Inquiry Reading Writing Collaboration Tulsa Community College- Engaged Student Programming
Writing allows students to think in complex ways, build critical thinking skills and developing knowledge of oneself and the outside world. Students in the AVID classroom use writing in a variety of ways to extend and generate thinking, analyze and organize their own thought-processes, and revise and review current understandings. Prewrite Draft Respond Revise Edit Final draft Class and Textbook Notes Learning Logs/Journals Tulsa Community College- Engaged Student Programming
Students learn best by engaging with their own thinking process and this kind of engagement encourages a sense of ownership over their learning. The AVID student is an equal participant in a Socratic tutorial session that engages him/her in asking critical questions, pursuing understanding and potentially revising his/her own thinking. Students use Costa’s model of questioning that levels learning from lower- level gather and recall to higher-level application and evaluation. Strategies Skilled Questioning Socratic Seminars Quickwrite & Discussion Critical Thinking Activities Writing Questions Open-Mindedness Activities Tulsa Community College- Engaged Student Programming
Strategies Group Projects Study Groups Jigsaw Activities Read-Arounds Response/Edit/Revision Groups Collaborative Activities Collaboration actively engages each student in the process of learning, because it relies on the multitude of opinions and evidence each student brings to the discussion. Tutorials reinforce previous learning and encourage students to think ahead. Students will internalize what they have studied and learned if they are able to collaborate with others and make connections Tulsa Community College- Engaged Student Programming
AVID focuses on reading to increase comprehension, awareness of the different reasons for reading and understanding of the different structures of texts. Strategies instruct students on how to use context clues to determine the meaning of unknown words, predicting, visualizing, and monitoring for comprehension. Strategies SQ3R ( Survey, Question, Read, Recite,Review) KWL (What I know; What to learn; What I learned) Reciprocal teaching Think-alouds Literary circles Tulsa Community College- Engaged Student Programming