Learner Centered Ideology: Presented To: Sir Khalid Mehmood
Learner Centered Ideology: Presented To: Sir Khalid Mehmood
Learner Centered Ideology: Presented To: Sir Khalid Mehmood
Presented to:
Sir Khalid Mehmood
Overview And Examples
Aemen Dilber
Learner Centered Ideology
• Learner centered ideology is a phenomenon
that puts the learner at the center.
• According to learner centered ideology,
educators should develop school curriculum
that allow students to become active
participants in an activity, in the content, in the
lesson and have more choice on what they
want to do and how to do it.
• According to Schiro (2008), schools should be
places where individual enjoy as they acquire
knowledge and develop their inherent
capabilities.
The Ideal School
• Underlying the thoughts of learner centered
educators is an image or vision of an ideal
school: “school of tomorrow”, as John Dewey
wrote in 1915.
• An important dimension of learner centered
educators vision of their ideal school is that
they perceive it to be different from the
traditional school.
• It is different in atmosphere, housing,
furniture, different in its basic philosophy and
psychology; different in the role that it assigns
to pupil and teacher initiative. (Rugg and
Shumaker, 1928)
Ideal School for All Learner
• The ideal schools envisioned by Learner
centered educators have existed in the past and
exist today. They exist at all levels of
education.
• Francis Parker promoted them at all
educational levels in the 1890s.
The Learner-Centered School
• The learner-centered school concentrates on
meeting the needs, interest, desires of a child
and insists that ‘children should not be
conscious of adult expectancy.
• The learner-centered ideal school is different
from the traditional school because it is based
on “nothing less than reorientation of entire
school around the child.” (Rugg & Shumaker)
• First, Learner-centered schools are “child-
centered institutions in contrast to the teacher-
centered and principal-centered schools of the
conventional order.”
• Second, Learner-centered schools are organized
around the needs and interests of individuals
rather than the demands of the school subjects.
• Third, learner centered schools orient themselves
around the needs and interests of the children
rather than around parental expectations for their
children.
The Activity School
• The activity school is a school full of activity,
a school where experience is the medium
through which individuals grow and learn, a
school where, indeed, “experience is the
keynote of education.”
• Knowledge comes through the interaction of
an individual with the surrounding world, both
inanimate and social.
• “I know” is taken to be the slogan of the
traditional school.
• In contrast, “I have experienced” is the slogan
of the activity school.
The activity school program is based on based on
four practices:
• Firsthand experience with reality.
• Experience with physical materials and people
• Experience involving physical activity
• Experience inside and outside the classroom
Firsthand Experience with Reality
• The activity school provide firsthand
experience with reality and avoid the
traditional school’s practice of providing only
secondhand experience through reading,
writing, listening and viewing.
Experience with Physical Materials
and People
• Physical materials of both animate and
inanimate form are prominent in the activity
school.
• Children experience the growing of plants
firsthand in the activity school instead of
reading about them as they would in the
traditional school.
Experience Involving Physical Activity
• The ideal school is full of activity; physical,
verbal, social and emotional.
• It radiates the belief that healthy intellectual,
social and emotional growth must be
accomplished by physical and verbal activity.
Experience Inside and Outside the
Classroom
• Activity school is designed to provide learners
with experiences that occur both inside and
outside the classroom.
• Teachers within the school frequently take
children outside the classroom and school to
explore phenomena within their everyday
natural and man-made world.
Overview and Examples
Kainat Mumtaz
The Organic school
• Marietta Johnson was an educational reformer. She
founded a progressive school called the Organic
school.
• A school designed to further the natural growth of the
developing human organisms.
• It is organized to respect the inner movement of
growth of learners.
The Traditional School
• The traditional system based on the acquisition of
knowledge through the division of learning according
to the age of the student.
• To achieve this increase in skills and knowledge, this
system relies on two fundamental axes such that:
“The professor and reference books”.
Ways of Difference
• Organic school is different from the traditional school
in three ways:
First because its curriculum is based on the natural
developmental growth of people rather than only
demands external to them
It does not pressure people to acquire academic skills
and knowledge
Organic school educators do not force children to
learn to read or write before their bodies and mind are
ready to voluntarily to do so.
• It is the task of the organic school to provide the
medium of growth-an intellectually rich physically
interesting,socialy humane, emotionally joyous
instructional environment for individuals to
experience.
• Second the organic school is different from the
traditional school because:
it believe people evolve through a series of
qualitatively different growth stages as they develop
from infancy to adulthood
The organic school views children as different from
adults, treat then differently and bases its curriculum
on the nature of children
The organic school treats children as children and
provides them with childlike activities.
• Third the organic school is different from the
traditional school because:
it believes Individual grow and Learn
intelectually,socially,emotionally,and physically in
their own unique and idiosyncratic ways and at their
own individual rates rather than in a uniform manner.
The integrated school
The ideal school is an integrated school. It is integrated
in many ways:
• First it is integrated because
Peoples are dealt in the way that they use all of their
attributes at a time .
It takes a holistic view of personality that require one
to “look at the whole child” and deal with all of their
attributes simultaneously.
• Second it is integrated because:
It integrate knowledge of school discipline.
Integrated school don’t view knowledge as broken up
into separate disciplines
The teacher’s job and the curriculum is to create
engaging different academic disciplines.
• Third it is integrated because:
It has few fixed periods during the day when
particular event occur
There will be fluidity in time during each event.
Learner's begin active, end their involvement in
activities and move on to new activity when it feels
natural to them.
• Fourth it is integrated because:
It attempts to integrate people’s home and school
lives.
It create the sense that world is not fragmented into
isolated places of school and homes.
Children bring their things and ideas from home to
school and the result is more fully integrated day.
Global Assumptions
Laiba
Definition of Assumption
An Assumption is something that you
assume to be the case, even without
Proof.
For example
people might make the assumption that
you’re nerd if you wear glasses, even
though that’s not true. Or very nice.
Assumption of Learning theory
The learning theory underlying the learner
Centered ideology is
a form of constructivism.
An assumption if the learner Centered “approach
is that children constitute the basic resources of
the educational process. In contrast to those
educational theories which ‘assume’ the presence
of a child during instruction’”
The Lerner Centered “ approach ‘ requires’ the
presence of a child to define instruction”.
Learner Centered educators declare that
each individual learner must be the agent of
his or het own learning growth, education,
and life.
Laraib Israr
Progressive Education Association was founded in 1919
• On of its important contribution was the Eight-Year study, which
compared the effectiveness of learner centered and traditional
schools
Aqsa Razzaq
Assessment for growth
• In learner centered teachers assess learning
growth and interest by observing, recording and
documenting the learning progress.
• They can plan instrumental environmental which
students will learn and plan the way in which they
will facilitate student’s growth by interacting.
• They can revised to meet students development
needs, individual learning, characteristics and
interests.
• Assessment relies heavily on portfolio and direct
observation of students.
Standardized objective testing
• Learning centered advocate opposed to
psychometric philosophy of education.
• It posits that learner possesses measurable
abilities.
• Learner centered advocate give the reason for
viewing standardized achievement
unfavorable.
• One reason is that students frequently understand
that they cannot verbalize as symbolic
expressions publicly displayable in a form that
they can be objectively assess on standardized
achievement test.
• Another reason is that the important thing such as
student’s self-concept, curiosity and initiative are
difficult to measure and while trivial things.
• Third reason is that taking and confronting the
results of standardized achievement test can have
negative effects on student’s learning.
Grading
• Lengthy written reports describing children
development, learning and activity is the
preferred mode of providing.
• Letters and numeric grades re avoided because
it believes that learning should have intrinsic
value of learning.
• Learner centered ideology is necessity for
children how to evaluate their own learnings as
well as to earn.
Student Evaluation
• Since 1880 G. Stanley Hall started the child
study movement, the preferred Learner
Centered methods of assessment through
teacher observation of student.
• Assessment include, for each student, portfolio
assessment, teacher notes, teacher student
diaries, development checklists, learning logs
and journals, student self-assessment, student
peer assessment.
Characteristics of student assessment
• Learner centered take the value loading out of
evaluation.
• They want to remove the connotation of good or
bad, right or wrong, better or worse, from the
action of learner in order to help them make use
of their mistakes, or as well as their success.
• Lerner centered educators tend to view students as
whole and take an approach to assessment.
• Evaluation should not be separate technical issue,
conceptualized analyzed, and implemented
independent education.
Curriculum Evaluation
• Learner centered educator have interest in curriculum
evaluation.
• Subjective formative evaluation of the curriculum. It
leads to improvement in the curriculum as being
developed.
• Evaluation is usually based on such as the degree
which learner involved with the curriculum.
• The findings of eight years study 1930s of Aiken and
Walberg research clearly indicate that children educated
in learner centered environment do as well as or better
than children educated in traditional classrooms.
Conclusion
• Learner centered ideology is humanize education
over last century.
• Educational process belief that self-actualization
growth is the goal of education, teachers are
facilitators of learning, bringing attention the
importance of learning styles and including the
authentic assessment.
• The learner centered ideology gained greater
influence as part of the progressive education
association insisted that education must to the
needs and nature of child.