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Part 2: domain —academic/cognitive
Performance Objectives Methods, Materials, or Strategies Roles and Responsibilities Assessment
3. Joey will recognize and print his name.
  • Cards with one student’s name per card. Joey will __??__
  • Make name using __??__
  • __??__
Teacher:
  • monitor
TA:
  • facilitate
  • model
  • __??__
4. ___??___
  • __??__
  • __??__
Teacher:
  • monitor
TA:
  • facilitate
  • model
  • __??__
  • __??__

Questions

For Performance Objectives #2 and #3, the sample phrases and model sentences are missing in the “Methods, Materials, and Strategies” column. Suggest two reasonable sample phrases and two model sentences to fill in these blanks. Then suggest how each of the teaching strategies illustrate principles of learning.

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For Performance Objective #3, what is missing in the “Assessment” column? Suggest a reasonable method of assessment and then explain (1) why the method would be both valid and practical, and (2) any cautions the teacher should be aware of in using the method of assessment.

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Performance Objective #4 is missing both “Methods, Materials, and Strategies” and “Assessment.” Fill in both boxes—i.e. suggest two ways of implementing the objective and two ways of assessing it. Then explain how your suggestions reflect the nature of Performance Objective #4.

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Preparing for licensure: rosemary’s instructional decision

See also [link] , Nature of classroom communication; [link] , Facilitating complex thinking.

Rosemary had planned a lesson for her second grade class about personal and social management, but she was not satisfied with it. She had taken the general goal directly from the state’s official curriculum guide for health education: “Students will identify positive communication skills”, it said. But the guide said nothing about how to translate this goal into practice.

She was thinking that she would use puppets to demonstrate how to communicate in positive ways. The puppets would engage in dialogue, during which they would nod their heads appropriately, focus on the speaker, not interrupt, and keep still while listening. Maybe she would include a few communication mistakes as well—times when a puppet might interrupt in appropriately, for example—and challenge students to identify those moments.

Her plan seemed fine as far as it went, but she felt unsure about two things. One concern was how to make sure that students got the point of the activity, and did not regard it simply as entertainment. How should she introduce the activity? What should she say about it, either beforehand, during, or afterwards? What exactly should she tell students she is expecting from them?

The other concern was with the very format of the activity. She did not want students just to know about good communication skills; she wanted them to use them as well. The puppets did not seem to help with this latter purpose. How, she wondered, could she get students to take responsibility for practicing good communication? Was there a way to modify or extend the puppet activity that would do this? Or perhaps additional activities that students could do?

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Source:  OpenStax, Educational psychology. OpenStax CNX. May 11, 2011 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11302/1.2
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