Carefully determine what is important for students to know and why before presenting classroom activities focusing on a specific water topic Continue reading →
Best Education Practice: Individual
See below for: research findings about outreach with an individual.
For the Individual, the learning experience:
- Provides opportunities for extended effort and practice.
- Promotes active engagement and real world problem solving.
- Enables the learner to link new knowledge to their existing knowledge in meaningful ways.
- Presents a new behavior or skill by • Demonstrating its similarity to a current behavior or skill. • Relating the new behavior to current social practices. • Demonstrating ease of adoption in terms of time, effort and money.
- Builds thinking and reasoning skills – analysis, synthesis, evaluation, and problem solving – that learners can use to construct and apply their knowledge.
- Provides a nurturing context for learning, with attention to • Cultural or group background and influences • The physical environment • The use of tools or practices appropriate to learner skills and abilities.
- Relates to personal interests and provides for personal choice and control. (the learning experience is “learner centered”)
- Has a clear purpose with tightly focused outcomes and objectives
- Allows a learner to interact and collaborate with others on instructional tasks.
- Can be adapted to individual differences in learning strategies and approaches.
- Encourages the learner to set meaningful learning goals and to take personal responsibility for their own learning.
- Relates to the individual’s level of physical, intellectual, emotional, and social development.
- Builds on positive emotions, curiosity, enjoyment, and interest.
- Assesses the learner in order to set appropriately high and challengings standards.
Findings Navigation: Browse by Audience; Browse by Theme; Browse by Best Education Practice; Browse by multiple topics
Shaffer, R. M., & Meade, G. S. (1997) Finding 1
Provide training with a clear goal, geared toward the needs of a target audience. Continue reading →
Fedler, A. J. (Ed.) Finding 2
In designing outreach to encourage participation in outdoor recreation programs, attend to:
- Individual and socio-economic characteristics of participants (age, gender, income, education) as they relate to their participation in outdoor activities
Pompelli, G., Morfaw, C., English, B. C., Bowling, R. G., Bullen, G. S., & Tegegne, F. (1997) Finding 1
Link education to production decisions to reflect the fact that operators prefer to make production decisions based on their own farm records and advice from on-farm employees.
- Work with operators to review farm records in order to consider potential impacts of proposed changes
- Increase knowledge of on-farm advisors
- Collaborate with many groups/organizations to convey important information
Fortner, R. W., & Lahm, A. C. (1990) Finding 1
Structure activities at a field site in order to increase knowledge gain, but apply structured activity with care in order to avoid reducing motivation Continue reading →
Bosch, D. J., Cook, Z. L., & Fuglie, K. O. (1995) Finding 1
Recognize the limits of regulation in producing behavior change:
- Regulation leads to adoption of specific regulated behaviors only. (e.g. the target audience performed required nitrogen test but did not apply resulting information when making decisions about nitrogen application)
Feather, P. M., & Amacher, G. S. (1994) Finding 1
Recognize the role of economic factors in behavior change:
- Carefully design a demonstration project to meet farmer economic and other regionally specific needs
Ryan, J., Mathew, K., Anda, M., & Yuen, E. (2001) Finding 1
Carefully tailor the water conservation message to address the specific circumstances of the target audience. Continue reading →