The Montessori Message

The Montessori Message

Tag Archives: progress

What do you know?

24 Thursday May 2018

Posted by Lisa Lalama in Learning

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

applied learning, deeper learning, knowledge, learning, memorization, progress, standardized testing

DOK Levels
As another school year ends, thoughts naturally turn to student progress. What have the students learned this year? What should be practiced over the summer? Are they prepared for the next grade level?

The answer to many such questions depends on the goal. Grades don’t really tell a story, nor does standardized testing. Is the goal memorization, acquisition of a skill, critical thinking, or extending thinking and applying learning to new situations? Learning begins with recall or memorization. Whether learning to ride a bike or read a book, you begin by memorizing the parts of the desired action or outcome. However, most learning has to go deeper in order to be meaningful. Learning has to have an application. Deep learning is applied to other situations and allows for creative and extended thinking.

Tests are given to assess knowledge. What they typically measure is memorization. Think back to a test you took in school, maybe in a subject that you didn’t like or was hard for you. Do you recall much about that subject? Did that information stay with you? Probably not. If you are lucky, you had a good enough memory to pass the test and move on… and you wanted to move on!

Now think about something you really wanted to learn. When were you finished learning? When did you decide you had enough? My guess is that you still aren’t done and are continually learning about a subject that interests you. Not only are you still learning – you are well beyond the memorization or summarization phase of learning. You are probably applying the knowledge you’ve gained to other situations, asking questions to further consider the ideas and in new contexts.

Progress is measured by an individual’s learning. What has your child learned this year?

What is progress?

09 Thursday Jun 2016

Posted by Lisa Lalama in Learning, Montessori Education, Wilmington Montessori School

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

accomplishments, goals, progress, progress report, Wilmington Montessori, Wilmington Montessori School

progresspuzzleJune brings the end of yet another school year. For some, it is the end of a preschool, elementary, high school or even college year. For others, it may mark the end of an era of each of those educational markers. For all, it brings with it the age-old process of documenting one’s progress. For younger students, a progress report is sent home when school ends, marking that student’s progress for the past year. It often contains comments as well as grades or check lists. For high school and college students, it typically contains number or letter grades. It is the sum of what they’ve accomplished in school for the past few months – not necessarily their progress. For younger students, it is often a summary of their challenges, as well as their accomplishments.

As I read many progress reports this school year, I paused to think. What does it mean to progress? By its very definition, progress means forward movement toward a higher goal. Somehow, though, when many parents, students and teachers review progress reports, they look for accomplishment or fulfillment of that goal – not progress. As children progress, they definitely make accomplishments. They learn many things, which are reflected on the reports. However, sometimes progress is incremental. Sometimes it is elusive. Sometimes one person’s progress is another’s end game. For example, I know someone who feels math is not her forte. However, she was able to move through the needed college math courses to reach the goal set for her degree. She progressed through them and accomplished her goal, although she may not be as accomplished as the student who consumed what was taught, asked for more and moved on to higher level math. Did she progress? Yes. Is she an accomplished mathematician? Not at all.

We each progress on our own timeline. Each learner is different, with different affinities as well as challenges. For some students, paying attention to a lesson for 10 minutes is progress, for in September they could manage only five. For others, reading a sentence is an accomplishment, while for others, reading a chapter book meets the mark. Let’s not lose sight of the fact that our progress is individual and incremental. I type quickly and run slowly and should have two different markers for each of those activities. The same is true of our children. They, and we, are works in progress. As we review yet another school year, relish the progress, delight in what has been done, and know that as they mark another year  – and then another – they will have many accomplishments in their progression of learning.

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