T-APPLE Frequent opportunities for: interaction

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Take a piece of pizza from the counter.
Advertisements

Seeing Change Through to the Classroom Principal Leadership Academy November 2012.
Wait time- Thinking Time children need time to think!
Checking For Understanding
Enhancing SIOP Assisting, Collaborating, and Training ESL Secondary Content Teachers ACT-ESL Post-Seminar April 21, 2009 Hosted by VCU School of Education.
Explicit Direct Instruction Critical Elements. Teaching Grade Level Content  The higher the grade the greater the disparity  Test Scores go up when.
Effective Questioning in the classroom
Using Math Talk To Promote Student Understanding and Problem-Solving Kim Oliver-Second Grade Melissa Hawley-Kindergarten
Kelly Schroering Academic Coach
Checking for Understanding T-APPLE
SIOP Overview Shelter Instruction Observation Protocol
Working With ELL Students. Intro The number of English-Language Learners in the United States is growing rapidly, including many states that have not.
Once referred to as ESL and ELL. Level 1 Starting Level 2 Emerging Level 3 Developing Level 4 Expanding Level 5 Bridging English Learners can (understand/use):
Explicit Direct Instruction Part I: Learning Objectives, Checking for Understanding, and Closure.
Asking better questions Asking questions better. 1.Why do you ask questions in lessons? 2.What do you think is a strength of your current questioning.
Lesson Planning SIOP.
SIOP The Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol (SIOP)
Talking Partners. What is Talking Partners? The NLS promotes “talk for writing”. They recommend the use of “talking partners” during shared work in the.
LESSON PLANNING What? Why? And How?. Goals of this session Participants will be able to identify and explain: 1.What is a lesson plan and how to develop.
Cooperative learning in the classroom.
Comprehensible Input “Say WHAT?!” Translating “teacherese” into “studentese” with ease! ~Dr. Cindy Oliver.
CHECKING FOR UNDERSTANDING… KEEPING STUDENTS ENGAGED CFU.
Sheltered Instruction: Making Content Comprehensible for ELLs London Middle School April 18, 2008.
Teaching Strategies Equity in the Classroom. An Overview Defining equity in the classroom Meeting basic needs first Identifying some best practices –
Active Engagement Strategies Foothill Farms Neighborhood Network Woodridge School November 12, 2010 Marcie Nichols, Ken Dandurand, Will Pope.
Teacher Directed Instruction. Use for teaching basic facts, knowledge, and skills (examples): New tasks Alphabetizing Unfamiliar material Science equations.
Objectives of session By the end of today’s session you should be able to: Define and explain pragmatics and prosody Draw links between teaching strategies.
CFU Strategies MJHS Problem of Practice Problem of Practice: Based on classroom observations and administrative/department meetings, it is.
‘The whole sum of what might be said about questioning is comprised in this: It ought to set the learners thinking, to promote activity and energy on their.
Active Participation presented by April Kelley If you can’t hold them accountable, they think it’s optional! - Anita Archer - Anita Archer.
Asking the right questions to stimulate students’ minds.
Kagan Structures WALT– introduce Kagan structures in order to broaden teaching and learning methodology WILF improved knowledge of Kagan structures.
with Professor I. M. Smarter
Bumble Bee Class Supporting Your Child with Reading 2nd February 2017
Classroom Management Session 2 Prepared by Matt Mckeown
Glottodidattica Lesson 5.
Communicating Clearly
Learning Outcomes In this workshop, we will: *demonstrate the importance of teaching speaking. *discuss some common concerns on teaching speaking. *practice.
Interaction SIOP Chapter 6.
Checking for Understanding
The Learner Centered Classroom
Questioning Part 2 February 22, 2016.
Mathshell in Practice Ready Made Quality Group Work 6-8
Do All Students Participate in Your Classroom?
Teaching Listening Based on Active Learning.
Expectations for a successful discussion
LANGUAGE TEACHING MODELS
Twelfth Song of Thunder
Term 1, Week 9 Table of Contents Hour 1 Hour 2 Hour 3 Hour 4
Expectations for a successful discussion
Name____________________________________________ Period____
Making Sense of Socratic Seminar: Scaffolding for Effective Student Engagement Leslie A Birdon and Alton McGee Jr. October 25, Joint LSTA/LMTA.
Making Sense of Socratic Seminar: Scaffolding for Effective Student Engagement Leslie A Birdon October 25, Joint LSTA/LMTA Joint Conference.
Accountability and Attention during Questioning
TAPPLE a strategy to Check for Understanding
Title III Federal Programs Professional Development Series August 2018
What Happened Long Ago? Year 1 History / Even Year.
What do we know (page 1)? Define the word "Taxonomy." (Knowledge)
Learning from Incidents Engagement Pack
How to be an effective Learning Helper in the classroom
Fostering Critical and Creative Thinking
Teaching speaking Aims:
Conversation objectives: -Providing students with language comprehensible input -Presenting language function -Presenting new vocabulary/expressions related.
EXPLICIT DIRECT INSTRUCTION
Reading Engagement Strategies
Formative Assessments
Effective Questioning
Clarifying Questions INFER Lesson 5.
How do you increase student engagement?
RUMP.
Presentation transcript:

