Teach Less, Teach Better, Teach It Again and Again

“I taught a lesson to my students.  They should have learned it.” 

Some students learned “it”, and some did not.  And some tuned out and were not mentally present for learning.  Walk the hallways of any school.  Stop to look in and watch the teaching and learning act in motion.  We see the teaching.  We assume the learning.  At the end of any lesson, we may hear the teacher sigh with this assumption.  “There.  I taught it.   They should have learned it”.  Or was it exasperation.

What do we know?

We don’t remember all that we are taught for very long.  This is a fact.  Hermann Ebbinghauss, a German psychologist, explored memory and why we forget.  His work in the 1880s has been replicated and validated over time.  His “forgetting curve” is instructive today.

“We forget 50% of the new information we are presented within 24 hours and 90% of that new information within a week.”

Perhaps the above statement should be emblazoned on the back wall of every classroom for teachers to constantly read as they teach.

https://www.mindtools.com/a9wjrjw/ebbinghauss-forgetting-curve

Ebbinghauss’ “forgetting curve” corresponds with Edgar Dale’s “Cone of Experience”.  In the 1960s Dale posited what he called the “Cone of Experience”.  Dale examined how people receive information.  He developed a model portraying the effectiveness of the mode for presenting new information and memory.  The isolated act of reading was the least effective while designing and making a presentation was the most effective. 

Later, misinterpreters of Dale’s work relabeled it the “Cone of Remembering” and this misinterpretation has been repeated until many believe it as factual.  This is the misinterpretation.

WE REMEMBER

10% of what we read.

20% of what we hear.

30% of what we see.

50% of what we see and hear.

70% of what we discuss with others.

80% of what we personally experience.

95% or what we teach others.

This is Dale’s Cone of Experience.

Presentation modes of verbal and visual symbols (words and graphics) are impersonal and less well remembered while the four experiential activities at the bottom of the cone require personal engagement and result in better retention.

https://uh.edu/~dsocs3/wisdom/wisdom/we_remember.pdf

Ebbinghauss and Dale inform us that memory is fickle and short-lived if it is isolated and left alone.

Capitalize on learning and make it memorable.

Further, Ebbinghauss’ research tells us that we can reduce the decline of memory by using several instructional strategies.  He found these to reduce forgetting.

  • Reinforce content, skills, and dispositions about learning regularly.  We know from retention theory that if we want information or skills to be accessible in short-term memory, students need 5-7 repetitions of mentally or physically working with they are to remember.  Theory tells us that 18 – 20 repetitions are required to create long-term retention.  If the biggest loss of memory is within one day, repetition must be at least daily to begin building memory.  This clearly is Ebbinghauss.

Consider automaticity of math facts.  We teach and drill children to learn addition, subtraction, multiplication and division math facts in the primary grades.  Then in the upper elementary and middle level grades we assume these facts are secured memory for all students.  In fact, they are not.  If we want to ensure automaticity, repeat episodes of the several times every year.  Make a game of it but do it.  Assumptions that children remember almost always leads to problems.

  • Presentation matters for clarity of what is to be remembered.  Make the new information easier to comprehend and absorb.  Assign smaller chunks of material to be read or watched.  Use visuals and graphics to assist students to make a clearer understanding of new information.  Build outlines, maps, and graphic organizers for students to link new information to what they already know.  This clearly is Dale.

https://www.lucidchart.com/blog/types-of-graphic-organizers-in-education

  • Make learning relevant and personal.  Motivation theory tells us that when students see themselves using new information or skills, they are more receptive to new learning and invested in remembering it.  Personalizing new learning gives students a purpose for learning and remembering it.
  • Make learning active not passive.  Use as many modalities for students to engage with new learning as are reasonable.  Approach new learning verbally – say it, write it, interpret it in a different language.  Approach it creatively – draw it, paint it, sculpt it, build it, sign it, and act it out.  Be careful not to let the projection of new learning become more important that the new learning itself.

https://asc.tamu.edu/study-learning-handouts/using-learning-modalities

What to do – Teach it, Teach it better, and Teach it again and again.

Teach less.  A grade level or subject area curriculum always contain more learning than can be accomplished within the confines of school year.  A teacher who says, “I taught everything in my curriculum or course guide” either has Cliffs Notes as a guide or is settling for very minimal student achievement in the end of year assessments.  This is not a license to discard a curriculum or course guide, but to carefully select the essential content information, skills, and dispositions that all students must learn and remember.  Both words are critical – learn and remember. 

Teach it better.  Use sound theories of instruction to build student retention and use of what they learn.  Chunk new learning for clarity.  Provide organizers of connecting new to secured learning.  Use multiple examples to help challenged learners find a connection to new learning.  The use of sound theories to teach essential new learning by itself will propel student achievement.

Make it meaningful.  Attach new learning to what students already know.  Attach new learning to the interests of the students, their families, and their community.  Attach new learning to what students will be learning and doing in their educational and career futures.  Once a child finds a purpose for learning, get out her way and simply coach her along the way.

Teach it again and again.  We parse our curriculum into units and chapters and almost never reteach or return to a unit or chapter once we complete it.  Then we wonder why students at the end of the year cannot recall with completeness or clarity what they learned at the beginning.  Take the time to repeat a chapter review from several chapters ago.  Check to know what students remember and can to with completeness and clarity.  If that knowledge or skill is essential, teach it again.  Do this rear-view mirror chapter review throughout the year.  You will see better student performances on end of year tests and future teachers of your students will be amazed at their longer-term memory.

