COMPILATION
COMPILATION
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Conclusion
The research is not definitive because there are factors that have not really been
teased out as of yet.
Multi-grade teaching is based on several basic principles about how children learn
and how teachers can teach effectively to respond to their needs:
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5. The implementation of the school curriculum must take into consideration the
varied abilities, levels and interests of a particular group.
6. The value of any educational program will be judged according to how well it
is able to achieve the goals of the program-whether the children actually
learn, what they are expected to learn and how well they have learned.
7. The advantage of being in a heterogeneous group like a multi-grade class is
that children who have certain strengths and weakness can be helped rather
than be punished for their weakness, and their strengths built-on rather than
wasted.
MULTIGRADE SCHOOL
It organized as matter of necessity remote barangays, aside from the limited
enrollment, the distance of the barangay to a school, teacher shortage, lack of funds for
school buildings and other facilities also led to the organization of multigrade schools in
the different parts of the country.
Aims to assess how well the MPPE was implemented in line with existing
standards and policies.
Identify factors that contribute and hinder in achieving the goals of MPPE.
Aims to describe the contribution of the Multigrade program to student learning and
school quality.
Intends to examine the role of the program in improving access to quality education
in disadvantages school communities.
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PROGRAM COMPONENTS
Curriculum and Materials Development
Staff Development
Monitoring and Supervision
Research and Evaluation
Physical Facilities
Community Support
The term Physical Environment refers to the overall design and layout of given
classroom and it's learning center.
Factors that you need to consider to settings up physical environment in multi-grade
class:
Space
Students
Materials and equipment
Order and arrangements
Space
It needs to consider the space especially when trying to renovate multigrade
classroom. Know if the space is huge, wider and comfortable.
Students
As a teacher, one important thing that needed to do is to know the students and
their background, attitude, behavior and intelligence.
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MULTIGRADE SCHOOLS
Combine students of different ages and abilities in one classroom, under the
direction of one teacher. They take a variety of organizational forms, ranging from a
grouping of several formal grade divisions under the direction of one teacher to a
completely non-graded learning environment.
COOPERATIVE LEARNING
A collaborative (or cooperative) learning approach involves pupils working
together on activities or learning tasks in a group small enough to ensure that everyone
participates. Pupils in the group may work on separate tasks contributing to a common
overall outcome, or work together on a shared task.
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checker (checks the work and hands it in), its clear how each student needs to fulfill his
or her responsibilities.
1. Positive Interdependence:
You'll know when you've succeeded in structuring positive interdependence when
students perceive that they "sink or swim together." This can be achieved through mutual
goals, division of labor, dividing materials, roles, and by making part of each student's
grade dependent on the performance of the rest of the group. Group members must
believe that each person's efforts benefit not only him- or herself, but all group members
as well.
2. Individual Accountability:
The essence of individual accountability in cooperative learning is "students learn
together, but perform alone." This ensures that no one can "hitch-hike" on the work of
others. A lesson's goals must be clear enough that students are able to measure whether
(a) the group is successful in achieving them, and (b) individual members are successful
in achieving them as well.
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Important cognitive activities and interpersonal dynamics only occur when students
promote each other's learning. This includes oral explanations of how to solve problems,
discussing the nature of the concepts being learned, and connecting present learning with
past knowledge. It is through face-to-face, promotive interaction that members become
personally committed to each other as well as to their mutual goals.
5. Group Processing:
After completing their task, students must be given time and procedures for
analyzing how well their learning groups are functioning and how well social skills are
being employed. Group processing involves both task work and teamwork, with an eye to
improving it on the next project.
The Multigrade LAC Resource Materials for Multigrade Teachers will provide
many opportunities for multigrade teachers to become effective classroom teachers. The
different session guides were designed to address several issues on the implementation of
K to 12 Curriculum in multigrade schools, specifically, on instructional planning,
instructional delivery such as on the use of ICT tools, and monitoring and evaluation of
school performance.
Lesson Plan-
It is a teacher's daily guide for what students need to learn, how it will be taught,
and how learning will be measured. A good lesson plan should include the following 5
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components; lesson topic, class objectives, procedure, time management, and student
practice.
Visual Aids
Visual aid is any material that gives shape and form to words or thoughts. Types
of visual aids include physical samples, models, handouts, pictures, videos, infographics,
etc. Visual aids have come a long way to now include digital tools such as overhead
projectors, PowerPoint presentations, and interactive boards.
Printed Material
Simply put, print sources are sources that have been published in printed format,
such as many daily newspapers, magazines, academic or trade journals, books, etc.
Learner Behavior
Different Behavior of the Lerner Inside the Classroom
1. Talkers – they are the ones who prefer to talk and discuss. They often find
themselves talking to those around them.
2. Tactile/Kinesthetic Learner – they may find themselves hard to sit still for long
period of time.
3. Bullish – they are the one who seek harm or intimidate.
4. Truant – learners who repeatedly go outside.
5. Awkward and shy – they silently deal with their selves.
6.
Glasser’s Choice Theory suggests that students behave according to how their needs will
be fulfilled and satisfied.
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B.F. Skinner (1982) suggests that the teacher manage the students’ behavior through
rewards and punishment. According to Skinner, the teacher reinforce good behavior by
giving external rewards like praises, prizes, or good grades.
In contrast, Alfie Kohn (2006) believes that students’ behavior can be manages
well if they are given the opportunity to satisfy their curiosity. In this theory, Kohn
suggests be given the freedom to pursue concepts that interest them instead of imposing
predetermined lessons on them. When students are engaged in learning concepts of their
choice, they become more involved in their own learning. Teachers, according to Kohn,
need not to use grades or rewards to motivate students. Students learn because they see
the relevance of what they are learning on their own lives.
Today, the issue of learners’ behavior in the school continue to surface as one of
the most challenging problems in education. Misconduct creates tension for both the
teacher and students as it disrupts the flow of lesson. it changes the classroom dynamic as
the attention shifts from the academic tasks to the problem caused by disruptive behavior.
Hence, for learning to happen, classroom management, appropriate discipline must be
implemented. Productive classroom environments supports students, engagement, and
achievement. Let’s talk about some behavior management strategies you can tap into to
enhance students’ behavior and allow teaching and learning to procees as planned.
1. Maintain a routine
2. Set rules together with students
3. Create stimulating lessons
4. Use positive language
5. Develop positive relationship with your students
6. Adjust your scoring methods
IMPORTANCE
● Allows for higher rates of student response and feedback which results in better
academic achievement
● Creates more opportunities for students to practice specific skills which leads to
better retention.
EFFECTIVENESS
● Students feel more comfortable asking groups rather than large classes. Peer
tutors have often experienced the same difficulties and can help students through learning
process
● Some approaches have been shown to have a positive effect equivalent to
approximately five additional months progress within one academic year.
PRINCIPLES
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● Abraham Maslow: viewed the need for Love and Belonging” in his theory
“Hierarchy of Motivatonal Model” which he described in 1954 as a step toward
achievement. In this view, the deprevation or more basic needs hinders progress along the
path to achievement. In Maslow’s model, people must have love and belongingness
issues satisfied in order to needs of achievement.
Example: A student with deprived relationship concersn will be less able to
participate in classroom learning opportunities. This ability to learn is built on
faoundation of comfortable relationship with others, including peers and family and
classroom learning is all about learning with and in the presence of others.
● Behaviorism: provides one way to explain the association between the motivation to
learn and peer interactions. In basic theories, relationship between people affect learning
only as much as people reinforce each other (or not) in the acadic arena.
Example: If the peer group encouragess education and leraning, then the
individual student within the group will value leraning because the individual is
reinforced or rewarded for behavior that indicates that learning is valued. On the other
hand, student in peer groups that do not value education lack the simulation and
reinforcement needed to encourage personal learning. These peer groups presumably
stimulate and reinforce other values.
● Social Learning Theory: proponent of this theory is “Albert Bandura” that speaks
precisely to the interactions involved in learning. Observational or “vicarous” learning
based upon learning by watching then “modelling” or acting similarly to others. If the
student views and works with people who appreciate learning by engaging in the learning
activities then the student who will engage in learning and might work harder.
Example: If a student is involved to its peer that has positive attitudes and
behaviors toward education will allow and teach others to set goals that includes
opportunities to learn and achieve. However, if a student be with a peer that do not
convey positive attitude towards learning then the students observing these model or peer
will not proritize learning in their own lives. They will learn to prioritize other goals.
● Lev Vygotsky: in 1978 also presented ideas on the facilitation of learning through
experiences mediated by other people. In his explanations, the learner cannot reach full
potential without the aid of others. The processes of guiding, the learner to higher stages
of cognitive functioning rely on the human relationship.
Example: Mentors- for instance, a tecaher or more capsble peers- can raise the
students’ competence through the “Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)”.
ZPD is defined as the gap between what a student can do alone and what the
student can achieve with assistance. In this view assistance is transitional, a “scaffold”
that is removed when it is no longer needed and the student has internalized another’s
support.
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Overview
In a classroom with good multigrade practice, there were be lots of small group
happening. It is one of the most useful strategies a multigrade teacher can employ. A
multigrade teacher cannot the whole class in one group all day and meet the needs of
individual students with their different levels of experiences, maturity and abilities.
