R4u4snerg.ppt version:20091021. Reading for Understanding Research Initiative Institute of Education Sciences –US Department of Education 5 or 6 “R&D.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cognitive Academic Language Learning Approach
Advertisements

T H A N K Y O U !. Charlie Robinson Charlie
Take a piece of pizza from the counter.
When Students Can’t Read…
Reciprocal Teaching: Session 1. Twilight Course Overview Session 1: An Introduction to Reciprocal Teaching Introduction to the 4 key strategies used in.
What is Word Study? PD Presentation: Union 61 Revised ELA guide Supplement (and beyond)
PAYS FOR: Literacy Coach, Power Hour Aides, LTM's, Literacy Trainings, Kindergarten Teacher Training, Materials.
Strategies Teaching students to use special thoughts or actions to Assist learning tasks Understand, remember, recall new information Practice skills efficiently.
Using Picture Books to Teach Adolescents Reading Strategies
Teaching and Monitoring Comprehension in the early grades Leecy Wise
Curriculum Instruction & Assessment Part I - Alignment By Tina Waddy.
Literacy Continuum K-6 Western Sydney Region – Literacy Background
Bridges New ELA: Supporting SIFE with Low Literacy in the Home Language Session 1, March 19, 2015.
Common Core State Standards Professional Learning Module Series
Vocabulary. Vocabulary (NRP)  Themes or general categories of effective vocabulary instruction direct and indirect instruction multiple exposures to.
Objectives Look purposefully at vocabulary instruction. Discuss how this component is effectively taught. Collaborate to plan for strategic instruction.
Assisting Struggling Readers and Writers: Using Evidence-Based Resources to Support Adult Learners Michigan Conference 2014 Kathy Houghton-- LINCS.
Session 4: Academic Vocabulary Audience: 6-12 ELA & Content Area Teachers.
TEACHING STUDENTS TO READ INFORMATIONAL TEXT Reference: Reference: What Research Has To Say About Reading Instruction, by Alan E. Farstrup (2002)
Stages of Second Language Acquisition
Developing a literacy implementation strategy
Rediscovering Research: A Path to Standards Based Learning Authentic Learning that Motivates, Constructs Meaning, and Boosts Success.
General Considerations for Implementation
Dr E. Lugo Morales1 6/28/2012. Develop academic vocabulary Read to acquire new information Understand information presented orally Participate in classroom.
NCSC Project Description
Take a “Close” Look Using Close Reading Strategies with CCSS A.L. Corbett Middle School Bridget Black, 6 th Grade ELA Kanelia Cannon, 8 th Grade ELA Tara.
Selecting Research Based Instructional Programs Marcia L. Grek, Ph.D. Florida Center for Reading Research Georgia March, 2004.
Communicating Ocean Sciences to Informal Audiences (COSIA) Session 3 Teaching & Learning.
COMPUTER ASSISTED / AIDED LANGUAGE LEARNING (CALL) By: Sugeili Liliana Chan Santos.
ESSENTIAL QUESTION What does it look like and sound like when students use evidence to support their thinking?
New Teachers’ Induction January 20, 2011 Office of Curriculum and Instruction.
Teaching language means teaching the components of language Content (also called semantics) refers to the ideas or concepts being communicated. Form refers.
Academic Needs of L2/Bilingual Learners
VOCABULARY AND READING. 85% COVERAGE Americans have been making _______ since the first European settlers found wild ________ on the East Coast. But until.
Why a balanced literacy program?
Using a Story-Based Approach to Teach Grammar
Karen Erickson, Ph.D. Center for Literacy & Disability Studies University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Positive University + Manufacturer Relationships.
Chapter 1 –organizing principle
Prepared by Teacher Angel. I. Vocabulary  Kinds of Vocabulary  What does it mean to know a word?  Obstacles in Vocabulary Development  Primary Goals.
Are you ready to play…. Deal or No Deal? Deal or No Deal?
Embedding Student Research Science & Engineering Projects in the Science & Technology/Engineering Curriculum Presented by Bill Rigney Marlborough High.
QAR: Question Answer Relationships
Teaching Reading Comprehension
Using a Story-Based Approach to Teach Grammar
Second Language Acquisition
Why Inquiry?. What is Inquiry-based Science? Inquiry features: Questions for which answers are not already entirely known by the students and/or teachers.
1 Adapted from Deborah C. Simmons (2002) BIG IDEAS.
Sheltered Instruction: Making Content Comprehensible for ELLs London Middle School April 18, 2008.
ITEAMS is designed to provide teachers with the tools to develop inquiry-based lessons, and the opportunity to develop a deep understanding of implementation.
Technology, Digital Media, and Curriculum Integration
TYPE OF READINGS.
Turing:CCS/575S10.ppt version:
INTRODUCTION TO THE WIDA FRAMEWORK Presenter Affiliation Date.
Developmentally Appropriate Practices. Five Guidelines For Developmentally Appropriate Practices.
ELL353 Welcome to Week #3 Dr. Holly Wilson. This Week’s Assignments 1. Readings 2. Discussion #1: Teaching Vocabulary 3. Discussion #2: Vocabulary Lesson.
D 4 Understanding the Common Core State Standards & Assessment Katie McKnight, Ph.D.
COMPREHENSION STRATEGIES
IQWST Investigating & Questioning our World
Integrated and Designated ELD –
Professional Learning Communities
Using Cognitive Science To Inform Instructional Design
ICT : Module III - Instructional Design Mrs. Sunita Singh
Sheltered English Instruction
Performance Indicator F: Performance Indicator G
Reading Strategies “The only guide you'll ever need to Reading Chinese,” accessed at Zizzle Learn Chinese
Helping Students Generate and Test Hypotheses
Teaching Reading 主讲人:张敬彩 1.
General Considerations for Implementation
Thinking About Planning Amalia Lopez
Presentation transcript:

