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Cultivating Thinking in the Disciplines

Knowledge does not fall from the sky.
Paper Flying in Mid Air --- Image by © Sung-Il Kim/Corbis
Someone discovers it!

There are complex processes that are essential to the functioning of each discipline — and they take years to cultivate! How do we help students to build their understanding and use of these processes?
Dr. Lois Lanning’s Structure of Process, the complement to Dr. Erickson’s Structure of Knowledge shows us how. Just as concepts are timeless, abstract, universal ideas that organize topics and facts, there are strategies and skills underlying complex processes that have their own concepts, too.

We take those concepts and articulate them in a conceptual relationship. Then we have our generalizations or principles that will guide inductive teaching to allow students to discover them.
Here are a few examples for Social Studies, Mathematics and Science. The grade levels are marked so you can see a progression throughout the years. They should be vertically aligned and increase in sophistication. I think once you read them you will agree these should also be goals of teaching and learning!
Social Studies:

Mathematics:

Science:

Tomorrow and Friday’s posts will go into more detail and examples about assessment and instruction.
What do you think?

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