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Tommy Galletta Justin Henderson Erin Morris Leigh Daley

Nonlinguistic Representations. Tommy Galletta Justin Henderson Erin Morris Leigh Daley. Research on Learners. 18% are auditory learners 32% are visual learners 25% are tactile learners 25% are kinesthetic learners which means that greater than 50% of learners are nonlinguistic.

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Tommy Galletta Justin Henderson Erin Morris Leigh Daley

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  1. Nonlinguistic Representations Tommy Galletta Justin Henderson Erin Morris Leigh Daley

  2. Research on Learners • 18% are auditory learners • 32% are visual learners • 25% are tactile learners • 25% are kinesthetic learners which means that greater than 50% of learners are nonlinguistic

  3. Brain Enrichment Variables • Challenge • Novelty • Feedback • Coherence • Time

  4. QUESTIONS • What is nonlinguistic representation? • What are the six patterns of nonlinguistic representation? • How do we teach nonlinguistic representation to our students?

  5. What is nonlinguistic representation? • It is an imagery mode of representation • The imagery mode is expressed as mental pictures and physical sensations such as smell, taste, touch, kinesthetic association, and sound • A way to raise percentiles by 27 points

  6. How to Use Nonlinguistic Representation • Graphic organizers • Make Physical Models • Generate Mental Pictures • Draw Pictures and Pictographs • Engage in Kinesthetic Activity

  7. Descriptive Patterns Time-Sequence Patterns Process/Cause-Effect Patterns Episode Patterns Generalization/Principle Patterns Concept Patterns Patterns of nonlinguistic representation

  8. Descriptive Patterns • They can be used to represent facts about specific persons, places, things, and events. • The information does not need to be in any particular order.

  9. FACT FACT TOPIC FACT FACT FACT

  10. Time-Sequence Patterns • Organize events in a specific chronological order

  11. Event Event Event Event Event

  12. Process/Cause-Effect Patterns • Organize information into a casual network leading to a specific outcome or into a sequence of steps leading to a specific product

  13. EFFECT

  14. Episode Patterns • Organize information about specific events including: - a setting (time and place) - specific people - specific duration - specific sequence of events - particular cause and effect

  15. DURATION PLACE TIME EPISODE EFFECT CAUSE PERSON PERSON PERSON

  16. Generalization/Principal Patterns • Organize information into general statements with supporting examples

  17. Principle Example Example Example

  18. Concept Patterns • The most general of all patterns • Organize information around a word or phrase that represents entire classes or categories of persons, places things, and events

  19. Example CHARACTERISTIC CONCEPT CHARACTERISTIC CHARACTERISTIC Example Example Example Example Example Example

  20. Make Physical Models • Concrete representation of the knowledge that is being learned • Souvenirs/tokens • 3D models – dioramas • File folder reviews

  21. Draw Pictures and Pictographs • Symbolic pictures that represent the knowledge that has been learned • Flip books • Illustrate vocabulary

  22. Engage in Kinesthetic Activity • Physical movement associated with knowledge generates a mental image of the knowledge in the mind • Finger plays • Role playing/charades • Elkonin boxes • Hand/body movements

  23. QUESTIONS ?

  24. Resources • Organizers Galore!!http://www.eduplace.com/kids/hme/k_5/graphorg/index.html • Interactive organizers http://www.readwritethink.org/materials/storymap/ • Souvenirs http://classroom.jc-schools.net/read/Souvenirs.htm • Amazing stuff http://home.att.net/~teaching/langarts.htm

  25. Bibliography • Heidorn, P.Bryan, “Image Retrieval as Linguistic and Nonlinguistic Visual Model Matching” Library Trends, Vol. 48 n2, pages 303-325, Fall 99. • Leonard, Laurence B. “Language Impairment in Children” Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, Vol. 25 n3, page 205-232, July 1979. • Marzano, R. J., Pickering, D. J., & Pollock, J. E. (2001). Classroom instruction that works: Research-based strategies for increasing student achievement. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

  26. “Actions speak louder than words”

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