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Curriculum & Instruction 407:
Inquiry Teaching & Learning
Spring, 1996
Goals, Structure, & Requirements

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Goals of the Course

The primary goal for this course is to provide an introduction to a way of thinking about teaching and learning. This way of thinking does not ignore the usual focus on content: "What should be taught?," or method: "How should we teach?," but it begins with even more basic sorts of questions, such as:

As Neil Postman and Charles Weingartner discussed in Teaching as a Subversive Activity, asking questions like these can get you into a lot of trouble. Simple and obvious assumptions about teaching, such as "We need to have clear (even national) standards for what is to be learned," "Learning objectives should be explicit," "The teacher should always provide clear explanations to students," "Learning should proceed from simple tasks to more complex ones," "It's important to determine the learner's readiness to learn," "One has to learn the basics first," and many more, turn out to be neither simple nor obvious.

We hope that the course will provide an opportunity for dialogue about these issues. To expand the basis for that dialogue, we will read about, observe, and engage in, inquiries about phenomena in general, and especially about our own teaching and learning.

Structure

Each week will typically involve three kinds of activities: