Spending time going through the learning activities and seeing how children have responded to a certain task or question, can really help change it for future activities. It is also important to look back at the learning objects so you can measure what the children have learned. It is important to have clear objectives at the planning stage, in order to evaluate whether pupils have achieved them after the lesson. If children have rushed through the activity and then looked bored then it would be obvious that the task was a bit too easy and not really suitable or beneficial for that group. Therefore you would need to try and make it more engaging and stimulating, perhaps by making it more difficult or time-consuming so the students really have to work to complete it.
The opposite learning styles, involving listening and verbal skills, are more difficult for me. I would much rather learn how something works by using it than by listening to someone tell me how it works. When any of my teachers stand in front of the classroom and just reads form the text book. This type of teaching is my kryptonite, the words just pass right through me. To help me my learning process in class's like that i need to recreate the lectured material using my own visual tools and adapt my teacher's preferred teaching methods to my preferred learning styles.
EDUC 302 Case Study 1 You have a student who is struggling with your synthetic approach to teaching phonics. Explain 3 alternative approaches to phonics instruction that you could use to help this student. Alternative #1: Linguistic Phonics Instruction, on page 231, is an approach that teaches unknown words by placing together sound-symbol patterns. For example, Dr. Seuss books use sound-symbol patterns and use the repetition of words that sound alike to teach new words. A good way to teach this to a child who is having problems with synthetic patterns, is to give them books, like Cat in the Hat by Dr. Seuss.
You need to encourage the use of good manners please, thankyou, etc and deter bad manners and behaviour by talking to the child in question and telling them how they need to behave. 1.2 Describe with examples how to behave appropriately for a child or young person’s stage of development. Year 1 children are just starting with lessons so they need to be told how to sit and listen to what they are being told so they know what they need to do to complete the task in hand. In Phonics you need to sound out the sounds and words, see how the children get on spelling the word and then help them by sounding the word out again or breaking the sounds down so they can hear the letter sounds easier. When they get it right let them know they have got it correct.
This paper will briefly look at these two different approaches, discuss some options on how best to deliver an effective reading program, and review a commercial reading program, in this case, Jolly Phonics, and its usefulness in promoting phonological awareness. Phonics based instruction is basically the premise that reading is learned by making sense of the smallest components of language, meaning the letters, then slowly progressing towards the larger components of sounds, words and sentences, teaching the children the relationship between the letters. It is then that they learn to decode language and gain understanding. In essence, they break the code and master the components. This is generally taught through direct instruction, via the use of worksheets and rote exercises.
An intuitive learner is one who prefers to take information in an abstract form such as ideas, images or ideas. When I am learning something new I like being able to see what it is I am learning and use charts, pictures or diagrams to solve it. Visual learners are those who learn through seeing things, they learn by using a visual aid when studying like colorful outline of test materials. Again when it comes to learning I get it a lot faster when someone shows me by using a diagram, picture, outline or charts. In each subject I tend to color organize my notes and notecards which makes it easier for me to study.
I am not an outgoing person and I like better to study by myself or with a teacher. I might try using symbols or pictures in the margin to emphasize important points. Tape my self-summarizing key points, then play the tape as a memory rehearsal strategy. Making an outline of key topics in chart or diagram format. Writing down problems and/or questions and practice writing solutions and/or responses.
Normally, (for numeracy and literacy) I support the higher ability group for Numeracy due to the 1-2-1 pupil I support, and the middle group in Literacy whilst keeping an eye on the other rest of group (just in case, but they are normally competent to work independently). When working with a table or a group, there will normally be pupils who are at different levels. That is why it is so important to be able to modify and adapt activities to enhance learning experiences. One important contribution whilst the learning activity is delivered is to ensure that learners understand the learning tasks and to reinforce the teaching points from the input. Being aware of the needs of pupils and the level of support they require, whether learning or personality needs.
You will receive the good materials that provide by school. In addition, teachers show you methods to learn the foreign language easily. Someone try to study hard but they do not know the right methods or not have experience. Besides, in class, we can discuss and exchange ideas together, so we can practice lots to develop speaking skill and listening skill. They are crucial skill
My Learning Style 1 My Learning Style Dylan Chambers COLL100 I053 Sum 12 American Military University Christian Barnes-Young My Learning Style 2 My Learning Style There are several different types of learning styles that help people learn. There are people that prefer to learn visually. To learn visually means that you grasp the subject better when you are taught through images, pictures, color and other visual media to help learn. Another style is aural learning which means people use sound, rhyme, and music to understand. Furthermore there are verbal learners.