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06 Sep 2005 - 04:32

from around the edusphere

Here and there in the "edusphere" I've seen mention of Professor Plum. He's a fellow educational radical (as I've grown to think of people who favor actual instruction in the classroom), and today I checked out his website.

I learned, among other things, that Direct Instruction actually refers to a very specific method of instruction, and to a commercially available set of curricula. It's not just what happens when I Directly Instruct Ben on how to do a math problem, as I had thought. Professor Plum has a lot of material on it here, if you're curious.

But on a quick perusal, I wasn't attracted to Direct Instruction. I couldn't find what I thought was a sufficiently clear description of what Direct Instruction is about. I learned that it is scripted interaction between teachers and children, and that a great deal of teacher training is needed to implement it properly -- all of which statements I've also seen recently in the Connected Math context. I'd like to see more beef, up front and center.

One of Professor Plum's links also took me here, to a site for parents on how to develop contracts for children that help them achieve academic success. I really like this guy's ideas, which are built around a principle I've been using to good effect around here since Ben was a little toddler, namely bribery. It's not really bribery, of course; it's merely setting up a system of targeted incentives intentionally, rather than accidentally setting up the wrong ones haphazardly. There are lots of good suggestions and examples on this website; a lot of detail of the sort that makes you braver about actually implementing his suggestions.

I also did very much like a recent post of Professor Plum's, entitled Basic Features of Effective Instruction. This post is a gem; it summarizes the features of effective teaching very well, I think (I'd love to know whether KTM teachers agree with me on that!). While reading it, it struck me that I hadn't seen teaching methods of any sort described with such clarity since Ben was very young, and I was working with Applied Behavioral Analysts to implement the Lovaas curriculum, which is designed to treat young autism-spectrum children. There is no tougher customer to teach than a very young autistic child; they are extremely disinclined to pay the teacher any attention at all, and they are often not motivated by the things that motivate typical children (like praise and attention). A teacher can't mess around; her message has to be crystal clear, and her incentives have to be right on. Many of the principles he outlines here are typical-kid versions of those one uses in Applied Behavioral Analysis, to decrease confusion and ineffectiveness (and no surprise either, since he has worked with autism spectrum kids in his career). A terrific post.

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WebLogForm
Title: from around the edusphere
TopicType: WebLog
SubjectArea: DirectInstruction, ParentsTeachingKids
LogDate: 200509060031