, So This Needs To Be Combined With The Adaptive Principle.
There Are Many Ways In Which Activities May Be Made Incrementally More
Difficult:
§ Instrinsically (E.G. By Providing Longer Numbers For A Sum In Maths);
§ By Withdrawing Help Or Scaffolding;
§ Increasing The Number Of Stages Of A Problem That Must Be Navigated;
§ By Creating More “Open Ended” Activities (E.G. At Higher Levels On Bloom’s
Taxonomy);
§ By Unexpected Timing (E.G. Introducing An Old Topic Out Of The Blue);
§ By Deeper Contextualisation Of An Abstract Principle (E.G. Use Of
Unfamiliar Language).
Criticism
Some Will Be Uncomfortable With This
Word—But It Is The Right One. Criticism Should Be Constructive Of Course And
There Are Times When Criticism May Be Withheld, To Be Replaced By Progression
Management Or An Expectation That The Student Will Work It Out For Themselves. Ultimately,
However, Criticism Is An Essential Part Of The Conversational Loop (See
Again In The Beginning Was The
Conversation). It Is A Key Part Of The Teacher’s Tool-Set And
Students Should Learning To Accept Criticism In The Constructive Sense That It
Ought To Be Offered.
Component Parts Of Criticism Are:
§ Evaluation;
§ Correction;
§ Contextual Repetition Of Exposition;
§ Target Setting.
At Higher
Levels, The Expert Evaluation Required Will Be Beyond The Capacity Of Computers
And Will Therefore Be A Primary Function Of The Subject Expert. At Lower
Levels (E.G. Routine Marking Of Simple Problems), Offering Instantaneous
Assessment And Feedback Are Functions To Which Computer Systems Are Well
Adapted.
Inviting Imitation
Humans Are Mimics. Children And Teenagers Are Naturally Programmed To
Find Role Models And Copy Them. Ideally, A Child Will Choose To Admire A
Teacher And Seek To Imitate Them. Children Will Also Imitate Each Other And The
Degree To Which This Sort Of Imitation Will Be Beneficial Will Depend On The
Extent To Which The Peer Culture Is Constructive.
The Criterion On Which A Teacher Is Likely To Be Selected As A Role
Model Will In Large Part Be Dependent On Personality—And This Is A Tough Call
For Teachers Who May Be Expert At Their Subject And Diligent In Marking Work,
If They Are Not At The Same Time Seen To Be Quite As Cool As The Latest
Celebrity On Big Brother.
Teachers Can Support Each Other In This Respect. The Willingness Of
Children To Look Favourably On Their Teachers As Role Models May Be Influenced
By The General Culture Of The School. Where Learning Is Not Respected, It May
Be Almost Impossible For A Teacher To Be A Potential Role Model As Well As
Being Passionate About Their Subject. I Suggest The Following Sub-Principles
Which Can Help Promote Beneficial Imitation:
§ Fostering A Peer Culture In Which Learning Is Valued;
§ The Appointment Of Charismatic Teachers In Senior Position (E.G. Head
Teacher, Leading Subject Teachers);
§ The Fostering Of Team-Teaching Whereby Senior Teachers Can Support
Junior Teachers, And Junior Teachers Can, By Working Alongside Senior Teachers,
Learn The Tricks Of The Trade;
§ Developing Good Relationships With Students;
§ Teacher Acting As Collaborator (Or “Guide On The Side”), Illustrating
For The Benefit Of Students Ways In Which Problems Can Be Addressed, Which The
Student Can Then Imitate;
§ Good Discipline, Where Rival, Negative Peer Role Models Are Challenged
Early;
§ Personalisation Of Learning And Effective Use Of Praise.
As The Last Of These Points Illustrate, There Is A Relationship Between
Effective Motivational Strategies And Selection Of Role Models: A Highly
Motivational Teacher Is Also Likely To Be Adopted As A Role Model.
As Much Of This Is A Matter Of Personality, It May Be Argued That
Technology Has Little Part Of Play. However, Technology Can Help In A Number Of
Ways, Including The Management Of Personalisation And The Reporting Of Learning
Outcomes To Encourage The Teacher In Giving Timely Praise.
I Would Argue That The Opportunities For Video Conferencing And Remote
Tutoring Can Also Help. This Can Help Replace Isolated Classroom Teachers With
Teaching Teams Led By “Leading Teachers” – People Who Combine Compelling
Charisma With Strong Subject Knowledge, Able To Champion The Cause And Help
With The Difficult Task Of Offering A Compelling Alternative (And
Complementary) Set Of Motivations To The Modern Entertainment Industry. Such Leading
Teachers Would Need To Be Supported By Junior Teachers And Machine Instruction,
Capable Of Addressing The Bread-And-Butter Management Of Learning, Reporting
And Aggregating Learning Outcome Data In Forms That Are Available To The Whole
Teaching Team.
Another Advantage Of The Leading Teacher Concept Will Be That, Being
Ultimately Responsible For Large Numbers Of Students, It Will Be Possible To
Pay Leading Teachers Significantly More Than Can Be Afforded For Classroom
Teachers, Who Are Limited By The 30-In-A-Classroom Productivity Ceiling. This Will
Help Attract High Calibre Entrants To The Profession And Keep Them “In The
Classroom”.
Conclusion
Understanding The Nature Of Pedagogy Is A Necessary Prerequisite To
Understanding What Role Technology Will Have In Supporting Education—And Also
To The Selection Of Terms That We Should Use To Describe And Classify The Business
Of Teaching.
Any Comments, Criticisms And Suggestions For Things That I Might Have
Missed Are, As Always, Welcome.
No comments:
Post a Comment