Competence goals 2 and 3:
2. You understand the principles, practices and forms of guidance in vocational education/higher education.
3. You understand the relevance of the learning process in the planning of pedagogically founded teaching and guidance.
Group 5: What are group (or team) dynamics and what collaborative methods or practices can be used in teaching? How can the teaching methods promote students' teamwork skills?
Group 1: How can the vocational/higher ed. classroom teaching methods promote individual learning process and personalized learning paths? What kind of methods can be used?
Group 2: How does the vocational teacher tutor and guide groups (teams)? How does the vocational teacher tutor and guide individuals? What kind of methods can be used and what are common guiding processes?
Group 3: What are pedagogical models? How can they help you to choose the teaching methods? Choose at least one model that you use in your teaching task!
In the second teaching session, group 5 representative started his presentation by showing first the objectives of the lesson, which were:
The group dynamics
how do they affect teaching and learning?
The collaborative methods or practices can be used in teaching in different environments
The teamwork skills
How can the teaching methods promote students' teamwork skills?
I liked the idea that he presented a group work sample picture and asked whether we believe team working is effective in learning or not. But I would have liked it better, if he actually let any of us give our opinion :)
I found this definition the most comprehensive:
"Group work is a form of voluntary association of members benefiting from cooperative learning, that enhances the total output of the activity than when done individually. It aims to cater for individual differences, develop skills (e.g. communication skills, collaborative skills, criticalthinking skills), generic knowledge and socially acceptable attitudes or to generate conforming standards of behavior and judgment, a group mind."
In my teaching session in OSAO, I asked students to do a role play in pair. This gave my students that chance to become closer to each other, come up to a solution for a problem by collaborative thinking, and also to decide together what the purpose of the task was in the end. They later could present their role play with other groups to get different suggestions from other students also. If the number of students was more, I would rather to assign them into bigger groups and make the given problems to each group more challenging. I might do that in my next teaching session.
- everyone has a job to do
- group does not move on to the next phase until everyone understands
- group members use helpful and supportive comments and tone of voice
- group members work together
- group members listen to all ideas without judgement
- group values each team members
- there is a competition within and outside of the group
- group members force speed on each other
- group members talk over each other
- group members use judgemental tone or judgemental comments
- one person takes over and does all the work
- one or two always are quiet and do not say anything
- group members are impatient with ideas of others
The collaborative techniques which he mentioned were for example:
Jigsaw, concept mapping, think-write-pair-share, round table.
Concept mapping
(concept map English teaching samples)
Students write terms from the course on a large piece of paper
Lines are drawn connecting individual terms to indicate the relationships between terms. Most of the terms in a concept map have multiple connections.
Developing a concept map requires the students to identify and organize information and to establish meaningful relationships between the pieces of information.
According to group 5 teacher, for example if there is reading material (such as background) to be digested before doing an activity, split it up into 3 or 4 self-contained parts.
Divide the class into the same number of Reading Groups, with one member from each team.
Give one part of the reading to each team to digest and to prepare to explain to their team.
Then rearrange the students so that each team has someone who has read one of the self-contained parts, and have each student teach his/her part of the reading to the rest of the team.
This method has been so far the way we are practising in professional teacher program and I have learned and received many good lessons from this.
This method can be a complementary method for the task which I mentioned in concept mapping. I mean, after my students came up with the meaning of the new word, they can be divided into other groups, and explain the way they came up with the meaning and also hear from other group members. In this situations, I usually walk around the class and listen to each group at a time and if necessary answer questions or make clarifications.
The advantages which I see in this method is that
Each student is given a chance to teach to others. And Based on my own experience I believe one of the best ways of learning anything is that you try to teach it to others. This is the way I am learning also Finnish language, eve though, I am not fluent, still I study first and teach the most difficult parts of especially Finnish grammar to some of my friends who are also learning Finnish. And sometimes we figure out some structures together as I try to explain it.
The fact that there is no material is a great advantage for some students who have always the tendency in just receiving the information. They will search and read different sources and in between they might also find not related but important information, which expands their knowledge. And they also acquire deeper knowledge in a topic which they are supposed to teach or present.
In my English classes this method always gives my students a chance to learn new vocabularies, and also their speaking skill enhances since they practice beforehand to present their lesson as fluent as possible.
In this method, I have seen those students who are not confident enough to talk for large groups have a confident performance in smaller groups.
The advantage list will be going on and on if I continue writing about them.
However, I can also say that there are some disadvantages in implementation of jigsaw method.
If one or two students do not attend the class presentation for other groups based on some reasons, then some information will be missed. It is exactly like a puzzle. All together shape a whole.
The time is also a big issue specially in classes with more students.
In online classes it is easier to send each group member in different rooms, but in face to face classes there is a chaos sometimes, and it is hard to control the noisy situations.
In my classes the group organizing is challenging. I need to consider different factors in assigning each student to different groups. Factors such as: their language levels, personality, hardworking, their relationship together.
And as I said before, teacher cannot observe all group at once.
Then we were given different factors which we need to consider when we want to choose our teaching method such as, learning environment and resources, curriculum teaching goals, administrative and institutional policies, and the types of learners.
