[NIFL-4EFF:2407] free resource

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Is this applicable to programs in which EFF is the focus?

The Functional Context Education (FCE) Workshop Resource Notebook is

available for free pdf downloading from


http://www.nald.ca/fulltext/context/cover.html

The notebook presents  theory of cognition and literacy, and it provides

evidence for the effectiveness of FCE and examples of FCE type programs.


What is Functional Context Education (FCE)?


Functional Context Education is an evidence-based approach to education

that is based upon a cognitive science theory of cognitive development,

learning, and instruction. The theoretical framework and the principles

for applying this framework to the task of instructional development are 
discussed in

this notebook.


Literacy is given special attention in FCE because of  its importance to

all schooling and instruction in our information age. A general thesis

is that the idea that literacy is something one must "get" in one

program, which is then "applied" in another is misleading.  Rather, it

is argued that literacy is developed while it is being applied.  This

means that for the large numbers of youth and adults who read between

the fifth and ninth grade levels, literacy and content skills education

can be integrated.  Therefore there is no need for special "remedial"

literacy programs to get students to "prerequisite" levels of literacy

before they are permitted to study the "real thing."


In overview, education based on functional context theory includes the

following conceptual framework:


oSociety and culture provide the most important resources for human

cognitive development. These resources include symbols and symbol

systems, such as the natural language and conceptual (in contrast to

perceptual) knowledge, which constitute the primary means for the

transmission of cognitive abilities.


oThe learner possesses a "human cognitive system" with an internal

knowledge base "inside the head" and access to an external knowledge

base in the world "outside the head."  The learner has a working, or

short term memory in which processing skills such as language are used

to move information in and out of both the internal and external

knowledge bases.


oLearning is information processing whereby the learner actively seeks

out information used in constructing a meaningful interpretation of the

world and a knowledge base comprised of these interpretations.


oA developmental perspective of literacy emphasizing the development of

oral language from earlier prelinguistic knowledge and literacy as the

amalgam of prelinguistic, linguistic and graphic symbolic knowledge.


oThe importance of context in learning new information and in

transferring information already learned to new and different problems

and situations.


The application of this theoretical framework to the instructional

development process suggests creating courses that facilitate learning

on entry into the course,  learning throughout the course, and transfer

into the contexts for which the learning is meant to apply.  To

accomplish these objectives, courses should be developed that:


oExplain what the students are to learn and why in such a way that they

can always understand both the immediate and long term usefulness of the

course content (facilitates entry into the course; motivates learning).


oConsider the old knowledge that students bring with them to the course,

and build new knowledge on the basis of this old knowledge (facilitates

entry learning)


oSequence each new lesson so that it builds on prior knowledge gained in

the previous lessons (facilitates in-course learning).


oIntegrate instruction in reading, writing, arithmetic, and problem

solving into academic or technical training programs as the content of

the course poses requirements for information processing using these

skills that many potential students may not possess; avoid

decontextualized basic skills "remedial" programs (facilitates in-course

learning; motivates basic skills learning; reduces instruction  time;

develops "learning to learn" ability ).


oDerive objectives from careful analysis of the explicit and tacit

knowledge and skill needed in the home, community, academic, technical

training, or employment context for which the learner is preparing

(facilitates transfer).


oUse, to the extent possible, learning contexts, tasks, materials, and

procedures taken from the future situation in which the learner will be

functioning (facilitates transfer).


Why is FCE important for youth and adult education?


Unlike children, who tend to do things to please their parents or

teachers, youth and adults will usually want to understand the

functional utility of investing time and mental energy in learning

something.  With respect to out-of-school youth and adults then, FCE

focuses on improving


(1) Participation in adult education programs by making explicit the

relationship between what students want to learn, what  is being taught

and its application in the contexts that the person will be functioning

in after the educational program, this promotes increased motivation;


(2) Achievement  in learning and transfer by ensuring that instruction

relates to the learner's prior knowledge in such a way that the learner

can function within the learning situation and  improving transfer by

deriving instructional contents as much as possible from the future

contexts in which the person will apply the learning, and


(3) Prevention  of learning problems in future generations by designing

youth and adult programs that maximize the intergenerational transfer of

the adults' new skills and attitudes about education to their children.


The FCE notebook presents 112 pages of elaboration upon the principles

summarized here.


Meta Potts, posting for T. Sticht



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