Masters of Curriculum in the Time of COVID

The Summer of COVID is almost over and we return to teaching and learning in the Time of COVID.  We have exhausted the summer with well-intentioned but conclusionless arguments about whether children should be in-school or at-home learners.  Opinion and data have abounded and most schools will implement an in-school and at-home design that fits their local dynamics of economics, politics, and school capacity.  Now, it is time to get do rather than talk.  It is time to teach. 

Never has a teacher been required to know her curriculum more than in the Fall of COVID.   Depending upon local COVID data, schooling will shift from in-school to at-home and back again throughout the school year for some if not all children.  One day she will be teaching in her classroom and poof!  Children and teachers may be quarantined into remote teaching and learning.  Where and how she sees her children may be an ever changing landscape.  In-class one day and at-home the next.  Now more than ever before, quality teaching and learning must be a constant in times of disruption.

Take Away

A teacher’s singular responsibility for the 2020-21 school year will be to cause each child to learn her annual grade level or subject course curriculum regardless of the student’s learning location.  This will, of course, be paired with the necessity of every teacher addressing the socio-emotional needs of children in a pandemic world and of families adjusting their work styles and life styles to a return to school.  With so many things disrupted and in disarray, a teacher’s clear and sustained knowledge of her curriculum will be the rock upon which we will educate children in 2020-21.  The battle cry for teacher’s will be “Know and Teach Your Curriculum”. 

What Do We Know?

Disrupted teaching and learning are not new to teachers.  Fire drills disrupt classes and hurricanes and blizzards disrupt school weeks.  Personal and family illness regularly absent teachers and children from the classroom.  A family that takes a prolonged vacation unrelated to school holidays requires modification to the flow of instruction and learning.  Within usual disruption, teaching and learning bounces back and returns to its yearly string of school days.  These are normal occurrences in the life and times of school.

Pandemic disruption is different. 

Teachers with hybrid schedules will have in-person contact with children one or two days per week on a rotating or alternating basis.  The other days of the week, teaching and learning will be remote.  This is juggling 3 or 4 balls in the air to assure that the teacher equally distributes in person time with all children and, while children are online, they continue to learn independent of the teacher.

Teachers of at-home children will teach a lesson to children with high-speed broadband Internet and with no or inadequate Internet connectivity, with parent support during the school day and without any adult supervision, and to children relying solely on mailed or school delivered packets of lessons.  A child’s time on task will be unseen.  A child may engage in today’s lesson today, tonight, tomorrow or next week.  And, then there is tomorrow’s lesson.  This is juggling 20 balls with the understanding that the juggler frequently must pick up dropped balls.

Toss in classroom or school closing when a child or teacher or staff member is exposed to or infected with the virus.  Then, all children will become at-home learners.  And, teachers will be teaching from home.

Teachers of children in-class and at-home simultaneously need to be be master jugglers.  The criteria for master juggling is a mastering of curriculum.

Why Is This Thus?

Disruption and broken strings of school days are facts.  Focused teaching and learning are a constant.  When reassembling during and after a disruption, a clear knowledge of her curriculum keeps a teacher pointed at the essential knowledge, skills and dispositions that all children must learn.  Equal to the national and community concerns about COVID is the national and community worry that children will not be provided the education required for their future.  Again, knowledge of curriculum is a teacher’s pathway to educating all children.

To Do

Focus on essential learning.  Knowledge of curriculum creates certainty in teaching what must be learned.  Every curriculum, every series, and every text provides a broad pathway of learning within which is a critical set of knowledge, skills and dispositions.  Knowing your curriculum keeps a teacher focused on what must be learned and allows disruption to shuck off the “it is nice to know”.  A teacher without this sound foundational knowledge chases every learning point possible without efficiency or effectiveness.

Focus on exceptional learning needs.  Knowledge of curriculum ensures that each child regardless of learning challenges is engaged regardless of location.  These are two significant “regardless” issues.  Children with IEPs or adaptive learning plans or without English fluency or who are children of various giftedness require modifications of essential curriculum that cause them to achieve and exceed the same outcomes as all other children.  These are equity and equality issues that cannot be excused by disruption or child location.  A mastery knowledge of curriculum keeps children with exceptional learning needs learning.

Focus on curricular outcomes.  Knowledge of curriculum creates deftness in the management of all learners.  Children range in their time and place within a unit of study and a knowledgeable teacher, like a shepherd, keeps them all moving in the same direction toward a known and necessary closure of the unit.  A teacher without deft management loses children along the way.  Deftness and a vigilant moving toward curricular outcomes keeps all children on the pathway to annual success.

Focus on formative assessments.  Knowledge of curriculum assures that checking for understanding and assessments of learning are included in every unit regardless of where children are learning.  Without this knowledge, it is easy for a teacher to become driven to deliver a quantity of instruction and lose sight of the quality of learning. 

Focus on learning modalities.  Knowledge of curriculum allows a teacher to shift from high tech to no tech teaching and learning while keeping all children learning.  An in-person child and an at-home/on-screen child and an at-home paper and pencil child can all be engaged in the same curricular standards and reaching the same learner outcomes.  A knowledgeable teacher works backward from the learning outcomes and builds instruction so that each child regardless of location reaches the same, high quality outcomes. 

The Big Duh!

COVID too shall pass.  When it does, we will not repeat the 2020-21 school year because some children did not learn their grade level or subject course curriculum.  Children will be promoted and graduated with what they learned this year.  We are called upon to deliver high quality teaching and learning in unbelievably difficult times.  A mastery knowledge of our curriculum is our best resource for succeeding in this responsibility.

And, there is no one else in our nation, state or community who can replace a master teacher.