Friday, July 29, 2016

Guided Discovery


Goals of Guided Discovery
  1. To excite children about classroom materials
  2. To help children explore materials with confidence and imagination and build a repertoire of constructive ways to use the materials in their academic learning
  3. To enable children to make independent and purposeful choices
  4. To establish and teach norms and routines for the use, care, and storage of materials

Guided Discovery Benefits Learning

Guided Discovery has a deep impact on children’s learning. Children get interested in classroom materials and learn how to use them creatively in their academic work. They have opportunities to stretch their thinking and work independently. Perhaps most importantly, children are at the center of the process. Every aspect of Guided Discovery encourages children to offer ideas, act on them, and share the results of their work with others, which stimulates everyone’s thinking about future uses of the material.

Step One: Introduction and Naming

One of the goals of step one is to get children interested in the material. One way teachers do this—particularly with younger children—is to create a mystery. This engages children’s thinking and helps them see familiar materials with fresh eyes.
But materials don’t always need to be hidden inside packages, and introductions don’t always need to take the form of mysteries. The teacher’s tone of voice and the way s/he holds the material can catch children’s attention. To do this, teachers use open-ended questions that encourage children to think about they’re past experiences with the material and to share current observations. Questions such as “How have you used dictionaries so far?”, “What might be in this box? What are your clues?”, “What do you know about markers?”, and “Look closely at your ruler. What’s one thing you notice?” are all examples of open-ended questions.
Open-ended questions are at the heart of Guided Discovery, occurring in every step. When teachers ask an open-ended question, they are looking for a reasoned, relevant response rather than one “correct” answer. By listening without judgment to a range of answers, the teacher says, “You have valuable experience and ideas that we want to hear about.”

Step Two: Generating and Modeling Students’ Ideas

In step two, the teacher invites children to think through how to use the material. Teachers can begin with an open-ended question to get children thinking. When the brainstorming falters, she/he challenges the students to go beyond their first ideas. She/he uses the phrase “I wonder” so that the challenge seems fun rather than stressful.
After the children name ideas for using the material, the teacher invites them to model some of the uses:
There are many situations during a typical day when a teacher needs to show students the correct way to do something (for example, the safe way to carry scissors). However, during Guided Discovery teachers turn to the students to model their own ideas. This sends the message that the teacher values the children’s ideas for using the material creatively and appropriately and trusts their ability to do so. As several children step forward to shape clay or draw a design with markers or look up a word in the dictionary, everyone in the class observes and learns.

Step Three: Exploration and Experimentation

After students have generated a list of ideas and a few children have modeled ideas, it’s time for children to independently explore the material. They tend to begin trying what was modeled. But with encouragement, they’ll soon start experimenting with new ideas. Although the teacher sets some limits on the task, the children still can make choices about how to do the task. They learn to turn to their own and their classmates’ resources rather than always looking to the teacher.

Step Four: Sharing Exploratory Work

There are many opportunities during Guided Discovery for children to learn from each other: they share and model their ideas, sometimes help each other during exploration, and at the end of the Guided Discovery they have an opportunity to share the work they’ve done.
Work-sharing is always voluntary; in order for children to feel free to experiment, they need to know they won’t have to make their results public. Teachers can lower the risk of work-sharing by having the entire group display their designs at once. The more examples of each other’s work children see, the more opportunity they have to learn from each other.

Step Five: Cleanup and Care of Materials

In the final step, the teacher engages the children in thinking through, modeling, and practicing how they will clean up materials, put them away, and access them independently at a later time. As in previous steps, it is the children who generate and model ideas.

Guided Discovery Benefits Learning

Guided Discovery has a deep impact on children’s learning. Children get interested in classroom materials and learn how to use them creatively in their academic work. They have opportunities to stretch their thinking and work independently. Perhaps most importantly, children are at the center of the process. Every aspect of Guided Discovery encourages children to offer ideas, act on them, and share the results of their work with others, which stimulates everyone’s thinking about future uses of the material.

Won’t this approach take too long? How do we cover all required material if we spend so much time in teaching concepts?
The guided discovery approach cannot be rushed — students must be allowed to make mistakes, pick wrong choices, and face consequences. This requires more time, but will help learners develop a deep understanding of principles; therefore, learning follow-up material is lot easier and faster.

Why is this important?
Quite often we hear people say, “don’t reinvent the wheel.” From an educator’s perspective, this notion is completely wrong and often counterproductive. There is no learning if there is no invention that is personally meaningful to a student. Every leaner should be provided an opportunity to reinvent. Guided discovery approach focuses on helping every student to reinvent important concept in their mind. Rote memorization and figuring out the right answer using blind techniques are not the way to develop understanding. Many concepts in science are not intuitive, even though most people believe in them.
Consider the example, why do all objects fall at the same time? When I ask this question, rephrased “as which object, one heavy and one light, will hit the ground first when dropped from the same height,” some students answer the question correctly and others incorrectly. Further probing indicates even the students who answered correctly have no real understanding. They answered correctly not because they know this is a tricky question and they’ve heard that all objects fall at the same time.
We regularly witness even top performing students (who scored well in AP physics and calculus) show no understanding. This is dangerous. Real understanding is essential for success and it comes from experience. The guided discovery is an effective pedagogical approach that can truly engage learners by providing authentic learning experiences.

Guided discovery of dictionaries




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