- Visual learners, who learn more and better when they see for example images.
- Auditory learners, who perceive better and faster if they listen and repeat what they hear.
- Reading/writing learners, who understand better and deeper if they read and write information.
- Kinesthetic learners, learn better if they get involved physically in the tasks and be in more dynamic environments.
- Visual: live training, Powerpoint, video library, Demo, webinar, case studies
- Auditory: Live training, lecture, webinar, Podcast
- Reading/writing: live training, quick reference guides, job aids, hands-on labs, case studies
- Kinesthetic: live training, one-on-ones, small group, coaching, hands-on labs, case studies
Learning by watching
Learning by imitating
Learning by practising
Learning through feedback
Learning through conversation
Learning by teaching and helping
Learning by real-world problem-solving
Learning through enquiry
Learning by critical thinking
Learning by listening, transcribing and remembering
Learning by drafting and sketching
Learning by reflecting
Learning on the fly
Learning by being coached
Learning by competing
Learning through virtual environments
Learning through simulation
Learning through playing games
- Haaga-Helia University of Applied Sciences
- Häme University of Applied Sciences
- JAMK University of Applied Sciences
- University of Jyväskylä
- University of Eastern Finland
- Oulu University of Applied Sciences
- Tampere University of Applied Sciences
In vocational guidance system the base of the pyramid is students' self-knowledge of their interest, passion, values, and skills, and considering the reality of their chosen job in the countries market. For example for those international students whose Finnish language is not advanced, and they do not have any plan regarding improving it professionally, it seems unrealistic if their goal is to become for example schools policy maker and make the connection with other Finnish educational settings, where the main spoken language is Finnish. However, there is always exceptions, but the reality keeps the students in the right path of choosing whatever suits their skill, passion and values.
In the upper side of the model is decision making and motivation. Guides do not need to tell exactly the students how to be a motivated learner or what to choose, but they can show them different options and potential possibilities which each choice bring to them.
Guidance is given both individually and in groups.
Guidance in group is those services that school or any educational settings provide to a group of pupils. Even though, the group guidance is a group activity process, the primary purpose in group guidance is to help each individual in the group to solve their personal issues and make the necessary adjustment to facilitate the challenges. In this way, each student gain enough knowledge related to the problem of his/her life in a group setting (Thakur, 2015).
Actually, at the general upper secondary level, in Finland's educational settings, counselors, group advisers and teachers offer guidance according to their professional roles. This guidance is also provided fully in vocational education and training (euroguidance)
During my teaching practice, the counselor in OSAO, Business Unit, stated, the scope of Group Guidance in vocational setting includes many problems and issues for example:
- Problems in regards to educational courses, plans, curriculum, and programs
- Problems of career choices in the setting of facilities gained
- Different occupational issues which sometimes occur in hand-in contexts
- Personality and social problems and issues
- Job practice placement and adjustments
- What are the most typical guiding and tutoring situations in your field and educational level (higher education/ vocational secondary / 3rd sector)?
- What is the purpose of guiding / tutoring / scaffolding – and how is it different from "traditional" teaching?
- How does one prepare to guiding situations a) as a teacher? b) as a student?
- Name at least three guiding methods and elaborate when they are most useful!
- Discuss the challenges of guiding and tutoring - are there ethical, practical, personal or institutional issues that should be considered?
- Why do you think that the role of guiding and tutoring has increased? (Consider learning trends, shifts in educational system, changes in working life, globalization...)
We were the last group presenting our topic related to pedagogical models and teaching methods. My group attended Teams' meeting and discussed about our pedagogical model and the methods we were going to imply in our teaching session. We decided by relying on the more recent pedagogical model of Constructivist (student achievement, engagement and well-being) , choose Flipped-classroom approach, Interactive-participative method, Reflective discussion, and Anchored-instruction.
Lets see what is a pedagogical model?
I firstly went through the pedagogical model mindmap which was already presented to the participates as a section of Flipped-classroom method.
Then we discussed openly on which model and why, when, and to whom we choose that model in our classrooms. (It actually was an interesting discussion.)
While I was preparing the content of my class, in my research path, I found this simple, practical, and not linear model in Victorian educational institution website.
This Pedagogical Model describes what effective teachers do in their classrooms to engage students in intellectually challenging work. It provides an overview of the learning cycle and breaks it down into five domains or phases of instruction: Engage, Explore, Explain, Elaborate and Evaluate.
In this model, each of these five domains are all elements of another complete model of teaching. They are not separate and self-contained parts. Students have this autonomy to move through all domains in some lessons; however, in other lessons, teachers decide to switch between domains based on students' needs and personal study plans.
Engage
Teachers know their students well and engage them in building supportive, inclusive and stimulating learning environments. Teachers motivate and empower students to manage their own learning and develop agency.
Explore
Teachers present challenging tasks to support students in generating and investigating questions, gathering relevant information and developing ideas. They help students expand their perspectives and preconceptions, understand learning tasks and prepare to navigate their own learning.
Explain
Teachers explicitly teach relevant knowledge, concepts and skills in multiple ways to connect new and existing knowledge. They monitor student progress in learning and provide structured opportunities for practicing new skills and developing agency.
Elaborate
Teachers challenge students to move from surface to deep learning, building student ability to transfer and generalize their learning. They support students to be reflective, questioning and self-monitoring learners.
Evaluate
Teachers use multiple forms of assessment and feedback to help students improve their learning and develop agency. They monitor student progress and analyse data to draw conclusions about the effectiveness of their teaching practices, identify areas for improvement and address student individual needs.
How does the pedagogical model which we follow affect our teaching methods?
Actually, teaching methods can be used within various pedagogical models. Teaching methods determine the approach a teacher uses to achieve learning objectives. In my field of study that is Teaching English as a Foreign Language, the scope of teaching methods is wide. For instance, Direct method, Silent method, Communicative languageteaching etc.
In my teaching session in Propeda, I introduced four different teaching methods which are in association with costructivist pedagogical model as samples.
Project-based learning (PBL), Flipped-classroom, Anchored instruction, and Jigsaw technique.
As an example I choose PBL method to point out how constructivist ideaology is behind this teaching method.
In PBL method:
- The instructor requires content area expertise and pedagogical competence
- Instructional design is learner centered and flexible
- A central question(s) or problem focuses and provides the catalyst for learning
- Teaching and learning objectives are explicit
- Learning tasks are authentic and engaging
- Instruction is mediated and integrated
- Promotes critical reflection and higher-order thinking skills
- Continuous assessment and monitoring of learning
This method is what I have witnessed the most in OSAO while I was doing my teaching practice. For example in OSAO Business unit, they have this marketing course, where students come up with business ideas in teams. And in the end, after working on the planning, marketing, accounting, and advertising they will attend a competition to see which business will be introduced as the best worked-on and attractive one in the whole Finland.
What is Uskalla Yrittää finals?
Uskalla Yrittää finals is a nationwide entrepreneurship championship of the JA Company program. It gathers JA-companies from all around Finland to compete for the national championship and a place in the European final. The finalists are chosen from all over Finland in regional semifinals (UskallaYrittää).
In this journey, teachers are acting as business coaches. They do not teach, however they do scaffolding. They use variety of instructional techniques to move students progressively toward stronger understanding and ultimately, greater independence in the process of learning and presenting their project.
Scaffolding and Guidance
To explain the role of teacher in scaffolding, I have this example. Imagine that you buy a furniture from a web page. The product arrives at your door. It looks nicely and neatly packed. All pieces are there. But there is no instruction on how to assemble it. I have experience on building something without a proper guidance. It feels overwhelming to me. I assume the role of teacher the same as that instruction paper in the furniture box.
Scaffolding in education is an instructional methods teachers apply to guide students in solving problem and offering support as they need it.
When a construction team builds a house, they use scaffolding as support to both themselves and materials. As soon as each section is completed, and they no longer need the support, they remove the scaffolds. This is exactly what I noticed that teachers in OSAO business section were doing. The teachers did not teach there. They support the students in finding their own unique way of presenting their start up business to the judges in Uskalla yrittää competition project. They never told students how their logo or web page content should include. They were trying firstly to present as many samples as possible, then answer all the questions which students were asking regarding their own content or logo. Then, as students internalize the necessary knowledge and experience and show signs of understanding, teachers gradually remove the scaffold. Of course, this is only one small example of how teachers act their part as guides.
Scaffolding is different based on goals, lessons and students.
In my English teaching classes, I break up the learning into chunks to move slowly into the whole picture.
As an example, in teaching grammar, I provide as many samples as possible, then the students come up with the general point of the grammar lesson. In the old times I remember our teachers used to write the whole grammar on the board e.g., Past tense: Subject + verb (regular or irreguler) + object. Then we built many examples based on this rule. Which makes us to miss many exceptions and confuse them with many other tense formulas!
Scaffolding in education is built on the idea of a zone of proximal development, first theorized about in the 1930s by Soviet psychologist Lev Vygotsky. The zone of proximal development (ZDP) is the distance between what students can accomplish on their own and what they need help with (Vygotsky, 1978).
The presence of a teacher, as a knowledgable other, is a key element of scaffolding and helps students move the zone of proximal development. They help students develop new skills, using scaffolding techniques to build on what students have already mastered.
Reference:
Bransford, J.D. et al. (1990). Anchored instruction: Why we need it and how technology can hel p. In D. Nix & R. Sprio (Eds), Cognition, education and multimedia. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum Associates.
SAMPSON, J.,P., & WATTS, A., & PALMER, M., HUGHES, D. (2011). International Collaboration in Translating Career Theory to Practice, Journal of Employment Counseling,37(2). pp. 98-106.
Toni, A., & Vuorinen, R. (2020). Lifelong guidance in Finland : Key policies and practices. In E. Hagaseth Haug, T. Hooley, J. Kettunen, & R. Thomsen (Eds.), Career and career guidance in the Nordic Countries (pp. 127-143). Brill. Career Development Series, 9.
Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
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