Teacher’s Role
Teacher Interactive (direct teaching)
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Teacher is directly teaching or assessing a group and the teacher-student interaction is
intensive.
Teacher Supervised (guided and checked)
The students work together in their group with some guidance and monitoring by teacher.
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students in a continuous way, and identifying those students who are experiencing
difficulty or those who are ready for further challenges, you can adjust your teaching to
better meet the needs of everyone in the class.
Student Reflection
Revising Knowledge
Accountable Answers
Summarizing
Assessment
Assessment is a method of gathering your school performance data that aims to
collect information to specify and verify problems concerning your learning achievement.
Some proof of your learning success can be manifested in your test, written works,
journals, portfolios and other learning task (Navarro, et al…. 2017).
Information about student achievement can be assessed through both direct and
indirect measures.
Direct Measures
May includes homework, quizzes, reports, essays, research projects, case study
analysis and rubrics for oral and other performances.
Indirect Measures
May include course evaluation. Students surveys, course enrollment information,
retention in major, alumni surveys, and graduate school placements rates.
Summative Assessment
Tests, quizzes and other graded course activities that used to measure student
performance. They are cumulative and often to reveal what students have
learned at the end of unit or the end of a course. Within a course, summative
assessment includes the system for calculating individual student grades.
Formative Assessment
Is to monitor student learning to provide ongoing feedback that can be used
by instructors to improve their teaching and by students to improve their
learning.
Observation and Interaction
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Individual interaction between you and your students provides some
opportunities to evaluate their progress and retention.
Performance Assessment
Are very effective for measuring the process and the product involved with
student achievement. It is an actual performance is assessed through a
completed task or work.
EVALUATION
Involves judging or deciding about the quality of your school performance for
your teacher to implement a possible course of action. When your assessment
information is collected, synthesized, and thought about, your teacher is in a position to
judge the quality of your performance and what classroom course of action should be
done or what action is most appropriate.
Importance of Evaluation
Provides a systematic method to study a program, practice, intervention, or initiative to
understand how well it achieves it's goal. Evaluations help determine what works well
and what could be improved in a program or initiative.
Types of Evaluation
Diagnostic Evaluation
Summative Evaluation
Formative Evaluation
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Instructional strategies are techniques teachers use to help students become
independent, strategic learners. These strategies become learning strategies when students
independently select the appropriate ones and use them effectively to accomplish tasks or
meet goals.
Effective instructional and learning strategies can be used across grade levels and
subject areas, and can accommodate a range of student differences. Instructional
strategies that are especially effective in the health education program include:
cooperative learning
group discussion
independent study
portfolio development
journals and learning logs
role-playing
cognitive organizers
literature response service learning
issue-based inquiry.
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teacher directly while performing is assigned task. He may be moved to his area because
he may need close supervision from the teacher.
This type of instructional scheme allows the child to be in his own classroom for
the entire day even through he may be given differentiated to suit particular needs. It
reduces any stigma may come with being pulled out from the class during class hour.
Pull out in another venue
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5. He assist in physical/ behavioral management of the child during routine ( lining
up, putting toys in place etc.) and also during group activities ( circle time, action,
singing etc.)
6. He records the development progress of the child
7. He confess with the class teacher about the progress of the child.
8. He reports to the class teacher in child's home achievement whenever needed.
9. He assist in the child smooth and positive mainstreaming with his peers in class
10. He restrains himself from being solicitous by giving the child the helpful
opportunities to do things / task himself.
Support service plan
Individualization can also occur in a support - service plan program. A child
whose needs require the employ of support- service give such as physical therapist,
occupational therapist, speech therapist, psychologist and counsellors can receive
instructions in the therapist own clinic or office. The IEP is used as the instructional
program alongside the support service givers therapeutic program.
Integration plan
Integration is a placement that include a child with special needs both in a special
class and in a regular class. With the special class remaining at the child's station, he is
admitted in the regular class for integration in non- academic areas ( Dizon, et al ,2001).
Both special education teacher and regular class teacher work together,
coordinating activities wherein the child with special needs can participate in with the
other regular children.
Multigrade / Multilevel Plan
In this plan the child can take once or two subjects in one or two grade levels
other than his current grade levels placement depending achievement in the different
subjects.
If for example, the child is in Grade 2.0 expect in math with grade 3.0 equivalent,
then he goes to grade 3.0 class for his math. If, however he performs with grade 1.0 level
in reading the he is placed in the grade 1.0 class only for reading.
In multigrade teaching, the teacher can follow different approaches like:
Direct observation
Lesson oriented teaching
Group learning
Supervision method
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