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Book
On Education Reform Offers Alternative To 'Cemetery Model' Of Learning
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 13, 2001
Contact: Barbara McKenna (831.459.3521); mckenna@cats.ucsc.edu
Five Standards model addresses needs of bilingual, low--income,
and other at--risk students
SANTA CRUZ--From hearing rooms on Capitol Hill
to parent meetings in cafeterias across the country, debate continues
on how to help more of America's students succeed in the classroom.
According to Roland Tharp, director of the national Center for
Research on Education, Diversity & Excellence (CREDE), academic
excellence can be achieved by more students--including students
traditionally at risk of academic failure. Like most education
researchers, Tharp is advocating change but, unlike many, Tharp
believes improvements will come not through curricular changes,
but by restructuring classroom activities and teacher--student
interaction.
Tharp is the co--author of the book Teaching Transformed: Achieving
Excellence, Fairness, Inclusion and Harmony (2000, Westview Press),
which outlines a classroom reform model that has been used successfully
in schools across the country--from inner city schools in Florida
to rural schools of Native American students in New Mexico to schools
with predominantly Spanish--speaking students in California.
"When schools open this fall," Tharp says, "the
overwhelming majority of students across the country will file
into ordered rows, pick up their books, and face their teachers.
They will be taught in one subject and then move on to the next,
in a recurring pattern of teacher--led instruction and assessment." Tharp
calls this approach--seated in rows, quietly and passively receiving
knowledge--"the cemetery model."
This method has been in use since at least the time of the Civil
War and numerous studies have shown that in such a classroom it
is mainly students in the mainstream--culturally, economically,
and academically--who succeed academically. But, Tharp says, there
are ways to structure classroom activity so that all students can
improve their learning, including those who are traditionally at
risk of failing because of linguistic or cultural differences,
poverty, or geographical isolation.
A leading education reformer and a professor of education at the
University of California, Santa Cruz, Tharp has spent decades studying
and developing effective standards for learning. Along with several
colleagues, he has implemented and observed his approaches in schools
throughout the country with great success. An advantage the standards
have over curriculur reform is that they are applicable across
grade levels, student populations, and subject matters.
Teaching Transformed, which is co--authored by Peggy Estrada,
Stephanie Stoll Dalton, and Lois Yamauchi, presents real--life
examples of transformed classrooms. In these classrooms students
often work in small groups. Sometimes groups are formed based on
skill level or language ability while others intentionally mix
students of varied skills and different native languages. In classrooms
with such structures, children tend to focus intently on their
projects, share ideas, take on leadership roles, and achieve high
levels of comprehension. While each group focuses on its assignment,
the teacher sits with one group at a time, functioning as a facilitator
rather than an authority.
At the core of this classroom model is what
Tharp and his colleagues call "Five Standards for Effective Pedagogy." These
standards are:
* Teachers and Students Producing Together
* Developing Language and Literacy Across the Curriculum
* Making Meaning: Connecting School to Students' Lives
* Teaching Complex Thinking
* Teaching through Conversation
(see below for details on the Five Standards)
Teachers in classrooms across the country have successfully applied
the Five Standards and researchers from CREDE have been working
in close collaboration with demonstration schools in Wastonville,
California, and Wai'anae, Hawaii, to comprehensively implement
the Five Standards.
Teaching Transformed is receiving high praise
from other experts in education. "In stark contrast to the dogmatic, reductionist,
controlling, 'one--size--fits--all' curricular prescriptions that
have gained so much favor in the field of education, these authors
propose a pedagogy that actually respects the intellect of teachers
and students, and that advocates building on their sociocultural
resources in creating advanced, flexible, and diverse circumstances
for learning," says Luis C. Moll, professor of education at
the University of Arizona.
The book presents the authors' vision of an ideal classroom, reviews
theory and research supporting their model, and offers a process
for transforming any traditional classroom into one structured
for the successful learning of a diversity of students. Along with
theory, the book offers examples, guidelines, and other resources
for creating a transformed classroom.
THE FIVE STANDARDS FOR EFFECTIVE PEDAGOGY
STANDARD 1: TEACHERS AND STUDENTS PRODUCING TOGETHER
The teacher:
* Designs instructional activities requiring student collaboration
to accomplish a joint product in the time available.
* Arranges classroom furniture to accommodate students' individual and group
needs to interact and work jointly for a product (students do not sit in rows,
facing forward).
* Plans with students how to work in groups and moves from one activity to
another, e.g., moving from large group introduction to small group activity
to clean-up and dismissal.
* Places students in a variety of groupings-language, friendship, mixed academic
ability, project, interest, size, etc. to promote interaction and productivity.
* Participates with students in joint productive activity.
* Monitors and supports student collaboration over products in positive ways.
STANDARD 2: DEVELOPING LANGUAGE AND LITERACY ACROSS THE CURRICULUM
The teacher:
* Designs activities that motivate students to use new language
for everyday and academic purposes.
* Interacts with students to model appropriate everyday and academic speech
in the language of instruction.
* Listens to student talk.
* Connects students' everyday talk to academic topics.
* Responds to student talk, questions at every opportunity, and makes "in-flight" changes
during instruction that directly relate to students' comments.
* Provides frequent opportunity for students to interact with each other and
the teacher during instructional activities.
STANDARD 3: MAKING MEANING: CONNECTING SCHOOL TO STUDENTS' LIVES
The teacher:
* Designs instructional activities based on what students already
know from home, community, and school.
* Acquires knowledge of local norms and perspectives by talking to students,
students' parents, community members, other insiders, and reading pertinent
documents.
* Assists students to connect and apply their learning to knowledge and issues
in home and community.
* Varies activities to include students' cultural preferences.
* Plans jointly with students to design community-based learning activities.
* Provides opportunities for parents and community members to participate in
classroom instructional activities.
STANDARD 4: TEACHING COMPLEX THINKING
The teacher:
* Presents challenging standards for student performance.
* Designs instructional tasks that advance student understanding to more complex
levels.
* Assists students to accomplish more complex understanding through the exercise
of the other principles.
* Gives critical feedback about how student performance compares with the standard.
STANDARD 5: TEACHING THROUGH CONVERSATION
The teacher:
* Converses with students about academic topics using content
lexicon and concepts in small group (3 to 7 students) on a regularly
scheduled basis.
* Assures that student talk occurs more frequently than teacher talk in the
speaking style students prefer.
* Guides conversation to focus on students' views, judgments, and rationales
based on text evidence and other substantive support.
* Leads students to prepare a product that indicates the stated goal of that
instructional conversation was achieved.
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