| Literature DB >> 22383611 |
William B Wood1, Kimberly D Tanner.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22383611 PMCID: PMC3292071 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.11-12-0110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
The INSPIRE model of expert tutoring and results for tutees
| Characteristics and behaviors of expert tutors | Results for tutees |
|---|---|
| Intelligent: Superior content as well as pedagogical content knowledge | Difficulty of questions optimally matched to students' levels of understanding |
| Nurturant: Establish and maintain personal rapport and empathy with students | Feeling accepted, supported, and free to explain their thinking |
| Socratic: Provide almost no facts, solutions, or explanations, but elicit these from tutees by questioning | Constantly thinking, doing, and responding |
| Progressive: Move from easier to progressively more challenging cycles of diagnosis, prompting toward a solution, and posing of a new problem | Moving in small steps to higher competency through deliberate practice |
| Indirect: Provide both negative and positive feedback by implication; praise solutions, not the student | Working in a nonjudgmental atmosphere |
| Reflective: Ask students to articulate their thinking, explain their reasoning, and generalize to other contexts | Gaining insight into their own thinking through metacognitive reflection |
| Encouraging: Use strategies to motivate students and bolster their confidence (self-efficacy) | Experiencing productive learning and gaining confidence in their abilities |
A comparison of traditional classroom and expert tutorial instruction
| Traditional lecture in a large class | Tutorial with an expert tutor |
|---|---|
| Instructor transmits facts and explanations to students by lecturing and presenting visuals. | Tutor poses problems, asks questions, and provides occasional hints but little explanation. |
| Students sit passively and record information from lecture and visuals. | Student answers questions, works at problem solving, and engages actively in deliberate practice. |
| Instructor focuses entirely on content, most of it factual information. | Tutor focuses not only on content, but also on student's affective state, motivation, and metacognitive awareness. |
| Students receive feedback on their progress only periodically, through high-stakes, summative exams. | Student receives continual feedback through formative assessment in the form of questions. |
| Instructor does not know how well students are understanding concepts until after a high-stakes exam and cannot tailor presentation to student needs. | Tutor continually monitors student's understanding through questioning, knows student's level of understanding precisely, and can adjust strategy accordingly |
| Students may learn factual and conceptual information only in the context of the course. | Student is required to apply new knowledge to new situations and generalize it to other contexts. |
| Instructor has little or no personal interaction with individual students. | Tutor establishes rapport with student and encourages and supports the learning process. |