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Formation through
Inductive Thinking
   A Lesson Strategy for a Conceptual
                           Curriculum
Where do ideas come from?
Sources of ideas
 Sensory learning – using our senses to explore and
  arrive at knowledge or understanding (Amorino, 2007).

 Constructive activity – making connections between what
  we perceive (Amorino, 2007; Hesse, 1989).

 Using open-ended problem solving – creating solutions
  (Wang, et al., 2009).

 When people make generalizations about a set of data
  (Bennet&Rolheiser, 2008).
Can we recreate conditions which
provoke conceptual thinking?
The Inquiry Cycle
                  INQUIRY
                   (Asking)




    REFLECTION                      ACTION
     (Thinking)                     (Doing)


                     (International Baccalaureate, 2008)
Inquiry uses concept formation for
learning
 Learners are presented with a data set

 Learners examine the data set items for common
  attributes

 Learners are asked to generalize among items in the
  data set, coming up with ideas of how these items are
  connected and what general idea they express or
  exemplify

(Bilica& Flores, 2009; International Baccalaureate, 2008;
  Reid, 2011)
Application of Inductive Strategy
 Science inquiry lessons
 Students examine facts, data or visual information and
  form generalizations about observations.
 Generalizations are based on critical attributes of the
  data set.
 In science, teachers use an inductive method for
  students to form scientific concepts


(Reid, 2011)
Can this strategy transfer to
subjects other than science?
Inductive Strategy in subjects
other than Science
 Teachers can use complex and realistic problems in their
  lessons

 Complex thinking is independent of language

 Scaffolding can be used to teach students how to think
  inductively



(Felder & Prince, 2007)
Inductive Thinking across the
curriculum
 Taking exemplars from the content area and using them
  as data sets

 Using analytical skill to reach generalizations about the
  data sets

 Data sets can be visual, text-based, or actual objects



(Hesse, 1989; Reid, 2011; Tishman, 2008)
Robertson‟s Process in Lessons
using inductive thinking strategy
 Starts with EXPLORATION where teacher engages
  students in activities designed to set up understanding of
  a concept.

 In this phase, students draw generalizations from a data
  set.



(Robertson, 2007)
Robertson‟s Process phase 2
 Phase 2 of the process is EXPLANATION, where
  students use activities to explain the new concept.

 This phase is where the teacher introduces the students
  to the lexicon related to the concept, the vocabulary that
  they will need to discuss that concept.

 For example, we using the termsinquiry, generalizations,
  questioning, data set to talk about concept formation
  using inductive thinking.

(Robertson, 2007)
Robertson‟s Process phase 3
 The third phase of the process is ELABORATION, where
  students are engaged in more activities to reinforce
  understanding of the concept.

 Here the teacher may present more examples, some that
  are examples of the concepts, and others that are non-
  examples.

 This is used to clarify and cement understanding of the
  characteristic attributes of the concept.



(Robertson, 2007)
An example using literature
 PHASE 1 EXPLORATION The teacher gives students a
  data set consisting of different extracts from fiction and
  asks the question, “What makes a piece of literature
  literary?”

 Students then have to draw on prior learning, and the
  data set, to come up with generalizations.

 Generalizations are written down for future use.

(Hesse, 1989)
An example using literature,
phase 2
 In phase 2 EXPLANATION, the teacher may ask the students
  to do the following:
 Compare and contrast the extracts with previous literature that
  students think are literary
 Come up with a list of characteristics of what literary pieces of
  text are
 Explain why one of the extracts or more is literary or non-
  literary based on the characteristics
 Justify choices by illustrating from specific examples
 The teacher may teach literature terms while students engage
  in these activities
An example using literature,
phase 3
 In ELABORATION, the teacher may present other text
  types such as travel writing, diary entries, greeting cards,
  etc mixed with literary text types such as poetry, short
  fiction, vignettes

 The activity may ask students to come up with attributes
  of the concept “literary” using these new data sets.

 Interspersed with these activities might be clarification of
  the concept using other strategies such as cooperative
  learning, academic controversy, scaffolding to reinforce
  the concept formation.
Summary

                • What for?
                • How?

