This blog post will be a continuum of the previous post, where in this post, i will post about the learning principles in the primary school curriculum. I had browsed through many learning principles from the web, but i choose to post about the learning principles of Ireland's primary school curriculum as their education is more focused in integrating ICT in the primary school curriculum.
"A positive learning climate in a
school for young children is a composite of many things. It is an
attitude that respects children
.
It is a place where children receive guidance and encouragement from
the responsible adults around them. It is an environment where children
can experiment and try out new ideas without fear of failure. It is an
atmosphere that builds children's self-confidence so they dare to take
risks. It is an environment that nurtures a love of learning."
Carol B. Hillman
ICT AND THE PRINCIPLES OF LEARNING IN PRIMARY SCHOOL CURRICULUM
DEFINITION
OF THE PRINCIPLES
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The
child’s sense of wonder
and natural
curiosity is a primary motivating factor in learning
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The
child’s sense of wonder at the complexity of the world,
the desire to understand it, and the spontaneous curiosity to
explore it through play is the heart of the learning process and
provides the purest and most valuable motivating factor in the
child’s learning. It is in cultivating the sense of wonder that
the curriculum can provide the most fulfilling learning experience
for the child and foster an appreciation of the value of learning.
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The child is an
active agent in his or her learning
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The child should
be an active agent in his or her own learning. The structure and
content of the curriculum are designed to provide opportunities
for active engagement in a wide range of learning experiences and
to encourage children to respond in a variety of ways to
particular content and teaching strategies.
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Learning is
developmental in nature
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Conceptual
development is not necessarily a linear process. Having dealt with
particular knowledge, ideas and skills at a simple level, the
child should have the opportunity to return to them at regular
intervals in order to deepen his or her understanding. In this way
the curriculum allows for the complexity of the learning process
and for a coherent expansion of the child’s conceptual framework
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The child's
existing knowledge and experience form the base for learning
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It
is a fundamental principle of the curriculum that the child’s
existing knowledge and experience should be the starting point for
acquiring new understanding. The curriculum enables the child to
move from the known to the unknown,
from the simple to the more complex, from the concrete to the
abstract, benefiting from a learning experience that is
effective,coherent, and relevant.
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The child’s
immediate environment provides the context for learning
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The
child’s environment is an important context for his or her
development. First-hand
experience that actively engages the child with the immediate
environment and with those who live in it is the most effective
basis for learning.
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Learning should
involve guided activity and discovery methods
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The principle of
guided activity and discovery and the importance of the teacher in
providing the most effective learning experiences for the child
are central to the curriculum. In order to ensure that learning is
fully productive, the teacher needs to identify particular stages
of development in the child’s understanding and then choose the
sequence of activities that will be most effective in advancing
the child’s learning.
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Language is
central in the learning process
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Language has a
vital role to play in children’s development. Much learning
takes place through the interaction of language and experience.
Language helps the child to clarify and interpret experience, to
acquire new concepts, and to add depth to concepts already
grasped.
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The child should
perceive the aesthetic dimension in learning
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The
curriculum enables the child to perceive the aesthetic dimension
in every area. This enriches the learning experiences for the
child and the different aspects of conceptual development. The
uniqueness of the child is perhaps
most apparent in the innate creativity of each individual, while
valuing the child’s
creative response and expression of perceptions, insights,
interpretations and knowledge is an important principle of the
curriculum
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Social and
emotional dimensions are important factors in learning
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It
is widely recognised that the child’s social and emotional
development significantly influences his or her success in
learning. This is addressed most effectively through a school
ethos that is characterised by a caring, interactive
relationship between teachers and pupils. It is also a central
concern of learning in every curriculum area.
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Learning is most
effective when it is integrated
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For
the young child, the distinctions between subjects are not
relevant: what is more important is that he or she experiences a
coherent learning process that accommodates a variety of elements.
It is important, therefore, to make
connections between learning in different subjects. As they
mature, integration gives children’s learning a broader and
richer perspective, emphasises the interconnectedness of knowledge
and ideas and reinforces the learning process.
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Skills that
facilitate the transfer of learning should be fostered
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One
way to judge the effectiveness of learning is to look at the
child’s ability to apply what he or she has learned in dealing
with problems, choices,
situations and experiences that are unfamiliar. The acquisition of
this ability to transfer learning is a central feature of the
curriculum.
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Higher-order
thinking and problem-solving skills should be developed
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In
the curriculum the child is encouraged to observe, collate and
evaluate evidence, to ask relevant questions, to identify
essential information, to recognise the essence of a problem, to
suggest solutions, and to make informed
judgements. These activities help to foster the higher-order
thinking skills, such as summarising, analysing, making inferences
and deductions, and interpreting figurative language and imagery
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Collaborative
learning should feature in the learning process
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While
it is important that children experience a variety of classroom
organisational frameworks, working collaboratively provides
learning opportunities that have particular advantages. Children
are stimulated by hearing
the ideas and opinions of others, and by having the opportunity to
react to them. Collaborative work exposes children to the
individual perceptions that others may have of a problem or a
situation. These will reflect the different personalities and
particular abilities of other members of the group and make for an
interactive exchange that will help to broaden and deepen
individual children’s understanding.
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The range of
individual difference should be taken into account in the learning
process
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The
curriculum allows for differences in capacity and in the range of
individual intelligence. It also takes account of many other
factors of difference, such as urban and rural environments,
single-class and multi-class
school organisation, variations in socio-economic background, and
family and community expectations. The breadth and flexibility of
the curriculum, the choices it offers in the selection and
sequencing of content and its focus on
the developmental needs of children ensures its adaptability to
the diversity of children’s circumstances and experiences.
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Assessment as an
integral part of teaching and learning
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Assessment
assists communication about children’s progress and development
between teacher and child, between teacher and parent, and between
teacher and teacher. It helps the child to become more self-aware as
a learner and to develop powers of self-assessment. It also helps
to ensure quality in
education.
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