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How Do I Plan My Class?
by Ken Bain
A Systematic Approach to Teaching: Some Fundamental Questions to Define the Course
Intellectually:
We cannot say that
every outstanding teacher asks all of these questions when preparing a
new course, but we certainly found some clear patterns:
Initial Questions
1. What big questions will your course help students answer? Or what abilities (or
qualities) will it help students develop?
- Identify a major ("big") question that your discipline and course might help to
answer.
- Identify small, yet still significant, sub-questions from your discipline, the answers to
which will help answer the larger question.
2. What reasoning
abilities must students have or develop to answer these questions?
- List the various abstract reasoning capacities that the
student must already possess, or must be helped to develop, to confront
the evidence and deal properly with the question and sub-question and
not have to resort to memorization of the "right" answer.
3. What information will
your students need to answer these questions? How will they obtain that
information?
- What will you ask them to read?
- What will you explain? Why did you decide to explain this material?
4. What paradigms of reality are students likely to bring with them that I will want them
to challenge?
- How can I help them construct that intellectual challenge.
5. How will you
help students who have difficulty understanding the questions and using
evidence and reason to answer them? What questions will you ask them to
focus their attention on significant issues, or to clarify concepts, or
to highlight assumptions that they are likely to ignore? What writing
will you ask them to do that will help them grapple with these matters?
6. How will you confront them with conflicting claims and encourage them to
grapple (e. g., collaboratively) with the issues?
- Indicate how
you will expose students to more than one interpretation so they will
have practice making distinctions.
- Indicate how they will
learn to understand, apply, and appreciate the criteria your discipline
uses to reach its conclusions.
7. How will you find out what they expect from the course? How will you
reconcile any differences between your plans and their interests?
8. How will you help
students learn to learn, to examine and assess their own learning and
thinking, and to read more effectively, analytically, and actively?
9. How will you find
out how students are learning before you test them for a grade? How
will you provide feedback before and separate from any grading of the
student?
- Richard Light found in interviews with Harvard students that the most intellectually
stimulating classes let students do their work (write papers, do
problems, etc.) and get feedback BEFORE they turned it in for a grade.
Indicate how they might provide feedback to each other.
- Indicate how you will
encourage students to think aloud. Indicate how you will create a
non-threatening atmosphere in which they can do so. Indicate how you
will give them the opportunity to struggle with their thoughts without
facing assessments of their efforts.
10. How will you
communicate with students in a way that will keep them thinking?
SUMMARY QUESTIONS
11. How will you create a natural learning environment in which you embed the skills
and information you wish to teach in assignments (questions and tasks)
students will find fascinating--authentic tasks that will arouse
curiosity, challenge students to rethink their assumptions and examine
their mental models of reality? How will you create a safe environment
in which students can try, fail, receive feedback and try again?
QUESTIONS ABOUT EVALUATION
12. How will you spell out explicitly the intellectual standards you will be
using in assessing their work and why you use those standards? How will
you help students learn to assess their own work using those standards?
Indicate how you would lead the students to stand back, become conscious of the
patterns of thinking and reasoning in which they have engaged, and if
possible, connect this experience with experiences they have had in
other courses.
13. How will you
know when students are able to do what you want them to be able to do
intellectually?
Comparing and
contrasting what they hear with what they already think, asking why
they should accept or reject, etc.
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