Four types of IT-based projects which can effectively be
used in order to engage students in activities of a higher plane of thinking.
To be noted id the fact that these projects differ in the specific process and
skills employed, also in the ultimate activity or platform used to communicate
completed products to others. It
is to be understood that these projects do not address all of the thinking
skills shown previously in the Thinking Skills Framework. But these projects
represent constructivist project.
Key
Elements of a constructivist approach:
- The teacher creating the learning environment.
- The teacher giving students the tool
- The teacher facilitating learning.
Now let us see four IT-based projects conducive to
develop higher thinking skills and creativity among learners.
I. RESOURCE-BASED PROJECTS
The teacher steps out of the traditional role of being an
context expert and information provider, and instead lets the students find
their own facts and information.
The general flows of events in resource-based projects
are:
- The teacher determines the topic for the examination of class.
- The teacher presents the problem to the class.
- The students find information on the problem/questions.
- Students organize their information in response to the problem/questions.
TRADITIONAL AND RESOURCE-BASED LEARNING
Traditional learning model
|
Resource-based learning model
|
Teacher is expert and information provides
|
Teacher is a guide and facilitator
|
Textbook is key source of information
|
Sources are varied(print, video. Internet, etc.)
|
Focus on facts
Information is packaged
In neat parcels
|
Focus on learning inquiry, quest, or discovery
|
The product is the be-all and end-all of learning
|
Emphasis on process
|
Assessment is quantitative
|
Assessment is quantitative and qualitative.
|
II. SIMPLE CREATIONS
In developing software, creativity as an outcome should
not be equated with ingenuity or high intelligence. Creating is more consonant
with planning, making, assembling, designing or building.
Three kinds of skills/abilities:
- Analyzing- distinguishing similarities and differences/ seeing the project as a problem to be solved.
- Synthesizing- making spontaneous connections among ideas, does generating interesting or new ideas.
- Promoting- selling of a new ideas to allow the public to test the ideas themselves.
The five key task to develop creativity:
- Define the task- clarify the goal of the completed project to the student.
- Brainstorm- the students themselves will be allowed to generate their own ideas on the project. Rather than shoot down ideas, the teacher encourages ideas exchange.
- Judge the ideas- the students themselves make an appraisal for or against any idea. Only when students are completely off check should the teacher intervene.
- Act- the students do their work with the teacher a facilitator.
- Adopt flexibility- the students should be allowed to shift gears and not follow an action path rigidly.
III. GUIDED HYPERMEDIA PROJECTS
The production of self-made multimedia projects can be
approached into different ways:
Instructive tools- such as in the production by students
of a power point presentation of a selective topic.
Constructive tools- such as when students do a
multi-media presentation (with text, graphs, photos, audio narration,
interviews, video clips, etc. to simulate a television news show.
IV. WEB-BASED PROJECTS
Students can be made to create and post webpages on a
given topic. But creating webpages, even single webpages, may be too
sophisticated and time consuming for the average student. Creativity projects
as tools in the teaching learning process can be achieved with the assistance
of advisers adept in the technical use of Internet resources.
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