Reading Reflection: After reading the required material for this module, type a reflection ?that include the following: Analyze HOM used: Start your reflection addressing a habit(s)
Reading Reflection: After reading the required material for this module, type a reflection that include the following:
- Analyze HOM used: Start your reflection addressing a habit(s) of mind (HOM) that you used to understand the topic and analyze how and why did you use that HOM. Use the “How are we doing” checklist (Download “How are we doing” checklist (Word) to support your reflection.
- Question: Post one question for the discussion about each chapter. These questions should require interpretation of the ideas laid out in the chapter and should reflect your careful reading and thinking about its content. You do not need to provide answers to these questions. The quality of your questions will be considered as part of the assignment grade using Arthur Costa's quinksto an external site.. Make sure to include the level of questioning next to each question.
The criteria for your grade will be:
- Reading reflection (not summary or bullets) (1 point)
- Analyze HOM used (2 points)
- Questioning level based on Arthur Costa (2 points)
Reading: Ritchhart, et al. MTV 3 pages 45-52 Making Thinking Visible: How to promote engagement, understanding, and independence for all learnersRitchart, R. Church, M., Morrison, K.San Francisco Jossey- Bass Publishers. 2011ISBN-10 047091551XISBN-13 978-0470915516 Chapter 8
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
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Shifting Teachers’ Discourse in the Classroom:
Implications of Cultivating Habits of Mind, Visible Thinking, and Teaching for
Understanding in a Graduate Childhood Curriculum Course
Angela K. Salmon, Ed.D.
Florida International University
Debra Mayes Pane, Ph.D.
Florida International University
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
2
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse in the Classroom:
Implications of Cultivating Habits of Mind, Visible Thinking, and Teaching for
Understanding in a Graduate Childhood Curriculum Course
It is common for teachers to teach in the same way that they were taught. In their teacher
discourse, teachers often communicate and reflect their philosophies of teaching and learning,
teaching approaches, and habits of mind. This chapter presents our approach of embedding and
consolidating the Habits of Mind (HoM) and using the Visible Thinking (VT) approach to
develop thinking dispositions within a Teaching for Understanding (TfU) framework (Blyte &
Associates, 1998) in a graduate course (Childhood Curriculum, EDE 6205) in the College of
Education (COE) at Florida International University (FIU) which is designed for candidates to
study curriculum theory, research, construction, and evaluation. The combination of approaches
have been designed and applied to enhance thinking and understanding of teachers/master’s
degree candidates’ enrolled in the MS Curriculum and Instruction – Jamaican program.
Additionally, we designed a qualitative case study of course participants to explore the three
important interrelated frameworks [HoM-VT- TfU] for developing dialogical and dialectical
thinking through teachers’ discourse (Flyvbjerg, 2011). The study took place in in several
regions of Jamaica during the summer term, 2012. The study included the candidates’ field
notes and audio/videotaping of their lessons taught at early childhood, elementary, middle, and
high school levels in very diverse learning settings in grades pK-12 schools. We triangulated the
data from different candidates’ artifacts that revealed how the three frameworks of EDE 6205
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
3
were a call to action in their current practices to reflect on their classroom discourse, and that the
new ideas/approaches would have favorable implications in their students’ learning outcomes.
Childhood Curriculum Course EDE 6205
Thinking is a critical component in the learning process. Learning is a consequence of
thinking (Perkins, 1992); thus, we believe that it is important for teachers to interpret the concept
of thinking and how it is reflected in their discourse in the classroom. EDE 6205 was designed
with this end-goal in mind.
Our Philosophy: Setting the Stage for Dialogical and Dialectical Thinking
Paul (2001) distinguishes between two theories that reveal the teacher’s discourse in the
classroom: (a) the didactic teaching theory and (b) the dialogical and dialectical thinking theory.
We differentiate between these two theories to illustrate how the performances of understanding
for this course were planned with the end-goal in mind of helping teachers reflect on their initial
didactic teaching and their shift to a dialogical and dialectical thinking and teaching practices.
The didactic teaching theory is a teacher-centered approach that encourages the teacher’s
monologic thinking from beginning to end. Didactic instruction is teaching by telling (The
Critical Thinking Community, 2012). Teachers provide students with explicit knowledge to
memorize, and the teachers expect students to regurgitate the same knowledge back to them. In
the didactic teachingapproach, students’ knowledge is separate from understanding and
justification. In other words, didactic teaching assumes that teachers can give students
knowledge directly without their having to think their way through it. (See Appendix A, EDE
6205 Stories from the Authors’ Personal Experiences concerning didactic teaching theory and
approaches.)
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
4
On the other hand, the dialogical and dialectical thinking theory involves dialogue or
extended exchange between different points of view or frames of reference. Teachers
purposefully create a classroom culture of thinking, talking, and collaborative learning. Within
this perspective, teachers show students how to use their own thinking to figure out the thinking
of another as they listen carefully to the thoughts of another and try to make sense of those
thoughts. For Dottin (2010), the effort of teacher education programs is to help candidates move,
like children, past impulse to the more intelligent level of pedagogical conduct, that is, to grow in
professional judgment (p 8). When students arrange their thoughts, orally or in writing, they are
reasoning dialogically (Paul, 2001). In the next sections, we explore how to engage
teachers/master’s degree candidates in dialogical and dialectical thinking through the a process
that ultimately aims for exposure to the Habits of Mind (HoM), the Visible Thinking (VT), and
Teaching for Understanding (TfU) frameworks. The following passages represent the
foundational aspects of the three frameworks.
Habits of Mind: Dispositions Toward Behaving Intellectually
The Habits of Mind (HoM) are performed in response to people’s questions and
problematic situations (Costa & Kallick, 2009). HoM are defined as dispositions toward
behaving intelligently when confronted with problems—the answers to which are not
immediately known. Costa and Kallick (2009) propose sixteen HoM, such as persisting,
managing impulsivity, listening with understanding and empathy, and thinking flexibly, among
others. The HoM can enrich different curriculum models. We use Costa and Kallick’s (2008)
four levels of educational outcomes framework (see Figure 1.1) as a foundation to justify our
interpretation of the HoM within the particular learning community in this study.
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
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Figure 1.1: Four levels of educational outcomes.
Reprinted with permission from ASCD.
The HoM require a composite of many skills, attitude cues, past experiences, and
proclivities. Internalizing the HoM means that we do not value one pattern of thinking over
another, which implies we make choices about which pattern should be employed at the time.
Visible Thinking (VT): Cognitive Tasks That Demand Skillful Thinking
Our interpretation of the cognitive tasks that demand skillful thinking draws from our
experience with the VT approach and the TfU framework. Both approaches are compatible with
Costa and Kallick’s (2008) idea of providing students with sufficiently authentic, engaging, and
challenging curricula, instead of merely reproducing knowledge. The VT approach, developed
by Project Zero researchers (Ritchhart & Perkins, 2008), is a broad and flexible framework for
enriching classroom learning in the content areas while fostering students’ intellectual
development. The key goals of VT are to (a) deepen learners’ understanding of content, (b)
increase motivation for learning, (c) develop learners’ thinking and learning abilities, (d) develop
learners’ attitudes toward thinking and learning, (e) develop learners’ alertness to opportunities
for thinking and learning—the dispositional side of thinking, and (f) shift the classroom culture
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
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toward a community of enthusiastically engaged thinkers and learners. Within this framework,
an understanding of the eight cultural forces that Ritchhart (2002) proposes leads us to appreciate
how teachers can create cultures of thinking in their classrooms.
