Thank you for sharing your interactive resource on Public Goods. I really like the topic you chose. Although it is a bit specific to students with economics backgrounds, you explain the lesson in a way that makes it accessible and comprehensible to others as well.
I like the overview part very much as it clearly describes what should be expected from this project and highlights critical elements. And I think it is great that you mentioned the learners’ group that this project is meant for.
As for technology choices, I like how you incorporate Twitter, which serves as a great tool for interactive learning. WordPress is also a helpful learning tool, However, it might be better to explain the application of WordPress in detail in the modules and assessment sections.
I like the layout of your learning modules. The three sections give students a clear image of the characteristics of public goods and lead them to explore each section in depth. I especially like the activity in the Non-rival section. The learning content and objectives are very clear and the discussion part is highly interactive. Even those who are less familiar with Microeconomics can understand the concept with the help of group members.
In addition, the learning materials in the other two sections facilitate learning to a large extent. The application of vivid images, animation, text, and subtitles cater to the various needs of learners, which also reflects your design for inclusion.
Overall, I like your learning activities, but you may consider explaining the concept of public goods before the defining characteristics. Some examples or interactive activities would be helpful as well.
I love the reflection questions in the assessment section. The open-ended questions provide more opportunities for students to exchange ideas and learn from each other and helps them develop critical thinking abilities.
Overall, I think this lesson plan is quite amazing and I would borrow ideas from in my own practice. Although there is still work to be done, it offers insights to others who were hoping to design an effective learning experience for students. I hope this feedback is helpful for you
Category: Uncategorised
Mara Cox: thank you for your sharing. You can apply what edci335 has learned through your own actual operations. I think this is very good. And I totally agree with your point that āIn the classroom, it is important that we take on this perspective where we recognize that we all need support in some way. This then helps us to help our learners in identifying and accessing the supports they need to be successful.ā This can help us design courses and learning activities, identify obstacles that may hinder student success, and change or adjust plans to reduce these obstacles.
Haeleen Parmar post: thank you for your post. You picked a great TedTalk video. I also like to watch TedTalk, because I can learn a lot of knowledge from it. You let the students write journals and communicate with them in this way, I think it’s very good. Because you can know their inner thoughts through the journals of students and help them in time. TedTalk also has visual examples through audio delivery and also provides script recording. Through classroom activities that help “hands-on” learning, I think the video will be meaningful to all students.
Hey, Candice Shang, I really like how you understand and interpret the back-bike parts. I have the same feeling, he really changed bicycle riding into a new thing. When you look at the world from a different perspective, you will find it difficult to understand or be confused at first and see many aspects of the world. We can solve the problem in more than one way. The world is strange and weird, and there are many aspects and perspectives that we need to solve in different ways. Thank you for your sharing. It gave me a new way of thinking about the world and solving problems.
Hi Zihan Bai, thank you for your post. You have used one image to show the relationship between interaction w/peers, interaction w/content, and interaction w/instructor. From this image, we can know learning is very important because it is in the middle of this image. Everything needs learning. You have talked about students needs to learn something after watching videos, I totally agree with you, because when students after watching videos, they need some time to learn it and know it. The learning time after watching the video is very necessary.
Hi Capri, it is a nice post. I think art is an important skill for children to embrace and think openly. It is a tool for self-expression, and most students like it. There will always be children who do not believe that they are a good artist. This is a great way to show them that they may have some hidden talents. Will definitely use it in my classroom! I think it is very important and great that taking the notes and watching the video at the same time, when the student is learned something by video, and they can take some notes which they think it is important. This can strengthen the memory of students, and it is not easy to forget the new knowledge learned.
Hi Amy bai, I really like your post, cooperative learning & Visual art. You were talked about what is cooperative learning. I think Cooperative learning is a method of learning or working in groups to achieve the same goal. Students will communicate with each other to handle lecture courses. Every student needs to take on some responsibilities to help the group. And I also agree with you that cooperative learning can be hard for visual art depends on what is the project. Everyone has their own thinking and idea. However, cooperative learning can help students do step by step. And it also can make students brainstorm, the student may have more awesome ideas.
