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Best Practices in Instruction

Best Practices in Instruction. Creating the best classroom environment for learning. Agenda. Questioning Techniques Conversing with Students Teaching Students to Question Answering Questions Cooperative Learning Techniques Activities for Cooperative Learning

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Best Practices in Instruction

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  1. Best Practices in Instruction Creating the best classroom environment for learning

  2. Agenda • Questioning Techniques • Conversing with Students • Teaching Students to Question • Answering Questions • Cooperative Learning Techniques • Activities for Cooperative Learning • Teaching Self-Regulation Study Strategies

  3. Best Practice • Questioning • Answering • Praise • Modalities • Modeling • Cooperative Learning • Vocabulary • Problem Variety • Practice Quizzes • Formative Assessment • Motivation • Bloom’s Taxonomy • Cognitive Disfluency • Webb’s Depth of Knowledge • Spaced Recall • Practice Retrieval • Independent Practice • Self-Regulation • Learning Styles • Differentiation • Problem Solving • Mastery Teaching • Learning Tasks • Brain-Based Learning • Cognitive Coaching • Seating Arrangements • Advanced Organizers • Whole Group Cues • Interleaving • Manipulatives • Error Correction • Mastery Learning • Using Technology • Active Learning • Content Integration • Examining Student Work • Reflection • Goal Setting Opportunity, not Mandate!

  4. What works? • US Dept of Ed

  5. Questioning Techniques • Purpose? • Engage students • Think at a higher levels • Assess formatively • “Never say anything a kid can say.” – Steven Reinhart • “Teaching is listening; Learning is talking.” – Deborah Meier

  6. Questioning Techniques • How do we accomplish good questioning? • We have to plan our ETA!

  7. Planning Questions • When is it appropriate to ask questions to elicit a more constructivist/discovery learning approach and when is direct instruction necessary? • Notation, definitions • How can we replace most lectures with a series of questions? • We have to plan our ETA!

  8. Planning Questions • What sort of questions should we be asking? • Lens: Bloom’s Taxonomy • Knowledge – basic recall • Comprehension – conceptual understanding • Application – use of knowledge • Analysis – whole to part • Synthesis – part to whole • Evaluation – judge value or validity • Pick a topic and write some Bloom’s questions.

  9. Planning Questions • What sort of questions should we be asking? • Lens: Webb’s Depth of Knowledge • Level 1 – recall • Level 2 – skill/concept • Level 3 – strategic thinking • Level 4 – extended thinking • Using the same topic, write some DOK questions.

  10. Planning Questions • How does Bloom’s compare to DOK?

  11. Planning Questions • Tips for asking questions • Ask open-ended questions • Ask questions that need answers • Anticipate student thinking • Ask less product and more process questions • Focus on the content • Build coherence by asking questions that connect to prior and upcoming content • Think about CPA and Math Practices • Plan your ETA!

  12. Planning Questions • What sorts of questions should we avoid? • Does anyone… or Who can tell me… • Do you have any questions? • Questions to individual students during whole group interactions • Questions to punish students for inattention • Difficulty qualified questions (easy or hard) • Rhetorical questions

  13. Managing Student Responses • Share with students reasons for using questions • Utilize wait time • Teach students how to build consensus • Teacher is not the giver of knowledge • Make participation mandatory • Thumbs up/down • Clickers • Require several answers to the same question • Use cooperative learning strategies

  14. Continuing the Conversation Ask students to… • Revoice • In your own words, can you restate what she just said? • Evaluate • Do you agree or disagree? Why? • Participate • What can you add to that? • Extrapolate • Does that always work?

  15. Continuing the Conversation • Tips when responding to student answers • Don’t improve student responses • Be non-judgmental • Praise can be as detrimental as negation • Accept and reflect

  16. The Art of Questioning • 5. Questions that need enhancing • 6. Value of a pause • Teacher post-question pause • Student within-response pause • Student post-question pause • Pause may not be silent • 7. Encouraging student questions • 9. Troubleshooting

  17. Just Some Good Questions • How would you explain this to a student in grade ___? • How would you summarize what we have learned today? • How does this look like something you already know? • What would happen if…? • How could you solve this in a different way? Have we found all the ways to solve this problem and how do you know? • What do you think is the best way to solve this problem? • Will it be the same if we use different numbers? Will it work the same way every time? Why? • What decisions can you make from the patterns you’ve seen?

  18. Big Idea for Questioning • Plan your ETA!

  19. Lesson Examples • A standard lecture on solving two-step equations • Whole group questioning with solving two-step equations • Cooperative learning about solving two-step equations (later)

  20. Teaching Students to Question • “Once you have learned how to ask questions – relevant and appropriate and substantial questions – you have learned how to learn and no one can keep you from learning whatever you want or need to know” - Postman and Weingarten • Chinese word for knowledge is two characters meaning “to learn” and “to ask questions.”

  21. Teaching Students to Question • Question Formulation Technique • Find a Focus • Brainstorm • Refine • Prioritize • Determine Next Steps • Reflect

  22. Teaching Students to Question • Questions for students to ask themselves in order to explore a problem • What do I know? What can I find with that information? • What do I want to know? What information do I need to be able to find that? • How does this look like something I know? How do I solve those problems?

