1 / 23

Strategies and Instruction

Strategies and Instruction. Brittany Colavito Lindsay Spinner Grace Morgan. Learning Strategies. Metacognitive Strategies. match thinking and problem solving strategies to certain learning situations clarify purposes for learning

lam
Download Presentation

Strategies and Instruction

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. Strategies and Instruction Brittany Colavito Lindsay Spinner Grace Morgan

  2. Learning Strategies

  3. Metacognitive Strategies • match thinking and problem solving strategies to certain learning situations • clarify purposes for learning • monitor comprehension through self-questioning and self-correction if understanding fails • implies awareness, reflection, and interaction • used in an integrated, interrelated and recursive manner

  4. Cognitive Strategies • Help students organize information they are expected to learn through self-regulated learning • Directly related to individual learning tasks • Used by learners when they physically manipulate material or apply specific techniques to learning • Examples of cognitive strategies

  5. Social/Affective Strategies • Learning can be enhanced when people interact with each other (cooperative learning) • Goal: students to develop independence in self-monitoring and self-regulation through practice with peer-assisted and student-centered strategies • ELL’s have difficulty initiating an active role in using these strategies • Effective SIOP teachers scaffold ELL’s by using a variety of learning strategies

  6. Mnemonics, Rehearsal Strategies and Graphic Organizers • Mnemonics- memory system involving visualization and/or acronyms • Rehearsal Strategies- used when verbatim recall of information is needed; visual aids and cognitive strategies • Graphic Organizers- representations of key concepts and vocabulary

  7. SQP2RS (“Squeepers”) • Survey • Question • Predict • Read • Respond • Summarize

  8. GIST- Generating Interactions between Schemata and Texts • students and teacher read a section of text together • after reading assist students in underlining 10 or more words or concepts they deem most important to the text • List phrases or words on the board • Without the text, write a summary sentence or two • Repeat process through subsequent sections of the text • Write a topic sentence to precede summary sentences; end result should be edited to a summary paragraph

  9. Comprehension Strategies & DRTA • Comprehension Strategies- comprehension of text is enhanced when teachers incorporate instruction that includes prediction, self-questioning, monitoring, determining importance, and summarizing • Directed Reading-Thinking Activity (DRTA)- encourages strategic thinking while students are reading a narrative

  10. CALLA • Cognitive Academic Language Learning Approach: instructional model for content and language learning that incorporates student development of learning strategies; developed for intermediate and advanced ESL students; incorporates metacognitive, cognitive, and socioaffective strategies

  11. Scaffolding Strategies

  12. What is Scaffolding? • Vygotsky’s theory of Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) • The assistance provided by a teacher is called scaffolding

  13. Scaffolding Practices • Emphasize the role of personal choice, effort, and persistence • Motivate students’ strategy • Activating prior knowledge • Mentally model (ex. Think aloud) to make thinking apparent to students • Provide guided and independent practice • Encourage independent strategy

  14. Verbal Scaffolding • Prompting, questioning, and elaboration- paraphrasing, using “think-alouds”, reinforcing contextual definitions, providing correct pronunciation by repeating students’ responses, slowing speech, increasing pauses, and speaking in phrases, encourage more language and information from the students

  15. Procedural Scaffolding • Modeling, guided and independent practice, one-on-one teaching, small- group instruction with children practicing a newly learned strategy with another more experienced student

  16. Instructional Scaffolding • Graphic organizers (prereading tools to prepare students for texts), models of completed assignments (posters, booklets, ect. to give the students a clear picture of their goal)

  17. Higher Order Thinking (Promote Critical Thinking)

  18. Blooms Taxonomy • Learning proceeds from concrete knowledge to abstract values • Denotative to connotative

  19. Critical Thinking Skills • Out of 80,000 questions annually; 80% are at the Literal/knowledge level • Problematic with English Language Learners because it tempts them to continue to answer with Yes/No answers • Example of literal question: • Are seeds sometimes carried by the wind? • Example of Higher Order Thinking Question: • “Which of these seeds would be more likely to be carried by the wind: the round one or the smooth one? Or this one that has fuzzy hairs? Why do you think so?

  20. What Can Teachers Do? • help students use strategies to determine if a question is literal or inferential • Literal: answer can be found right in the text • Inferential/Higher Order Thinking: student has to "think and search” or “read between the lines” to find the answer • OAR (Question-Answer Relationship) • Students are taught to ask questions of varying level • Goal: developing hypothesis and using scientific method; benefits research skills

  21. Activity • Split up into 3 groups • Look through an elementary, middle level and high school level book • Use one of the strategies on pages 97-100 (starting at mnemonics ending at CALLA) to use for your book • Questions to Consider: • How would an ESL learner/non-ESL learner benefit from the strategy? • How could you expand this strategy?

More Related