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What are the Principles of Instruction?
• A ‘check-list’ of ten research-informed principles and suggestions for classroom practice
• Based on three sources:
• Research on how the brain acquires and uses new information
• Research on the classroom practices of those teachers whose students show the
highest gains
• Findings from studies that taught learning strategies to students
• Begin each lesson with a short review of previous learning
• Present new material in small steps with students practising after each step
• Ask a large number of questions and check the responses of all students
• Provide models
• Guide student practice
• Check for student understanding
• Obtain a high success rate
• Provide scaffolds for difficult tasks
• Require and monitor independent practice
• Engage students in weekly and monthly review
What are the Principles of Instruction?
Research on how the brain acquires and uses new information
• Draws on the research from cognitive science
• Aligns particularly with cognitive load theory
• ‘There is a limit to how much new information the human brain can process at one time
[…] there are no known limits to how much stored information can be processed at one
time.’ (Centre for Education Evaluation and Statistics: 2017)
Working (short-term) memory vs. long-term memory
The learning journey
The working
memory
bottleneck
Long-term memory
storehouse
Learning
Remembering
The learning journey
The working
memory
bottleneck
Long-term memory
storehouse
Learning
Remembering
Lost
Forgotten
fixed, limited and easily overloaded
almost unlimited
An average person can only
hold about four chunks of
information in their working
memory at one time
(Cowan, 2001)
‘If nothing has been changed in long-term
memory, nothing has been learned’
Kirschner, Sweller and Clark (2006)
So the aim of all instruction should be to
improve long-term memory
Schools may only focus on this
The working
memory
bottleneck
Long-term memory
storehouse
Learning
Or maybe only this
The working
memory
bottleneck
So this happens
at end of year
assessments.
We need to concentrate on augmenting
remembering
The working
memory
bottleneck
Long-term memory
storehouse
Remembering
•What makes effective feedback? What are the
expectations in your department?
•How can we engage students in feedback?
•How detailed should comments be?
•How often should we be marking like this?
Ineffective
Feedback
Effective
Feedback
What Does Good Feedback Look Like?
What do the codes mean? What you can do to improve?
QF: Question Focus
Some parts of your response are too descriptive and lack a focus on the question.
Some points may be irrelevant.
QF: Question Focus
Read the question very carefully. Highlight the key words to help you remain focused. Think very carefully
about the opening and closing sentences of your paragraphs. Is there a clear point at the start and a strong
link to the question at the end?
NC: Not Clear
Written expression needs some attention: e.g. your sentences are not explaining
ideas in a coherent way.
NC Not Clear
Re-read what you have written very self-critically. Have you expressed yourself clearly? Look carefully at
what you have actually written—not what you think you have written. Will someone else understand what
you have written? Check the structure of your sentences.
EV: Evidence
Arguments are not well supported. Either there is a lack of evidence or your chosen
quotations do not sufficiently support your point/help answer the Q.
EV: Evidence
Ensure that you have chosen evidence which links to your point and helps you to answer the question.
Select evidence carefully and make sure you embed quotations clearly into your writing.
EX: Explanations
Your explanations are not detailed enough and/or need more specific references to
the question.
EX: Explanations
Ensure that you have explained your evidence and linked it back to the point and overall question clearly
and concisely.
LA: Language Analysis
Your writing lacks detailed and thoughtful analysis of language.
LA: Language Analysis
Have you chosen particular words/phrases for analysis? Have you discussed multiple connotations and
interpretations? Have you discussed the impact such language has on the reader/audience?
C: Context
Your writing lacks contextual information
C: Context
Have you included relevant context? Is it interwoven into your argument?
AU: Audience
Your writing lacks a focus on the audience’s response.
AU: Audience
Have you said how the audience would feel/think and why?
SPaG: Spelling, Punctuation & Grammar
Your essay contains a number of important spelling errors of technical terms and may
lose you marks
SPaG: Spelling, Punctuation & Grammar
Study common spelling errors and practice writing them out repeatedly so you learn to spell them
correctly—especially if they include technical words that the examiner will expect you to know.
V: Vocabulary
Your writing may include vocabulary which is unclear or inappropriate to the task.
You may have also repeated vocabulary or misunderstood the meaning of some
words.
V: Vocabulary
Check your vocabulary choice. Have you used terms of possibility? Have you varied your connectives? Have
you used words in the correct context?
