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Teaching What You Know
And Knowing What You Teach:
A Recipe For Relevance
An SBBC Faculty In-Service Event
Facilitator: A.J. Schuermann
Santa Barbara Campus January 22, 2016
• Why are we
here at this
In Service?
• In-service education has as its major goal the updating of
teachers in (1) subject matter, (2) curriculum concepts, (3)
new theories and techniques of instruction, and (4) new
educational media.
• Recap of recent SBBC In Services
for new and returning instructors
• 2013: “Four Elements 4 the Future”
• 2014: “Millennial Challenge”
• 2014: “Creating a New Online Experience on the Ground”
• 2015: “Turn It App a Notch”
• Today’s In Service
• Today we introduce some new theories and techniques of
instruction. I’m using source materials and ideas contained
in two books worth reading: Teach What You Know by
Steve Trautman and Teaching What You Don't Know by
Therese Huston
• That’s partly how I came up with the title…
Teaching What You Know
And Knowing What You Teach:
A Recipe For Relevance
• Describes the need for successful transfer of knowledge
through mentoring in the workplace, and how to do so.
• Describes different types of “learning styles” – other than
what we are accustomed to recognizing – and how to reach
them all.
Teach What You Know
• Describes how faculty members traditionally expect to be
able to teach courses in their areas of expertise.
• Describes the gap between teaching as an expert of course
content and teaching as a novice of it.
Teaching What You Don’t Know
• The Why? Learners
• The What? Learners
• The How Does It Work? Learners
• The What If? Learners
Learning Styles from the Real
World
• Why are we building a bridge?
• Why are you teaching me how to build a bridge right now?
• Why are we doing it before we work on the road?
Building the Bridge
1. Why? Learners
• All of these come down to the biggest question they’re
really getting at: Why do I care?
• “Some learners simply cannot learn effectively before they
get over this hurdle. When you’re teaching them, part of
their brain is asking these questions and demanding an
answer before allowing learning to proceed.”
Building the Bridge
1. Why? Learners
• Give a reason for the demonstration
• “Demonstrate again and explain the logic behind each step.
Logic means why we do it and the consequences of not
doing it.”
Building the Bridge
1. Why? Learners
• “Explain the relationship to the job, which gives you an
opportunity to tell your apprentice how often he will use the
skill and how important it is before teaching it.”
Building the Bridge
1. Why? Learners
• What kind of a bridge is it?
• Is there anything I can read to be prepared?
• Where is it located?
• What is the plan?
Building the Bridge
2. What? Learners
• All of these come down to the biggest question they’re
really getting at: What do I need to know?
• “What? learners just want the facts without a lot of fluff.
Give them the information in the cleanest language
possible for the best results.”
Building the Bridge
2. What? Learners
• “They need documentation or, at least, an outline or an
agenda. They really like step-by-step processes. What?
learners don’t do well if you’re winging it or talking without a
plan. They really appreciate being taught by people who
are prepared and focused.”
Building the Bridge
2. What? Learners
• Is it like the bridge we built last time?
• Is it going to be part of the State or National Highway
system?
• Are we replacing or rebuilding an existing structure?
Building the Bridge
3. How does it work? Learners
• “How Does It Work? learners need to see the relationships
between what they’re learning and the big picture. They
need to see the context relative to the workflow. They need
to get their hands dirty and practice the skills and ideas .”
Building the Bridge
3. How does it work? Learners
• “For them, the information doesn’t line up in neat rows, it
comes in connections to ideas and skills they already
understand.”
Building the Bridge
3. How does it work? Learners
• “Identify practice opportunities, remind peer mentors that
these learners need plenty of opportunity to experience the
tools or processes first hand. They often have trouble
learning without hands-on practices.”
Building the Bridge
3. How does it work? Learners
• What if we built a ferry boat?
• Have you considered how much faster and cheaper a boat
would be?
• What if we put two boats on line? Then we’d have double
the capacity.
Building the Bridge
4. What if? Learners
• “What If? learners learn by testing your ideas while you’re
teaching. Leave room for them to discuss some of the
options you considered. They want to know if you’ve tried
any of the ideas they might have come up with, and then, if
you have, what happened.”
Building the Bridge
4. What if? Learners
• “Each question is about understanding the boundaries and
the options that were considered in shaping the information
presented. The questions don’t often sound like that to the
peer mentor who hears them. Instead, they can sound
judgmental, arrogant, and completely off-topic.”
Building the Bridge
4. What if? Learners
• “You can round yourself out as a teacher, so you
accommodate all learning styles all the time. All types of
learners benefit from each type of information described. If
you provide that information, you won’t be wasting time. It’ll
just mean that no matter whom you’re teaching, you’ll have
a much better shot at hitting the mark.”
Building the Bridge
Teaching What You Don’t Know
• Huston's book describes ways that “content novices” have
an advantage in helping students learn.
• Novices have a more realistic assessment of the time it will
take a learner to complete a task. Experts often assign
more work than the learner can complete in the time
allotted.
Teaching What You Don’t Know
• Huston cites one study that demonstrated the estimations
made by experts about the time a new learner needed to
complete a task were not only much less reliable than the
estimations of a novice—they were actually "worse than
those of someone who has never performed the task at all."
Teaching What You Don’t Know
• "People with little experience," Huston writes, "are also
better than experts at predicting how many steps another
person will need to complete a task on her first attempt.
They can better envision the steps that a beginner will take,
what kinds of mistakes she'll make, and which steps she
might have to repeat."
Teaching What You Don’t Know
• "A content novice is also more likely than a content expert
to relate difficult concepts to everyday, common
knowledge—to something the student already knows—
simply because the instructor doesn't have a vault of
specialized knowledge on the topic from which to draw."
Teaching What You Don’t Know
• “The underlying assumption for many of us is that good
teaching involves finding an effective way to structure and
communicate complex information."
Teaching What You Don’t Know
• “When you teach as a content novice, you become much
more aware of the limitations of thinking about teaching as
covering content.”
Teaching What You Don’t Know
• “You come to realize that just because you are covering it
doesn't mean they are learning it.”
Teaching What You Don’t Know
• “Teaching as a content novice, you are more likely to set
realistic expectations for learners, to notice when they are
breaking down and experiencing problems, and to pause
and make adjustments in response—instead of marching
dutifully from one end of the syllabus to the other, covering
everything on your ambitious agenda.”
Teaching What You Don’t Know
• “Teaching as a content novice, you are more likely to set
realistic expectations for learners, to notice when they are
breaking down and experiencing problems, and to pause
and make adjustments in response—instead of marching
dutifully from one end of the syllabus to the other, covering
everything on your ambitious agenda.”
Teaching What You Don’t Know
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