Contributing Faculty:
Dr. Tomeka Wilcher is the educational program developer for the Center for Faculty Development.
Essential Questions:
- What does it mean to activate prior knowledge?
- Why is activating students' prior knowledge essential to their understanding and success?
- What strategies can instructors implement to activate students' prior knowledge?
"What students already know about the content is one of the strongest indicators of how well they will learn new information relative to the content" (Marzano, 2004, p. 1). Therefore, instructors should take the time to incorporate strategies to activate prior knowledge in order to gain a pulse check on what students know, do not know, or need to know. This information will aid in the building and transferring of knowledge. It will also aid in creating lessons and learning experiences to target specific learning needs (Lent, 2012). Activating prior knowledge is critical because it closes the learning gap.
What does it mean to activate prior to knowledge?
Resources
- Ginsberg, S.M. (2010). "Mind the gap" in the classroom. The Journal of Effective Teaching, 10(2), 74-80.
- Lee, H.S., Coomes, J., & Yim, J. (2017). Teachers' conceptions of prior knowledge and the potential of a task in teaching practice. Journal of Math Education, 22, 129-151. doi: 10.1007/s10857-01709378-y
- Oleson, A. & Hora, M.T. (2014). Teaching the way they were taught? Revisiting the sources of teaching knowledge and the role of prior experience in shaping faculty teaching practices. Higher Education, 68, 29-45. doi:10.10007.a10734-013-9678-9
- Richardson, J.S., Morgan, R.F., & Fleener, C. E. (2009). Reading to learn in the content areas (8thed.) Belmont, California: Wadsworth, Cengage Learning.
References
- Lent, R.C. (2012). Overcoming textbook fatigue: 21st century tools to revitalize teaching and learning. Alexandria, Virginia: ASCD.
- Marzano, R. J. (2004). Building background knowledge for academic achievement: Research on what works in schools. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.
- Schallart, D. (2012). Schema theory in B.J. Guzzetti (Ed.) Literacy in America: An encyclopedia of history, theory and practice (pp. 556-558). Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO.