2. LEARNING STRATEGY TRAINING
“good language learners are willing and accurate
guessers who have a strong desire to communicate…
They attend to both the meaning and the form of
their message. They also practice and monitor their
own speech as well as others.” (Larsen-Freeman,
p159)
3. WHAT IS LEARNING STRATEGY TRAINING?
• LEARNING STRATEGY – used to achieve learning
strategies
• - usually tied to the needs and interests of students
to enhance learning and based on many types of
learning styles
• LEARNING STRATEGY TRAINING – learning will
be facilitated by making students aware of the range
from which they can choose during language
learning and use (to improve learning effectiveness)
5. GOALS OF STRATEGY TRAINING
• Self diagnose their strengths and weaknesses in language
learning
• Become aware of what helps them to learn the target
language most efficiently
• Develop a broad range of problem solving skills
• Experiment with familiar and unfamiliar learning
strategies
• Make decisions on how to approach a language task
• Monitor and self-evaluate their performance
• Transfer successful strategies to new learning contexts
6. FRAMEWORK
FOR
LEARNING
STRATEGY
TRAINING
AIMS AT
RAISING STUDENT
AWARENESS OF THE
PURPOSE AND
RATIONALE OF
STRATEGY USE
GIVES STUDENTS
OPPORTUNITIES TO
PRACTICE THE
STRATEGIES THEY
ARE BEING TAUGHT
HELP THEM USE
THE STRATEGIES IN
NEW LEARNING
CONTEXTS
• SEQUENCE FOR FRAMEWORK
i. Initial modeling of the strategy by
the teacher with direct
explanation of the strategy’s use
and importance
ii.Guided practice
iii.Consolidation – help students
identify the strategy and decide
when it might be used
iv.Independent practice
v. Application of strategy to new
tasks
7. COOPERATIVE LEARNING
“WHAT CHILDREN CAN DO TOGETHER TODAY,
THEY CAN DO ALONE TOMORROW” – LEV
VYGOTSKY, 1962
“THERE IS POWER TO WORKING IN GROUPS” –
DAVID AND ROGER JOHNSON
“IT’S MORE THAN 3 PEOPLE AND FORM A
GROUP”
8. COOPERATIVE LEARNING – WHAT IS IT?
• Is an approach to organizing classroom activities
into academic and social learning experiences
• An instructional method that allows students to work
in small groups within the classroom, often with a
division of assignment of several specific tasks or
roles. Allows students to practice working in a group
and taking leadership roles
• Structured form of small group learning. Based on 2
key assumptions – positive independence and
individual accountability
11. GROUP PROCESSING
individual members of the team follow correct
procedures to analyze how well their team is
functioning and how well their team is using
interpersonal skills
12. COOPERATIVE LEARNING - OBJECTIVES
• Students learn from each other in groups
• Students think in “positive interdependence”
• Groups are mixed in gender and race
• Individuals help each other
• Teacher teach students social skills
• Students communicate in L2 to achieve language
acquisition
• Students are tested individually
• Students responsibility are distributed
• Teacher teach L2 & cooperation
• Cooperative learning teaches language for academic and
social purposes
13. HOW TO IMPLEMENT COOPERATIVE
LEARNING?
Big project – report writing based on findings,
observations etc.
Jigsaw – divide the group to focus in special areas of
the material to be learned
Peer review – learn how to provide and receive
constructive feedback
14. COOPERATIVE LEARNING
Not random – involves intentional planning that
focuses on goals and objectives
Based on students’ multiple intelligences,
learning styles, interests, readiness vs ability
Fosters positive social and interpersonal skills
demonstrated by members of the team
Assigns roles to members of the group
Individuals as well as group members
responsible for learning
Encourages individual members to reflect upon
their roles in the group and work
15. MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES
PHILOSOPHY
The ability to enhance and amplify our intelligence
Can be taught to others
A multiple reality that occurs in different parts of the
brain/mind system
Intelligence – the ability to solve problems, create
products that are valued in more than 1 cultural
setting
18. MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES
APPROACH
Better regard for intellectuality
Provide opportunities for authentic learning based
on needs, interests and talents of students
Parents and community involvement may increase
when students demonstrate work before panels
and audiences
Students will be able to demonstrate their abilities
and strengths – can help increase self esteem
19. BENEFITS OF IMPLEMENTING MULTIPLE
INTELLIGENCES
When you teach for understanding students will
accumulate positive educational experiences and the
capability for creating solutions to problems in life
20. HOW CAN MI HELP STUDENTS LEARN
BETTER?
Learning is both a social and psychological process.
When ss understand how they are intelligent – to
manage own learning , to value individual strengths