14 TeachingStrategies
14 TeachingStrategies
14 TeachingStrategies
Teaching Strategies to
Promote the Development of
Students Learning Skills
Introduction
Many course learning outcomes and the
associated assessment tasks require some level of
proficiency in a wide range of generic academic
skills. Some of these capabilities are so embedded
in academia that we may assume student
competency and not explicitly help students to
develop them. Academic reading, academic
writing and all its associated components,
research strategies and the ability to engage with
ideas critically are core expectations in most
fields of study. Teachers can help to enhance
these abilities by using simple
strategies that can form part of their
day to day teaching. Complementing
these generic competencies are the
unique requirements associated with
reading, writing and methods of
inquiry in particular disciplines.
Teaching and assessment approaches
can also integrate initiation and
coaching in the conventions and
nuances of particular disciplines. This
booklet suggests some strategies that
you may like to incorporate into your
teaching to help your students to
develop these important attributes. In
this booklet we cover academic
writing, reading and research skills,
TEACHING STRATEGIES TO PROMOTE THE
DEVELOPMENT OF STUDENTS LEARNING SKILLS TDU
Academic writing
Simple in-class strategies to
improve writing competency
Bean (2001) suggests a number of
simple in-class writing strategies.
These include asking students for a
written response to a question at the beginning of
a class, based on the readings or anticipating a
significant idea in the forthcoming class.
Similarly, Bean (2001) and Angelo and Cross
(1993) suggest inviting students to ask questions
about something that they have found confusing
or difficult to grasp mid-class. Bean (2001) also
suggests asking students to write something down
when discussion palls or when things become
overheated. Additionally, Angelo and Cross
(1993) and Bean (2001) recommend that students
can summarise their understanding of something
in writing at the end of a class. All of these
strategies help students to deepen their
intellectual grasp of a subject and develop the
capacity to manage complex ideas in writing.
They also offer the additional bonus of helping to
make the students learning visible to the lecturer,
and prompt an appropriate response.
Task instructions
Students are often baffled by task instructions.
Discussion of typical assessment instructions can
be easily built into a lecture, tutorial or on-line
teaching component:
TEACHING STRATEGIES TO PROMOTE THE
DEVELOPMENT OF STUDENTS LEARNING SKILLS TDU
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Marshalling evidence
Students can be divided into groups and given a
few materials on a course-related contentious
topic - for example, a sustainability issue, an
educational perspective or theory, a legal
decision. The volume of resources can be kept
relatively slim and readily accessible (newspaper
articles, simple statistics, etc). Students have to
make a decision on the issue and simply list the
supporting evidence in order of importance. This
exercise can be done in class or subsequently as
an early formative part of a more extended piece
of assessment.
Academic integrity
There are numerous practical exercises that
students can undertake both to develop their
understanding of the concept of academic
integrity and to equip them with the requisite
skills. A very simple exercise which will also
invite them to engage more deeply with content is
to get students to practise writing passages of
texts or articles in their own words. The exercise
can be done in groups or individually and handed
in as part of a larger assignment.
Another strategy is to show students a range of
writing samples and get them to identify different
kind of plagiarism such as cutting and pasting
from the internet or books, paraphrasing
without acknowledgement, and
interweaving words from a source with the
writers own words. Students can then be
asked to rewrite the relevant sections in ways
that avoid plagiarism.
Referencing
Many lecturers tend to assume student familiarity
with different types of source material, their
particular conventions and uses for researchers.
Lecturers can readily make this transparent by
comparing the usefulness, relevance, merits, and
appropriateness of different sources of
information on a class topic. The benefits of
taking students behind the scenes like this are
numerous. Students will not only learn directly
about the different types of materials they can
consult, but they will also get an insight into how
materials are selected and evaluated and how the
evidence is used to build a position in relation to
a topic. The deliberate reference to multiple
sources can also deepen students understanding
of a topic and invite critical engagement through
exposure to different perspectives.
A related assessment is to select a range of
different types of references on a topic and ask
students to write a short commentary on their
pertinence for the topic and their merits. This
exercise can be part of a larger assignment.
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Research skills
Formulating a research question
For many students, there is an almost mysterious
process about the passage from reading to
writing. It is as though a random selection of
materials vaguely related to the topic and
extensive jottings will gradually shape themselves
up into a more or less acceptable response to the
assignment topic. One very useful suggestion is
to coach students to approach their sources with a
core question and associated sub-questions. In the
first year, this may simply involve getting
students to turn their assignment topics into a
question and sub-questions. Turning a topic into
questions and sub-questions is a process that can
be done regularly with students in large or small
class settings in relation to different class content.
In later years a class exercise can be to discuss a
particular concept in class with students and then
get them to work individually or in groups to
formulate a possible research question and subquestions. These exercises can be linked into a
subsequent assessment task and also tied into
library sessions on searching databases. From a
learning perspective, the practice of posing
research questions (in a discipline-appropriate
manner) is an important preparation for
postgraduate studies and for working life.
Your students might find mind-mapping a useful
concept in helping to organise ideas and
arguments. A mindmap can start with the central
question to be answered, and branches that list
the arguments for and against, complete with
references that support the points. Look for
Ingmar Svantessons Learning Maps and
Memory Skills (1998) or google mindmapping
for heaps of examples..
TEACHING STRATEGIES TO PROMOTE THE
DEVELOPMENT OF STUDENTS LEARNING SKILLS TDU
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Evaluating material
This can be readily practised in the context of a
small or large class. Again the exercise can be
integrated into ongoing discussion of a topic and
can deepen engagement. The lecturer or tutor can
bring some short extracts from different resource
materials relating to the class topic. Students can
work individually or in pairs/groups and use a
few set questions to evaluate the material.
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Academic Reading
Introduction and general principles
Reading academic material is so interwoven with
the processes of academic life that it is difficult
for lecturers to remember the enormous
challenges that reading academic material poses
for most students. Students are unfamiliar with
the different forms of academic writing and their
unique conventions, formats and language.
Students will also not generally have any insight
into the way in which work in journal articles is
written for communities of scholars in different
fields. There are other more general factors to
bear in mind. Academic articles are completely
different from most students prior experience of
reading and students may be baffled by the notion
of reading material that is not necessarily
immediately accessible and may need teasing out.
Furthermore, the current generation of students
have been nurtured on highly visual material and
instant messaging. This is a long way from the
level of travail often associated with making
sense of an academic reading.
TEACHING STRATEGIES TO PROMOTE THE
DEVELOPMENT OF STUDENTS LEARNING SKILLS TDU
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Types of material
Students can be exposed to different types of
reading material and their conventions in a range
of ways. One simple way is to show the particular
source in the context of a topic discussion in a
lecture. For example, the lecturer could show a
TEACHING STRATEGIES TO PROMOTE THE
DEVELOPMENT OF STUDENTS LEARNING SKILLS TDU
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Evaluating reading
This is a very difficult process for students,
especially in their early stages of study. Students
are unfamiliar with academia and the discipline
and may also lack the more general academic
vocabulary with which to manage and articulate
evaluation and judgement. In the early stages of
study, students are more likely to see knowledge
as absolute (Perry, 1970). For all of these reasons
it can be difficult for students to respond
immediately with an evaluative and questioning
stance. The process of evaluation should be
introduced and coached very gradually, and
initially most effort should be directed to getting
the students to extract the essential meaning of a
reading. Evaluative tasks can be introduced
gradually through the use of one or two
questions for example students can be asked to
find the evidence to support main points or to
examine the way in which certain key words are
used. It may be that in an entire course the
practice of and coaching in evaluation can focus
on just one or two key competencies.
Critical thinking
Introduction
Critical thinking and associated attributes (such
as evaluation, judgement, and reflection) feature
widely in accounts of the defining features of
higher education, in lecturers accounts of their
aims, in graduate profiles and in assessment
instructions and criteria. However, we very
seldom incorporate the teaching of critical
thinking into our programmes. As Moon (2008)
observes, Although thinking must surely be at
the heart of education, it is not often explicitly
taken into consideration in pedagogy. Critical
thinking does, however, feature in the rhetoric of
education, particularly higher education (p.vii).
Moreover, there are widely different
understandings of what the term means and also
possible disciplinary differences in the
understanding and usage of the term. It is
likely that for some of us the term critical
thinking is an inherited and relatively
unexplored part of higher education rhetoric.
Before we think about ways to help enhance
our students critical thinking competencies,
we need to clarify our own understanding of
the term and any discipline specific
manifestations of it. Moon (2008) explores the
term critical thinking from a range of
perspectives - teachers views, students
perceptions, what she terms the common sense
view (p.25) and extensive discussion of the term
in the literature. She uncovers a range of views,
considerable confusion as to its meaning,
different foci and emphases as well as certain
common themes. There also appears to be
crossover between conceptions of critical
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DEVELOPMENT OF STUDENTS LEARNING SKILLS TDU
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20
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Using Examples
Give students a number of different examples of
writing about the same event/idea/or piece of
writing. The examples should display varying
degrees of critical engagement. Students can be
asked to identify examples of critical thinking in
the accounts, explain the reasons for the sections
they identify and possibly rank the different pieces
of writing according to the quality of their critical
engagement (adapted from Moon, 2008).
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Collaborative learning
According to Bean (2001), one of the most
effective ways to coach students in the
development of critical thinking skills is
through focussed small group work. Bean
suggests that small group work of this kind
needs to be carefully planned and usually
involves students having to work in groups to
respond to a discipline-related problem or issue,
record their process, their different perspectives
and conclusions and then report their findings.
This exercise can be linked to a subsequent
written assignment if desired. See attachment
from Bean (2001) on the next few pages for a
number of ways of posing questions or problems
for group discussion and resolution.
Creating dissonance
Creating a sense of discomfort/dissonance or
unease is a good stimulus to thinking. Sometimes
this can be done through very simple strategies
such as framing a lecture with a provocative
question, a problem scenario which needs to be
approached in the light of lecture material or
creating a critical incident. Other prompts can
include critical incidents, unresolved
questions, or an invitation to
respond to hypothetical
possibilities.
For an extended
list of strategies
and resources, see
Moon (2008).
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Students Problem
Helping Strategy
Poor reading
problem
Failure to
reconstruct
arguments as they
read
Failure to assimilate
the unfamiliar;
resistance to
uncomfortable or
disorientating views
Limited
understanding of
rhetorical context
27
Unfamiliarity with
cultural codes
Unfamiliar vocabulary
Failure to adapt to
different kinds of
discourse
28
30
32
34
36
References
Bean, J. C. (2001). Engaging ideas. San
Francisco: Jossey Bass.
Moon, J. (2008). Critical thinking.
Routledge: London & New York.
Perry, W. (1970). Forms of intellectual
and academic development in the
college years. New York: Holt,
Rhinehart & Winston.
Svantesson, I. (1998) Learning Maps and
Memory Skills (2nd Edition). London: Kogan
Page
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