FACILITATING LEARNING
SELF-REGULATION, COORDINATING COGNITION AND
MOTIVATION IN LEARNING
CLASSROOM AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS SHAPING
MOTIVATION
TEACHERS STRATEGIES FOR FACILITATING POSITIVE
MOTIVATIONAL PROCESSESS IN LEARNING
(lesson planning, designing learning and assessment activities)
Prepared by:
REYBETH DINEROS RACELIS
GOOD
MORNING!!!
MOTIVATIONAL
FACTORS IN
LEARNING
A. DEFINING MOTIVATION AND MOTIVATIONAL PROBLEMS IN
LEARNING
B. INTRINSIC AND EXTRINSIC MOTIVATION
C. SELF-COMPETENCE BELIEFS, SELF-EFFICACY,
SELF-EXPECTATION, ACADEMIC SELF-CONCEPT
AND OUTCOME EXPECTANCY BELIEFS
D. GOAL THEORIES IN LEARNING
E. SELF-REGULATION, COORDINATING COGNITION AND
MOTIVATION IN LEARNING
F. CLASSROOM AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS SHAPING
MOTIVATION
G. TEACHERS STRATEGIES FOR FACILITATING POSITIVE
MOTIVATIONALPROCESSES IN LEARNING
(Lesson Planning, Designing Learning and Assessment Activities)
SELF-REGULATION,
COORDINATING
COGNITION
AND MOTIVATION IN
LEARNING
Self-regulation
- refers to a person's ability to
master himself.
Indicators of Self-regulation
Set standards for one self
Monitor and evaluate one's own
behavior
Impose consequences on oneself for
one's successes or failures
HOW DOES SELF-
REGULATION
RELATE TO
MOTIVATION?
A student who is capable of self-regulation is more
likely to be more intrinsically motivated because he sets
his goals and standards, he monitors his progress, and
evaluates his own performance.
A student who is capable of self-regulation, is not only
capable of regulating his behavior, he is also capable of
his own learning.
PROCESSESS INVOLVING
SELF-REGULATION
 GOAL SETTING
Self-regulated learners know
what they want to accomplish
when they read or study.
PLANNING
Self-regulated learners
determine ahead of time how
best to use the time they have
available for learning.
ATTENTION CONTROL
Self-regulated learners try to focus
their attention on the subject matter
at hand and clear their minds
potentially distracting thoughts and
emotions.
APPLICATION OF
LEARNING STRATEGIES
Self-regulated learners choose
different learning strategies
depending on the specific goal they
hope to accomplish.
SELF-MONITORING
Self-regulated learners continually
monitor their progress toward their
goals and they change their strategies
or modify their goals, if necessary.
SELF-EVALUATION
Self-regulated
learners determine whether what
they have learned is sufficient for
the goals they have set.
From the perspective of social
cognitive theorists, self
regulation entails at least four
processes (Bandura, 1986;
Schunk, 1989; Schunk &
Zimmerman, 1996)
1. STANDARDS AND GOALS
As mature human beings we
tend to set standards for our
own behavior.
2. SELF-
OBSERVATION
An important part of self-
regulation is to observe oneself
in action.
3. SELF-JUDGMENT
People's behavior are
frequently judged by others.
4. SELF-REACTION
As people
become increasingly self-
regulating, they begin to
reinforce themselves.
THE COGNITIVE
SIDE OF SELF-
REGULATION
Cognition - is the process of learning in the broadest
sense that includes perception, memory, judgment, and
thinking. It is both a mental activity and behavior that
provides an understanding of the world arising from
biological, experiential, motivational and social
influences.
Cognitive(knowledge) - concerned with act or process of
knowing or perceiving. (psychological process)
SELF-REGULATION (according to Winnie, 1995)
-involves cognitive processes as well as behavior.
CLASSROOM AND
ENVIRONMENTAL
FACTORS
SHAPING MOTIVATION
Ten Ways to Motivate
Students
1. Publish Student Work
Seeing one’s work in print or posted on the
Internet as part of a classroom website can
be truly motivating. This will allow students
to have a goal to work towards and they can
see and share the results of their hard work
with others.
2. Use Supporting Material and
Props
Bringing manipulative and props into the class can be
truly motivating. Some history teachers have been
known to dress up as characters from history like
Abraham Lincoln or Theodore Roosevelt which is
always fun for students and teacher alike. However,
even just bringing in items like foreign money that can
be passed around or posting pictures around the
classroom about the topic at hand can be interest
building for students.
