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Transfer Like a Champ! Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal By Michelle Brazeal

Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

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Page 1: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Transfer Like a Champ!Transfer Like a Champ!

By Michelle BrazealBy Michelle Brazeal

Page 2: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Transfer TrainingTransfer Training

Why do we teach?

Page 3: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Transfer TrainingTransfer Training

Transfer: The ability to extend what has been learned in one context to new contexts

Page 4: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Transfer TrainingTransfer Training

Now let’s do some boxing…

Page 5: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Aunt Maud wants to pack a box of breakables and mail the package to her sister. How could she pack the items so

that nothing gets broken?

Page 6: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Now let’s transfer…Now let’s transfer…

You are working for an electrical distributor. It is your job to find the most efficient way to pack the trucks, even with an inventory of thousands of products. As customers order products to be shipped, you need a quick way of taking whatever combination is ordered and packing with care and efficiency. Let’s say a customer orders 24 lamps, 2 fixtures, and 3 transformers…

Page 7: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

What if the “Aunt Maud” problem had been What if the “Aunt Maud” problem had been presented differently?presented differently?

Page 8: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

What if the “Aunt Maud” problem had been What if the “Aunt Maud” problem had been presented differently?presented differently?

• This is the same kind of information a student would get out of a teacher standing at the front of the room, giving steps, and saying “Do this”

Page 9: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

What if the “Aunt Maud” problem had been What if the “Aunt Maud” problem had been presented differently?presented differently?

• This is the same kind of information a student would get out of a teacher standing at the front of the room, giving steps, and saying “Do this”

When teaching in this manner, there is no meaning for the student.

Page 10: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

What about memorization?What about memorization?

• When the emphasis is on drill and practice then emphasis is taken off of problem solving, creativity, and motivation

• Effective for memory skills, but poor for transfer

• Students are learning things that are more specific instead of developing a general skill

Page 11: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

What influences successful transfer?What influences successful transfer?

• The degree of mastery of a subject• The degree to which people learn with

understanding• Realistic view of the amount of time it

takes to learn a complex subject matter• Learning is most effective when people

engage in deliberate practice that includes active monitoring of one’s learning experiences

Page 12: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

What influences successful transfer?What influences successful transfer?

• Appropriately arranged contrasts to help students notice new features that previously escaped their attention and learn which features are relevant to a particular concept

Ex: The concept of linear functions is more clear when contrasted with non-linear functions

Page 13: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

What influences successful transfer?What influences successful transfer?

• Motivation– Challenges should be at appropriate levels in

order to be and remain motivating– Too easy tasks become boring– Too difficult tasks can cause frustration– Feeling like you are contributing to others is

highly motivating

Page 14: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

What influences successful transfer?What influences successful transfer?

“Learners of all ages are more motivated when they can see the usefulness of what they are learning and when they can use that information to do something that has an impact on others.”

Page 15: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Dealing with lack of flexibility in transferDealing with lack of flexibility in transfer

• Look at how tightly learning is tied to the context

• Ask learners to solve a specific case and then provide them with an additional similar case

• Use specific context and then “what-if” problem solving

• Ask students to create a solution to a whole class of related problems

Page 16: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Transfer TrainingTransfer Training

We should view transfer as a dynamic process that requires learners to actively choose and evaluate strategies, consider resources, and receive feedback. Transfer is not just solving a set of “transfer problems” right after the initial learning task, but asking questions/prompting appropriately for the level of your students.

Page 17: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Transfer and MetacognitionTransfer and Metacognition

• Transfer is improved when students are able to monitor their own learning strategies and resources and assess their own readiness for particular tests and performances

• Metacognitive approach to instruction increases the degree to which students will transfer to new situations without the need for explicit prompting

Page 18: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Reciprocal TeachingReciprocal Teaching

1. Instruction/practice enabling students to monitor their own understanding

2. Provision of an expert model of metacognitive processes

3. Social setting that enables joint negotiation for understanding

The instructional procedure is reciprocal in the sense that a teacher and a group of students take turns in leading the group to discuss and use strategies for comprehending and remembering text content.

Page 19: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Building on Existing KnowledgeBuilding on Existing Knowledge

• All learning involves transfer from previous experiences

• However, one’s existing knowledge can make it difficult to learn new information

- when people construct a coherent representation of information while deeply misunderstanding the new information (Ex: Fish is Fish)

Page 20: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Misunderstanding new informationMisunderstanding new information

Consider fractions: • Math principles underlying fractions are not

consistent with principles of counting (Ex: ¼ is not more than ½)

• Early knowledge of numbers can serve as a barrier to learning about fractions – and for many learners it does

Page 21: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Prior KnowledgePrior Knowledge

• Can also include kinds of knowledge learners acquire because of their social roles (race, gender, class, etc)

• Interpretations of a students resistance to answer a question can have consequences for how academically capable a student is viewed or for instructional approaches toward them

Page 22: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

School Environment vs. Everyday SettingsSchool Environment vs. Everyday Settings

School

• Emphasis on individual work

• “Mental work” used to solve problems

• Abstract reasoning emphasized

Everyday

• Many settings are working with others

• Heavy use of tools to solve problems

• Contextualized reasoning often used

Page 23: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

The most effective transfer may come from a balance of specific examples

and general principles, not from either one alone.

Page 24: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

Summary and ConclusionSummary and Conclusion

• A major goal of schooling is to prepare students for flexible adaptation to new problems and settings

• Instructional differences become more apparent when evaluated from the perspective of how well the learning transfers to new problems and settings

• Initial learning, motivation, time on task, the context in which one learns, and feedback are all important for promoting transfer; none of these stands alone, they must all work together to create a flexible transfer

Page 25: Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?

How can we become How can we become champions of transferchampions of transfer??

• Help students make their thinking visible• Understand cultural practices• Encourage!• Actively identify relative knowledge/strengths

and help students build on them• Use a metacognitive approach to teaching to

help students learn about themselves as learners, so they can gain the ability to regulate their own understanding

• “By all means, have fun!” (Brawner, 2008)