Monday, December 29, 2008

What Is Substantive Conversation - ScribeFire Test

Does classroom talk lead to sustained conversational dialogue between students, and between teachers and students to create or negotiate understanding of subject matter?

Explanation

In classes with substantive conversation there is considerable teacher-students and student-student interaction about the ideas of a substantive topic; the interaction is reciprocal, and it promotes coherent shared understanding. This element describes the extent of talking to learn and to understand in the classroom.

Features of substantive conversation include:

  1. INTELLECTUAL SUBSTANCE: The talk is about subject matter in the discipline and encourages critical reasoning such as making distinctions, applying ideas, forming generalizations, raising questions. It moves beyond just the recounting of experiences, facts, definitions, or procedures (e.g., technical language, analytical distinctions and categories being made, levels of differentiations between types and arguments stated, grounds for disagreement stated).
  2. DIALOGUE: The conversation involves sharing of ideas and is not completely scripted or controlled by one party (as in teacher-led recitation). Sharing is best illustrated when participants provide extended statements, direct their comments, questions and statements directly to others, redirect and select next speakers.
  3. LOGICAL EXTENSION AND SYNTHESIS: The dialogue builds coherently on participants' ideas to promote improved collective understanding of a theme or topic. In short, substantive conversation resembles the kind of sustained exploration of content characteristic of a good seminar where student contributions lead to shared understandings (e.g., teachers and students may make principled topic shifts, may use linking words, make explicit references to previous comments, and may summarize).
  4. A SUSTAINED EXCHANGE: This extends beyond a routine IRE (initiate/response/evaluate). This can occur between teacher and students or student and student and involves several consecutive interchanges. Dialogue consists of a sustained and topically related series of linked exchanges between speakers.
In classes where there is little or no substantive conversation, teacher-student interaction typically consists of a lecture with recitation where the teacher deviates very little from delivering information and routine questions; students typically give very short answers. Discussion here may follow the typical IRE pattern: with low-level recall/fact-based questions, short utterance or single-word responses, and further simple questions and/or teacher evaluation statements (e.g., 'yes, good'). This is an extremely routine, teacher centered pattern, that amounts to a 'fill in the blank', or 'guess what's in the teacher's head' format.

Continuum of Practice

Virtually no features of substantive conversation occur during the lesson. Lesson consists principally of either a sustained teacher monologue/lecture and/or a repeated IRE sequence with little variation, or conversation which is not substantive.

  • Features B (dialogue) and/or C (logical extension and synthesis) occur and involve two or more sustained exchanges.

  • All features of substantive conversation occur in an ongoing and sustained fashion, extending across almost all of the lesson, with both teachers and students scaffolding the conversation.

Example

A year 8 integrated Maths and Science class was divided into groups. Each group spent a period building animals to certain design specifications. The animals were given names by the students. Discussion was then held about classification systems of the animals. The teacher then distributed a classification system that he had created.

In groups of four the students then moved from table to table where the 15 animals were set up and had discussions about the animals. On a sheet they classified the animals according to the system the teacher had given them. When all the animals had been classified by all groups, the teacher held a whole-group discussion of the classification by each group of each animal. Interesting discussions ensued in respect of different classifications by some of the groups of the same animal.

This discussion covered issues of measurement, including very sophisticated discussion about exactitude, angle of viewing the animals, injured animals, error in measurement generally and its sources and so on. In most instances within these conversations students were initiating the dialogue and other students were providing the frameworks upon which the groups were constructing their collective understandings of the topic.

Content from: Queensland Government Educational Site

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Alternative To a Poster Project

There are few educational tasks more tedious than keeping track of several classes worth of poster projects. They are bulky, unportable, many parents hate them, and invariably they fall apart once the Elmer's glue loses its grip.

Now you don't need to "loose your grip"; www.glogster.com/edu is an excellent resource for students to complete an online poster project rich with multimedia and creative opportunities. These projects now become portable, open up new avenues for creativity, appeal to our "21st Century Learners", and can include an audience far beyond the brick and mortar of our classrooms - "the web".

Unless you like getting glitter all over your desk...

Check out this example of a poster or "glog" I created based upon Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. It used resources readily available on the web, and took about 1/2 an hour to create.

Before I request unblocking it for the students, I am looking for some input on how you might use this resource in your classroom...Comments welcome...

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Animoto In the Classroom

Animoto is a cool website that allows you to upload a bunch of pictures or PowerPoint Slides. It mixes them, creates animations, and then balances the animations in relationship to the beat of music. Here is an example:



I am trying to figure out ideas where this can be used in your classes, but I am having trouble discerning a legitimate reason to do so. A reason besides, 'cause its cool...Any comments are welcome...