The second topic that stood out to me was the idea of understanding by design or backwards design. The educational curriculum works in the reverse of how most educators set up lesson plans. First starting with the goals or outcomes for the students then going backwards to choosing the method of instruction and how students will achieve this. I believe this is a very ingenious model to use when making lesson plans. This concept, I believe focusing on a better understanding and processing of the information for students. This can be tied into the learning assessment that I discussed before. I believe that this is the type of method that should be used when preparing for learning assessments. When administrators and teachers have the assessment as the end goal then figuring out how students will get to the end goal will achieve greater success.
The last topic that stood out to me was the idea of multimodal learning. This is essentially an individual's best learning styles. After I did some research, I found a website called VARK. This website, gives people a questionnaire to figure out what their best learning style is. After what which learning style or learning styles are best suited for you, the website has an individual web page to describe each learning style (through the link provided, you will be brought to a page where there are hyperlinks to each page). I took this questionnaire and was given the following scores:
Visual 5
Aural 4
Read/Write 7
Kinesthetic 4
Based on the questionnaire, I was told that my preferred style of learning is to read and write information. This was spot on for how I like to learn and study.. For students to know what their preferred learning style is can make the biggest difference between an A or a B. ![]() |
Photo credit to GotCredit from Flickr |
Calabrese, A. (2016, June 10). Backwards Design. Created with Gliffy, from http://www.gliffy.com/go/publish/10754611
GotCredit. (2015, March 16). Learning. Retrieved on June 10, 2016, from https://www.flickr.com/photos/jakerust/16846023595/in/photolist-rECgUF
Jehlen, A. (2009). NCLB: Is it Working? Retrieved on June 10, 2016, from http://www.nea.org/home/20755.htm
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