r4u4snerg.ppt version:

Reading for Understanding Research Initiative Institute of Education Sciences –US Department of Education 5 or 6 “R&D Core Teams” 1 or 2 “Network Assessment Teams” “Manhattan Project” / “Apollo Mission” –to improve (the teaching of) reading for understanding/reading comprehension –$20 million over 5 years

A Center for Reading for Understanding A Research and Development Core Team to Integrate Vocabulary, Writing, Reasoning, Multimodal Literacies, and Oral Discourse to Improve Reading Comprehension Principal location:UB Satellite locations:Niagara University, Penn State University Affiliated school districts: Niagara Falls CSD, Cleveland Hill USD, State College Area SD

Projects Writing Intensive Reading Comprehension –Jim Collins (UB/LAI) Contextual Vocabulary Acquisition –Bill Rapaport (UB/CSE & CCS) Multimodal Literacies –Kathleen Collins (Penn State) Virtual Interactive Environments to improve vocabulary and reading comprehension –Lynn Shanahan & Mary McVee (UB/LAI) Interactively Modeled Metacognitive Thinking –Rob Erwin (Niagara U) Bilingualism and Basic Cognitive Processes –Janina Brutt-Griffler (UB/LAI) oExperimental Design & Statistical Analysis –Ariel Aloe (UB/CSEP)

Writing-Intensive Reading Comprehension — Jim Collins (LAI) Based on previous successful research “Thinksheets” that guide students’ writing about a text improve their reading comprehension –Thinksheets begin with questions whose answers can be found directly in the text –Then gradually ask more abstract questions requiring inference. Goals: –extend this research –apply to more grade levels –semi-automate development of thinksheets

Multimodal Literacies — Kathleen Collins (Penn State) Previous research: –if teachers work with professional artists to develop strategies for integrating the arts as forms of inquiry and meaning- making into the school curriculum, then more students are able to engage successfully with core curricula. Multimodal interventions & enhancements will be designed to include the following broad categories: –Visual/Graphic (still photography, illustration, digital video) –Oral/Interactional (scripted dialogue, interviews, guided conversations, podcasts) –Tactile (movement, model building, sculpting)

Virtual Interactive Environments to Develop Vocabulary Knowledge — Lynn Shanahan & Mary McVee (LAI) Develop extensible & effective computational framework for improving vocabulary knowledge through virtual- contextual learning Couple a virtual world, large projection screen, stereo sound, & positional tracking using commodity devices (e.g., Wii controllers). Virtual environment will be created using a programming toolkit developed for use in computer games and engineering simulations. –NYSCEDIINYSCEDII Rather than interact with a computer monitor, the environment will use projection technology to provide learners with the opportunity to interact with objects of actual size, increasing the immersion into the virtual world.

Interactively Modeled Metacognitive Thinking — Rob Erwin (NU) Instead of teaching specific strategies for reading comprehension… –(which have recently been shown to be worse than teaching textual content) … Have students develop their own strategies on an as-needed basis Then compare to strategies- & content- approaches

Bilingualism & Basic Cognitive Processes — Janina Brutt-Griffler (LAI) What are the cognitive advantages of being a bilingual reader? What are the cognitive aspects of text comprehension and possible linguistic advantages observed in bilingual readers?

Contextual Vocabulary Acquisition — Bill Rapaport (CSE & CCS) 1.Previous research: A reader's understanding of a word's meaning in a context is a function of both the context (the surrounding words) and the reader's prior knowledge. 2.Already accomplished: a)A procedure for successful CVA can be expressed in terms so precise that they can be programmed into a computer. b)That computational procedure can then be converted into a strategy teachable to human readers 3.We propose to embed this procedure in a curricular intervention that can help readers improve both a)their vocabulary and b)their reading comprehension.

