jeudi 18 avril 2019

Classroom Analysis



Video analysis
Amr Kammoun
Human Development and learning theories
Dr. Mohammad Elnagdi
23/4/2019

Classroom Video Analysis
Introduction
The current paper aims to describe and analyze a teacher classroom practice during a whole session. The paper will highlight the classroom settings, the session learning outcome, and the learning strategies through which the student will acquire the new information, knowledge, and skills. To dig deeper into the teacher's practice, this paper will try to explore the learning theory behind each activity. To do so, the paper will proceed by first describing the classroom setting second the video will be cut into snippets. Each snippet will contain a certain phase in the lesson or activity. And for each snippet, this paper will try to explore the learning theory behind each activity assigned to the students to do. This paper will end by a conclusion section to reflect on the teacher practice and will introduce also some critics.
In this learning situation, the teacher refers to a variety of learning theories, but the main dominate theories are behaviorism and social-constructivism. She succeeded as we are going to see through her classroom session analysis, to combine those two learning theories to reach her pre-set learning goals for the session.
The settings
The educational settings for this classroom lesson are suitable to achieve the session learning outcome which is “Ordering food at the restaurant”. Suitable as it is, the physical environment of the classroom does not seem so rich. The room where the lesson takes place is big with two big entries through 2 large doors. In the front side of the classroom, on the wall, appears the South Korean flag. The classroom has enough space for movement. There are large windows on two sides of the classroom with roll-down curtains that allow manipulating the lighting. So, the lighting can be controlled. The students can have a well-lit and dimly-lit classroom. There is a wall-clock hanged on the right wall. On the left wall, there is a fan.
In the front side of the classroom, there is a large green chalkboard and the teacher desk which is equipped by a lab top. On the same side at the right, there is a screen that is large enough connected to a data-show device. Also, in front of the class, there is a table with one chair. It seems that it is brought in the classroom to be used in the role-play activity.
I think that the students' age is about 14 or 15 years old. The students are sitting on light chairs around rectangular tables in clusters. Each group has 5 or 6 students on each table. There are about 35 students in the classroom. Each table has one desktop computer.
In the back of the classroom, there is another board where papers can be stacked too. Between the tables, there is enough space for the teacher and her assistants to circulate. The teacher has two assistants. It seems to me, although the scene in a Korean classroom, that the teacher is an Indian female. She has two female assistants with a Korean nationality.
The class, through its left side windows, overlooks a garden. It seems that it is winter. The teacher, the students, and the guests are putting heavy clothes. As for the students’ clothes, they are in uniform. The acoustics seem to be good. the sounds are clear whether it is the teacher sound, the students sound or the computer sounds.  

Video snippets
Snippet 1:




In the first snippet, the teacher is trying to reactivate the students' prior knowledge through some strategies like brainstorming and posing questions also she related the recalled vocab through a context which is a restaurant. The teacher introduces some keywords to the students and asks them to repeat aloud after the teacher. In this snippet 4 learning strategies are used as an entry to the lesson about ordering in a restaurant: reactivation, brainstorming, posing questions, contextualize the activities.
1-Reactivation:
The teacher tries to benefits from the students’ prior knowledge about the topic of the lesson to build new knowledge and linguistic skills. Here the teacher makes use of the cognitive theory of Piaget who calls this prior knowledge "The Schema" (Shing & Brod, 2016, p.153).  Through this activity, the teacher may also discover the Korean students' perception of restaurants because the topic of the lesson which is food and restaurant has its cultural dimension.
Reactivating the students’ prior knowledge about the lesson topic will help students to memories the incoming information: by recalling the prior solution, the teacher is activating the schema (cognitive structures) into which the new knowledge will be integrated. That will facilitate the memory processing of new information (Shing & Brod, 2016, p.154).
2-Posing questions (stimuli-response-reinforcement for the right answer)
So, the tool or the strategy that the teacher uses to reactivate the student's prior solution is posing questions. Questions in that scene play the role of stimulus that invites the students to respond. This is purely behaviorism, the learning theory that builds learning on the association between stimuli (from the teacher) and the right responses (from the student) 
By using questions to invite students to respond, as doing so, the teacher depends on the concept of contiguity of Guthrie which is pairing in time between stimulus and response (Schunk, 2012, p.85) and when she praises the students for the correct answer by doing so she refers to the low of the effect of Thorndike which aims to prevent unlearning or forgiveness. And also, to reinforce the retain of the correct answerer for those students that have forgotten and did not revise their lesson before coming to the class.
Praising the students after producing a correct answer is very related to the skinner’s operant conditioning which states that reinforce a behavior make it tends to be repeated or reproduced (McLeod, 2007, p.1).
4-Contextualization
The teacher begins the learning process at the very beginning of the session by contextualizing the whole fowling activities by saying ‘we are going to speak about going to a restaurant'. 

The teacher uses images in this phase. According to Allan Paivio imagery is centrally important in facilitating long-term retention which allows the learner to stores information in two different modes: imaginal and verbal (Broudy, 1987, p. 12). 

Snippet 2:



In the second snippet, the teacher introduced directly the key expressions that will help the students to the main activity in the lesson which is role play. Instead of inviting the students to deduce those keywords through a reading activity for a dialogue transcription between a client and a waiter in a restaurant, the teacher wants to save time and introduce those key expressions directly and invite students to memorize them by two learning strategies imitation and repetition. When saying imitation and repetition the behaviorism learning theory appears.
The teacher by asking the students to repeat after her the key expressions, in fact, she is in the behaviorist camp and she is trying to build up an effective linguistic intuition, and acquisition of these key expressions by repetition and drilling (Demirezen, 1988, p. 139). By using imitation and repetition the teacher is using the basic strategies of language learning according to behaviorism which are imitation, reinforcement and rewarding (Demirezen, 1988, p. 138). As the video shows, she askes the students to imitate here and repeat after her. The reinforce and the rewarding come at the end of each repetition by praising words and sentences like “good, good job, very good…”
Although the teacher, in this snippet, uses the imitation and repetition which are stand-alone strategies, she always keeps the student in context, by making them aware that they are in the context of a restaurant and that those key expressions are used to order food as she declared in the very beginning of this snippet. The students know that they imitate and repeat after the teacher to memorize and retain the key expressions in order to be used later in a dialogue.
Snippet 3



In snippet 3, the teacher keeps contextualizing the key expressions but this time by inviting the students to read them in a dialogue between a waiter and a client. This kind of contextualization depends on the brain fact that Learning words in a narrative way or in context cause elicit activity detected by the FMRI on both sides of the brain not only in the left hemisphere when learning isolated words (Society for Neuroscience, 2018, p. 39) or expressions. That’s why the teacher, introduced new key expressions in a dialogue between a waiter and a client in a restaurant context More brain process on the new information might make it last.
Snippet 4:



From the first snippet to the 4th one the teacher is scaffolding the students. She did not give the students the key expressions and asked them immediately after to make the dialogue.
She began by helping the students to reactivate their prior knowledge about the topic and then she introduced the key expression and invited her students to do some active learning activities to internalize the key expressions.
Continuing her scaffolding role, in the 4th snippet, the teacher describes the task that the students are going to do. And she invites them to do the first activity to fill the blank in a text depending on a menu given to her students. She still helping her students to internalize the basic linguistic elements necessary to do the main task which is the role play that will take a big part of this snippet.
Doing so, the teacher refers to the scaffolding concept of Vygotsky defined by Hammond, & Gibbons, (2005) in the context of classroom interaction as:
“the temporary assistance that teachers provide for their students to assist them to complete a task or develop new understandings so that they will later be able to complete similar tasks alone.” (Gibbons, 2005, p. 9). 
That is what exactly the teacher is doing. She is preparing the students to do much more complex task in the following snippet which is role-playing.
As it is clear the modality of the student work in this snippet for the activity of filling the black was in groups. Here we can notice the social constructivism approach that the teacher chooses to her students to do this task.
The student knowledge is constructed through two types of interaction: teacher/students and students/students. That what can be seen in this snippet. The first type of interaction teacher/students can be clearly noticed by the teacher explaining the tasks to the students and his movement in the classroom, she and her assistant, to facilitate the work of the students.
The second type which is students/students can be easily noticed through the collaboration between the students while accomplishing the task. Social constructivism views that social group learning and peer collaboration are useful for learning (Schunk, 1996, p. 235).




Snippet 5

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As for the role play, the students try to be prepared for the activity of role play because they will be personally involved in the situation in front of the class. The teacher, by choosing this activity, refers to the experiential learning or learning by doing of John Dewey which is based on three hypotheses. The one related to this snippet that students learn more effectively when they are involved in the learning experience. ( Ord, 2012, p. 55).
In this snippet also, the teacher considered all learning styles. She invited students to read, to listen and to play a role. So, the additive, the visual and the kinetic learning styles are all active in this snippet. Learning styles describe how learners perceive, interact with, and respond to the learning environment. Many researchers have argued that knowledge of learning styles can be of use to both educators and students. It is well noticed that the teacher did not miss this side. She tried to take into account when preparing her classroom activities, all her students learning styles. There were reading activities, listening activities. (Romanelli, Bird, & Ryan, 2009, p. 9).
In this snippet also the observational learning can be noticed through the students observing their two classmates doing the role play activity. By observing their classmates, they can gain knowledge and skills concerning the role play activity and they might also do some regulations due to their observation. Observational learning refers to Bandura. Observational learning will motivate students to pay attention to the desired skill to retain it and produce it also (Schunk, 1996, p. 126).

Snippets 6 & 8






In snippet 6 and 8, the teacher does what she did in the snippet 2. She tries to insist on the key expressions that are essential to the lesson learning outcome by inviting her students to imitate her and repeat after her.
In this snippet as in the second one, the teacher refers to the theory or imitation which is according to Rosenthal and Zimmerman as cited in () an important way to transmit behaviors or knowledge.
So, through imitation which is considered as a stimulus for the following response in addition to the encouragement of the teacher which refers to the operant conditioning theory the teacher seeks to consolidate the memorization of the key expressions (Schunk, 1996, p. 12) and transfer them from the short-term memory to the long-term memory.
Snippet 7







In this snippet, the teacher refers to gamification. And she begins this snippet by explaining to her students the game rules. Gamification is strongly related to motivation. A body of research suggests that games may increase intrinsic motivation levels when they make boring tasks interesting (Faiella, & Ricciardi, 2015).
The game that the teacher introduced to her students put them in a behaviorism learning camp. The feedback delivered by the machine makes the student learning depend on the association between stimulus, introduced by the machine and the student’s response. To be more accurate the Skinnerian operant conditioning here plays a big role. When feedback, given by the machine, is positive it reinforces the right response and makes it tend to be repeated in the future. And the negative feedback aims to extinct the wrong response. Here the talk is about the positive and negative reinforcement. (McLeod, 2007).
Snippet 9







In the last snippet, the teacher declares to students that they will receive a spelling test in the week that follows. She is trying to make learning last in her students’ memory by more exposing the content to the student. To pass the spelling test, the student will have to read and study the content more than one time so they will not forget it.
Conclusion
The teacher in this session adopted the mastery learning theory which claims that all students can master most of what they are taught in the classroom (Block, & Anderson, 1974). In mastery learning theory a very important component is the attainment of self-confidence (Block, & Anderson, 1974). It seems that why the teacher always encourages, praise and celebrate the student's achievement after each activity to increase the students' self-confidence to achieve the learning outcome. To increase the students' self-confidence the teacher also divided the learning outcome in very small chunks, like words, sentences, filling the blank, and role play. She was progressing bit by bit in order to scaffold her student to master the "ordering food in a restaurant" in a foreign language which is English in our current case.
Learning for mastery implies that the learning process begins where the learner is and help him to reach where he should be. And that what the teacher did during this session. She began to form the student's prior knowledge and she progressed little by little.
Also, the evaluation component in mastery learning (Block, & Anderson, 1974). That implies that the teacher uses varied assessment tools carefully to assess students’ progress in learning.
One of the critics for this session is about the role-play activity. In fact, it's not a role play activity. It is more about verbalizing the written dialogue. A real role play is to provide the students with the description of the situations that they are going to simulate and let them prepare themselves and then let them act or play the roles without a pre-fixed dialogue that the student sticks to.
The second one that the teacher did not allow the students to discover and deduce the information, the knowledge, on their own, like give them a video at the beginning of the session and let them discover the key expressions of the topic. She was always introducing the new information directly to the students and train them to master it. I think that our teacher mainly a behaviorist teacher although she varied the adopted learning theory, behaviorism was dominant in this session.
Also, she introduced the wrong information to her student. The key expression "Entrée" does not mean the main meal. It is a French word that points to the first thing introduced in the meal, like the salad.



References
Block, J. H., & Anderson, L. W. (1974). Mastery learning. Handbook on Teaching
Educational Psychology.).
Broudy, H. S. (1987). The role of imagery in learning (Vol. 1). Getty Publications.
Demirezen, M. (1988). Behaviorist theory and language learning. Hacettepe Üniversitesi
Eğitim Fakültesi Dergisi3(3).
Faiella, F., & Ricciardi, M. (2015). Gamification and learning: a review of issues and
research. Journal of e-Learning and Knowledge Society11(3).
Hammond, J., & Gibbons, P. (2005). What is scaffolding? Teachers’ voices8, 8-16
McLeod, S. A. (2007). Bf Skinner: Operant conditioning. Retrieved September 9, 2009.
Ord, J. (2012). John Dewey and Experiential Learning: Developing the theory of youth
work. Youth & Policy108(1), 55-72.)p55
Romanelli, F., Bird, E., & Ryan, M. (2009). Learning styles: a review of theory, application,
and best practices. American journal of pharmaceutical education73(1), 9.)
Schunk, D. H. (1996). Learning Theories. Printice Hall Inc., New Jersey53.) p235
Schunk, D. H. (2012). Learning theories an educational perspective sixth edition. Pearson.
Shing, Y. L., & Brod, G. (2016). Effects of prior knowledge on memory: Implications for
education. Mind, Brain, and Education10(3), 153-161.
Society for Neuroscience. (2018). Brain Facts Retrieved from


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