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Habits of Mind Another perspective on curriculum design

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Page 1: Habits Of Mind Lbcc

Habits of Mind …

Another perspective on curriculum design

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Habits of Mind…

knowing how to behave intelligently when you DON'T know the answer.

having a disposition toward behaving intelligently when confronted with problems, the answers to which are not immediately known: dichotomies, dilemmas, enigmas and uncertainties.

Arthur Costa and Bena Kallick, Habits of Mind, A Developmental Series

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Habits of Mind…

Performative Literacy – knowledge that enables readers to activate and use all the other forms of knowledge required for the exercise of anything like a critical or disciplined literacy

Sheridan Blau, Performative Literacy: The Habits of Highly Literate Readers

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Habits of Mind…

… ways of thinking that one acquires so well, makes so natural, and incorporates so fully into one’s repertoire, that they become mental habits – not only can one draw upon them easily, one is likely to do so.

E. Paul Goldenberg, “Habits of Mind” as an Organizer for the Curriculum

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Another perspective

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New term for old concepts

Intelligence can be taught (Whimbey, 1975) Multiple Intelligences (Gardner, 1983) Learnable Intelligence (Perkins, 1995) Emotional Intelligence (Goleman, 1995) Moral Intelligence (Coles, 1997)

(Costa and Kallick)

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So why teach habits …?

People know how to think better about something, but are not disposed to do so …

“Without inclination, a person will not feel drawn toward X behavior. Without sensitivity, a person will not detect an X occasion.”

Perkins, Jay, and Tishman, Beyond Abilities: A Dispositional Theory of Thinking

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So why teach habits …?

Habits of mind …

emphasize attitudes, habits, and character traits in addition to cognitive skills;

accommodate roles that emotions play in good learning;

encourage intellectual “sensitivity” – recognizing opportunities to engage in intellectual behavior;

support thought across and beyond disciplines.

(Costa and Kallick)

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So why teach habits …?

A curriculum organized around habits of mind …

builds a background for advanced study in the discipline

gives a strong sense of how practice in the discipline is actually done

serves the needs of students preparing for advanced study as well as students who have not developed skills or interest in the discipline

(Goldenberg)

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So why teach habits …?

Finally, talking about habits of mind …

provides a common talking point for instructors across disciplines and grade levels

allows course designers to choose those habits of mind that best serve most students general education purposes.

(Goldenberg)

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Costa & Bennick’s habits

1. Persisting2. Managing impulsivity3. Listening to others4. Thinking Flexibly5. Thinking about thinking6. Striving for accuracy and

precision7. Questioning8. Applying past knowledge to

new situations9. Thinking and

communicating with accuracy and precision

10. Gathering data through all senses

11. Creating, imagining, and innovating

12. Responding with wonder and awe

13. Taking responsible risks14. Finding humor15. Thinking interdependently16. Learning Continuously

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Thinking dispositions

1. To be broad and adventurous

2. Toward sustained intellectual curiosity

3. To clarify and seek understanding

4. To be planful and strategic

5. To be intellectually careful

6. To seek and evaluate reasons

7. To be metacognitive

(Perkins, Jay, and Tishman)

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Habits of critical thinkers

1. Respect for reasons and truth

2. Respect for high-quality products and performances

3. Inquiring attitude4. Open-mindedness5. Fair-mindedness6. Independent-

mindedness

7. Respect for others in group inquiry and deliberation

8. Respect for legitimate intellectual authority

9. Intellectual work ethic

Bailins, Case, Coombs, and Daniels, Conceptualizing Critical Thinking

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Blau’s performative literacy

1. Sustained focused attention2. Willingness to suspend closure – to entertain

problems rather than avoid them3. Willingness to take risks4. Tolerance for failure – willingness to re-read and

re-read again5. Tolerance for ambiguity, paradox, and uncertainty6. Intellectual generosity and fallibility7. Capacity to monitor and direct one’s own reading

process – metacognitive awareness

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From the CESTed Sizer proposes:1. Perspective

2. Analysis

3. Imagination

4. Empathy

5. Communication

6. Commitment

7. Humility

8. Joy

CPESS habits of mind:1. Evidence – how do we

know what we know?

2. Perspective – who says?

3. Connection – what causes what?

4. Supposition – what if?

5. Relevance – who cares?

Habits of Mind. CESNationalweb. http://www.essentialschools.org

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From BYU – 1st Year Exp.

1. Curiosity2. Questioning3. Observation (through paying attention)4. Analysis (understanding the parts)5. Integration (understanding the whole)6. Persistence

Habits of Mind. Office of First-year Experience, Brigham Young University

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Science habits of mind

1. Curiosity2. Openness3. Skepticism

* Balance between the two a central tension in all science. Too skeptical results in no new ideas tested. Too open results in no commitment to existing ideas.

4. CommunicationWillingness to discuss and debate, share, cooperate and collaborate.

Mark Volkmann and David Eichinger, Habits of Mind: Integrating the Social and Personal Characteristics of Doing Science into the Science Classroom.

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Mathematics habits of mind

Students should be …

1. Pattern sniffers2. Experimenters3. Describers4. Tinkerers5. Inventors6. Visualizers7. Conjecturers8. Guessers

Cuocco, Goldenberg, and Mark. Habits of Mind: an Organizing Principle for Mathematics Curricula

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Social Studies habits of mind

1. Open mindedness 2. Fair-mindedness3. Independent-mindedness4. Inquiring or “critical” attitude5. Respect for high quality products and

performances6. Intellectual work ethic

Roland Case and Ian Wright, Taking Seriously the Teaching of Critical Thinking

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Habits in the curriculum …

What we are proposing is something a bit different. It is not an act of faith that taking mathematics seriously gives one the mathematics directly and (also) improves one’s thinking, but almost the reverse: taking particular ways of thinking seriously and giving them top priority among the various principles one needs for organizing mathematics (or other) curricula, gives one the thinking skills directly and also improves one’s mathematics.

(Goldenberg)

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Habits in the curriculum …

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Habits in the curriculum …

In considering habits, Goldenberg proposes …

1) What “habits of mind” do people need to be safe, healthy, employable, socially connected ...? What “habits” will they need to be adaptive to unforeseen obstacles and new problems

2) What special contributions to that thinking can my discipline make?

a. What knowledge and skills from my discipline best help to deliver the message about thinking?

b. What might best convey the flavor of my discipline?

c. What might be the most broadly useful to students?

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Habits in the curriculum …

Habit is a cable; we weave a thread of it each day, and at last we cannot break it.

Horace Mann

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Habits in the curriculum …

Habit: A recurrent, often unconscious pattern of behavior that is

acquired through frequent repetition. An established disposition of the mind or character.

Habituate: To accustom by frequent repetition or prolonged exposure

The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language

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Habits in the curriculum …

A habits of mind approach requires: Multiple opportunities for practice, becoming

increasingly varied and complex and in different contexts over time.

“Thinking Occasions” (Barry Beyer, Improving Student Learning)

Providing Scaffolds Modeling Opportunity for reflection and “self-talk”

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Thinking Occasions

Beyer, quoting Vygotsky, notes that – Thinking occasions are not “time to think” add-ons.

Rather, they are occasions that demand thinking. These occasions actually provoke thinking, by

triggering it and calling it into play.

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Scaffolds …

A Support for thinking Strategies/Mental Models Worksheets/ graphic organizers Modeling open-ended nature of research

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Modeling …

At some point in our lives, each part of the intellectual process demanded our full concentration. But once learned (or, more precisely, once mastered), our mental habits became so automatic that they faded from view.

It is that very point that spells trouble in the classroom. For the same aspects of cognition that ease our job as thinkers pose the greatest threat to our effectiveness as teachers. Our familiar mental habits, often overlooked or omitted when we describe our thinking processes to others, can create a gulf between us and our students.

Sam Wineburg, Teaching the Mind Good Habits

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Professors may assume that their students are stupid or suffer from a learning disability. Often the truth is much simpler: No one has ever bothered to teach them some basic but powerful skills of interpretation. As teachers, we need to remember what the world looked like before we learned our discipline's ways of seeing it. We need to show our students the patient and painstaking processes by which we achieved expertise. Only by making our footsteps visible can we expect students to follow in them.

Wineburg