CVA (cont’d) Our goal is not to improve vocabulary per se, but: –to improve reading comprehension by active thinking about the text with a specific goal of vocabulary enrichment in mind –and to provide readers with a method that can be used independently… e.g., when they are reading on their own …to learn new vocabulary and to improve comprehension.

CVA (cont’d) GOFAI: –if we know how to explicitly teach some cognitive task to humans e.g., play chess, do calculus, prove theorems – then we can explicitly program a computer to do that task pretty much as humans do it. Our CVA algorithms fall into this category –  Can do the converse! –I.e., can have a human reader simulate our program

CVA (cont’d) Not “think like a computer” –I.e., rigidly, mechanically, uncreatively But: –what we have learned by teaching a computer to do CVA can now help us teach human readers who need guidance in CVA.

“Contextual Semantic Investigation” (CSI): A Curriculum Outline 1.Teacher models CSI 2.Teacher models CSI with student participation 3.Students model CSI with teacher assistance 4.Students do CSI in small groups 5.Students do CSI on their own

CSI: Algorithms (for Humans) I.Become aware of word X & of need to understand X II.Repeat: A.Generate hypothesis H about X’s meaning B.Test H until H is a plausible meaning for X in the current “wide” context

IIB. Test H 1.Replace all occurrences of X in sentence by H 2.If Sentence (X := H) makes sense then proceed with reading else generate new H

IIA. Generate H 1.Make an “intuitive” guess H 2.If H fails or you can’t guess, then do in any order: a) if you have you read X before & if you (vaguely) recall its meaning, then test that earlier meaning b)if you can generate a meaning from X’s morphology, then test that meaning c)if you can make an “educated guess” (next slide), then test it

IIA. Generate H 1.Do in any order to generate H: a)Make an “intuitive” guess b)Try to recall X’s meaning from previous reading c)Use X’s morphology d)Make an “educated” guess

IIA1d: Make an “Educated Guess” i.Re-read X’s sentence slowly & actively ii.Determine X’s part of speech iii.Summarize entire text so far iv.Activate your PK about the topic v.Make inferences from text + PK vi.Generate H based on all this

IIA2: If all previous steps fail, then do CVA a)“Solve for X” b)Search context for clues c)Create H

IIA2a: Solve for X i.Syntactically manipulate X’s sentence so that X is the subject ii.Generate a list of possible synonyms (as “hypotheses in waiting”)

IIA2aii: Generate a list of “hypotheses in waiting” “Sandra had won the dance contest & the audience’s cheers brought her to the stage for an encore. ‘Every step she takes is so perfect & graceful,’ Ginny said grudgingly, as she watched Sandra dance.” (Beck, McKeown, McCaslin 1983) –A “misdirective” context? –But: syntactic manipulation yields: Grudgingly is a way of: –saying something (e.g., quickly, loudly,…) –praising someone’s performance (lavishly, honestly…) –apparently praising (e.g., ironically, sarcastically, reluctantly…)

IIA2b: Search context for clues i.If X is a noun, then search context for clues about X’s… class membership properties structure acts agents comparisons contrasts

IIA2b: Search context for clues ii.If X is a verb, then search context for clues about X’s… class membership  what kind of act Xing is  what kinds of acts are Xings properties of Xing (e.g., manner) transitivity  look for agents and objects of Xing cause & effect information comparisons & contrasts

IIA2b: Search context for clues iii.If X is an adjective or adverb, then search context for clues about X’s… class membership  is it a color adjective, a size adjective, a shape adjective, etc.? contrasts  is it an opposite or complement of something else mentioned? parallels  is it one of several otherwise similar modifiers in the sentence?

IIA2c: Create H Aristotelian definitions: –What kind of thing is X? –How does it differ from other things of that kind? Schwartz & Raphael definition “map” –What is X? –What is it like? –What are some examples? Express (“important” parts of) definition frame in a single sentence –Cf. Collins COBUILD

CVA (cont’d) Research questions: 1.Can a computer algorithm be translated into a successful curricular intervention? a)Does this computer-based curriculum improve (meaning) vocabulary? i.CVA students vs. “typical context-based” students vs. “no treatment” control – Each read same passage with single unfamiliar word & figure out a meaning from context ii.CVA students vs. “direct-method” control at time t – Tested on meaning at time t > t

CVA (cont’d) 1.Can a computer algorithm be translated into a successful curricular intervention? b)Does the algorithm-based curriculum improve reading comprehension? CVA students vs. “typical context-based” students vs. no-treatment students Test for reading comprehension on passages… – containing unfamiliar words – with no unfamiliar word

CVA (cont’d) 2.Other issues: “teacher training”/professional development oral discussion: – explicit instruction on using language to reason is valuable use thinksheet as “detective”/“scientist” notebook role & nature of prior knowledge – what is needed, how to identify it, how to elicit it, etc. test at different ages & in STEM vs. ELA develop software for use in classroom – student can ask Cassie how she figured it out