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Transcript
Micro Teaching #2
Teaching Educational Psychology using
Children’s Literature
Copyright July 2014 – Narmada Paul and Susan Strayer
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.
THERE ARE SOME THEMES,
SOME SUBJECTS, TOO LARGE
FOR ADULT FICTION; THEY CAN
ONLY BE DEALT ADEQUATELY IN
A CHILDREN’S BOOK.
- Philip Pullman
Goals
 To introduce theory
 To build background knowledge
 To make theory more understandable
 To create images of concepts
 To help students make connections between theory and
their work with children
The Rainbow Fish
Activity
 What are the underlying themes of the story?
 What are your thoughts on how the story ended?
Self-concept
 Individuals’ knowledge and beliefs about themselves –
their ideas, feelings, attitudes and expectations.
 Self-concept evolves through constant self-evaluation.
 Reactions of significant people are used in making
judgments about Self.
 As children grow up self-concept is tied to physical
appearance and social acceptance.
 Different from self-esteem (though there may be
connections).
Questions…
 As a teacher, how do you ensure that your students
value their own qualities? (group 1)
 How do you react to individual differences among
students in your class? (group 2)
The Dark
Activity
 What was the theme of the story?
Self-efficacy
 Albert Bandura (1986, 1994, 1997)
 A person’s sense of being able to deal effectively with a
particular task.
 It influences human agency or the capacity to coordinate
learning skills, motivation, and emotions to reach one’s
goals.
 Self efficacy is different from self-concept.
Activity
 Think of a task which you initially felt was beyond your
capacity to accomplish successfully but with time
mastered it.
 What do you think led you to change your beliefs about
your ability to do the task?
Sources of self-efficacy expectations
 Mastery experiences (most powerful source of efficacy
information)
 Level of arousal
 Vicarious experiences
 Social persuasion
Question…
 What influenced Laszlo to overcome his fear of the dark?
Final questions…
 Can you think of using content from a different discipline
to aid your teaching?
 How would you do it?
 What are the pros/cons of integrating different
disciplines in teaching?
Bibliography
 Pfister, M. (1999). The Rainbow Fish. North-South Books.
 Snicket, L. (2013). The Dark. Little, Brown Books for Young
Readers.
 Woolfolk, A. (2013). The self, social, and moral
development . In Educational Psychology (pp. 68-112).
Prentice Hall.
 Woolfolk, A. (2013). Social cognitive views of learning and
motivation. In Educational Psychology (pp. 396-436 ).
Prentice Hall.
 Zambo, D. & Hansen, C.C. (2005). Once upon a
theory: Using picture books to help students understand
educational psychology. Teaching Educational Psychology,
1(1), 1-8.