The Learning Power Approach - Guy Claxton - E-Book

The Learning Power Approach E-Book

Guy Claxton

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Beschreibung

In The Learning Power Approach: Teaching learners to teach themselves Guy Claxton sets out the design principles of a pedagogical formula that aims to strengthen students' learning muscles and develop their independence, initiative, determination, and love of learning. Foreword by Carol S. Dweck. Learning is learnable! Educators can explicitly teach not just content, knowledge, and skills, but also the positive habits of mind that will better prepare students to flourish both in school and in later life. And as 'traditionalists' fight for rigour and knowledge, and 'progressives' defend the increasing focus on character and well-being, Guy Claxton's Learning Power Approach (LPA) brings resolution to this phoney and unnecessary war by offering teachers a win-win pedagogical formula that delivers good academic results while simultaneously turbocharging students' independence, initiative, and love of learning. In this groundbreaking book Guy distils fifteen years' experience with his influential Building Learning Power method to provide a set of design principles for strengthening students' learning muscles, and together with a wealth of practical strategies and the supporting evidence that underpins them details the small tweaks to daily practice that will help teachers attend more closely to the ways in which they can shape their students' learning dispositions and attitudes. Complemented by engaging and informative classroom examples of the LPA in action and drawing from research into the fields of mindset, metacognition, grit, and collaborative learning The Learning Power Approach describes in detail the suite of beliefs, values, attitudes, and habits of mind that go in to making up learning power, and offers a thorough explanation of what its intentions and guiding principles are. Furthermore, in order to help those who are just setting out on their LPA journey, Guy presents teachers with an attractive menu of customisable strategies and activities to choose from as they begin to embed the LPA principles into their own classroom culture, and also includes at the end of each chapter a Wondering section that serves to prompt reflection, conversation, and action among teachers. Suitable for teachers and leaders in all educational settings, The Learning Power Approach carefully lays the groundwork for a series of books to follow that are specifically tailored to primary teaching, secondary teaching, and school leadership.

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Praise for The Learning Power Approach

In person, Guy Claxton balances the precision of academia with the warmth and wit of our most beloved teachers. He challenges, engages, and inspires in equal measure. It is the same when he writes; he transforms complexities of learning into recommendations that are both inviting and inspirational, and he does so without ever losing the subtlety of nuance or culture. He is the perfect “critical friend”, and The Learning Power Approach is the exemplary handbook.

James Nottingham, author of The Learning Challenge

Guy Claxton writes compellingly about the importance of teachers recognising the influence that they have within their classroom to create a culture where learning can take place at different depths and levels. He transcends the traditional versus progressive debate by illustrating how we can “have it all” when both knowledge acquisition and skilful learning behaviours are valued in harness. The teacher’s transformative influence is celebrated and practical examples of an environment where the Learning Power Approach is evident are provided alongside encouragement for the reflective teacher to explore, within the confines of his or her own classroom, the design principles laid out in this book.

The Learning Power Approach restores faith in the fullest ambition for what can be achieved when we engage inclusively to empower children, young people, and teachers through education.

Professor Dame Alison Peacock, Chief Executive, Chartered College of Teaching

What I particularly like about The Learning Power Approach is how Guy Claxton almost makes you feel as if you are in the room with him. Page by page, Claxton gently guides you through each element of his Learning Power Approach and then – as if reading your mind – skilfully puts to bed any doubts you may have, reassuring even the most reluctant cynic. There’s something in The Learning Power Approach for everyone, whether you’re an experienced teacher or an NQT, and it is written in such a way that you’ll find yourself having finished the book before you even know it. Thoroughly recommended.

Andrew Morrish, Chief Executive, Victoria Academies Trust, author of The Art of Standing Out

Reading this latest offering from Guy Claxton is a total treat. Rich with practical examples of what teachers and school leaders can do to support our pupils to develop the right mindset for success, The Learning Power Approach is a must-read for all educators who care about ensuring our young people develop the character and resilience to enjoy learning, as well as be great at it.

Not only is Guy’s approach rooted in solid research, it resonates with me personally as somebody who has a passionate belief in teachers’ dual role of teaching content and then enabling pupils to make sense of and master its key concepts through challenging and thought-provoking follow-up activities. And what’s even better, pupils who combine these approaches do better in tests and exams too. What’s not to like?

Andy Buck, Founding Director, Leadership Matters

The Learning Power Approach is a very important book indeed. Few, if any, people over the years have provided as consistent or intelligent a voice as Guy Claxton when talking about the need for a deep and genuine education. This book really nails the subject.

Sir Anthony Francis Seldon, FRSA, FRHistS, FKC

Guy Claxton’s The Learning Power Approach clearly shows that developing children’s thinking and learning skills is not only compatible with acquiring knowledge and passing tests; the two aims actually constitute the warp and weft of 21st century education. Full of practical teaching tips and common sense ideas, The Learning Power Approach is both very readable and immensely timely.

Dame Reena Keeble, Chair, The Teaching Schools Council’s Effective Primary Teaching Practice Report 2016

Guy Claxton is one of the deepest thinkers in education. Every book he writes is worth reading as they are treasure troves of new ideas, perspectives, and strategies, and his fundamental insight that the purpose of schooling is to develop powerful learners is more relevant now than ever before.

Guy shows how his method combines rigour with imagination, and his credibility as a cognitive psychologist gives him unimpeachable credentials when navigating the minefields of memory, knowledge, and learning. Whether learning a skill, acquiring new knowledge or developing emotional resilience, building learning power is the route to success and The Learning Power Approach shows you how to go about it.

Peter Hyman, Executive Head Teacher, School 21

Guy Claxton’s influence on schools over the last few decades has been enormous. Through all of the many and often contradictory changes imposed by successive governments, Guy has helped focus teachers on ways to unlock learners’ enormous potential, and, in The Learning Power Approach, provides teachers with a guide to keep at their side during the decades ahead as they navigate the as-yet-unimagined changes that will be imposed on our schools in the future.

What governments make complex, Claxton makes intelligible, simple, and exciting.

Sir Tim Brighouse, former London Schools Commissioner and Chief Education Officer for Birmingham and Oxfordshire

Guy Claxton clearly illustrates why a focus on building the competence and inclination to learn well needs to be a fundamental part of the educational approach of all schools.

Full of rich insights and practical approaches, this is a must-read for any educator who cares about preparing students of all abilities, and from all backgrounds, to be effective lifelong learners.

Tristian Stobie, Director of Education, Cambridge Assessment International Education

To David Perkins, unassuming giant of our field

 

 

The Learning Power Approach seems to be the answer to so many challenges we [teachers] face at the moment: the need to prepare young people for a world where many professional jobs will be automated, the need to get good academic results, the need to engage all students (boys being the most likely to be disillusioned) in education, the need to get a good inspection report (where inspectors are now looking to see the development of independent learning), the need to be distinctive … and the need to deal with the growing problem of mental health in the young.

Neil Tetley, Headmaster, Woodbridge School

 

I constantly see people rise in life who are not the smartest, sometimes not even the most diligent, but they are learning machines. They go to bed every night a little wiser than they were when they got up, and boy does that help – particularly when you have a long run ahead of you.

Charlie Munger, Vice Chairman of the Berkshire Hathaway Conglomerate (from his University of Southern California Law Commencement Speech, May 2007)

Foreword by Carol S. Dweck

Many people now recognise that the drill-and-test focus in our schools is not preparing students for the modern world. This increasingly unpredictable world requires a zest for challenging ill-defined problems, an ability to see things through, and the resilience to bounce back from setbacks. It requires the desire and the ability to do this over and over and over.

Although many agree that schools are not equipping either our low or high achievers well enough for the real world they will meet after they finish school or college, far fewer have suggested practical alternatives. Into this comparative void rides Guy Claxton and his colleagues with their Learning Power Approach. This approach combines research-tested learning techniques that can be implemented in any classroom, and it includes these all-important factors: provoking curiosity and imaginative thinking, promoting “metacognitive” skills (such as reflecting on one’s strategies and planning new ones), encouraging determination and perseverance, and fostering collaboration in the learning process.

In other words, the Learning Power Approach places the student in the centre of an exciting, purposeful, and social learning environment – not an environment in which students are required to memorise things they may not understand, for reasons they may not understand, and to do so in isolation from other students. You can just feel your heart sink as you go from the description of the Learning Power Approach to the Business as Usual Approach.

There are many reasons to believe that what the Learning Power Approach offers is so important. Here are just two.

First, it teaches generalisable qualities of mind – not just facts and formulas that apply in specific cases, but learning “mindsets” and skills that apply to many tasks and problems that students will encounter both now and in the future in all parts of their lives. For example, students in these classrooms (such as those in the Expeditionary Learning (EL) schools in the United States; see https://eleducation.org) may often do projects that require them to learn about meaningful issues (such as issues in their community), formulate the problem in a manageable way, do research into possible courses of action, and make recommendations, including ones that they and their peers can act on. They may also present oral reports on their work to the school and community. How could this not be more useful in the long run than memorising decontextualised facts and formulas that bear little relation to what they will encounter in life?

Second, more and more of our students are experiencing mental health problems such as anxiety and depression. Too often I am hearing of first or second graders who experience such high levels of anxiety about schoolwork that they do not want to go to school. The testing culture is now reaching down into kindergarten, with many students, younger and older, believing that these tests measure something deep and permanent about their intelligence and their ability to succeed in the future. Rather than places of joyful learning, many of our schools become places of dread. In contrast, classrooms that embody the Learning Power Approach can become places of tremendous eagerness as students question, explore, delve deeply, and collaborate in the service of learning. Upon entering such a classroom, you may hear laughter or squeals of excitement, or you may hear nothing as students devote intense concentration to the compelling problems they’re grappling with.

So, you might ask, what’s the problem? Why isn’t every classroom using the Learning Power Approach?

Well, I think there’s one big reason: the current incentives for schools, teachers, and parents. In the United States, schools are often evaluated and rewarded (or punished) based on their students’ standardised test scores. Teachers, too, are often evaluated and rewarded on the basis of their students’ test scores. I recently learned of a teacher who created a joyful and effective learning environment for her summer school students, using many of the principles of the Learning Power Approach. However, during the actual school year, with the test hanging over her head, she used a more structured drill-and-test approach. She felt it was a risk for her and for her students to do otherwise. Observers reported that the difference in anxiety between the summer and school-year classes was palpable.

The irony here is that schools that adopt a version of the Learning Power Approach often have higher test scores. Good test scores are a natural by-product of deeper and more effective learning. Furthermore, in Learning Power schools teachers are free to experience why they became teachers in the first place. They did not become teachers to force-feed facts and formulas to anxious and depressed students. They became teachers to see their children avidly learn and successfully grow their brains.

Parents, too, can play a role in perpetuating the drill-and-test approach. Many parents see high test scores as ways of ensuring their child’s place in top schools in the future. They may not want to risk new teaching methods that may not pave the way to these schools. Yet the same parents are puzzled when their child moves back home after university rather than confidently taking on the world. In the end, shouldn’t parents prefer an education that prepares their children for life?

You will cherish this book. It’s full of engaging and informative classroom examples, and the recommendations rest on solid foundations, such as research on mindsets, interest, metacognition, grit, and collaborative learning. Guy Claxton, himself a noted cognitive scientist, is a knowledgeable and entertaining guide to the future of teaching. I urge you as teachers not to stand by as the world changes but our teaching does not. I urge you to be leaders in the crusade to transform education, so our students can thrive now and in the future – starting with your own classrooms. This book will help you begin your journey.

Carol S. Dweck, Lewis and Virginia Eaton Professor of Psychology, Stanford University

Acknowledgements

I’d like to say a big thank you to the people who very kindly read the first draft and offered feedback and advice. First, there were my friends and colleagues Becky Carlzon, Nusrat Faizullah, Graham Powell, and Susie Taylor-Alston, whose experience, enthusiasm, and excellent ideas for improvement were invaluable. Then there were five anonymous reviewers organised by Corwin whose detailed comments were really useful. And finally there were my two splendid editors, Ariel Bartlett of Corwin and David Bowman of Crown House, whose experienced eyes have helped me to craft a book that is, I hope, both persuasive and accessible.

Carol Dweck has long been an inspiration for my work, and her offer of a foreword was extremely generous, given so many calls on her time. Other gurus of mine – giants on whose shoulders I have tried to stand – include David Perkins, to whom this book is dedicated, Art Costa, and the late Neil Postman. Over the years, many friends, colleagues, and authors have challenged and enriched my thinking about education. They include Ron Berger, Mark Brown, Margaret Carr, Maryl Chambers, Margot Foster, Michael Fullan, Paul Ginnis, John Hattie, Faye Hauwai, Bill Lucas, Deb Merrett, Karin Morrison, Kath Murdoch, James Nottingham, Graham Powell, Ron Ritchhart, Chris Watkins, Val Westwell, and Dylan Wiliam. Even some of those who temperamentally or ideologically disagree with me have helped me sharpen my thinking and deserve my thanks. They include Katharine Birbalsingh, Daisy Christodoulou, David Didau, Kathryn Ecclestone, Martin Robinson, and Chris Woodhead.

Many school teachers and head teachers have helped me to understand where my ideas work and where they don’t, and have been a huge source of practical wisdom. Far too many to name exhaustively, they include Hugh Bellamy, Sue Bill, Matthew Burgess, Robert Cleary, Liz Coffey, Andrea Curtis, Reagan Delaney, Robyn Fergusson, Gemma Goldenberg, Bryan Harrison, David Kehler, John Keohane, Debbie Marchant, Sarah Martin, Karen McClintock, Andy Moor, Kellie Morgan, Judith Mortell, Bojana Obradovic, Leah O’Toole, Tom Sherrington, Annabel Southey, Nicole Styles, Adam Swain, Luke Swain, and Michael Whitworth. Becky Carlzon in particular has been a massive source of energy and ideas. She and her husband Juan were responsible for many of the elegant photographs and illustrations in the book.

Judith Nesbitt, as always, has been my most precious source of support and reassurance.

Many thanks to you all.

Contents

Title PageDedicationEpigraphForeword by Carol S. Dweck Acknowledgements Chapter 1. The Origins of the Learning Power ApproachNuclear FamilyGodparentsFriends and NeighboursNear MissesA Socket SetChapter 2. What Is Learning?Why Do We Learn?When Do We Learn?What Is the Launch Pad for Learning?What Do Learners Actually Do?The Beginnings of Learning PowerSo Can You Get Better at Learning?What Kinds of Learning Are Going On in Classrooms?Chapter 3. What Exactly Is the Aim of the Learning Power Approach?Diving in: The Aim of the Learning Power ApproachSome Flesh on the BonesChapter 4. How Do I Get Started? Some Quick WinsThe LPA Menu du JourCurious, Adventurous, Determined, Collaborative: A Starter Kit of Learning DispositionsA Reflective ExerciseChapter 5. Why Does Learning Power Matter? Ten Good Reasons for Pumping Those Learning Muscles1.   Because Life Is Complicated2.   Because Learning Power Makes the World a Safer Place3.   Because We Won’t Always Be There4.   Because Good Learners Are More Successful in Life5.   Because Employers Want to Hire Powerful Learners6.   Because Powerful Learners Do Better in School7.   Because Powerful Learners Do Better in College and University8.   Because It Makes Teaching Easier and More Rewarding9.   Because People Are Happier When They Are Learning10. Because Young People’s Mental Health Depends Upon Their Learning PowerChapter 6. What Is Learning Power Made of?The Elements of Learning PowerChapter 7. Learning Power in Action: Some Classroom IllustrationsChapter 8. Design Principles of the LPA Classroom1.   Create a Feeling of Safety2.   Distinguish Between Learning Mode and Performance Mode3.   Organise Compelling Things to Learn4.   Make Ample Time for Collaboration and Conversation5.   Create Challenge6.   Make Difficulty Adjustable7.   Show the Innards of Learning8.   Make Use of Protocols, Templates, and Routines9.   Use the Environment10. Develop Craftsmanship11. Allow Increasing Amounts of Independence12. Give Students More Responsibility13. Focus on Improvement, Not Achievement14. Lead by ExampleChapter 9. What Is the Evidence for the Learning Power Approach?Does Curiosity Affect Learning?What About Concentration?Can Learners’ Resilience Be Deliberately Increased?Does Resilience Contribute to Raising Achievement in School?Does Imagination Improve Learning and Creativity, and Can People Get Better at Imagining?Do Deliberate Attempts to Teach Students to Think Clearly Work? And Do They Improve School Performance?What About Collaboration?Does the Same Apply to Empathy?Does Reflection Aid Learning?Does Learning Power Developed in One Context Transfer to Other Contexts?Chapter 10. Distinctions and MisconceptionsFocus on Learning Power, Not Just LearningLearning, Not ThinkingLearning Dispositions Are Malleable, Not FixedIs the LPA “Traditional” or “Progressive”?Evidence, Not MeasurementPrecision About LanguageLearning Muscles and the Mind GymPedagogy RulesIt’s Not Just Classrooms; It’s the Ethos of the Whole SchoolProvisional and Growing, Not Set in StoneChapter 11. Joining the Culture ClubBibliography Resources Publishers’ AcknowledgementsIndex About the Author  Copyright

Chapter 1

The Origins of the Learning Power Approach

Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.

Mahatma Gandhi

It wasn’t until I was working on my doctorate in cognitive psychology that I began to unlearn to be taught. DPhil supervision in the Oxford University Department of Experimental Psychology was, in the early 1970s, a very loose affair. I had three supervisors over the course of the four years it took me to complete my thesis, all of whom practised a form of benign neglect. It was entirely down to me to make an appointment to see them, and, when I did, the response was usually some form of “very interesting – what do you plan to do next?” What guidance I got came mostly from protracted coffee-break conversations with other graduate students, and especially from conversations with the three young bloods with whom I shared an office, Stephen, Nigel, and Roger.

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