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Month: December 2018

Gpers: TIF Project Reflection

Gpers: TIF Project Reflection

What has creating the lesson plan and presentation for The Island Foundation  taught you about the way children learn best?

Through creating the lesson plan and presentation for The Island Foundation I learnt several things about how children learn best. These are:

1. I learnt the importance of incorporating 21st Century Skills (Critical Thinking, Collaboration) to raise the quality of students and develop highly refined and practically applicable skills. These skills help children to have better thought processes and communication skills that help them in the future. The importance of starting to develop these skills early and provide a quality platform for students to learn is something we usually take for granted and not really understand how beneficial these are for our future.

 

2.  Contextually and Age Appropriate

When planning a lesson it is crucial to make sure the lesson is of the conceptual understanding level of the group of students that we are working with. The concepts should drawn upon knowledge they are familiar with and knowledge they can expand on related to the particular topic. In this case, we learnt how teaching knowledge that is relevant to the lives of students in the community would be highly beneficial and practical.

3. Time Management

While planning our lesson, we realised the difficulty of trying to fit all of the content we wanted to cover within a particular time limit. The main issue we learnt how to work around was leaving time to consolidate the information that will be given to them so that the lesson if effective and not open-ended. I realised that we need and equal amount of time to give new information as well as discuss and digest that information during class time.

4. Classroom Management

During the process we researched into classroom management techniques and I learnt a lot about effective methods of keeping the class attentive and engaged. I learnt that vocal or visual cues are better methods than verbal cues. Additionally, we learnt to modify our techniques to the age group of the students again which account for their attention span

What connections can you draw between Piaget’s theory of cognitive development and/or Vygotsky’s social learning theory and the way you have constructed your lesson? Consider what you have been learning in Integrated Humanities. 

In our lessons plan we aimed to build upon concepts should drawn upon knowledge they are familiar with and knowledge they can enhance their understanding on that particular topic and prompt them toward new refined ideas. This syncs up with the Vygotsky’s  ideologies of the ‘Zone of Proximal Development’ wherein teachers guides them through what they know and what they have to learn through discussion and debating. This then relates to the 21st Century Skill of collaboration as it evokes sociocultural learning and helps children catch ideas themselves rather than it being taught and not understood. The latter is a philosophy put forward by Piaget.

Why is this approach to learning important for meeting Indonesia’s development needs? Refer back to the Catalysing Productive Livelihood report from earlier in the unit. 

The main components lacking Indonesia’s educational development from reading the Catalysing Productive Livelihood report is the quality of teachers, the quality of education and the late enrolment in school. The approach of learning we want to incorporate gives students a higher quality of education as it develops more practical skills needed from the future using more holistic ways of teaching rather than rote-learning or teacher-centred learning. This method of education focuses on realistic levels of knowledge so that no conceptual understanding is lost in translation. It is a method that can be implemented at a young age and non-reliant on level of content so students can starts practicing beneficial skills that can counteract late the issue enrolment. Student-centred learning gives teachers new improved and efficient methods of teaching as well.

Service Reflection: Music Buddies with Cerebral Palsy

Service Reflection: Music Buddies with Cerebral Palsy

Over the last season, I signed up for a local service in which we work with children in the Cerebral Palsy Alliance Center. The experience taught all the students in the service a lot. Firstly, it made us aware of the condition of Cerebral Palsy in general. We learnt the causes of CP which is due to lack of oxygen in birth, methods of treatments and different types of therapy, types of CP (paraplegic, diaplegic), special ways of calming the children, example, multi-sensory rooms and developed methods of teaching using adapted resources like visual simulations and ‘yes’ or ‘no’ buttons. Mainly, it helped us be better informed and be less prejudiced about the issue. We learnt how to interact appropriately with the students, while also encountering and getting over the difficulties of creating an impactful and simulating lesson when we have limited time to work. Initially, it was hard to connect with the children and personalise lesson plans based upon the group of students. However, we learnt to strategise new ways of creating activities (eg. musical chairs with hoola-hoops) and learnt to be more resourceful and thoughtful while planning as well. Personally, I wasn’t quite aware of what CP was before joining this service or never worked with differently abled children before and it was quite hard to break out of a shell and try to finds methods and ways to connect with them even if it seems hard or non-beneficial. Through the process, I learnt a lot about conduct and challenges that come with trying to teach differently abled children. I learnt how to be patient or understanding of a variety of situations.

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