Curiosity and Powerful Learning Models of Practice 5 & 6: Inductive Teaching and Mnemonics
Curiosity and Powerful Learning Models of Practice 5 & 6: Inductive Teaching and Mnemonics
By: David Hopkins
The six models of practice explored in this three-volume series are all rooted in inquiry and in the belief that a teacher’s role is not simply to “teach,” but to create powerful contexts for learning.
Model 5: inductive teaching, encourages students to build, test, and use categories. It nurtures logical thinking and supports students to process information effectively.
Model 6: mnemonics, assists students to master large amounts of information and to gain conscious control of their learning processes.
After completing the included assessment tool on classroom and school conditions, it offers two classroom work models for practice—an inductive teaching model and a mnemonics model—describing each model’s key features and syntax. It includes peer coaching guides for the models that help facilitate planning, communication, and sharing ideas among teacher teams.
Purchase Order Options Available – Share this book with your entire team and get bulk discount savings. Email store@mcrel.org to get started.
Title information
Curiosity drives the impulse to learn—and our Curiosity and Powerful Learning model shows school teams how to systemically develop and support curious learners and create an effective, sustainable learning system supported by students, staff, and school leaders. Based on a successful school improvement effort in Melbourne, Australia, these manuals are designed to help teachers, instructional coaches, school leaders, and system administrators embark on a professional journey to lift student literacy, numeracy, and curiosity. Written originally for Australian educators, the theories of action and recommended activities outline practices that have been tested and refined in schools over time and can be adapted and used by schools and districts around the world, including the U.S.
The four manuals at the core of the series—The System and Powerful Learning, Curiosity and Powerful Learning, Leadership for Powerful Learning, and Curiouser and Curiouser—together explain how powerful learning is made real for our students through purposeful, specific changes in whole school culture, classroom culture, leadership, and teaching practice. The manuals advance the notion of “precision without prescription”–helping educators increase their knowledge and abilities regarding effective teaching strategies and allowing them to thoughtfully apply these skills as professionals, rather than prescribing a specific instructional model and mandating that it be followed step-by-step in every classroom.
The series also includes three sequential Models of Practice manuals, which explore in depth six instructional strategies that get to the heart of the learning experience.
Based on the fundamental understanding that schools differ—and must differ—when responding to their communities, the Curiosity and Powerful Learning series supports the idea that diversity among schools is as much a cause for celebration as is consistently high student learning outcomes in all schools. Each manual emphasizes the collective endeavor essential to achieving curiosity-driven powerful learning: teachers working together; students becoming more adept at using curiosity as a learning resource; and leaders communicating purpose and direction. Working together on this journey, everyone monitors outcomes and adapts. Everyone becomes a professional learner.
David Hopkins
David Hopkins is an emeritus professor at London’s Institute of Education, and founded the Adventure Learning Schools Charity. Among many educational roles, David served as Chief Adviser to the U.K. Secretary of State on School Standards and was also Dean of Education at the University of Nottingham. He has also been an Outward Bound instructor and an international mountain guide. With Wayne Craig, David led a school improvement initiative in the northern suburbs of Melbourne, Australia, an effort that led to the creation of the Curiosity & Powerful Learning approach to school improvement.
Curiosity drives the impulse to learn—and our Curiosity and Powerful Learning model shows school teams how to systemically develop and support curious learners and create an effective, sustainable learning system supported by students, staff, and school leaders. Based on a successful school improvement effort in Melbourne, Australia, these manuals are designed to help teachers, instructional coaches, school leaders, and system administrators embark on a professional journey to lift student literacy, numeracy, and curiosity. Written originally for Australian educators, the theories of action and recommended activities outline practices that have been tested and refined in schools over time and can be adapted and used by schools and districts around the world, including the U.S.