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Task (teaching style)
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The Task teaching style is an option available to students under Student-Directed Teaching, a progressive teaching technology that aims to give the student a greater sense of ownership in their own education.
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This teaching style is "for those students who required formal instruction and yet are capable of making some choice as to the appropriate practice for them to master the objective."[1] This formal instruction happens at the same time as the Command students.
Under Task, the teacher will:[2]
- Provide a unit plan consisting of the objectives for several days, written in a language that students can understand
- Provide formal instruction
- Limit formal instruction to 25% of the time
- Provide an instruction area
- Assign an appropriate amount of choice in practice related to the instruction
- Provide a checking station with answer keys
- Use good questioning techniques and negotiation to help steer the students to becoming more independent
- Spend approximately 60% of the total class time with the students whose choice was Task (remember Command and Task are together for formal instruction)
- Provide perception checks and final tests as indicated in the unit plan
- Provide a second evaluative activity if required by an individual student
The student will:[3]
- Listen to the instruction
- Consider what they know and what they don't know when selecting the amount and type of practice
- Declare the mark expected on each perception check
- Do more than one perception check if the declared mark is not reached within the flexibility factor
Assignments for students choosing Task style might look something like this:
On page 159 there are some practice questions. Do any 3 of the first 5, any 2 of the next 5 and any 4 of the next 10.[4]
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