    Concept
    Formation     • Process
    Using
    inductive     • Integration
    thinking



                • Impact
Classroom Impact
   Integration (through concepts and skills) with other
    subject areas
   Form original ideas
   Improve conceptual thinking
   Discover and engage in learning
   Meaning-oriented approach
   Self-directed learning
   Student is at the center of the lesson
(Amorino, 2007; Bilica& Flores, 2009; Felder & Prince, 2007; Hesse, 1989;
Reid, 2011)
References

Amorino, J. (2007). Classroom educators learn more about teaching and learning
  from the arts. Phi Delta Kappan, 90(3), 190-195.

Bennet, B. &Rolheiser, C. (2008). Beyond Monet: The artful science of
  instructional integration. Toronto, Ontario: Bookation.

Bilica, K. & Flores, M. (F 2009). Inductive and deductive science thinking; A model
    for lesson development. Science Scope, 36-41.

Brown-Jeffy, S. & Cooper, J. E. (2011). Toward a conceptual framework of
   culturally revelant pedagogy: An overview of the conceptual and theoretical
   literature. Teacher Education Quarterly, Winter, 65-84.

Felder, R. & Prince, M. (O 2007). The case for inductive teaching. Prism, 17(2),
   55.

Hesse, D. (N 1989). Canon and critical thinking. English Journal, 78(7), 16-22.
Heubner, T. (N 2008). Balancing the concrete and the abstract. Educational
  Leadership, 66(3), 86-87.

International Baccalaureate (2008). From Principles Into Practice. Cardiff, Wales:
    Author.

Reid, B. (J 2011). The concept attainment strategy. The Science Teacher, 51-55.

Robertson, B. (J 2007). Getting past „inquiry versus content.‟ Educational
  Leadership, 64(4), 67-70.

Tishman, S. (F 2008). The object of their attention. Educational Leadership, 65(5),
   44-46.

Wang, J., Wang, Y., Tai, H. & Chen, W. (2009). Investigating the effectiveness of
  inquiry-based instruction on students with different prior knowledge and
  reading abilities. International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education,
  8, 801-820.