Cultural Forces. Tishman, Perkins and Jay (1995) claim that schools are places of
culture not only in the sense of intellectual achievements, but also the sense of community and
spirit of common enterprise. A culture of thinking exists in a classroom when the cultural forces
of that classroom are directed toward, and aligned with, the support of good thinking (Ritchhart,
2002). The use of Thinking Routines (TRs) uncovers children’s thinking and provokes
collective thinking, or dialogical and dialectical thinking. Dialogical and dialectical thinking
involve dialogue or extended exchange between different points of view or frames of reference
(Paul, 2001). The interplay between nature and nurture plays a critical role in promoting
children’s cognitive development. We do not teach children to talk, but we provide them with
opportunities to engage them in talking. As Vygotsky (1978) pointed out—children grow into
the intellectual life of those around them. Children are born with genetic codes that influence
their cognitive development, however, we need to nurture their thinking. We can see these
opportunities reflected in Ritchhart’s (2002) eight cultural forces:
Time for thinking, allocating time for exploring topics in depth
Expectations for thinking and learning, setting the agenda of understanding and value for
thinking
Opportunities for engaging in thinking, providing purposeful activities that require
students’ cognitive engagement and understanding
Routines which are structures that scaffold thinking and learning
Language and conversations centered on thinking products and stances
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
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Modeling who we are as thinkers
Interactions and relationships that show respect for students’ contributions
Physical environments where we make thinking visible by displaying the students’
process of thinking
As we reviewed the literature, we noticed strong connections between the eight cultural
forces and the HoM. We see the HoM as precursors for designing curriculum that cognitively
engage students and help them understand concepts. We also considered that the internalizations
of these frameworks were critical to shift teachers’ discourse in the classroom. Furthermore, the
social environment plays a critical role in shaping dispositions of intelligent conduct (Dottin,
2010). Project Zero researchers designed a variety of thinking routines (Ritchhart, Church, &
Morrison, 2011). The next passage addresses the origins of the thinking routines and connections
with the HoM.
Thinking Routines (TRs). The research-based TRs were developed by Project Zero
researchers at Harvard Graduate School of Education (Ritchhart, Church, & Morrison 2011).
Routines exist in all classrooms. A routine can be thought of as any procedure, process, or
pattern of action that is used repeatedly to manage and facilitate the accomplishment of specific
goals or tasks. Classrooms have routines that serve to manage student behavior and interactions,
to organize the work of learning, and to establish rules for communication and discourse.
Classrooms also have routines that structure the way students go about the process of learning.
VT makes extensive use of learning routines that are thinking rich. These routines are simple
structures—for example, a set of questions or a short sequence of steps that can be used across
various grade levels and content. What makes them routines, versus mere strategies, is that they
get used over and over again in the classroom so that they become part of the fabric of classroom
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
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culture. The routines become the ways in which students go about the process of learning
(Visible Thinking, 2012). In other words, teaching thinking is an enculturation approach.
According to Tishman, Perkins & Jay (1995) enculturation involves a model, explanation,
interaction and feedback. By using thinking routines the student becomes aware of the language
of thinking or mental process. Words of thinking describe and evoke thinking. This is important
because the process helps students organize and communicate their own thinking more precisely
and intelligently, while it reinforces standards for thinking (Tishman, Perkins & Jay, 1995). The
teachers/master’s degree candidates and authors selected the most popular TRs to analyze in
connection with the HOM. In Appendix B, we share our interpretation of the close relationship
between TRs and the HoM.
Teaching for Understanding: Thinking Skills and Content
An important quality in children is the ability to use what they know in new and
unfamiliar contexts by demonstrating their understanding flexibly as they respond to the moving
target of tomorrow. For Perkins (2001), understanding something is a matter of being able to
think and act flexibly with what you know and are coming to know (p. 446). Traditional
education has been about educating for the known. Here, educators’ attention is being called to
the fact that we are educating for the unknown. In other words, “good learning is learning from a
richly experienced today with tomorrow in view” (p. 218). It is worth mentioning that we do not
know what is going to happen in 5, 10, or 20 years from now.