3. Provide Specific Rewards Students Can
Work Towards
Come up with one or more rewards that students can
work towards. Maybe you agree to allow them 10
minutes of free time on Fridays or you will provide
them with popcorn during the next lesson specific
movie. Whatever it is, come up with what the students
need to do to achieve the goal and stick to your plan.
4. Provide Choices for Students
Whenever possible, allow students to have some choice in what
they are learning. For example, if you are having the students
write an essay, you might give them a couple of broader topics to
choose from so that they can pick something they are more
interested in. Another area of choice can come in the method of
presentation for projects. The students may choose to create a
website, a PowerPoint, or a song. The ability to demonstrate
learning through choice and a variety of methods can be very
motivating for students.
5. Have Students Work Towards
Individual Goals
Have students come up with one or more
specific goals of what they want to achieve
in your class. You can attach a grade to
these goals in terms of how much effort
they put into achieving the goals.
6. Give Students a Role
Allow students to be as involved in
possible in your classroom
environment. Try to fit in debates and
simulations to give them the
opportunity to participate in a more
direct manner.
7. Connect Learning to the Real
World
As often as you can, connect what students
are learning to the world around them. By
connecting the classroom lesson to the
students’ personal lives we can provide them
with greater incentives and buy-in on what
you are teaching.
8. Mix It Up
Too much of anything can quickly lead to
boredom, including lectures, whole group
discussions, small group work, debates, and
cooperative learning activities. Therefore, make
sure to vary your lessons accordingly. Similarly,
vary homework assignments so that students are
not always doing the same thing every night.
9. Get Students Involved in Contests
Find contests, publishing events, scholarships, and events that
students can participate in and work towards outside of the
classroom. Maybe you have all your students send a
submission for a story to a local magazine. Maybe you have
students write an essay for a college scholarship competition.
By connecting what you are teaching in the classroom to
something that carries real world rewards, you can help
increase student involvement.
10. Bring Service Into the
Classroom
Most students have an innate desire to work
towards a goal greater than themselves. For some
this might be that they want to help preserve the
environment. Others might want to help the poor or
focus on individuals hit hard by natural disasters.
If you can tap into this while connecting the actions
to lessons in the classroom, you can build on these
natural, altruistic desires.
Classroom Factors
That Affect
Motivation
Teacher Attitude
Teacher attitude makes a difference in motivating
students. Students quickly sense when a teacher is
disconnected with what she's teaching or when she
really doesn't care for or isn't connected with the
students, not just as a class, but as individuals. An
attitude of criticism or favoritism disrupts good
order in the classroom and motivates students to act
out in a negative fashion because the students do not
believe the teacher cares, or believe nothing they do
will be good enough.
Home Situation
Home situations affect student motivation in the
classroom. If students come from homes where they
are loved and encouraged, the students will approach
classroom work with eagerness and with a willingness
to learn. If the students do not have a positive home
environment or if the home situation doesn't provide
appropriate levels of nutrition and/or sleep, students
attend school with a disadvantage and a lack of
motivation because of physical or emotional
problems.
Teaching Approach
Lectures and a recitation of dry facts and figures tend to motivate
students not to pay attention and to “tune out” a teacher they
believe is boring. However, when the students become part of the
learning process, learning can become more enjoyable and
adaptable to those with different learning styles. Students can be
motivated when teachers help them “see” what they're learning in
a different context. If teaching about a historical figure or event,
read stories about the time period. As long as the historical
background is accurate, fiction stories draw students into the
historical setting and make the era come alive. When students
connect better with what they're learning, they can become more
motivated.
Interactive Activities
Using interactive activities such as having students act
out skits or plays on the topic--or writing scripts to act
out--can be motivating factors for positive classroom
participation. Also, the use of puzzles, games, special
speakers and bulletin-board displays are factors that
can affect classroom motivation. Encouraging students
to set goals in the classroom can also provide
motivation.
Environmental Factors
Affecting Motivation
Human Environmental Factors
Affecting Motivation
If environment is defined as the sum total
of one's surrounding then environmental factors
that affect student's motivation include human as
well as non-human factors.
Teacher's Affective Traits
A teacher's positive affective traits such as
caring, understanding, genuine respect, enthusiasm,
and professionalism, the student's sense of belonging
to a learning community; and parent's supportive
behavior definitely create a learning environment
that is facilitative of learning. The contrast of these
produces a counterproductive learning environment.
Affective characteristics of
effective teachers:
 CARING
 FAIRNESS & RESPECT
 SOCIAL INTERACTIONS w/ STUDENTS
 ENTHUSIASM & MOTIVATION IN
LEARNING
 ATTITUDE TOWARD TEACHING
PROFESSION
 REFLECTIVE PRACTICES
Bullying and the Need to
Belong
Students form part of the human
environment of the learner. In fact,
they far outnumber the teachers in the
learning environment.
Parents as Part of the
Learner's Human
Learning Environment
Parents who are supportive of their children's learning are observed
to do the following:
 Follow-up status of their children's performance
 Supervise their children in their homework/project
 Check their children's notebooks
 Review their children's corrected seat works and test papers
 Attend conferences for Parents, Teacher's Community Association
(PTCA)
 Are willing to spend on children's project and involvement in school
activities
 Participate actively in school-community projects
 Confer with children's teachers when necessary
 Are aware of their children's activities in school
 Meet the friends of their children
 Invite their children's friends at home
Teacher Strategies For
Facilitating Positive
Motivational Processes In
Learning (Lesson Planning,
Designing Learning and
Assessment Activities
LESSON PLAN
It is the teacher's road map of what student's
need to learn and how it will be done effectively during
the class time. Before you plan your lesson, you will
first need to identify the learning objectives
for the class meeting. Then, you can design appropriate
learning activities and develop strategies to obtain
feedback on student learning. A successful lesson plan
addresses and integrates three key components.
THREE COMPONENTS
1. Objectives for student learning
2. Teaching/learning activities
3. Strategies to check student's
understanding
STEPS FOR
PREPARING A
LESSON PLAN
 OUTLINE LEARNING
OBJECTIVES
The first step to determine what you
want student's to learn and be able
to do at the end of the class.
 DEVELOP THE
INTRODUCTION
Now that you have your learning
objectives, in order of their
importance, design the specific
activities you will use to get students
to understand and apply what they
learned.
PLAN THE SPECIFIC
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
(the main body of the lesson)
Prepare several different ways of
explaining the material (real-life
examples, analogies, visuals, etc.) to
catch the attention of more students
and appeal to different learning styles.
 PLAN TO CHECK FOR
UNDERSTANDING
Now that you have explained the topic and
illustrate it with different examples, you
need to check for student's understanding.
How will you know that students are
learning?
 DEVELOP A CONCLUSION
AND A PREVIEW
Go over the material covered
in class by summarizing the
point of lesson.
CREATE A REALISTIC
TIMELINE
Know how easy it is to run out of time
and not cover all of the many points
they had planned to cover. A realistic
timeline will reflect your flexibility
and readiness to adapt specific
classroom environment.
Suggestions in
Making Lesson
Plan
1.The lesson plan is an aid to
teaching.
It should not be a bible to be
followed to the letter.
2. A lesson plan should not
be too detailed. Numerous
details may obscure the
main points and cause
confusion.
3. Lessons should be planned
within the time allotment for the
subject.
Beginning teachers
sometimes cover too much ground
resulting in teaching becoming
superficial and the class does not
learn much.
4. The textbook should not be
regarded as infallible.
After all, textbooks are made by
human beings who are also subject
to mistakes.
5. The lesson plan may serve as a
basis for future plans and a means
of evaluating the success of
learning. -A lazy teacher who
teaches the same subject year after
year may continue using the same
plan.
“The greater the structure of a
lesson and the more precise the
directions on what is to be
accomplished, the higher the
achievement rate.”
-Harry Wong
LEARNING DESIGN
Professional learning that
increases educator effectiveness and
results for all students integrates
theories, research, and models of
human learning to achieve its intended
outcomes.
FACTORS INFLUENCE DECISION
ABOUT LEARNING DESIGNS
• Goals of learning
• Characteristics of the learners
• Their comfort with learning process and one
another
• Their familiarity with the content
• Educator's work environment
• Resources available to support learning
• Apply learning theories, research and models
ASSESSMENT ACTIVITIES OR TASK
Assessment activities or task can provide more
useful information for the purpose of making
judgment at key points (including assigning
grade for the record of school achievement) if
they provide assessment information across a
range of syllabus outcomes within the one
activity or task.
EFFECTIVE ASSESSMENT ACTIVITIES OR TASK
Connect naturally with what has been taught and allow students to make their own
connections with concepts they have previously learned.
 Address a range outcomes in one activity or task and are thus time efficient and
manageable.
 Explicitly describe the expectation and requirements of the activity or task of the
learner.
 Engage the learner, a worthwhile activities or task for student learning, and are relevant
to real life situations.
 Provide opportunities for all students which encouraging higher order thinking, depth of
knowledge and understanding.
 Provide a range of students responses
 Help you determine if students are ready to move on to the next stage in the learning.
 Represent ways in which their knowledge, skills and understanding can be applied to a
new situation.
MOTIVATIONAL STRATEGIES:
 employ a variety of teaching strategies
 narrate a story or recite a poem which is related to the lesson
 from experience, teacher could vividly remember the kind of
motivation that would work every group of students
 a good sense of humor never fails to elicit positive reaction as long as
it is not overdone.
 a pleasing personality always wins positive interaction
 plan lessons that will arouse their curiosity
 lessons that will require manipulation of tools and operations of
equipment will keep everyone moving to get a chance at the wheel
 introduce an educational game related to the lesson
 some teaching strategies that have high motivating power could be
tried
(role playing, drama presentation, and musical show)
 film showing, slide presentations, television, broadcasts, learning
devices will keep them highly attentive and concentrated.
REFERENCES:
Maria Rita D. Lucas, PhD. and Brenda B. Corpuz, PhD., FACILITATING
LEARNING: A Metacognitive Process, 2nd edition, pages 175-177
Violeta A. Vega, PhD. and Nelia G. Prieto, M.A., Facilitating Learning
2006
pages 84-85
ONLINE REFERENCES:
http://712educators.about.com/od/motivation/tp/Ten-Ways-To-
Motivate-Students.htm
http://www.ehow.com/list_7637082_classroom-factors-affect-
motivation.html
https://prezi.com/yqwil_u9zsrs/environmental-factors-affecting-
motivation
THANK
YOU!Prepared by:
MS.REYBETH DINEROS RACELIS
BSED – MATHEMATICS

FACILITATING LEARNING

  • 1.
    FACILITATING LEARNING SELF-REGULATION, COORDINATINGCOGNITION AND MOTIVATION IN LEARNING CLASSROOM AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS SHAPING MOTIVATION TEACHERS STRATEGIES FOR FACILITATING POSITIVE MOTIVATIONAL PROCESSESS IN LEARNING (lesson planning, designing learning and assessment activities) Prepared by: REYBETH DINEROS RACELIS
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
    A. DEFINING MOTIVATIONAND MOTIVATIONAL PROBLEMS IN LEARNING B. INTRINSIC AND EXTRINSIC MOTIVATION C. SELF-COMPETENCE BELIEFS, SELF-EFFICACY, SELF-EXPECTATION, ACADEMIC SELF-CONCEPT AND OUTCOME EXPECTANCY BELIEFS D. GOAL THEORIES IN LEARNING E. SELF-REGULATION, COORDINATING COGNITION AND MOTIVATION IN LEARNING F. CLASSROOM AND ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS SHAPING MOTIVATION G. TEACHERS STRATEGIES FOR FACILITATING POSITIVE MOTIVATIONALPROCESSES IN LEARNING (Lesson Planning, Designing Learning and Assessment Activities)
  • 5.
  • 6.
    Self-regulation - refers toa person's ability to master himself.
  • 7.
    Indicators of Self-regulation Setstandards for one self Monitor and evaluate one's own behavior Impose consequences on oneself for one's successes or failures
  • 8.
  • 9.
    A student whois capable of self-regulation is more likely to be more intrinsically motivated because he sets his goals and standards, he monitors his progress, and evaluates his own performance. A student who is capable of self-regulation, is not only capable of regulating his behavior, he is also capable of his own learning.
  • 10.
  • 11.
     GOAL SETTING Self-regulatedlearners know what they want to accomplish when they read or study.
  • 12.
    PLANNING Self-regulated learners determine aheadof time how best to use the time they have available for learning.
  • 13.
    ATTENTION CONTROL Self-regulated learnerstry to focus their attention on the subject matter at hand and clear their minds potentially distracting thoughts and emotions.
  • 14.
    APPLICATION OF LEARNING STRATEGIES Self-regulatedlearners choose different learning strategies depending on the specific goal they hope to accomplish.
  • 15.
    SELF-MONITORING Self-regulated learners continually monitortheir progress toward their goals and they change their strategies or modify their goals, if necessary.
  • 16.
    SELF-EVALUATION Self-regulated learners determine whetherwhat they have learned is sufficient for the goals they have set.
  • 17.
    From the perspectiveof social cognitive theorists, self regulation entails at least four processes (Bandura, 1986; Schunk, 1989; Schunk & Zimmerman, 1996)
  • 18.
    1. STANDARDS ANDGOALS As mature human beings we tend to set standards for our own behavior.
  • 19.
    2. SELF- OBSERVATION An importantpart of self- regulation is to observe oneself in action.
  • 20.
    3. SELF-JUDGMENT People's behaviorare frequently judged by others.
  • 21.
    4. SELF-REACTION As people becomeincreasingly self- regulating, they begin to reinforce themselves.
  • 22.
    THE COGNITIVE SIDE OFSELF- REGULATION
  • 23.
    Cognition - isthe process of learning in the broadest sense that includes perception, memory, judgment, and thinking. It is both a mental activity and behavior that provides an understanding of the world arising from biological, experiential, motivational and social influences. Cognitive(knowledge) - concerned with act or process of knowing or perceiving. (psychological process) SELF-REGULATION (according to Winnie, 1995) -involves cognitive processes as well as behavior.
  • 24.
  • 25.
    Ten Ways toMotivate Students
  • 26.
    1. Publish StudentWork Seeing one’s work in print or posted on the Internet as part of a classroom website can be truly motivating. This will allow students to have a goal to work towards and they can see and share the results of their hard work with others.
  • 27.
    2. Use SupportingMaterial and Props Bringing manipulative and props into the class can be truly motivating. Some history teachers have been known to dress up as characters from history like Abraham Lincoln or Theodore Roosevelt which is always fun for students and teacher alike. However, even just bringing in items like foreign money that can be passed around or posting pictures around the classroom about the topic at hand can be interest building for students.
  • 28.
    3. Provide SpecificRewards Students Can Work Towards Come up with one or more rewards that students can work towards. Maybe you agree to allow them 10 minutes of free time on Fridays or you will provide them with popcorn during the next lesson specific movie. Whatever it is, come up with what the students need to do to achieve the goal and stick to your plan.
  • 29.
    4. Provide Choicesfor Students Whenever possible, allow students to have some choice in what they are learning. For example, if you are having the students write an essay, you might give them a couple of broader topics to choose from so that they can pick something they are more interested in. Another area of choice can come in the method of presentation for projects. The students may choose to create a website, a PowerPoint, or a song. The ability to demonstrate learning through choice and a variety of methods can be very motivating for students.
  • 30.
    5. Have StudentsWork Towards Individual Goals Have students come up with one or more specific goals of what they want to achieve in your class. You can attach a grade to these goals in terms of how much effort they put into achieving the goals.
  • 31.
    6. Give Studentsa Role Allow students to be as involved in possible in your classroom environment. Try to fit in debates and simulations to give them the opportunity to participate in a more direct manner.
  • 32.
    7. Connect Learningto the Real World As often as you can, connect what students are learning to the world around them. By connecting the classroom lesson to the students’ personal lives we can provide them with greater incentives and buy-in on what you are teaching.
  • 33.
    8. Mix ItUp Too much of anything can quickly lead to boredom, including lectures, whole group discussions, small group work, debates, and cooperative learning activities. Therefore, make sure to vary your lessons accordingly. Similarly, vary homework assignments so that students are not always doing the same thing every night.
  • 34.
    9. Get StudentsInvolved in Contests Find contests, publishing events, scholarships, and events that students can participate in and work towards outside of the classroom. Maybe you have all your students send a submission for a story to a local magazine. Maybe you have students write an essay for a college scholarship competition. By connecting what you are teaching in the classroom to something that carries real world rewards, you can help increase student involvement.
  • 35.