Closing the Gap
• Students become familiar with the marking codes
• Students understand the codes and how to apply
them to their own work
• Students respond to feedback
• Students re-draft work
Ways Forward
• Provide systematic feedback to students
• In verbal feedback, praise the process not the outcome
– encourage discussion
• Train students to respond to feedback independently
• Create time for reflection and improvement
• Train students to self and peer evaluate from the start
• Provide models of what is expected and help students
bridge the gap between their work and the exemplar
material
Pour réviser…
Pour commencer…
Traduisez les phrases en anglais.
J’en fais beaucoup
Elle n’en fait pas
Non, j’en ai trois Ils en mangent tous
les samedis
Il y’en a plusieurs
e.g. habiter
Present tense ‘nous’ form =
nous habitons
Take off the ‘ons’ = habitons
Add the endings for the
different people:
J’habit_____
Tu habit_____
Il/elle/on habit_____
Nous habit_____
Vous habit_____
Ils/elles habit_____
ais
ais
ait
ions
iez
aient
Comment dit-on…?
I used to watch
Step 1:
Find the ‘nous’ form of the
verb in the present tense:
regardons
Step 2:
Take off the ‘ons’:
regardons
Step 3:
Add the correct ending for
the person:
je ais
tu ais
il/elle/on ait
nous ions
vous iez
ils/elles aient
Je regardais
Sur les petits tableaux blancs, écrivez la phrase à
l’imparfait:
I used to play
Je jouais
Sur les petits tableaux blancs, écrivez la phrase à
l’imparfait:
I used to have
J’avais
Sur les petits tableaux blancs, écrivez la phrase à
l’imparfait:
He used to go
Il allait
Sur les petits tableaux blancs, écrivez la phrase à
l’imparfait:
I used to be/I was
J’étais
Remember
‘être’ is the
only verb with
an irregular
stem - ét
Pour commencer…Below are some expressions which can be used to develop your writing and
speaking about where you live, by increasing the range of your language.
Match up the English and the French:
1. de l’un côté…
2. de l’autre côté…
3. en plus…
4. ce que j’aime
5. ce que je n’aime pas
6. qui se trouve…
7. car…
8. puisque…
9. il y a…
10.l’inconvénient, c’est que…
1. ______________________
2. ______________________
3. ______________________
4. ______________________
5. ______________________
6. ______________________
7. ______________________
8. ______________________
9. ______________________
10. ______________________
which is found because since there is
what I like what I don’t like in addition
on the one hand… on the other hand… the disadvantage is that…
Les avantages et les inconvénients d’habiter en ville
J’habite un bel appartement au centre de Londres.
J’aime habiter en ville parce qu’il y a beaucoup de
distractions et mon quartier est intéressant. C’est trop
bruyant parce qu’il y a beaucoup d’embouteillages.
Pour améliorer le paragraphe, adaptez-le pour gagner plus de
varieté en utilisant les mots et phrases ci-dessous:
Les avantages et les inconvénients d’habiter en ville
J’habite un bel appartement au centre de Londres.
J’aime habiter en ville parce qu’il y a beaucoup de
distractions et mon quartier est intéressant. C’est trop
bruyant parce qu’il y a beaucoup d’embouteillages.
Pour améliorer le paragraphe, adaptez-le pour gagner plus de
varieté en utilisant les mots et phrases ci-dessous:
‘When re-reading Rosenshine’s principles, I am struck
by just how simple it all sounds. But this shouldn’t be
surprising. Teaching, at its core, is simple. Recap
previous information, input of new information, apply
it, test and respond. However, doing these simple
things well is complex and deserves some
consideration.’
Mark Enser
Head of Geography and blogger, Heathfield Community College
References and acknowledgements
Centre for Education Statistics and Evaluation, NSW Department of Education (2017) Cognitive load theory: research that
teachers really need to understand. https://www.cese.nsw.gov.au//images/stories/PDF/cognitive-load-theory-VR_AA3.pdf
Cowan, N (2001) The magical number 4 in short-term memory: A reconsideration of mental storage capacity, Behavioural
and Brain Sciences, 24:1, 87-114
Enser, Mark https://heathfieldteachshare.wordpress.com/2018/04/23/putting-theory-into-practice/
Kirschner, P.A., Sweller, J. & Clark, R.E., (2006) Why Minimal Guidance During Instruction Does Not Work: An Analysis of the
Failure of Constructivist, Discovery, Problem-Based, Experiential, and Inquiry-Based Teaching, Educational Psychologist,
41:2, 75-86 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1207/s15326985ep4102_1?needAccess=true
Rosenshine, B. (2012) Principles of Instruction: Research based principles that all teachers should know. American
Educator, Spring 2012. http://www.aft.org/pdfs/americaneducator/spring2012/Rosenshine.pdf
Sealy, Clare @ClareSealy

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Principles of instruction and feedback for erasmus

  • 1.
  • 2. What are the Principles of Instruction? • A ‘check-list’ of ten research-informed principles and suggestions for classroom practice • Based on three sources: • Research on how the brain acquires and uses new information • Research on the classroom practices of those teachers whose students show the highest gains • Findings from studies that taught learning strategies to students
  • 3. • Begin each lesson with a short review of previous learning • Present new material in small steps with students practising after each step • Ask a large number of questions and check the responses of all students • Provide models • Guide student practice • Check for student understanding • Obtain a high success rate • Provide scaffolds for difficult tasks • Require and monitor independent practice • Engage students in weekly and monthly review What are the Principles of Instruction?
  • 4. Research on how the brain acquires and uses new information • Draws on the research from cognitive science • Aligns particularly with cognitive load theory • ‘There is a limit to how much new information the human brain can process at one time […] there are no known limits to how much stored information can be processed at one time.’ (Centre for Education Evaluation and Statistics: 2017) Working (short-term) memory vs. long-term memory
  • 5. The learning journey The working memory bottleneck Long-term memory storehouse Learning Remembering
  • 6. The learning journey The working memory bottleneck Long-term memory storehouse Learning Remembering Lost Forgotten
  • 7. fixed, limited and easily overloaded almost unlimited An average person can only hold about four chunks of information in their working memory at one time (Cowan, 2001)
  • 8. ‘If nothing has been changed in long-term memory, nothing has been learned’ Kirschner, Sweller and Clark (2006) So the aim of all instruction should be to improve long-term memory
  • 9. Schools may only focus on this The working memory bottleneck Long-term memory storehouse Learning
  • 10. Or maybe only this The working memory bottleneck
  • 11. So this happens at end of year assessments.
  • 12. We need to concentrate on augmenting remembering The working memory bottleneck Long-term memory storehouse Remembering
  • 13. •What makes effective feedback? What are the expectations in your department? •How can we engage students in feedback? •How detailed should comments be? •How often should we be marking like this? Ineffective Feedback Effective Feedback What Does Good Feedback Look Like?
  • 14. What do the codes mean? What you can do to improve? QF: Question Focus Some parts of your response are too descriptive and lack a focus on the question. Some points may be irrelevant. QF: Question Focus Read the question very carefully. Highlight the key words to help you remain focused. Think very carefully about the opening and closing sentences of your paragraphs. Is there a clear point at the start and a strong link to the question at the end? NC: Not Clear Written expression needs some attention: e.g. your sentences are not explaining ideas in a coherent way. NC Not Clear Re-read what you have written very self-critically. Have you expressed yourself clearly? Look carefully at what you have actually written—not what you think you have written. Will someone else understand what you have written? Check the structure of your sentences. EV: Evidence Arguments are not well supported. Either there is a lack of evidence or your chosen quotations do not sufficiently support your point/help answer the Q. EV: Evidence Ensure that you have chosen evidence which links to your point and helps you to answer the question. Select evidence carefully and make sure you embed quotations clearly into your writing. EX: Explanations Your explanations are not detailed enough and/or need more specific references to the question. EX: Explanations Ensure that you have explained your evidence and linked it back to the point and overall question clearly and concisely. LA: Language Analysis Your writing lacks detailed and thoughtful analysis of language. LA: Language Analysis Have you chosen particular words/phrases for analysis? Have you discussed multiple connotations and interpretations? Have you discussed the impact such language has on the reader/audience? C: Context Your writing lacks contextual information C: Context Have you included relevant context? Is it interwoven into your argument? AU: Audience Your writing lacks a focus on the audience’s response. AU: Audience Have you said how the audience would feel/think and why? SPaG: Spelling, Punctuation & Grammar Your essay contains a number of important spelling errors of technical terms and may lose you marks SPaG: Spelling, Punctuation & Grammar Study common spelling errors and practice writing them out repeatedly so you learn to spell them correctly—especially if they include technical words that the examiner will expect you to know. V: Vocabulary Your writing may include vocabulary which is unclear or inappropriate to the task. You may have also repeated vocabulary or misunderstood the meaning of some words. V: Vocabulary Check your vocabulary choice. Have you used terms of possibility? Have you varied your connectives? Have you used words in the correct context?
  • 15. Closing the Gap • Students become familiar with the marking codes • Students understand the codes and how to apply them to their own work • Students respond to feedback • Students re-draft work
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  • 18. Ways Forward • Provide systematic feedback to students • In verbal feedback, praise the process not the outcome – encourage discussion • Train students to respond to feedback independently • Create time for reflection and improvement • Train students to self and peer evaluate from the start • Provide models of what is expected and help students bridge the gap between their work and the exemplar material
  • 20. Pour commencer… Traduisez les phrases en anglais. J’en fais beaucoup Elle n’en fait pas Non, j’en ai trois Ils en mangent tous les samedis Il y’en a plusieurs
  • 21. e.g. habiter Present tense ‘nous’ form = nous habitons Take off the ‘ons’ = habitons Add the endings for the different people: J’habit_____ Tu habit_____ Il/elle/on habit_____ Nous habit_____ Vous habit_____ Ils/elles habit_____ ais ais ait ions iez aient
  • 22. Comment dit-on…? I used to watch Step 1: Find the ‘nous’ form of the verb in the present tense: regardons Step 2: Take off the ‘ons’: regardons Step 3: Add the correct ending for the person: je ais tu ais il/elle/on ait nous ions vous iez ils/elles aient Je regardais
  • 23. Sur les petits tableaux blancs, écrivez la phrase à l’imparfait: I used to play Je jouais
  • 24. Sur les petits tableaux blancs, écrivez la phrase à l’imparfait: I used to have J’avais
  • 25. Sur les petits tableaux blancs, écrivez la phrase à l’imparfait: He used to go Il allait
  • 26. Sur les petits tableaux blancs, écrivez la phrase à l’imparfait: I used to be/I was J’étais Remember ‘être’ is the only verb with an irregular stem - ét
  • 27. Pour commencer…Below are some expressions which can be used to develop your writing and speaking about where you live, by increasing the range of your language. Match up the English and the French: 1. de l’un côté… 2. de l’autre côté… 3. en plus… 4. ce que j’aime 5. ce que je n’aime pas 6. qui se trouve… 7. car… 8. puisque… 9. il y a… 10.l’inconvénient, c’est que… 1. ______________________ 2. ______________________ 3. ______________________ 4. ______________________ 5. ______________________ 6. ______________________ 7. ______________________ 8. ______________________ 9. ______________________ 10. ______________________ which is found because since there is what I like what I don’t like in addition on the one hand… on the other hand… the disadvantage is that…
  • 28. Les avantages et les inconvénients d’habiter en ville J’habite un bel appartement au centre de Londres. J’aime habiter en ville parce qu’il y a beaucoup de distractions et mon quartier est intéressant. C’est trop bruyant parce qu’il y a beaucoup d’embouteillages. Pour améliorer le paragraphe, adaptez-le pour gagner plus de varieté en utilisant les mots et phrases ci-dessous:
  • 29. Les avantages et les inconvénients d’habiter en ville J’habite un bel appartement au centre de Londres. J’aime habiter en ville parce qu’il y a beaucoup de distractions et mon quartier est intéressant. C’est trop bruyant parce qu’il y a beaucoup d’embouteillages. Pour améliorer le paragraphe, adaptez-le pour gagner plus de varieté en utilisant les mots et phrases ci-dessous:
  • 30. ‘When re-reading Rosenshine’s principles, I am struck by just how simple it all sounds. But this shouldn’t be surprising. Teaching, at its core, is simple. Recap previous information, input of new information, apply it, test and respond. However, doing these simple things well is complex and deserves some consideration.’ Mark Enser Head of Geography and blogger, Heathfield Community College
  • 31. References and acknowledgements Centre for Education Statistics and Evaluation, NSW Department of Education (2017) Cognitive load theory: research that teachers really need to understand. https://www.cese.nsw.gov.au//images/stories/PDF/cognitive-load-theory-VR_AA3.pdf Cowan, N (2001) The magical number 4 in short-term memory: A reconsideration of mental storage capacity, Behavioural and Brain Sciences, 24:1, 87-114 Enser, Mark https://heathfieldteachshare.wordpress.com/2018/04/23/putting-theory-into-practice/ Kirschner, P.A., Sweller, J. & Clark, R.E., (2006) Why Minimal Guidance During Instruction Does Not Work: An Analysis of the Failure of Constructivist, Discovery, Problem-Based, Experiential, and Inquiry-Based Teaching, Educational Psychologist, 41:2, 75-86 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1207/s15326985ep4102_1?needAccess=true Rosenshine, B. (2012) Principles of Instruction: Research based principles that all teachers should know. American Educator, Spring 2012. http://www.aft.org/pdfs/americaneducator/spring2012/Rosenshine.pdf Sealy, Clare @ClareSealy

Notas do Editor

  1. Learning is an extended process that can’t happen in a single lesson. If we want to improve learning we need to focus lot more on systems that foster remembering.