What is "spacing" learning and how does it benefit teachers and
students? Do students learn more when solved problems are alternated with
problems to be solved? How do "higher order" questions enhance
student learning and help students articulate their answers?
Visitors to the U.S. Department of Education's "Doing What Works"
Web site can find out the answers to these questions and much more. Just click
on <http://dww.ed.gov>, and check out the
section called Psychology of Learning: How to Organize Your Teaching, which
will empower educators and administrators with research-based strategies to
help instructors organize their teaching and improve student learning. This
latest addition is based on the What Works Clearinghouse Practice Guide called
Organizing Instruction and Study to Improve Student Learning, which was
released this month.
Space learning over time
with review and quizzing.
A key aspect of effective teaching and learning is promoting the ability
of students to retain information over the course of the school year and
beyond. Research has shown that exposing students to key concepts and
facts on at least two occasions, separated by several weeks to several
months, greatly reduces the rate at which information is forgotten. This
is easily accomplished by spacing and reviewing material over time with
short quizzes, review games, targeted homework assignments, and exams.
Alternate worked examples
with problem-solving practice.
Students learn more when worked examples, or solved problems, are
alternated with problems to be solved. For example, teachers can
demonstrate solving a single problem, then have students practice on a
similar problem, which is followed by another problem demonstration and
opportunity for practice. The benefits are that students learn effective
problem-solving strategies, can transfer these strategies more easily, and
solve problems faster.
Connect abstract and
concrete representations of concepts.
Connecting abstract ideas with concrete contexts can help students
understand challenging topics and transfer their understanding to new
situations. There are a range of ways teachers can connect the abstract
and the concrete, including stories, simulations, hands-on activities,
visual representations, and real-world problem solving.
Use higher-order questions
to help students build explanations.
Across subject areas, when teachers ask higher-order questions and provide
rich opportunities for students to develop explanations, learning is
enhanced. The implementation of this practice ranges from creating units
of study that provoke question-asking and discussion to simply having
students explain their thinking after solvinga problem.
This entry is from an update email from the US Department of Education's Teacher's Initiative (http://www.T2TWeb.us)
10/2/2008 7:08 PMBrandi wrote:
Hi, I am an elementary education student at Austin Peay State University and my education classes talk a great deal about creating oppurtunities for higher order thinking and connecting abstract with concrete contexts, but I have never heard the term space learning. It sounds like a great concept that I would definately use in my future classroom. Reply to this