Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Museum of Biblical Art Practice Thinking Routines

Teaching the Museum of Biblical Art staff about thinking routines was a total success!  These people greet the public, set up the ballroom for wedding receptions, curate collections, coordinate exhibitions, fund raising . . . yet they stepped up to the plate to participate in Thinking Routine exercises.  I established patterns of thinking in the classroom for the staff to envision how they might become the teacher in the museum environment.

 Marseille Moon at the MBA



By teaching the staff about the following patterns used by teachers in the classroom they were able to connect to and participate in the learning and teaching exercises.


HOUSEKEEPING
Manage movement and physical materials within the classroom. THESE ARE Rules and guidelines for living and working together as a group.  In connecting with the museum space an audience and a location/space would be selected such as a classroom or a specific gallery or path for a docent led tour.

MANAGEMENT
Helping the audience prepare for learning includes:
•Passing out papers
•Forming groups
•Coming to attention
•Transitioning from one activity to another
•Preparing for discussion
Having efficient and well-tuned management routines helps the audience to be focused and actually directs the learning activity or artwork production.

LEARNING
Guide the actual learning and thinking of the audience as they engage with content of an object. In the museum this would be as basic as answering the questions that follow the viewing of a piece of artwork. This routine provides a recognizable structure for the audience to work within.  Or use journals for note-taking procedures such as mind-mapping, problem-solving protocols, and classroom debates about the interpretation of a painting. FOR THE MUSEUM VISITOR TO Learn routines gives structure to the audiences’ activities and provides the tools for engaging with the content OF THE ARTWORK.

DISCOURSE
Structure the discussion and sharing of audiences’ learning, orchestrating the many types of conversations that occur among art educators and audience. We are all familiar with the routine of raising one’s hand for permission to speak, used in the classroom throughout the world. However, this is not the only way of structuring discourse.  Here are other ways of structuring ideas with all audiences.

1.  Think-Pair-Share (TPS)
2.  KWL strategy:  What do you know? What do you want to know? What have you learned?
3.  Experiences scaffold by the thinking routines.



After introducing these ideas to the eager audience, I prepared them to become the teachers by introducing.

THINK-PAIR-SHARE
1.  The teacher poses a question
2.  Provide time for students to think about the problem
3.  Ask students to pair up and discuss
4.  Students share their discussion with the whole class


Thinking routines provide structures for the museum staff to initiate, explore, discuss, document, and manage their thinking.

Thinking routines help guide students’ learning and intellectual interactions.
Teachers establish, use and adapt thinking routines to make them a part of the CULTURE of the classroom.  This establishes and maintains a thoughtful classroom environment.

KWL is another strategy used to guide learners by asking these important questions.
What do you know?
What do you want to know?
What have you learned?
Serves to structure students’ learning about a new topic and is a widely used learning routine in classrooms. This routine activates prior knowledge, engages curiosity, and prompts reflection. Think-pair-share and KWL become routines rather than merely strategies through their repeated use. This repetition of use is a key characteristic of all routines. It is what makes them common, shared practices.

Sample thinking routines from the Visible Thinking projects.
SEE-THINK-WONDER
CONNECT-EXTEND-CHALLENGE
PERCEIVE-KNOW-CARE-ABOUT
CLAIM-SUPPORT-QUESTION
LOOKING 10 X 2
THINK-PUZZLE-EXPLORE
HEADLINES
WHAT MAKES YOU SAY THAT?


IMPLEMENTATION OF THE NATURE OF ROUTINES
WHAT IS IT THAT MAKES A GOOD THINKING ROUTINE?
WHAT MENTAL MOVES WOULD BE EMBEDDED IN A ROUTINE AND HOW?


All classroom routines are explicit in nature, that is, they must be known by the learners.
In time, the teacher can activate a routine merely by naming it.

Having only a few steps, often identified in language that makes the thinking moves explicit, is an important characteristic of routines.

Easy to:           Teach
                        Learn
                        Remember

Routines operate as tools for getting a particular job done.  The goal of thinking routines is to scaffold and support a particular set of thinking moves.  The routines by teachers and students alike become useful tools for achieving thinking and learning goals.  They must internalize not just the actions but the purpose and message behind those actions.

Individual and Group Practice

When standing in front of a painting at a museum,
we can identify:
1.  What we see,
2.  Think what it might mean,
3.  Pose wonderings to ourselves


Thinking routines still can be of use to us in our private speculations.  This aspect of thinking routines makes them useful tools in developing visitor's ability to think.


In Review:  Characteristics of Thinking Routines
Individual and Group practices
Useful across a variety of contexts
Use over and over again
Instrumental in nature
Explicit, and
Having only a few steps
In working with teachers two additional characteristics emerged:
Flexibility and Language



WHAT KIND OF THINKING ROUTINES DO MUSEUM VISITORS PARTICIPATE IN?
Recall in a short series of steps or thinking moves.
Sample thinking routines from the Visible Thinking projects:  See/think/wonder—three steps
1.  What do you see?
2.  What do you think about that?
3.  What do you wonder about?
Each step constitutes a certain sort of cognitive behavior.

Types of Cognitive Behaviors – STUDENT AND/OR MUSEUM VISITORS
Generate lots of ideas
Give evidence and explanations
Look for comparisons and connections
Construct reason-based syntheses, summaries, and conclusions
Construct evidence-based interpretations and explanations
Make discernments and evaluations
Ask questions
Identify and explore multiple perspectives
Create metaphors
Reflect on and consolidate learning


These are photographs of the Museum of Biblical Art staff showing off their newly learned skills of teaching in the museum environment.  Staff members were asked to think-pair-share with a partner.   The slips of paper with instructions about what teaching routine to use were handed out.  I pre-selected reproductions of paintings by artists currently represented in the galleries.  I wanted the staff members to be familiar with the images they were looking at to have a prior connection.  They were given ten minutes to look at the image and determine what and how to present the particular thinking routine in reference to the reproduction.  They used computer images of art by Sunol Alvar, Victor Bregeda, Michalangelo, Kathe Kollwitz, George Tobolowsky, and Jack Terry to teach the rest of the staff about a selected thinking routines.




Photographs by Marseille Moon (unless I am in them).






2 comments:

  1. Everyone looks like they are having such a good time working with their Thinking Routines! Cognitive looking and thinking can be enjoyable - this is proof! I am so glad that the Thinking Routines worked so well with the staff of the MBA. Good work, Marseille, in spreading this way of looking/talking/thinking about art to the museum!

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  2. You are really open their eyes!!! This is so great, I'm happy:) You educate the educatores-It is such an important part of being a museum educator. Looks like they have fun & that will be a memorable experience for the MBA staff.

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