T-APPLE Frequent opportunities for: interaction discussion between teacher/student and among students elaborated responses about objectives Students engaged 90% -100% of period 1

T-APPLE Regular feedback provided to students on their output A variety of questions that promote higher-order thinking skills (e.g. literal, analytical, interpretive) 2

Checking for Understanding & Higher Order Thinking: T-APPLE Teach First Ask a Question Pause (pair/group-share) Pick a Non-Volunteer Listen to the Response Effective Feedback (echo, elaborate, explain) 3

Teach, then check. Teach, then check. Teach, then check. T-APPLE T=Teach First Always teach first, ask questions after Verify that the students are learning while and after you teach them Teach, then check. Teach, then check. Teach, then check. When you ask questions before you teach , you are not really measuring the effectiveness of your teaching When you CFU your student can answer correctly because they are applying the information you just taught them—definitions, rules, procedures and steps How can we verify if our student are learning before we teach them? 4

T-APPLE A = Ask a Question Ask a specific question about what students just learned Non-example: Does everyone understand what a prime number is? Example: What might be some examples of prime numbers? Pair-share and write examples on your whiteboard. Don’t ask student their opinion if they think they are learning, ask them specific questions that lead them back to what you just taught Does everyone understand what a prime number is? Are there any questions? Is this clear? Raise your hand if you don’t know what ___ is. Thumbs up if you understand, thumbs down if you don’t 5

T-APPLE P = Pause (Pair/Group-Share) When you ask a question, ALWAYS, ALWAYS, ask the question first, then pause before selecting a student to respond. Pause—3-5 seconds after asking the question; wait time does not need to be dead air. You may want to repeat the question again. Pause, pair/group-share is effective for asking higher-order thinking questions. Pause provides students with time to think, share, formulate an answer, talk-out new learning. Calling on one student before asking a question, may cause students to tune out 6

T-APPLE P=Pick a Non-Volunteer How many students should I call on? Rule of thumb: 3 A random statistical sampling of student learning If 2 random students are confused or incorrect, go back and re-teach. 7

T-APPLE L = Listen Listen carefully because you will make a decision depending on the student’s response. Determine the level of student understanding based on response. 8

T-APPLE E=Effective Feedback - (echo, elaborate) Echo: Correct answers get echoed back (i.e., “That’s right, a First Amendment right is freedom of speech.”) Elaborate: A tentative or partially correct response you’ll need to rephrase or paraphrase. * Don’t echo * For those students with soft voices, this ensures all students heard the response Elaborate: I’m going to stir the sticks and ask a question about the rights the first Ammendment guarentees us. What is one of the right on the First Ammendment. Repeat: What is one of the rights guaranteed by the first amendment? Pause. Now turn to your partners and share. Pause. Pick a random student Jason: Umm there’s speech, yeah that one, speech. Basically correct so teacher elaborates and expands. Yes, Jason freedom of speech is one of the rights guaranteed by the First amendment. For example in the US govt’ cant prevent you from expressing your opinion. Teacher continues to call on 2 more random students. 9

T-APPLE E=Effective Feedback - (explain) Explain: A student is randomly selected and does not understand, is confused, or answers incorrectly Tell him/her to listen carefully and say, “I’ll come back to you.” If the 2nd student does answer correctly, echo, elaborate, paraphrase and return to student 1. If the 2nd student does not answer correctly, go back re-teach and come back to these 2 students. Pick additional random samples. For those students with soft voices, this ensures all students heard the response There’s no need to keep asking student after student if you random selection shows you student don’t know the content. Elaborate: I’m going to stir the sticks and ask a question about the rights the first Amendment guarantees us. What is one of the right on the First Amendment. Repeat: What is one of the rights guaranteed by the first amendment? Pause. Now turn to your partners and share. Pause. Pick a random student Jason: Umm there’s speech, yeah that one, speech. Basically correct so teacher elaborates and expands. Yes, Jason freedom of speech is one of the rights guaranteed by the First amendment. For example in the US govt’ cant prevent you from expressing your opinion. Teacher continues to call on 2 more random students. 10

T-APPLE Check for Understanding Whiteboards allow you to check everyone at once! Include the pair/group-share first. Then ask students to write their answers and be prepared to justify or explain answer. Ask students to justify written answers on a whiteboard. 11

What does the T-APPLE help reinforce? Storing new learning into long-term memory. Multiple encounters and speaking opportunities create new pathways to long-term memory. Speaking preps ELLs for writing. General rule: 16-23 repetitions, with interaction to transfer to long-term memory. Remember, 3 “T-APPLEs” equates to 6 exposures to content. Think of your 3 samples and the 3 echoes. That’s already 6 repetitions 12