An overview of the way independent learning strategies
can be introduced into a school's educational strategies
INDEPENDENT LEARNING STRATEGIES facilitate parts of a differentiated
curriculum.. Emphasis is placed on student negotiation and modification
of tasks, and on students pursuing these tasks with greater independence.
This can be achieved by
preparing in advance options for the students to select as part
of a unit's work (with options set at variable levels, involving different
skills and appealing to different learning styles),
encouraging students to choose the option they felt was most relevant
- with this involving teacher input to facilitate student awareness
of the match between the options and the student's talents and needs,
encouraging students to suggest and pursue variations to the suggested
options if they can present them as viable options to the teacher,
encouraging students to work in groups if appropriate to the task
(and, where this is done, encouraging cooperative group skills),
encouraging students to seek out appropriate resources independently,
and
encouraging students to seek out and utilise working environments
conducive to the task (for example, the "recital performance"
based task involved moving outside and the analytic discussion based
option involved moving to another room or an "independent learning
centre" - see below).
Independent learning strategies can be utilised with appropriate students
in primaryor elementary schools as well as those in high schools.
Fostering students' independence in shaping their learning empowers
them and increases the motivation and enthusiasm they bring to the process
and to individual tasks. They become engaged in and responsible for
their own education and this flows through to the way they view life
as a whole.
Independent Learning Centres
An "independent learning centre" is a flexible space with
appropriate resources where students can pursue independent projects
or learning. Key elements of an "independent learning centre"
(ILC) are:
a space for one or more groups or individuals to work in relative
harmony (at higher discussion/noise levels than a library),
suitable furnishings and resources (tables, computers, sound equipment,
lock-away spaces, etc) to encourage flexible and relatively spontaneous
use,
a coordinator to handle ILC "bookings" and overall management,
a teacher roster (perhaps at half teacher loading, supplemented
by appropriate parent volunteers) to allow for necessary supervision
and, where appropriate, assistance - the coordinator may try to link
students using the ILC with ILC rostered teachers and parents with
appropriate skills (particularly with interdisciplinary projects),
and
an understanding amongst the teaching staff that the ILC is there
as a resource area for individuals or groups to flow into - this may
develop over time.
Independent Learning Centres and other independent learning strategies
can be utilised in primary as well as high schools.