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Direct Instruction Information

Direct instruction is a general term for the explicit teaching of a skill-set using lectures or demonstrations of the material, rather than exploratory models such as inquiry-based learning.

This method is often contrasted with tutorials, participatory laboratory classes, discussion, recitation, seminars, workshops, observation, case study, active learning, practica or internships. Usually it involves some explication of the skill or subject matter to be taught and may or may not include an opportunity for student participation or individual practice. Some direct instruction is usually part of other methodologies, such as athletic coaching.

Direct instruction may be ad hoc or even an incidental digression. Although there is usually some element of frontal instruction and a general concept of the skill or lesson, there may or may not be a formal lesson plan.

Direct instruction is not to be confused with Direct Instruction, a specific direct instructional model developed by Siegfried Engelmann and Wesley C. Becker.

One popular direct instruction approach is the Success for All program which uses scripted teaching to instruct elementary children in phonics intensive reading instruction program. What the teacher says is carefully scripted in the program. The program was designed by Johns Hopkins University professor Robert Slavin in the mid 1980s for failing inner city schools in Baltimore. The program requires a dedicated 90 minutes of reading instruction each day in which the teacher must follow a pre-ordained lesson plan that has every minute filled with scripted instruction and specific activities designed to teach reading to every child in the class.

This form of instruction is often contrasted with discovery learning (Tuovinen, & Sweller,1999). While many support discovery learning, because they feel students learn better if they "learn by doing," there is little empirical evidence to support this claim, quite the contrary in fact (Tuovinen and Sweller, 1999). Kirschner, Sweller, and Clark (2006) suggest that fifty years of empirical data does not support those using these unguided methods of instruction.

Opponents of direct instruction believe methods of measuring student progress, favor skills that are themselves emphasized by direct instruction and deemphasized by discovery education [1] In addition they suggest aptitude tests focus on students' ability to solve problems, while discovery education emphasizes critical information-seeking and active, fruitful participation in social discourse, goals that cannot be easily measured by traditional empirical methods[citation needed].

References

  1. ^ Marchand-Martella, & Martella (2002) An Overview and Research Summary of Peer-Delivered Corrective Reading - The Behavior Analyst Today, 3 (2), 214 -234 [1]
Standards-based education reform
Theorists William SpadyJean PiagetBenjamin BloomMarc TuckerMaria Montessori
Theories Outcome-based educationCognitive loadStandards-based education reformDevelopmentally Appropriate PracticeHolismConstructivismBlock schedulingHolistic gradingActive learningProblem-based learningDiscovery learningInquiry-based learningInventive spellingOpen-space schoolSmall schools movementInclusion
Values Excellence and equityAchievement gap
Learning standards National Science Education StandardsNational Reading PanelNo Child Left Behind ActAdequate Yearly ProgressGoals 2000School-to-work transitionPrinciples and Standards for School MathematicsNational Skill Standards Board
Standards-based assessment Authentic assessmentCriterion-referenced testNorm-referenced testStandards-based assessmentHigh school graduation examination
Standardized tests List of standardized tests in the United StatesStandardized testing and public policy
Standardized curriculum Decodable textGuided readingPhonicsWhole languageTraditional educationTraditional mathematicsDirect instructionRote learningGradesLectureTracking (education)Standard algorithms

External links

Categories: Pedagogy | Educational psychology | Behaviorism

 

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