1 / 30

Self-regulated Reading

Self-regulated Reading. Nancy Perry, UBC nancy.perry@ubc.ca Deborah Butler, UBC d eborah.butler@ubc.ca Prepared for CR4YRs January 18, 2013. Review. What is Self-regulation?.

odelia
Download Presentation

Self-regulated Reading

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Self-regulated Reading Nancy Perry, UBC nancy.perry@ubc.ca Deborah Butler, UBC deborah.butler@ubc.ca Preparedfor CR4YRs January 18, 2013

  2. Review

  3. What is Self-regulation? • Ability to control thoughts and actions to achieve personal goals and respond to environmental demands (Zimmerman, 2008) • It involves … • Attending to key features of the environment • Resisting distractions • Persisting when tasks are difficult • Responding appropriately, adaptively, flexibly • Delaying immediate gratification to meet a more important long-term goal

  4. http://developingchild.harvard.edu/resources/multimedia/videos/inbrief_series/inbrief_executive_function/http://developingchild.harvard.edu/resources/multimedia/videos/inbrief_series/inbrief_executive_function/

  5. Applied to Learning … SRL reflects independent, academically effective approaches to learning.

  6. Metacognition • Awareness of learning strengths and weaknesses • Ability to analyze the demands of tasks/activities • Use of effective thinking and problem solving strategies to cope with the challenges tasks present

  7. Motivation for Learning • Genuine interest in learning • Belief that ability is incremental • Focus on personal progress • Willingness to try challenging tasks • View that errors present opportunities to learn • Belief that effort and effective strategy use will lead to success

  8. Strategic Action • Choosing from a repertoire of strategies those best suited to the learning situation • Applying strategies effectively and efficiently

  9. Respond What can we do in our classrooms to help students regulate their learning before, during, and after reading?

  10. Task Understanding • Developing an accurate understanding of tasks is challenging for students. • What’s the purpose? • How is it structured? • What are its components? • How do I feel about it? • What are my learning strengths and weaknesses in relation to it? • Do I know strategies that help me complete it? • Task understanding is important for SRL and success.

  11. Check Task Understanding Hadwin, Oshige, Miller, Fior, & Tupper, 2008

  12. What Is Self-Regulation In “Kid Friendly” Terms? • As part of her learning team project, Kelsey asks: How can we define self-regulation in “kid friendly terms?” How can we help them (her grade 1, 2, 3 students) to understand it? From Kelsey Keller Baker Drive Elementary

  13. What Is Self-Regulation In “Kid Friendly” Terms? • As part of her learning team project, Kelsey asks: How can we define self-regulation in “kid friendly terms?” How can we help them (her grade 1, 2, 3 students) to understand it? I have to admit I’m pretty thrilled to see my students taking ownership … taking pride in their SR … being so honest and self-aware of their needs.

  14. Before and During Reading • What do good readers do? • Make predictions • Make connections • Ask questions • Sound out words • Use context clues • Establish what good readers do with students. • Post the strategies around the room. • Practice! • Alone • With the teacher • With a peer

  15. After Reading • What did you learn about yourself as a reader today? • What did you learn that you can use again, and again, and again? • “I can choose a book on my own.” • “I can make a prediction.” • “Sometimes I need help to sound out words.” From Martha Hightower Rochester Elementary

  16. Self-Regulation Stories

  17. Self-Regulation Stories

  18. Self-Regulation Stories From: Sharon Bain, Baker Drive Elementary

  19. Strategies, Independence, Ownership & Confidence: Two Big Ideas A Model of Self-Regulated Learning Context (Activities, Support, Assessment) Interpreting Demands & Setting Goals History, Strengths, Challenges, Knowledge, Beliefs, Interests, Confidence Adjusting Cycles of Self-Regulated Activity Planning Monitoring Against Criteria Enacting Strategies Idea Two: Confidence Builds Through Experience Idea One: From Learning Strategies to Strategic Learning

  20. Benefits of Working Collaboratively in Learning Teams? Teachers are contextualized decision-makers They draw on knowledge and resources in order to meet students’ needs in classroom settings In collaborative learning teams teachers support each other to learn about and adapt new knowledge and resources for use in classrooms Collaborative inquiry is a powerful model for professional development

  21. Inquiry as Teachers’ Self- and Co-Regulation (Adapted from Butler & Schnellert, 2012) Activity in Context Identifying Goals (for practice/learning) Teachers’ self- and co-regulated inquiry Resources Adjusting Planning History, Strengths, Challenges, Knowledge, Beliefs, Interests, Confidence Students’ self-regulated reading Monitoring Against Criteria Enacting Strategies

  22. Benefits of Collaborative Inquiry? Teacher learning, ownership, & confidence Purposeful shifts in practice Evidence is starting to also formally link collaborative PD to student outcomes It makes a difference for learners

  23. Extending Research on Inquiry-Based PD Innovative approaches to teacher PD are emerging across BC, the Yukon and the NWT These initiatives are designed to spur teachers’ PD in ways that achieve important goals for students Innovative is that these approaches engage teachers in collaborative inquiry, within networked learning communities We have a wonderful opportunity to study how these excitinginquiry-oriented initiatives can work to foster practice shifts and positive outcomes for teachers and students 



  24. “Partnership Development Grant” Project Goal: To advance understanding about whether and how inquiry-oriented PD can foster innovation & learning. Research Questions: How are initiatives (provincial, district)structured to foster inquiry and innovation? How are initiatives experienced by teachers, informal or formal leaders, students? What outcomes can be associated with change initiatives (for leaders, teachers and students)?

  25. The Partnership Team CR4YR Team Partner District Partner (BC) District Partner (BC) BCTF Partner District Partner (BC) District Partner (BC) District Partner (NWT) District Partner (BC) SSHRC Funded Project Team CR4YR: Learning from All Participants Partners: Case Studies of CR4YR & Other Partner Initiatives

  26. Resources

  27. http://srlcanada.ca

  28. Available at Amazon.ca for $24 … effective strategies for optimizing what K–12 students learn by improving how they learn … easy-to-implement assessment tools, teaching techniques and activities, and planning aids … numerous whole-class ideas and suggestions … how to differentiate instruction for students with learning or attention difficulties … reproducibles are included …

  29. Available at Amazon for $36 … step-by-step detail … research-based framework … how executive skills develop in children and are used in everyday life--from the self-regulation required for responsible behavior to the planning and initiation abilities needed to complete homework on time … includes over a dozen reproducible assessment tools, checklists, and planning sheets

  30. Carol Ann Tomlinson

More Related