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Adjunct Displays

Adjunct Displays. Brad Greenway. What are adjunct displays?. The “stuff” that appears outside of the text, such as pictures, geographic and concept maps, graphs, diagrams, and more An e ffective display reflects the structure of the actual information it is displaying

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Adjunct Displays

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  1. Adjunct Displays Brad Greenway

  2. What are adjunct displays? • The “stuff” that appears outside of the text, such as pictures, geographic and concept maps, graphs, diagrams, and more • An effective display reflects the structure of the actual information it is displaying • Studies have shown that these graphic organizers should be blank or partially completed; NOT completed when given to the student • They are NOT worksheets

  3. Examples • Concept maps • Cycle map • Flow diagrams • Matrix • Pyramid of hierarchy • Vin

  4. Example of a concept map

  5. Example of a hierarchy pyramid

  6. Why use them? • Evidence suggests that these “displays of information” actually promote recall of the text for the reader • Two effective types of learning • Verbal (the text) • Spatial (placement of information in relation to other facts)

  7. Bibliography • Concept maps. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.utsa.edu/tlc/im ages/fig2conceptmap.gif&imgrefurl=http://www.utsa.edu/tlc/teachi ngtips/Concept_Maps.html • Fisher, Douglas, Brozo, William, Frey, Nancy, & Ivey, Gay. (2007). 50 content area strategies for adolescent literacy. Prentice Hall. • Lee, S. (2009, September 09). Recovery pyramid. Retrieved from http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.gomoji.com/file bin/images/article_images/full/Pyramid3.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www .gomoji.com/education/recovery-performance-enhancement.

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