Topic Challenge #3: Work your body line
I see what you mean, but it makes no sense to me.
I hear what you're saying, but I just can't see it.
That just don't feel right to me, seems like there's something missing.
I Value what you're showing me.
I Apreciate what you're saying.
I Know what you're doing.
Can anyone help connect the dots? ... Maybe we need some differentiation to put this all together.
Sometime in the past, maybe back when we were learning how to teach, I'm sure we all learned about learning styles of one model or another. (My favorite is the VAK model, but others work as well.) Since then, seemingly, the emphasis has been on saying and showing. Now we have a question where showing becomes pointless, and most often our saying is linked to our showing anyway. In all that instruction, most of the kinesthetic "learning" happen when the students write notes, or type code.
In the early days, (oh sooo long ago, right?), we had some really good stuff about getting the students active in the learning. Then we lost our momentum, and now it seems to be all talk and little action.
I propose that we use differentiation as a base, but focus on the techniques that increase the use of kinesthetic learning strategies in the instruction set. Not just examples of activities (there's plenty of those to choose from on CS Unplugged), but how to actually integrate it into the whole of the teaching, and the testing.
This might also need some creative adjustments to the scoring, but I am not sure.
Work, work, work, Senora,
Work your body line
Work, work, work, Senora,
Work it all the time
Jump in the Line,, by Harry Belafonte