AN OUTLINE OF DIRECT INSTRUCTION
[The above outlines what is generally referred to at the Madeline Hunter Method; it is only a small part of her "method." An explanation of the meaning of the terms follows here and a fuller development of the Hunter Method follows this section.]
Questioning strategies: asking questions that go beyond mere recall to probe for the higher levels of understanding...to ensure memory network binding and transfer. Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives provides a structure for questioning that is hierarchical and cumulative. [See the end of this section for a summary of the Taxonomy of Educational Objectives.] It provides guidance to the teacher in structuring questions at the level of proximal development, i.e., a level at which the pupil is prepared to cope. Questions progress from the lowest to the highest of the six levels of the cognitive domain of the Taxonomy of Educational Objectives: knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation. [LINK PENDING See section following this outline for an exposition of the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domains of educational objectives.]
[For questioning strategies, such as Wait Time (allowing all pupils the time necessary to process and develop a response to a question before placing the question with a specific pupil) see GESA materials. GESA/TESA provide a practical model for questioning.]
The Madeline Hunter "seven step lesson plan." The basic lesson plan outline given above contains the so-called "Hunter direct instruction lesson plan elements:" 1) objectives, 2) standards, 3) anticipatory set, 4) teaching [input, modeling, and check for understanding], 5) guided practice, 6) closure, and 7) independent practice. If you count input, modeling, and check for understanding as three steps, there are nine elements...not the seven in the usual title.
Madeline Hunter did not create a seven step lesson plan model. She suggested
various elements that might be considered in planning for effective instruction.
In practice, these elements were compiled by others as the "Seven Step Lesson
Plan, "taught through teacher inservice, and used as a check list of items
that must be contained in each lesson.
This application is contrary
to Dr. Hunter's intent and its misuse is largely responsible for objections
to "direct instruction" and to Madeline Hunter's system of clinical supervision.
Used as Dr. Hunter's intent and its misuse is largely responsible for objections
to "direct instruction" and to Madeline Hunter's system of clinical supervision.
Used as Dr. Hunter intended, the steps make a useful structure for development
of many lesson plans...including non-behavioral ones. Not all elements belong
in every lesson although they will occur in a typical unit plan composed of
several lessons.
[Those who have an evaluator who uses the elements as a
check list and records a fault for each element missing from a lesson are
referred to Patricia Wolfe, "What the 'Seven-Step Lesson Plan' Isn't,"
Educational Leadership, pp. 70-71, Feb., 1987.]
Note that the term "mastery learning" may mean different things to different people. With Benjamin Bloom, Mastery Learning is a plan for ensuring that all children learn material before proceeding to the next step.
Behavioral Objective format:
Students will demonstrate their
[knowledge, understanding, skill, etc.] of/to [concept, skill, etc.] by
[activity performed to meet the lesson objective] according to [standard].
Example: Each student will demonstrate achievement of the skill of addition
of whole numbers by adding columns of figures with paper and pencil accurately
nine out of ten times individually in class.
Four step instructional process
Motivation "TRICKS"
Ways of monitoring
Questioning Guidelines
Retention, Reinforcement
Creating Directions
Giving Directions
The Madeline Hunter "Seven Step" lesson design may be used for more than just
direct instruction in the behavioral mode. It can be used as a shell for any
instructional lesson or unit.
One use in an inquiry mode suggested by Dr. Hunter appeared in Educational
Leadership, December-January 1990-91, pp. 79-80: "Anticipatory set and
objective: Let's review the procedure in making slides because today you'll
be making your own slides to be used in developing a hypothesis to
explain_________ and support your conclusions....Objective: Today your
group will work with magnets to see how many generalizations you can develop and
support...Input: Remember what you've learned about modifying only one
variable at a time, observing results carefully and checking whether or not the
data supportyour hypothesis. Your information today will be derived from your
own observations while you experiment with these materials.... (Input can come
from observation, experimentation, computers, films, videos, books, etc., not
just from teachers.) Modeling : Observe what I do, and be ready to state
whether my conclusions are valid or invalid, and why.... Checking for
understanding: Look at your data to determine and be ready tostate which
could be used either to support or refute yourhypothesis.... Guided or
monitored practice: I'll becirculating among your lab groups. Signal me if
you have questions or need assistance.... Independent practice:Identify a
question that you have about___________. Then designand conduct an experiment
(alone/ group) that would answer your question...."
Barak Rosenshine, in a presentation to the Association for Supervision and
Curriculum Development, Spring 1990, reported on recent research on direct
instruction. Direct instruction (as addressed by Rosenshine) applies to
skills, not to the teaching of content. The strategies he has recently reported provide scaffolds for learning
the less-structured skills. They:
All of these apply to the teaching of well-structured skills as well but they
are specifically indicated for the teaching of less structured skills: things
for which discrete procedural steps are hard to identify. They are less relevant
to the teaching of content because prior/background knowledge is key to the
teaching of content.
Learning takes place in the zone of proximal development [ZPD] where
the student's development is advanced enough for the pupil to learn but will
need help to get there.
A scaffold[outline, model, visual instruction plan (VIP), diagram, or
figure that provides an image to hang ideas on] makes it easier for the learner
to "get it" in developmental skills subjects where background knowledge is not
key and so is not applicable for non-progressive content like social studies or
literature. ZPD is not critical for most content in English or social
studies but is more so in science or math. [Note: writing an essay, at least in
the initial learning stages, is a less-structured skill that has steps that can
be taught, e.g., start with an attention-grabber, then a topic sentence, then a
statement followed by supporting information, then another statement with
support, then a third statement with support, then a summary statement tying the
three statements to the topic.]
Most things in math and science, especially skills, are taught in a context.
For transfer to broader applicability it is necessary to decontextualize
the learning. One way to do this is in guided practice by giving attention to
decontextualizing the skill by providing lots of varied practice and spaced
practice. [Ed.note: And to have students manipulate the ideas/skills, e.g.,
"Have you ever seen something like this down town?" or "How many ways can you
think of to use this concept/skill?" or "Can you explain how you arrived at that
answer" (metacognition).]
Return to Classroom
Observation
Go back to Class
handouts, models, keys, etc.
Go back to index
Not each of the "seven steps" need be in every lesson nor
should every lesson be based on the seven steps; however, the seven steps make
a good check list of elements in planning a lesson. The instructional purpose
and the best way to involve the learnerare the guides for what to choose in
planning a lesson.
Most of the research on teaching
effectiveness has been on the teaching of well-structured skills: how to add,
how to focus a microscope. His new work addresses research on how effective
teachers teach less-structured skills: how to summarize, how to take notes, how
to ask appropriate questions, etc. Other continua that are similar/parallel
to well structured-less structured are: explicit-implicit, algorithm-heuristic,
and concrete-abstract.
[Ed. note: It is likely that decontextualization of learning is
the most important and least practiced function of teaching for latter
application. The lack of transfer of knowledge/skills to "real life" is likely
the main reason why graduates do so poorly on state-wide and national tests
[even when they "know" the answers: the questions aren't asked in the context
in which they were learned. It is important that we present and re-represent
the material to be learned in as many different ways/contexts as we can...and
at the higher levels of Bloom's Taxonomy of
Educational Objectives.]
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