Pedagogical Strategies:
The pedagogical strategies embedded within the "Where are We?"
curriculum are as follows:
- Introduce children to the language of maps by beginning with an area
which is large enough to provide the complexity of an authentic adult's
map (i.e. bigger than a classroom or a single school building), but small
enough to be graspable by a child (i.e. small enough to walk across in
10 minutes).
- Introduce children to the power of maps by simulating situations in
which a map has obvious practical utility: e.g. getting from one place
to another, figuring out where you are when you are lost, planning how
to improve the nighttime illumination in a park.
- Have children use maps in both of their major roles: as a tool for
navigation, and as a tool for organizing spatial information.
- Leave the explicit "teaching" (i.e. explaining aspects of
the map language, modeling good map-using strategies, guiding discussions
of lessons learned) in the hands of the classroom teacher. Provide the
concepts and words necessary to do such teaching through a detailed Teachers'
Guide.
- Use learning technology to set up situations in which children must
'translate' between map and place, and between place and map, hundreds
of times over the course of the curriculum.
- Avoid questions or tasks which children can answer or solve entirely
within the frame of reference of the map, without consideration of the
characteristics of the underlying place.
- Use learning technology to set up situations where children can try
things out, and make mistakes safely.
- Use learning technology to provide rapid feedback, so that children
can learn from their mistakes quickly and efficiently. (Example: wrongly
placed symbols in "Add to the Map" don't stick to the map).
- Use learning technology to provide "scaffolding" for early
map-using experience, and then gradually withdraw the scaffolding as the
child's skill builds. (Example: the position-indicating red dot and arrow
are visible all the time in "Exploring the Park" mode, as needed
in "Are We There Yet?" mode, and never in "Lost!" mode.)
- Use learning technology to provide information that will help children
surface, articulate, examine, and solidify their decision-making processes.
(Example: the red line that replays the children's route followed in "Are
We There Yet?" mode tends to catalyzes a discussion between the pair
of collaborating students about why they turned when they did.)
- Have the teacher model, and all the children practice, map-using strategies
that are spontaneously used by children who are skilled at map use. For
example, the "Landmarks" lesson and the "Planning a Route"
lesson are both built around map-using strategies that were spontaneously
exhibited by second graders in our earliest test classes as we documented
their behavior in a real-world map using task.
- Identify common map-using misconceptions among children. Provide the
teacher with the symptoms for recognizing such misconceptions, and teaching
techniques for overcoming them. (Example: the boxed discussion, "A
Common Misconception: North as a Region versus North as a Direction"
in the "Compass Rose" lesson of the Teachers Guide.")
- Use the software as a "flight simulator" (not the game; the
real flight simulators that military pilots learn on). In other words,
use the software to practice skills efficiently, cost-effectively, and
safely. Then take those skills into real world settings, through one or
more field-based challenges, as detailed in "Field Trip" portion
of the Teachers' Guide.
- Lay the groundwork for thinking about metaphorical "journeys"
and abstract "spaces." Throughout human civilization, a journey
through a physical place has been a powerful metaphor for an intellectual,
or spiritual, or emotional journey (the Odyssey, Pilgrim's Progress, Dante's
Inferno). Dealing with the big "Where are We?" or "Where
am I?" questions is at the heart of the educational endeavor. History
seeks to help the child understand: Where are we, our society, with respect
to the parade of past cultures--and by what path did we get here? Global
studies asks: Where are we, our society, with respect to the mosaic of
peoples and cultures on today's globe? Literature asks: Where am I on the
spectrum of human experiences and human emotions? Biology asks: Where are
we, human beings, within the spectrum of life forms on earth? Astronomy
asks: Where are we, Earth, within the universe? The WAW Teachers Guide
embeds simple lessons applicable to physical or metaphorical journeys;
for example, "There's often more than one way to get where you want
to go," in the __________ lesson.
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