EDU 330
UNIT ONE - Introduction, Research, Statistics, and Standardized Tests
(BOT Rules addressed in this unit include 2E, 8B, 8D, 8E, 9D, and 9E)
CHAPTER 1
Terms with which you should be familiar:
12/23/18 Unit 1 Study Guide
EDU 330
Objectives:
- Identify some possible misconceptions about teaching and relevant research.
- Cite empirical evidence that subject content knowledge alone is not enough to be an effective teacher.
- Describe the different kinds of knowledge that impact effective teaching.
- Describe the role of research in the development of teaching as a profession.
- Our teacher education program at GAC views teaching as principled practice. Relate this theme to the various factors in teacher decision making.
- Describe the domain of the discipline of “Educational Psychology.”
- Explain what is meant by the Rosenthal Effect (Experimenter Bias Effect). Identify Thorndike’s criticism of the original study upon which this phenomenon was based.
- Describe the scientific process in educational psychology, starting with an initial observation and eventually resulting in a theory which can be used to predict outcomes.
- Apply the criteria discussed in class for evaluating a research study.
CHAPTER 13 Pages 461-472 only
Terms with which you should be familiar:
12/23/18 Unit 1 Study Guide
EDU 330
12/23/18 Unit 1 Study Guide
EDU 330
Objectives:
- For the various levels of the cognitive and affective domains of learning, classify and write educational objectives.
- For a skill, concept, or principle in your teaching major, conduct a task analysis.
- Identify deficiencies in behavioral objectives.
- Rewrite deficient objectives according to Mager’s criteria.
- Construct behavioral objectives according to Mager’s criteria.
- Write a Gronlund general objective, identify the taxonomic level, and write a specific behavior at this same taxonomic level for this general objective.
APPENDIX
CHAPTER 15 and Pages 497-498
Terms with which you should be familiar:
12/23/18 Unit 1 Study Guide
EDU 330
12/23/18 Unit 1 Study Guide
EDU 330
Objectives:
- Describe different uses of standardized tests and explain how they influence educational decision-making.
- Explain how different types of validity can be used to evaluate standardized tests.
- Interpret for a parent standardized test scores such as those on p. 541.
- Name 3 common standardized achievement tests commonly used in the schools.
- Describe the development and use of the first intelligence test.
- Compute an IQ score if given C.A. and M.A.
- Cite similarities and differences between the Stanford Binet and the Wechsler.
- Contrast individual and group intelligence test.
- Cite one reason for use of the SAT in helping to determine college admission.
- Name assessment situations that are more appropriately tested by a norm-referenced test; name some more appropriately tested by a criterion-referenced test.
STATISTICS: (responsibility of cooperative group)
- Construct and interpret rank-ordered scores, simple frequency distributions, histograms, frequency polygons, and cumulative percentage curves.
- Given a set of test data, compute the following: mean, median, mode, range, variance, standard deviation, percentiles, percentile ranks, z scores, T scores.
- Change a given score from one scale (given mean and standard deviation) to another scale.
- Describe and draw a normal curve and label its areas; describe and draw a skewed curve, and identify a learning and teaching situation likely to produce skewed results.
- Interpret and compare common standardized scores (e.g., z, T, stanine, CEEB) with respect to mean, standard deviation, and percentile equivalents.
- From paired data, decide if a correlation coefficient is positive or negative and estimate if it is low, moderate, or high.
12/23/18 Unit 1 Study Guide