What is Direct Instruction?
In direct teaching, teachers use clear teaching techniques to teach students specific skills. This kind of teaching is guided by the teacher, who usually stands at the front of the classroom and provides information. Teachers match their guidance with tasks to enhance studentsā understanding of the topic. The technology depends on a rigorous lesson plan and there is little room for change. It does not include active learning activities such as discussions, seminars, or case studies. Direct instruction doesnāt stop at the teacher explaining a concept. There are 6 steps that are very important in the process. Firstly, you set the stage for learning. This is the opening of the lesson, and itās intended to engage students, get their attention, and activate their prior knowledge. Secondly, using clear and instructive instructions so that students can begin to absorb new materials. Course content should be carefully organized step by step, and each step should complement each other. Thirdly, the teacher and students practice the concept together. The student attempts the skill with the assistance of the teacher and other students. Then, If the student does not understand the course materials, the teacher must correct them and provide feedback. This is also important for guided exercises because students must understand everything at this stage. Fifthly, Independent exercises provide students with the repetitive opportunities needed to combine new information or skills with previous knowledge or skills. Finally, Before continuing to learn new concepts based on what they have just learned, check that your students understand everything.
How is direct instruction connected to visual arts?
In the traditional sense, direct instruction is not suitable for use in visual arts. But I think some basic knowledge and theory of visual art will be better with direct instruction. Because any field or discipline has basic knowledge, direct instruction is a more efficient and time-saving way of teaching when facing basic knowledge learning. Skills first, creativity later. You can practice expression/experiment only if you have the skills, so you must do it first. Any great artist is inseparable from their skilled art skills. Direct instruction enables them to do more creative work because they will subsequently have more expression levels through higher skills. Thay said, direct instruction teaching does actually work to a degree, or you wouldn’t get the outcomes, but it’s superficial because your best students are actually being slowed down by it, and the less able need more time and support.
How is direct instruction connected to our learning resources?
The learning resource of my group is about the process of children participating in collaborative mural homework. They will use paint to create and display their work. Because I am dealing with children aged 6-8, it is necessary to grant them basic artistic knowledge. Let them understand theoretical knowledge, painting skills, and how to evaluate a painting is essential. Direct instruction is a very good way to teach children this boring but essential knowledge. I admit that art cannot use direct instruction too much, because art is about sharing, discussing, and evaluating. Because the audience is children, direct instruction is a more efficient and time-saving way to teach the basics of art. For these reasons, I think it is of great value to incorporate the elements of this learning method into our blueprint.
Resources:
Direct instruction – A practical guide to effective teaching
Direct Instruction art teaching
Direct Instruction
From reading, I disagree with one idea that āif you have ever argued with someone, you likely know that even the strongest arguments against their view, seem to make them believe even more strongly that they are correctā (Admin, 2020). Because you have to convince others that it must be the right thing. If you use a strong and wrong perspective to talk about being accused, you will bring the wrong values to others.
I think the theoretical perspectives are difficult to understand. Perspectives that are too theoretical will make me feel very abstract and difficult to understand. Because it is too theoretical, it makes me feel far away from reality, and it is difficult for me to use it in my life and understand it. So, I usually apply theoretical perspectives to real life and apply it to some basic perspectives that everyone knows. I think life is the best medium and way to link unfamiliar and difficult to understand theories with common theories.
I will share a story about my best learning experience. I used to play basketball during high school, and I am a member of my school team. Basketball has a lot of theoretical knowledge, the history, the rule, and the skill. During the studying, I always confuse what is basket assignment and tip-off, what is fouls and violations, what is the game clock. And how can I improve my offensive skills and defensive skills? But when I touch the ball and apply this theoretical knowledge in the game, I found I know it, I can understand deeply about what I confused about. So, I really enjoy this process that forms confusion to understand, life and application are the best way for me to learning.
Behaviorism, cognitivism, and constructivism are three totally different ways. Behaviorism is with reinforcement and feedback to develop habits in their learners (Admin, 2020). Cognitivism is work with the learner to help them uncover and use appropriate learning strategies and make connections to prior understandings (Admin, 2020). Constructivism is believing that learners make their own meaning and interpretations based on individual experiences and interactions (Admin, 2020). When I want to learn some real hands-on things, behaviorism is a better way. When I want to learn some theoretical perspectives, cognitivism is a better way. When I need to connect realistic and theoretical perspectives, constructivism is a better way.
Hello, my name is Yirun Jin. Iām 25 years old. My hometown is Shanghai, China. So, my native country is China as well. Definitely, my first language is Chinese. Iām also an international student. I have been in Canada for five years, I really like Canada which nice view, a nice river, and nice mountains. However, sometimes I feel bored and lonely because of my family in China. Iām a year 4 student, so this term is my last term in my college life. To ensure smooth graduation, I am in Vancouver, Canada now. My major in Uvic is economic, as I said, Iām year 4, so I will finish all courses after this term.
Iād like play any interesting things, so I have a lot of hobbies, like basketball, video game, swimming, and so on. Do any guys play lol or pubg, please contact me? I watch NBA usually, my favorite term is Lakers, the player is Kobe Bryant. But on January 26, 2020, Bryant was killed in a helicopter accident in Calabasas, California. He was only 41 years old. On April 5 of the same year, Bryant was officially elected to the Nai Smith Basketball Hall of Fame. RIP KOBE!!!
The world is becoming more and more technological every day. Multimedia has played such an important role in education. I think the future of education mainly comes from various media resources, so this is a very important course to learn.
I am so excited to meet everyone, hope everything well, and take care of everyone.
Before proceeding with this first blog post, we expect you to consider your privacy preferences carefully and that you have considered the following options:
- Do you want to be online vs. offline?
- Do you want to use your name (or part thereof) vs. a pseudonym (e.g., West Coast Teacher)?
- Do you want to have your blog public vs. private? (Note, you can set individual blog posts private or password protected or have an entire blog set to private)
- Have you considered whether you are posting within or outside of Canada? This blog on opened.ca is hosted within Canada. That said, any public blog posts can have its content aggregated/curated onto social networks outside of Canada.
First tasks you might explore with your new blog:
- Go into its admin panel found by adding /wp-admin at the end of your blogās URL
- Add new category or tags to organize your blog posts – found under “Posts” (but do not remove the pre-existing “edci335” category).
- See if your blog posts are appearing on the course website (you must have the the edci335 category assigned to a post first and have provided your instructor with your blog URL)
- Add pages, if you like.
- Include hyperlinks in your posts (select text and click on the link icon in the post toolbar)
- Embed images or set featured images and embed video in blog posts and pages (can be your own media or that found on the internet, but consider free or creative commons licensed works). To embed a YouTube video, simply paste the URL on its own line.
- Under Dashboard/Appearance,
- Select your preferred website theme and customize to your preferences (New title, new header image, etc.)
- Customize menus & navigation
- Use widgets to customize blog content and features
- Delete this starter post (or switch it to draft status if you want to keep it for reference)
Do consider creating categories for each course that you take should you wish to document your learning (or from professional learning activities outside of formal courses). Keep note, however, that you may wish to rename the label of the course category in menus (e.g., as we did where it shows “Learning Design” as the label for the “edci335” category menu.Ā This will enable readers not familiar with university course numbers to understand what to expect in the contents.
Lastly, as always, be aware of the FIPPA as it relates to privacy and share only those names/images that you have consent to use or are otherwise public figures. When in doubt, ask us.
Please also review the resources from our course website for getting started with blogging:
- WordPress resources
- Using RSS feeds to read blog posts from your networks (e.g., Feedly)
- Privacy resources
- Copyright resources
- Finding images you can use
Recent Comments