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Concept formation

  • 1. Formation through Inductive Thinking A Lesson Strategy for a Conceptual Curriculum
  • 2. Where do ideas come from?
  • 3. Sources of ideas  Sensory learning – using our senses to explore and arrive at knowledge or understanding (Amorino, 2007).  Constructive activity – making connections between what we perceive (Amorino, 2007; Hesse, 1989).  Using open-ended problem solving – creating solutions (Wang, et al., 2009).  When people make generalizations about a set of data (Bennet&Rolheiser, 2008).
  • 4. Can we recreate conditions which provoke conceptual thinking?
  • 5. The Inquiry Cycle INQUIRY (Asking) REFLECTION ACTION (Thinking) (Doing) (International Baccalaureate, 2008)
  • 6. Inquiry uses concept formation for learning  Learners are presented with a data set  Learners examine the data set items for common attributes  Learners are asked to generalize among items in the data set, coming up with ideas of how these items are connected and what general idea they express or exemplify (Bilica& Flores, 2009; International Baccalaureate, 2008; Reid, 2011)
  • 7. Application of Inductive Strategy  Science inquiry lessons  Students examine facts, data or visual information and form generalizations about observations.  Generalizations are based on critical attributes of the data set.  In science, teachers use an inductive method for students to form scientific concepts (Reid, 2011)
  • 8. Can this strategy transfer to subjects other than science?
  • 9. Inductive Strategy in subjects other than Science  Teachers can use complex and realistic problems in their lessons  Complex thinking is independent of language  Scaffolding can be used to teach students how to think inductively (Felder & Prince, 2007)
  • 10. Inductive Thinking across the curriculum  Taking exemplars from the content area and using them as data sets  Using analytical skill to reach generalizations about the data sets  Data sets can be visual, text-based, or actual objects (Hesse, 1989; Reid, 2011; Tishman, 2008)
  • 11. Robertson‟s Process in Lessons using inductive thinking strategy  Starts with EXPLORATION where teacher engages students in activities designed to set up understanding of a concept.  In this phase, students draw generalizations from a data set. (Robertson, 2007)
  • 12. Robertson‟s Process phase 2  Phase 2 of the process is EXPLANATION, where students use activities to explain the new concept.  This phase is where the teacher introduces the students to the lexicon related to the concept, the vocabulary that they will need to discuss that concept.  For example, we using the termsinquiry, generalizations, questioning, data set to talk about concept formation using inductive thinking. (Robertson, 2007)
  • 13. Robertson‟s Process phase 3  The third phase of the process is ELABORATION, where students are engaged in more activities to reinforce understanding of the concept.  Here the teacher may present more examples, some that are examples of the concepts, and others that are non- examples.  This is used to clarify and cement understanding of the characteristic attributes of the concept. (Robertson, 2007)
  • 14. An example using literature  PHASE 1 EXPLORATION The teacher gives students a data set consisting of different extracts from fiction and asks the question, “What makes a piece of literature literary?”  Students then have to draw on prior learning, and the data set, to come up with generalizations.  Generalizations are written down for future use. (Hesse, 1989)
  • 15. An example using literature, phase 2  In phase 2 EXPLANATION, the teacher may ask the students to do the following:  Compare and contrast the extracts with previous literature that students think are literary  Come up with a list of characteristics of what literary pieces of text are  Explain why one of the extracts or more is literary or non- literary based on the characteristics  Justify choices by illustrating from specific examples  The teacher may teach literature terms while students engage in these activities
  • 16. An example using literature, phase 3  In ELABORATION, the teacher may present other text types such as travel writing, diary entries, greeting cards, etc mixed with literary text types such as poetry, short fiction, vignettes  The activity may ask students to come up with attributes of the concept “literary” using these new data sets.  Interspersed with these activities might be clarification of the concept using other strategies such as cooperative learning, academic controversy, scaffolding to reinforce the concept formation.
  • 17. Summary • What for? • How? Concept Formation • Process Using inductive • Integration thinking • Impact
  • 18. Classroom Impact  Integration (through concepts and skills) with other subject areas  Form original ideas  Improve conceptual thinking  Discover and engage in learning  Meaning-oriented approach  Self-directed learning  Student is at the center of the lesson (Amorino, 2007; Bilica& Flores, 2009; Felder & Prince, 2007; Hesse, 1989; Reid, 2011)
  • 19. References Amorino, J. (2007). Classroom educators learn more about teaching and learning from the arts. Phi Delta Kappan, 90(3), 190-195. Bennet, B. &Rolheiser, C. (2008). Beyond Monet: The artful science of instructional integration. Toronto, Ontario: Bookation. Bilica, K. & Flores, M. (F 2009). Inductive and deductive science thinking; A model for lesson development. Science Scope, 36-41. Brown-Jeffy, S. & Cooper, J. E. (2011). Toward a conceptual framework of culturally revelant pedagogy: An overview of the conceptual and theoretical literature. Teacher Education Quarterly, Winter, 65-84. Felder, R. & Prince, M. (O 2007). The case for inductive teaching. Prism, 17(2), 55. Hesse, D. (N 1989). Canon and critical thinking. English Journal, 78(7), 16-22.
  • 20. Heubner, T. (N 2008). Balancing the concrete and the abstract. Educational Leadership, 66(3), 86-87. International Baccalaureate (2008). From Principles Into Practice. Cardiff, Wales: Author. Reid, B. (J 2011). The concept attainment strategy. The Science Teacher, 51-55. Robertson, B. (J 2007). Getting past „inquiry versus content.‟ Educational Leadership, 64(4), 67-70. Tishman, S. (F 2008). The object of their attention. Educational Leadership, 65(5), 44-46. Wang, J., Wang, Y., Tai, H. & Chen, W. (2009). Investigating the effectiveness of inquiry-based instruction on students with different prior knowledge and reading abilities. International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 8, 801-820.