    10. Bring ServiceInto the Classroom Most students have an innate desire to work towards a goal greater than themselves. For some this might be that they want to help preserve the environment. Others might want to help the poor or focus on individuals hit hard by natural disasters. If you can tap into this while connecting the actions to lessons in the classroom, you can build on these natural, altruistic desires.
  • 36.
  • 37.
    Teacher Attitude Teacher attitudemakes a difference in motivating students. Students quickly sense when a teacher is disconnected with what she's teaching or when she really doesn't care for or isn't connected with the students, not just as a class, but as individuals. An attitude of criticism or favoritism disrupts good order in the classroom and motivates students to act out in a negative fashion because the students do not believe the teacher cares, or believe nothing they do will be good enough.
  • 38.
    Home Situation Home situationsaffect student motivation in the classroom. If students come from homes where they are loved and encouraged, the students will approach classroom work with eagerness and with a willingness to learn. If the students do not have a positive home environment or if the home situation doesn't provide appropriate levels of nutrition and/or sleep, students attend school with a disadvantage and a lack of motivation because of physical or emotional problems.
  • 39.
    Teaching Approach Lectures anda recitation of dry facts and figures tend to motivate students not to pay attention and to “tune out” a teacher they believe is boring. However, when the students become part of the learning process, learning can become more enjoyable and adaptable to those with different learning styles. Students can be motivated when teachers help them “see” what they're learning in a different context. If teaching about a historical figure or event, read stories about the time period. As long as the historical background is accurate, fiction stories draw students into the historical setting and make the era come alive. When students connect better with what they're learning, they can become more motivated.
  • 40.
    Interactive Activities Using interactiveactivities such as having students act out skits or plays on the topic--or writing scripts to act out--can be motivating factors for positive classroom participation. Also, the use of puzzles, games, special speakers and bulletin-board displays are factors that can affect classroom motivation. Encouraging students to set goals in the classroom can also provide motivation.
  • 41.
  • 42.
    Human Environmental Factors AffectingMotivation If environment is defined as the sum total of one's surrounding then environmental factors that affect student's motivation include human as well as non-human factors.
  • 43.
    Teacher's Affective Traits Ateacher's positive affective traits such as caring, understanding, genuine respect, enthusiasm, and professionalism, the student's sense of belonging to a learning community; and parent's supportive behavior definitely create a learning environment that is facilitative of learning. The contrast of these produces a counterproductive learning environment.
  • 44.
    Affective characteristics of effectiveteachers:  CARING  FAIRNESS & RESPECT  SOCIAL INTERACTIONS w/ STUDENTS  ENTHUSIASM & MOTIVATION IN LEARNING  ATTITUDE TOWARD TEACHING PROFESSION  REFLECTIVE PRACTICES
  • 45.
    Bullying and theNeed to Belong Students form part of the human environment of the learner. In fact, they far outnumber the teachers in the learning environment.
  • 46.
    Parents as Partof the Learner's Human Learning Environment
  • 47.
    Parents who aresupportive of their children's learning are observed to do the following:  Follow-up status of their children's performance  Supervise their children in their homework/project  Check their children's notebooks  Review their children's corrected seat works and test papers  Attend conferences for Parents, Teacher's Community Association (PTCA)  Are willing to spend on children's project and involvement in school activities  Participate actively in school-community projects  Confer with children's teachers when necessary  Are aware of their children's activities in school  Meet the friends of their children  Invite their children's friends at home
  • 48.
    Teacher Strategies For FacilitatingPositive Motivational Processes In Learning (Lesson Planning, Designing Learning and Assessment Activities
  • 49.
    LESSON PLAN It isthe teacher's road map of what student's need to learn and how it will be done effectively during the class time. Before you plan your lesson, you will first need to identify the learning objectives for the class meeting. Then, you can design appropriate learning activities and develop strategies to obtain feedback on student learning. A successful lesson plan addresses and integrates three key components.
  • 50.
    THREE COMPONENTS 1. Objectivesfor student learning 2. Teaching/learning activities 3. Strategies to check student's understanding
  • 51.
  • 52.
     OUTLINE LEARNING OBJECTIVES Thefirst step to determine what you want student's to learn and be able to do at the end of the class.
  • 53.
     DEVELOP THE INTRODUCTION Nowthat you have your learning objectives, in order of their importance, design the specific activities you will use to get students to understand and apply what they learned.
  • 54.
    PLAN THE SPECIFIC LEARNINGACTIVITIES (the main body of the lesson) Prepare several different ways of explaining the material (real-life examples, analogies, visuals, etc.) to catch the attention of more students and appeal to different learning styles.
  • 55.
     PLAN TOCHECK FOR UNDERSTANDING Now that you have explained the topic and illustrate it with different examples, you need to check for student's understanding. How will you know that students are learning?
  • 56.
     DEVELOP ACONCLUSION AND A PREVIEW Go over the material covered in class by summarizing the point of lesson.
  • 57.
    CREATE A REALISTIC TIMELINE Knowhow easy it is to run out of time and not cover all of the many points they had planned to cover. A realistic timeline will reflect your flexibility and readiness to adapt specific classroom environment.
  • 58.
  • 59.
    1.The lesson planis an aid to teaching. It should not be a bible to be followed to the letter.
  • 60.
    2. A lessonplan should not be too detailed. Numerous details may obscure the main points and cause confusion.
  • 61.
    3. Lessons shouldbe planned within the time allotment for the subject. Beginning teachers sometimes cover too much ground resulting in teaching becoming superficial and the class does not learn much.
  • 62.
    4. The textbookshould not be regarded as infallible. After all, textbooks are made by human beings who are also subject to mistakes.
  • 63.
    5. The lessonplan may serve as a basis for future plans and a means of evaluating the success of learning. -A lazy teacher who teaches the same subject year after year may continue using the same plan.
  • 64.
    “The greater thestructure of a lesson and the more precise the directions on what is to be accomplished, the higher the achievement rate.” -Harry Wong
  • 65.
    LEARNING DESIGN Professional learningthat increases educator effectiveness and results for all students integrates theories, research, and models of human learning to achieve its intended outcomes.
  • 66.
    FACTORS INFLUENCE DECISION ABOUTLEARNING DESIGNS • Goals of learning • Characteristics of the learners • Their comfort with learning process and one another • Their familiarity with the content • Educator's work environment • Resources available to support learning • Apply learning theories, research and models
  • 67.
    ASSESSMENT ACTIVITIES ORTASK Assessment activities or task can provide more useful information for the purpose of making judgment at key points (including assigning grade for the record of school achievement) if they provide assessment information across a range of syllabus outcomes within the one activity or task.
  • 68.
    EFFECTIVE ASSESSMENT ACTIVITIESOR TASK Connect naturally with what has been taught and allow students to make their own connections with concepts they have previously learned.  Address a range outcomes in one activity or task and are thus time efficient and manageable.  Explicitly describe the expectation and requirements of the activity or task of the learner.  Engage the learner, a worthwhile activities or task for student learning, and are relevant to real life situations.  Provide opportunities for all students which encouraging higher order thinking, depth of knowledge and understanding.  Provide a range of students responses  Help you determine if students are ready to move on to the next stage in the learning.  Represent ways in which their knowledge, skills and understanding can be applied to a new situation.
  • 69.
    MOTIVATIONAL STRATEGIES:  employa variety of teaching strategies  narrate a story or recite a poem which is related to the lesson  from experience, teacher could vividly remember the kind of motivation that would work every group of students  a good sense of humor never fails to elicit positive reaction as long as it is not overdone.  a pleasing personality always wins positive interaction  plan lessons that will arouse their curiosity  lessons that will require manipulation of tools and operations of equipment will keep everyone moving to get a chance at the wheel  introduce an educational game related to the lesson  some teaching strategies that have high motivating power could be tried (role playing, drama presentation, and musical show)  film showing, slide presentations, television, broadcasts, learning devices will keep them highly attentive and concentrated.
  • 70.
    REFERENCES: Maria Rita D.Lucas, PhD. and Brenda B. Corpuz, PhD., FACILITATING LEARNING: A Metacognitive Process, 2nd edition, pages 175-177 Violeta A. Vega, PhD. and Nelia G. Prieto, M.A., Facilitating Learning 2006 pages 84-85 ONLINE REFERENCES: http://712educators.about.com/od/motivation/tp/Ten-Ways-To- Motivate-Students.htm http://www.ehow.com/list_7637082_classroom-factors-affect- motivation.html https://prezi.com/yqwil_u9zsrs/environmental-factors-affecting- motivation
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    THANK YOU!Prepared by: MS.REYBETH DINEROSRACELIS BSED – MATHEMATICS