Content. Curriculum designers work under the influences of different forces that are
mandated by the administration, state requirements, and so forth. However, practitioners should
always keep in mind a critical question: What is worth learning? During the early nineties,
Project Zero researchers developed the Teaching for Understanding (TfU) approach (Perkins,
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
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2001), which encompasses four cornerstones of pedagogy with four elements of planning and
instruction. The TfU is an educational pedagogy that uses the following four questions as a
foundation for its framework (Blyte and Associates, 1998):
1. What topics are worth understanding? (Generative Topic).
2. What about these topics needs to be understood? (Understanding Goals).
3. How can we foster understanding? (Performances of Understanding).
4. How can we tell what students understand? (Ongoing Assessment).
Thinking Skills. It is important for educators to help students become aware of the
thinking skills that they are using to perform an activity, solve problems, and so on (Salmon &
Lucas, 2011). Learning is a consequence of thinking (Perkins, 1992). Thus, educators can foster
learning when they use a language of thinking that directs students’ attention to a particular
thinking skill to solve a problem. For example, instead of saying, “Let’s look at these two
pictures,” a mindful language would be, “Let’s compare these two pictures” (Costa & Kallick,
2008). The intentional use of terminology creates students’ thinking dispositions. Good
thinking is not only a matter of skills, but also a matter of dispositions (Ritchhart & Perkins,
2008).
The 21st century calls students to become nimble learners who are trained to flex and
stretch their thinking skills (Perkins, 2009). When children are aware of the thinking skills that
help them understand concepts, they become independent learners. When talking about thinking
skills, many people refer to Bloom’s Taxonomy. Bloom’s Taxonomy is a theory and is not
based on research about learning (Ritchhart, Church, & Morrison, 2011). However, the
taxonomy has become codified into how many teachers are taught to think about thinking.
Ritchhart and colleagues (2011) disagree with the fact that Bloom’s Taxonomy has a sequential
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
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or hierarchical way of seeing thinking that takes place at different levels. In contrast, they
suggest that rather than concerning ourselves with levels among different types of thinking, it is
better to focus our attention on the levels or quality within a single type of thinking.
Problem Statement and Research Questions
When we observe a teacher in her classroom, in many contexts, the stories she is telling
to students reflect the teacher’s philosophy of teaching and learning. Teachers set the culture of
their classrooms based on their values and beliefs about teaching and learning. The patterns of
discourse reflect both the teacher’s expectations about her students and determine the culture that
the teacher is creating. Cultures of thinking are places in which a group’s collective, as well as
an individual’s thinking is valued, visible, and actively promoted as part of the regular, day-to-
day experience of all group members (Ritchhart, 2002). As with language, adults are responsible
for nurturing children’s thinking. There is a consensus among some scholars (Costa, 2001;
Fogarty, 2001; Perkins, 2001) that thinking is teachable and learnable, and teachers play a
critical role in making this happen. Ritchhart, Turner, and Hadar (2009) suggest that when
teachers engage children in cognitive activities to uncover their thinking, they capture those
critical moments when thinking is taking place. This allows teachers to get a hold of it and
engage children cognitively in deep thinking and understanding.
The profile of the 21st century citizen requires thoughtful people who are curious,
creative, collaborative, communicators and critical thinkers (National Council for Teachers of
English, 2012). Twenty-first century skills prepare citizens not only to be successful problem
solvers, but also to be problem finders,and such skills are developed through the dialogical and
dialectical thinking experiences. Thus, today’s teachers need opportunities to learn how to
implement the dialogical and dialectical thinking theory and associated approaches into their
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
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teaching, learning, and discourse practices. One of the purposes of EDE 6205 was to help
teachers/master’s degree candidates’ (graduate practitioners) gain ownership about building
cultures of thinking in their own classroom. Our study explored whether or not there were any
changes in the participants’ discourse in their classrooms as a result of their self-reflection and
discourse awareness, and if there were any implications for grades pK-12 children’s thinking and
learning. The research questions for this study were:
What are the implications of teachers’ interpretation and value of thinking reflected in
their philosophy and discourse in the classroom?
How do teachers’ reflect about changes that happen as a result of being exposed to the
HoM, VT and TfU frameworks for thinking and learning?
