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View Full Version : New teaching style needed



Knight of Cydonia
10th November 2007, 14:37
Many teachers and parents know children nowadays listen more to their iPods than to their words. Students have huge numbers of sources of information in this era of information technology. Teachers and parents are challenged by the attractiveness of computer-assisted information resources and their being more affordable for wider communities.

As a consequence, it is becoming harder and harder for the traditional approach of teaching to control student behavior since students share other values offered by the multimedia.

Take an example; teachers may need more than just words to ensure students read the recommended books for the following lessons. Students may spend most of their time after school utilizing advanced technology like the internet and cyber-gaming, and think that books are just out of character.

It does not mean that teachers can no longer refer to books as lesson materials, but merely depending on books in today's classroom is like going out for dinner in a Padang restaurant with no intention of spending more money. We may satisfy our hunger but may not satisfy our appetite despite the variety of food available.

It is wiser to understand than to control students' behavior. Teachers need to apply new methods of assessment that allow students to choose what they want to learn and to show in their own ways the results of their learning. Teachers also need to collaborate more with parents and other stakeholders in assuring the achievement of individual student learning objectives.

Tests as the traditional way of student assessments are limited in their capacity to cover all domains of students' abilities. Tests generally measure the students' cognitive ability, whereas the psychomotoric as well as the affective abilities remain unseen. The main purposes of assessments are to report, to guide and to diagnose student learning.

Therefore, considerations of sources of learning and preferred styles of learning are also very important in choosing appropriate kinds of assessments for students. All the high-tech stuff that students today are engaged with every day influences the development of their three skill domain sand assessing their cognitive skill only is unfair.

In his thesis "Continuous Assessment in Bhutan: Science Teachers' Perspective", Chewang (1999) defines continuous assessment, or authentic assessment, or alternative assessment, as a special method of assessment by which teachers at regular intervals assess students over the whole course.

Thus, things to assess can be diaries, videos, power point presentations, audio recordings, simulations of real-life problems and even parents' notes and commentaries.

The application of this new method of assessment allows students to develop positive feelings of achievement by showing others what they can do rather than what they do not know. Very few students perform well in all subjects they are studying but all students deserve appreciation for what they are good at.

Imagine what opportunities this continuous assessment provides for students who are only average at many of their courses, but skillful in others.

Besides, continuous assessment enables teachers to diagnose the relevance of their curriculum and lesson materials to students' life outside school. Students are also in control of what they are going to learn.

Students are expected to assess themselves in all stages prior to their final projects using all possible data like notations in group meetings, footage, photos and portfolios to see their progress toward the objective of their studies.

Parents and other students may take part in this process through parent and peer assessments. Teachers make themselves available for giving quality feedback to highlight each student's strengths and weaknesses on continuous scheduled assessment days.

Students should clarify all commentaries given by teachers to remedy all their weaknesses and most importantly to spell out any misunderstanding of value judgment. Students are permitted to defend their own criteria of accomplishments based on their personal traits and background, and teachers should place more value on students' critical thinking and move beyond the one-right-answer model.

Continuous assessment gives teachers more responsibilities in students' learning progress and they may have to spend much more time preparing and doing the assessments.

Applying consistently the continuous assessment in one particular subject will eventually lead to students' improving in other subjects as well. Indeed, all records of students' performances may be retrieved for future use such as when students need to convince interviewers for job vacancies of their computer and interpersonal communication skills, as well as foreign language mastery.

No matter how complicated and problematical this continuous assessment may sound in the context of our education system, consensus should be made by educational leaders to give the continuous assessment a go.

The Jakarta Post

:lol: i found this so funny, so teachers were worried that their students doesn't hear their every single word again nowaday, because the students were busy observing the technology.

Jazzratt
10th November 2007, 15:19
:rolleyes: Urgh, continuous assessment is such a horrible system, the idea is valid but it sure as hell ain't sound. It would involve a lot more compulsory work for students and a lot of students (like me when I was younger, and others I have known) do not respond well to increased workloads - especially during time outside of school (which, presumably, is when a lot of the assessed material will be written.).

I think the point that students don't pay attention at school because of technology is not really valid, most classrooms are innocent of the gadgets that have teachers so worried. Also a lot of young people have no real interest in these technologies because it's seen as "geeky", especially if one is learning something.

That said I do agree that it is a grave mistake not to embrace modern technology and integrate it into the learning environment as much as possible, but without arbitrarily using the technology for the sake of it (if it ain't broke, as the adage goes, don't fix it).

JazzRemington
10th November 2007, 16:10
There is a programming language called LISP that one can effectively use to create an instructor. This is seen as more effective as a traditional teacher because the student gets one-on-one instruction and his answers to the questions are checked in real time. Thus, if the question is "what is 5x2," for example, the instant the student enters anything other than a 1 as the first digit, he is told he is wrong.

Of course, this is only good for subjects that have been deeply researched (such as mathematics) and have a clear right and wrong way of performing things.

MarxSchmarx
16th November 2007, 10:24
That said I do agree that it is a grave mistake not to embrace modern technology and integrate it into the learning environment as much as possible, but without arbitrarily using the technology for the sake of it.

It depends on the field. In the natural sciences we can't embrace technology enough. Even for the sake of it. For example, I think high school physics students are better off being exposed to computational physics than astronomy.

But at the same time, I don't think areas like pure math, law, or Greek literature should be taught any differently than they have for hundreds of years. Jazzratt is right. Pedagogy in those areas ain't broke so don't fuck with them.


There is a programming language called LISP that one can effectively use to create an instructor. This is seen as more effective as a traditional teacher because the student gets one-on-one instruction and his answers to the questions are checked in real time. Thus, if the question is "what is 5x2," for example, the instant the student enters anything other than a 1 as the first digit, he is told he is wrong.

Paging Dr. Turing! Paging Dr. Turing! :lol: