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Teaching
Generic Skills
We must teach skills as well as content.
Generic Skills
are skills vital for success in assessments. For example the skills required to succeed in assignments, essays, exams, coursework etc This includes widely used 'study skills' and many 'Key Skills' but also includes subject specific skills such as writing a laboratory report, doing a comprehension exercise, or evaluating a marketing strategy.
These skills are not content, and so often don't find their way on to the Scheme of
Work. Yet they need teaching and they need class time! They are more difficult
to learn than the content usually. So dont just teach the easy bits (content),
and leave the hard stuff (skills) for the students to work out for themselves!
The
best way of teaching skills is to integrate them into your lessons.
A research review by Hattie Biggs and Purdie has shown that these
skills are best learned by integrating them into the course - teaching
them up front only works about half as well. Teaching these
skills well can add a grade and a half to student acheivement.
Download Summary
of Hattie Biggs and Purdie's review on how to teach study skills
Download
Approaches to generic
skills teaching.
Make sure your students believe the can improve their skills.
Hattie Biggs and Purdie found that a very important factor affecting the learning of skills was 'attribution'. Do students attribute their success or failure to factors over which they have no control such as intelligence or talent; or do they attribute success and failure to factors they can control, such as the time and effort they spend learning. Professor Carol Dweck has written a book on this which is sumarised very briefly here.
One of the best ways of getting students to attribute their success to that effort and time spent learning is the use of self and peer assessment, and perhaps spoof assessment. Methods for doing this can be downloaded in a handout called 'formative teaching methods' available on the active learning page.
Make time to teach Generic Skills
In order to teach a generic skill you need to set students tasks in class
that allow them to practice the skill. For example students could plan an
essay on some new content they are learning, then they learn the skill of
essay planning, but they also become more familiar with the content. You need
to teach them the how of the skill: the process; as well as attend
to the work they do when practising the skill: the product. Process is particulary
important, all skills are processes that can be learned, not genetic or God-given gifts.
Bridging
helps students to 'transfer' their learning of skills
The downloads on this page show strategies that you will need to adapt
for your subject and your students. In particular you will need to use
'bridging', see the Learning from Experience chapter in Teaching Today
Third Edition. The Feuerstein handout mentions bridging briefly.
Feuerstein's methods, when used to teach students with moderate learning
difficulties have typically added 20 or 30 points to their IQ in four
years leaving them with an IQ of 100 which is average. His methods use
special methods and materials, and you require training to use them. However,
some methods anyone can use, such as bridging.
Download
A
handout about Feuerstein and bridging here.
If you
are interested in devloping your students' creativity or Independent Learning
then visit : the creativity page and the
independent learning page
Meta-cognition
helps the learning of skills
The study skills activities below are suitable for tutorials or for teaching
subject specific study skills in your class. They come from an excelent
book by Graham Gibbs called 'Teaching Students to Learn' Open University
Press. The experiential and 'snowball' approach he advocates has many
adantages, do try it. Hattie Biggs and Purdie's review found that the
study skills programmes that had the most beneficial effect on achievement
made use of 'meta-cognition'. This is thinking about your own thinking
and learning, and self-regualting your own skills strategies and their
improvement. Gibb's book makes use of a brilliant meta-cognition strategy
called snowballing. Both the book and this strategy is very highly recommended.
Here are two adaptions of his methods to help teach students to write,
and for teaching them to read for understanding:
Download
Gibb's writing skills.
Download
Gibb's reading skills.
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