Method
The qualitative case study explored the EDE 6205 candidate’s implementation of three
important interrelated frameworks—Habits of Mind, Visible Thinking, and Teaching for
Understanding thinking frameworks—for developing dialogical and dialectical thinking through
teachers’ discourse in pK-12 classrooms in Jamaica (Flyvbjerg, 2011). The case study sought to
understand and exemplify a case study of individuals, who were participating in the same
graduate level course and program during summer, 2012. The case study was constructed
through narrative inquiry, a subtype of qualitative inquiry that [centers] around an interest in life
experiences as [narrated] by those who live them” (Chase, 2011, p. 421), using storytelling,
narrative practices, and content/discourse analysis (Rex, 2006; Rex & Schiller, 2009). This
interpretive case study is framed within the social constructivist paradigm (Denzin & Lincoln,
2011) in which “everyday realities are actively constructed in and through forms of social
action” (Holstein & Gubrium, 2011, p. 341).
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
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Participants
Participants were “selected on the basis of expectations about their information content”
(Flyvbjerg, 2011, p. 307) and with informed consent. A cohort of Jamaican graduate student-
practitioners serving pK-12 grade levels, who participated in the Master’s in Curriculum &
Instruction program at FIU in Jamaica, were selected to analyze their respective journeys toward
becoming more thoughtful “thinking” practitioners. The cohort of degree candidates was a
convenient sample, who worked in diverse educational settings, including early childhood,
elementary, middle school, high school, vocational, counseling, and so forth (see Table 1.0).
Table 1.0 EDE 6205 Participant Demographic Data: Teaching Level, Education Level,
Gender, & Age
Participants
______________________________________________________________________
Teaching
Level
Education
Level
Gender Age
______________________________________________________________________
Primary
5
Middle
2
High
School
9
Bachelor
16
Female
16
20-
29
3
30-
39
10
40-
59
3
______________________________________________________________________
All 16 participants were female and had bachelors’ degrees. Seven taught at primary or middle
school levels, while nine taught at the high school level. Three participants’ ages were in their
20s, ten were in their 30s, and three were in their 40s or 50s.
Curriculum and Instruction
The EDE 6205 curriculum and instruction were designed to engage candidates (who are
practitioners at the same time) in self-reflection about their current teaching philosophy and
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
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practice. Also, the course was designed to engage the participants in awareness, valuing, and
self-reflection of shifts in their teachers’ discourse. Shifts in teachers’ discourse included teacher
practices that cognitively engaged their students after experiencing the power of HoM, VT, and
TfU ideas in their own learning. Decisions for the course design with these end-goals in mind
included: planning for teachers/master’s degree candidates’ learning outcomes, understanding
goals, and performances of understanding.
Learning Outcomes
Candidates’ learning outcomes followed the FIU COE Conceptual Framework (CF) as
follows:
Stewards of the Discipline (knowledge)—having the necessary concepts, knowledge and
understandings in their respective field of study.
Reflective Inquirers (skills)—knowing how to use the requisite generic skills needed to
apply the content and pedagogical.
Mindful Educators (Dispositions)—being able to apply the dispositions, that is, habits of
mind (intellectual and social) that render professional actions and conduct more
intelligent.
Based on the CF, EDE 6205 included the following understanding goals and performances of
understanding.
Understanding Goals
Specific understanding goals for this course include the following:
Knowledge. Understand and appreciate various approaches and philosophies used
in curriculum development and decision making. Understand theories of child
development and principles of learning. Understand how to create, design, and improve a
Shifting Teachers’ Discourse
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course outline, unit and lesson plans to promote thinking and learning.
Skills. Develop the skills required to create, design, and improve a course outline,
unit and lesson plans to promote thinking and learning. Develop effective teaching
methods to design appropriate creative learning experiences for children including ESOL,
ESE and LEP, and culturally diverse backgrounds.
Dispositions. Disposed to understand, broaden, expand, and improve their
knowledge of curriculum development and theory both locally and within the
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