Self Directed Learning.ppt

4,519 views 37 slides Nov 11, 2022
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About This Presentation

Self Directed Learning


Slide Content

SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING
"No matter how good teaching may be, each student must take
the responsibility for his own education."

What is Self-Directed
Learning?
•In self-directed learningthe individual
takes the initiative and the responsibility for
what occurs. Individuals select, manage,
and assess their own learning activities,
which can be pursued at any time, in any
place, through any means, at any age.

DEFINITION
•SELF DIRECTED LEARNING refers to
both the external characteristics of an
introduction process and the internal
characteristics of learner ,where the
individual assumes primary responsibility
for a learning experience.
“ Brokett”

SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING
•adult learners can not be threatened,
coerced, or tricked into learning
something new
•the learning experiences adults seek
out on their own are directly related to
life-change events that trigger the
seeking

GOALS
•Enhance the ability of adult learner to be
self directed in their learning
•Promote transformational learning as a key
to self directed learning
•Promote emancipator learning and social
action as an integral part of self directed
learning

SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING
•it involves a continual process of:
–self-management
–self-monitoring
–self-modification

SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING
•self-management
–establishes clear goals
–thoroughly gathers information
–persistently stays with a task
–uses a systematic approach to
problem solving, organizational
planning, and decision-making

SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING
•self-management
–uses articulate, thoughtful
communication
–continuous process

SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING
•self-monitoring
–consideration of the ramifications
of thoughts, plans, decisions,
and actions
–metacognition -the process of
consciously monitoring one’s
own thinking

SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING
•self-monitoring
–self-reflection
–self-evaluation
–process of reflecting on one’s
own thinking patterns, plans,
decisions, and actions

SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING
•self-modification
–revises strategies and
strives to maximize his/her
effectiveness based on
feedback

SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING
•self-modification
–the change in one’s behavior
based on the data gathered
during self-monitoring and on
feed back received from others

FOURTEEN
CHARACTERISTICS OF
INTELLIGENT BEHAVIOR

FOURTEEN
CHARACTERISTICS
•PERSISTENCE
•MANAGING IMPULSIVITY
•LISTENING WITH UNDERSTANDING
•COOPERATIVE THINKING -SOCIAL
INTELLIGENCE
•FLEXIBILITY OF THINKING
•METACOGNITION
•ACCURACY AND PRECISION

FOURTEEN
CHARACTERISTICS
•A SENSE OF HUMOR
•QUESTIONING
•DRAWING ON PAST KNOWLEDGE
AND EXPERIENCE
•RISK TAKING
•USING ALL THE SENSES
•CREATIVITY
•WONDERMENT

PERSISTENCE
•“stick to a task” until completed
•does not give up easily
•has a systematic method of analyzing
a problem, knowing ways
to begin, steps to perform,
and data needed

MANAGING IMPULSIVITY
•thinking before acting
•forming a vision of a
product/goal/destination before beginning
"What we have to learn to do, we learn by doing."
~Aristotle

LISTENING WITH UNDERSTANDING
AND EMPATHY
•detecting cues of feelings or
emotional states -empathy
•accurately expressing other
people’s concepts, emotions, and
problems

COOPERATIVE THINKING -
SOCIAL INTELLIGENCE
•working effectively
in groups
•teamwork

FLEXIBILITY OF THINKING
•thinking “outside the box”
•considering alternative
points of view
•dealing with several sources of
information simultaneously

METACOGNITION
•being aware of the steps used
to solve a problem
•sequencing steps
•making a plan of action

ACCURACY AND PRECISION
•accuracy
–reading directions
–checking over your work
•precision of thought
–oral and written communication
•precision of language
–saying what you mean

A SENSE OF HUMOR
•ability to perceive situations from an
original and humorous point of view

QUESTIONING
•active problem-solving
•inquisitiveness

DRAWING ON PAST KNOWLEDGE
AND EXPERIENCE
•learning from the past

RISK TAKING
•“pushing the envelope”
•going beyond the
“correct” answer
"Experience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes."
Oscar Wilde

USING ALL THE SENSES
•multi-focus experience
–auditory
–visual
–kinesthetic

CREATIVITY
•the use of inspired
products, solutions,
and techniques

WONDERMENT
•“love” of learning
•curiosity
•life-long learners

Becoming self directed
•Reasons Why Becoming More Self-
Directed Is Important to You
•How Self-Directed Are You?
•A Book of Your Own
•Profile Your Genius
•An Adventure in Self-Direction
•Eventures: Applying What We Know to
Challenging Self-Directed Events.

•Be Intelligent
•Be Creative
•From Ideas to Action
•Tools for Getting Things Done
•Fighting Your Resistance to Action
•Tell the Story of Your Unfolding Project
•Becoming Skillful: Problem Solving
•Thinking Visually

Cont………
•The Attitudes of Successful Self-
Directed People: Living in the Light
These attributes are responsibility,
confidence, curiosity, drive, optimism,
courage and determination
•The Major Project: Getting It All
Together
•Connecting with Others: Linking to
Learn
•Wrapping Up & Moving On: Finishing,
Demonstrating, Celebrating, Archiving &
Spiraling

FOSTERING
SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING
"You cannot teach a man anything;
you can only help him find it within himself."
Galileo

MOTIVATING TODAY’S
LEARNERS
•the teacher can be a key to motivating
unmotivated students
–establish a supportive learning environment
–engage students in the learning process
–provide students with timely feedback on
their performance
–recognize students for their effort and
achievement

RESEARCH
•Maurice

•SUMMRY
The authors analyzed the biographies of twenty
acknowledged experts without formal training beyond high
school in search of commonalities that might suggest ways
people become effectively self-directed in learning and
accomplishment. Of the 154 characteristics identified, the
fifty rated as most important were examined. They outline
a pattern of education that is sharply focused, active,
experiential, self-directed, situational, and often personally
challenging. They indicate a personality that is both
traditional and radical, and they suggest a life theme of
gathering purpose and drive. The authors transform their
analyses into fourteen hypotheses about education, about a
form of schooling that would prepare students for a life of
self-directed learning and attainment.

If one advances
confidently in the
direction of his
dreams,and
endeavors to live
the life
which he has imagined, he will meet
with a success unexpected in
common hours.…
Henry David Thoreau
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