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Reporting |
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For all of our recorded history, mankind has been concerned with reporting information. Whether it's locating food or warning of danger, the need to convey information has always been with us. Today's classroom is far removed from the original fireside campsite. However, the need to move information has not changed. The modern student-centered classroom views teaching and learning information as different sides of the same coin. Students no longer simply regurgitate data learned in class. Students today are expected to know how to gather, organize, and then transmit the information they've acquired. As students learn, they're expected to teach others the new information they've assimilated into their knowledge base. The process of reporting back to peers gives students a chance to reflect, re-assimilate, and reexamine the information. This assimilation process helps cement knowledge and increases retention. With proper guidance from the facilitating educator, this process also engages students in higher-order thinking skills. One way that students achieve this is through creating reports and stories based on their studies and learning. | |
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We think it is important to differentiate between reporting and communicating information. Communicating is synchronous. It's a two-way exchange of information. Reporting is more formalized. It's asynchronous, moving information in one direction from the presenter to the audience. This type of reporting allows a person or small group to create an information resource that will be useful to many others. Some forms of communicating, such as threaded discussions, message boards, and e-mail, may seem asynchronous. However, there's an opportunity for reply embedded in the technology. In reporting, the information flows in one direction from the creator to the consumer. It's more formal and constrained. For example, when preparing a report, students pay closer attention to grammar, spelling, presentation, style, and delivery. Since reporting information is asynchronous, students can carefully plan their presentation ahead of time. For many years, reporting information in education consisted of traditional research papers, written stories, lectures, filmstrips, and other media. More recently, computer-related technologies have enabled teachers and students to use new presentation avenues. In this lesson you'll learn how a variety of technologies facilitate the student reporting process. This facilitation occurs when technologies are integrated effectively into the classroom using sound teaching methodology. You'll also be exposed to Bloom's Taxonomic and Vygotsky's Scaffolding theories. These theories help educators evaluate the level of understanding their students have attained. This provides a practical framework for designing activities to check student content comprehension. Several technologies will be discussed in the reporting information context in this lesson. It's important to realize that these technologies may be used in all of the lessons, regardless of how we're classifying them. The technologies aren't tied to any one particular mode of information presentation. | |
| Traditionally, student asynchronous reporting has been divided into four areas: persuasive, creative, narrative, and expository presentation. Persuasive reporting aims to sway opinion. Expository reporting seeks to inform. Narrative reporting tells a story that typically focuses on actual events. Finally, creative reporting tends to fictionalize. This lesson will focus more in-depth on each of these reporting styles. In-depth focus will give educators a practical framework for evaluating and implementing technology into the classroom. We'll begin with a short introduction to Bloom's Taxonomy and Vygotsky's Scaffolding Instruction. | |
| The cognitive domain is the domain of interest to our lesson. It involves student knowledge. It also involves the development of intellectual attitudes and skills. Bloom and his associates ranked behaviors in the cognitive domain from plain and simple to the most complex. Bloom divides student cognitive abilities into six categories. These categories are knowledge, comprehension, Application, analysis, Synthesis, and evaluation. This ranking is known as Bloom's Taxonomy. This system is generally easily understood and applied. | |
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Students should be informed about this aspect of learning up front. Their frustration needs to be validated (Walqui, 1992). When students realize that a learning curve is natural and expected, they can better deal with perceived failure in an emotionally healthy way. Vygotsky's Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) theory states that some learners may only enter certain areas of growth if provided with the right kind of assistance (Vygotsky, 1978). Scaffolding instruction is a way to provide support mechanisms to allow learners to handle complex tasks. | |
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This methodology uses six basic scaffolding strategies. These are Text Representation, Metacognitive Development, schema building, Contextualization, Bridging, and modeling (Walqui, 1992). The goal of these scaffolds is to support students when building understanding. These scaffolds have been used primarily with second language and special education students. Still, these methods may be used in information reporting. This review will be a brief explanation of each scaffold. It will include some tasks appropriate to implementing them. | |
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Schema Building Schema building helps students establish the connections that exist between and across concepts. These connections may otherwise appear unrelated. This helps students gain perspective of where ideas fit in the larger scheme of things (Carrell, 1983). Schemas are interconnected clusters of meaning. Schema, or background knowledge, is built before a topic is introduced. Students need to be able to process material from the top down. Top-down processing gives students general knowledge of the broad picture before studying the details. They also need to be able to process material from the bottom up. Bottom-up processing is the ability to understand vocabulary, syntax, and rhetorical style (Carrell, 1983). This observation applies equally to oral discussions, reading comprehension, and writing activities. Graphic organizers, a picture of important information in the lesson, also offer excellent frameworks for developing background knowledge (Parks and Black, 1990). | |
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