Graphic Organizer - Making Content Connections
Three
key ideas from the reading
-
Disciplinary literacy versus doing school:
As was noted in the Perusall exercise, one of the memorable phrases from
this week’s reading is that there is a difference between sitting together and
learning together. The first is simple
enough, the second requires more planning and work, but is much more worthwhile.
-
IAL, chapter 6: As a non-philosophy
specialist, I have distanced myself from the Socratic seminar, assuming it to
be formal and requiring familiarity with Plato’s works. Those scales have fallen from my eyes and I
will embrace the Socratic seminar as a practical way to enable students to
grapple with complex concepts.
-
Wouldn’t she notice he had mud on his shirt?:
The section on accountability as a necessary component of learning and
discussions was on target. How students
to expectations with regard to accountability to knowledge, to standards of
reasoning, and to the learning community can actually spark their interest and boost
their sense of agency.
Two
strategies I will use
- As mentioned above, the Socratic Seminar strategy is one I look forward to
using for an appropriate subject, such as a short but historically significant
text (Emancipation Proclamation, Martin Luther King’s final sermon, etc.).
-
The jigsaw strategy has many moving parts, but is a good way to tackle large,
but not too deep, subjects quickly by divvying information up amongst a number
of students. It also requires students
to pay attention and move around, boosting engagement.
One
question remaining
In
some of the readings and Doug Fisher’s video emphasis is placed on making the
work challenging and holding students accountable for preparation and
participation. All good ideas. However, I need to think more about how the
Socratic seminar, for example, could best be staged with an eye to encouraging
maximum participation and learning from ELL students.
Hi, John! Your question about how to maximize participation and learning from ELL students in a Socratic seminar, for example, is an important question that also kind of came up for me too. In Socratic seminars, it's necessary for students to be able to articulate their thoughts/opinions for others to understand and respond to ... but how can a student who is not comfortable with English fully engage and participate? Does this strategy have to be scratched altogether? I also wonder if there is a way to accommodate/adjust this strategy for ELLs or if it's necessary to just use a different strategy.
ReplyDeleteI like your Damascene conversion on Socratic Seminars. We had them in high school and I found them unbearable but I agree entirely that, with proper planning (both on the day and in the months leading up to them), they could be excellent. I was also very influenced by how the concept of 'accountability' was not only developed in Chiaravalloti but demonstrated in very accessible, practcal terms. As Alice also pointed out, your concern for ELLs added another dimension to the reading/viewing, which I hadn't actually thought of when I was doing the module - so I appreciate your perspective.
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