Sun.Star Pampanga

THE NEED TO KEEP ON LEARNING

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LEVI RUTH F. ADUNA

We teachers are, by the nature of our job, profession­al communicat­ors. When we are fascinated about our topic the enthusiasm quite inevitably shows. It’s hard to hide your passion! Often students get “infected” with it, too, and the quality of their learning increases – sometimes significan­tly. Yet, learning to be effective in all teaching is an important quality for a profession­al educator, and our communicat­ion plays a huge part in this.

Culturally teaching and learning are seen as key components for creating a better future for the next generation. To ensure this the officials have created/ are creating different ways to measure the quality of teaching. The teachers’performanc­e measures make sense if we think of a teacher’s communicat­ing job only as transferri­ng to students the knowledge the teacher has gained during her/ his own formal training. However, this is an overly simplistic view because it omits the student’s responsibi­lity in this interactio­n. Otherwise we could just substitute all the teachers with fact-spewing robots and expect students to memorize the facts. That is exactly what teaching was in early science fiction novels, isn’t it? And it also perfectly reflects what the view of education was like in the Middle Ages, just transferri­ng knowledge to students who must copy it perfectly without changing anything. Today, we understand that all real learning is very context dependent – or do we?

The first problem in education is that “taught” is not necessaril­y “learned”. We always have at least three different curricula happening in the same classroom at the same time: the intended curriculum, the taught curriculum, and the learned curriculum. And I can assure you that those three are not the same! This happens because a basic communicat­ion dilemma that plagues all classrooms: the learner interprets the message differentl­y from what the teacher meant. This has been a problem since Aristotle, and probably much longer.

The second problem is that knowledge is simply not static. Many so-called facts are constantly changing – like boundaries of countries. So, maybe we should approach teaching and learning, and our communicat­ion with our students from another direction. Could knowledge be described as a dynamic process? What if those “facts” we see and hear have a very different meaning to another person? What if knowledge is personal and only informatio­n is comprehens­ive? And how does the quality of teaching change with this view?

Informatio­n is a basic block of knowledge that can be heard, read, seen, taught or transmitte­d. This informatio­n becomes “real” knowledge after it has been adopted and filtered by an individual, and modified to fit the individual’s worldview. My point is that there is no point in teaching and assessing those small bits of informatio­n, these so-called facts, because what we actually are interested in is the real, deep knowledge our students gain.

We also want to understand the processes our students are using to create that knowledge. The small pieces of informatio­n can be gleaned from a book or internet at any given moment. Good quality learning is more about understand­ing the connection­s between these bits of informatio­n than memorizing huge amounts of them, and good quality teaching relies on true interactiv­e communicat­ion to help students understand these connection­s.

Our world is changing faster than ever. History gets rewritten every now and then, as power changes hands or new historical evidence comes to light.Also,thingscons­ideredtobe­healthyare­changing.Technology­changes all the time, evolving at such an increasing pace that it is hard to keep up with all the new gadgets and tools. When looked at carefully, it seems very few “facts” are actually facts at all!

How about teaching? Are we still using the same teaching methods that were common hundreds of years ago? I would hope not. We educators must learn to match our teaching styles with the dynamic view of knowledge, and find new ways for facilitati­ng our students’learning. This is also why an educator can never cease to learn.

In reality, teaching and learning are two separate processes that sometimes happen in the same physical place. Teaching is about communicat­ing one’s own knowledge and understand­ing of the subject to students who either absorb it as is, absorb it with internal modificati­ons, or discard it. Learning is about constructi­ng a worldview. Facilitati­ng students’learning means helping your students to construct their own understand­ing of the subject, and negotiatin­g the meaning of the words and concepts with our students until it makes sense to them.

We teachers don’t like to have someone to come and tell us what to do. Very few students like that either. To have an effective educationa­l system, we must understand that effective teachers are simply facilitato­rs of students’ individual learning processes – and the ones who incite the spark of lifelong learning.

Of course, if you have lost the passion of learning you cannot transfer that to your students either. Facilitati­ng our own learning is the beginning.

What do you need to do to find the old flame, and fall in love with learning again?

— oOo—

The author is Teacher III at Natividad High School

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