  23. Teaching Students to Question • Questions for students to ask other students (or the teacher) to help them when they are stuck • I think I understand _____, but I’m still not sure about ______. • How can we…? • I found _____ challenging because… • I need help with _____ because…

  24. Teaching Students to Question • Student Question Cards (Wong and Quek) • Meaning • What do you mean by …. • What is the difference between …. and …. • Can you use a diagram to show …. • (Your own question)

  25. Teaching Students to Question • Student Question Cards (Wong and Quek) • Method • Can you show us how to do this problem in another way? • Can you explain/show us this step (….) again? • What will you do next? • (Your own question)

  26. Teaching Students to Question • Student Question Cards (Wong and Quek) • Reasoning • Why do you do that ….? • What happens if you change …. to ….? • (Your own question)

  27. Teaching Students to Question • Student Question Cards (Wong and Quek) • Application • Why do we study this topic (….)? • How do we use this (….) in everyday life? • (Your own question)

  28. Answering Student Questions • “Is this right?” or “I don’t get it?” or “What do I do next?” • Can you be more specific? • With a specific question… • Control body language and facial expressions. • Ask additional probing questions. • Have the student convince you they have figured out the issue.

  29. Cooperative Learning – Student • Positive interdependence • We sink or swim together. • Each student’s contribution is important. • Building positive interdependence • Rewards • Resources • Roles • Group identity • Competition

  30. Cooperative Learning – Student • Individual accountability • Every student must do their part. • Participation is not optional. • Building individual accountability • Roles – Facilitator, recorder, timer, presenter • Individual report-out (random?) • Individual formative assessment

  31. Cooperative Learning – Student • Collaborative skills • Listen • Contribute • Question • Stages of learning collaborative skills • Unconsciously incompetent • Consciously incompetent • Consciously competent • Unconsciously competent • Building collaborative skills • T-charts – Looks like/Sounds like

  32. Cooperative Learning – Student • Group processing • Reflect on the group learning process. • Set goals for improvement. • Summarize learning.

  33. Cooperative Learning - Teacher • Specify objectives • Explain the cooperative goal structure and academic task • Monitor and intervene • Evaluate and process

  34. Cooperative Learning Groups • Formal learning groups • Grouped heterogeneously by ability • Grouped homogeneously by ability • Grouped by social comfort level • Grouped randomly • Red, green, blue groups

  35. Cooperative Learning Groups • Informal learning groups • Pick a partner • Neighbor talk • Nearby cluster

  36. Cooperative Learning Strategies • Stop and talk • Group talk with roles (numbered heads) • Individual reflections • Strategize (group), solve (ind), share (group) • Solve (ind), share (group), revise (ind) • Think (ind), pair (two), share (four) • Jigsaw • Tea Party • Create, solve, switch • Pass a problem • Three-minute review

  37. Cooperative Learning Activities • Sorts • Reflect on student work • Good, better, best instead of right/wrong • Find the error • Modality shifts • Alternate solution method • Create a flow chart for a procedure • Create a knowledge map for a concept • Compare/contrast

  38. Lesson Examples • A standard lecture on solving two-step equations (previously) • Whole group questioning with solving two-step equations (previously) • Cooperative learning about solving two-step equations

  39. Self-Regulation • The most effective learners regulate and monitor their own learning. • Self-regulation skills need to be explicitly taught.

  40. Self-Regulation Study Strategies • Time-on task self-rewards • Check, correct, reflect • Teach someone • Review and summarize • Create and solve • Flashcards • Study with a buddy • A proper study environment is critical to all of these.

  41. Self-Regulation Study Strategies • Study environment • Quiet place with appropriate background noise • Desk or table to spread out • A room or place of their own • Appropriate tools (calculator, computer, etc.)

  42. Self-Regulation Study Strategies • Time on-task rewards • Homework should take no more than twenty minutes. • Studying should be ten to twenty minutes per night (bite-sized chunks). • Use the five-minute rule. • Text, tweet, post every five • Study stars every five • Ask parents to give tangible rewards.

  43. Self-Regulation Study Strategies • Check, correct, reflect • Make the answer key available. • Don’t just write down the correct answers, but also identify the errors. • What was one thing I did well? • What is one thing I need to improve? • What do I need to ask questions about?

  44. Self-Regulation Study Strategies • Teach someone • Find someone who preferably doesn’t know the math. • Ask them questions to make them think. • Can you get them to do the math? • Can you get them to explain the math? • What do you still need to know before you can effectively teach it?

  45. Self-Regulation Study Strategies • Review and summarize • Re-read and highlight your notes. • Green – vocab • Blue – example problems • Yellow – concepts or procedures • Read the textbook and take new notes. • Summarize the big ideas of the section. • Summarize the steps in any process involved. • If possible, where could this math be used? • Write down any questions you still have.

  46. Self-Regulation Study Strategies • Create and solve • Create problems that look like the ones in the homework. • Create problems that look different. • Create problems that use a different modality.

  47. Self-Regulation Study Strategies • Flashcards • Vocabulary cards • Concept cards • Process cards • Application cards

  48. Self-Regulation Study Strategies • Study with a buddy • Create a step-by-step guide to a procedure. • Think of examples and non-examples of a concept. • Make problems, trade them, and solve them. • Compare corrections.

  49. Self-Regulation Strategy Teaching Plan • Quarter 1 • Study environment • Time on-task rewards • Overview all strategies • Quarter 2 • Check, correct, reflect • Teach someone • Quarter 3 • Review and summarize • Create and solve • Quarter 4 • Flashcards • Study with a buddy

  50. Self-Regulation Accountability • Model and practice it in class. • Make it homework. • Give a weekly survey. • Assign different strategies to different cooperative groups members to share the next day. • What’s monitored, matters.

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