Executive Function Skills and Academic Success in College: Supporting Students with Executive Function Challenges Rebecca K. Shankland Monica A. Lambert.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Content Literacy and the Reading Process Defining terms and perspectives.
Advertisements

How to Help Struggling Students Become Good Language Learners
Thinking and Learning Together. Developing a thinking culture in classrooms involves processes and strategies which: Are responsive and respectful towards.
How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience and School John D. Bransford, Ann L. Brown, and Rodney R. Cocking, editors.
© PMB 2007 Thinking Skills and Personal Capabilities Unit 6 Metacognition: Thinking About Thinking and Learning.
Module 1: Teaching functional skills – from building to applying skills 0 0.
Learning to Read What separate processes are involved in someone becoming a skilled reader?
Strategies Teaching students to use special thoughts or actions to Assist learning tasks Understand, remember, recall new information Practice skills efficiently.
Research Results:Comprehension Strategies for Remedial Readers Created by: Christina Weischedel.
Unlocking Expository Text
Discuss how to incorporate opportunities for students to practice and apply cognitive, metacognitive, and interactive strategies.
Mathematics Reform The Implications of Problem Solving in Middle School Mathematics.
Metacognition & Executive Control By Ruth Garner Presented by Pat Edwards & Hakim Shahid Rdg. 707.
Strategies.
Five Principles of Cooperative Learning 1. Positive interdependence: the task to be accomplished cannot be accomplished by one person alone. group members.
Meaningful Learning in an Information Age
DEVELOPING ACADEMIC LANGUAGE AND TEACHING LEARNING STRATEGIES Anna Uhl Chamot Jill Robbins George Washington University.
The Role of Metacognition in
Metacognition An Overview*
Chapter 9: Planning and Grouping Strategies for Special Learners Presented by David, Abdi, Craig and Adrienne.
Dr E. Lugo Morales1 6/28/2012. Develop academic vocabulary Read to acquire new information Understand information presented orally Participate in classroom.
Strategies to Accelerate Academic Learning for English Learners
Taxonomies of Learning Foundational Knowledge: Understanding and remembering information and ideas. Application: Skills Critical, creative, and practical.
Welcome to Unit 6 Seminar: Learning The Language Learning and Assessment Strategies 1.
© Witzel, 2008 A Few Math Ideas Brad Witzel, PhD Winthrop University.
1 How can self-regulated learning be supported in mathematical E-learning environments? Presenters: Wei-Chih Hsu Professor : Ming-Puu Chen Date : 11/10/2008.
Ideas and Activities to Differentiate Instruction through Strategies
BY Keith A. Anderson.  District-wide Initiative  Link between Differentiated Instruction and Danielson  What is Differentiated Instruction?  Why Differentiate?
Cognitive Strategy Instruction EEX 3257 Core Teaching Strategies University of FL.
A Framework for Inquiry-Based Instruction through
Addition and Subtraction with Ten Unit of Study: Addition and Subtraction Strategies to 20 Global Concept Guide: 3 of 5.
Active Learning Strategies
Teaching Learning Strategies and Academic Language
The CALLA Model: Strategies for ELL Student Success
Academic Needs of L2/Bilingual Learners
SRL Slides Prepared by Nancy Perry University of British Columbia
Learning and Motivation Dr. K. A. Korb University of Jos.
Ch. 3 StudyCast SarahBeth Walker. NETS-T Standard 1  Teachers use their knowledge of subject matter, teaching and learning, and technology to facilitate.
13 Strategies to Ensure Strong Scaffolding Lloyd, J.W., Kameanui, E.J., and Chard, D. (Eds.) (1997)
Chapter 1 –organizing principle
Gradual Release of Responsibility. (c) Frey & Fisher, 2008 In some classrooms … TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY Independent “You do it alone”
Transfer Like a Champ! By Michelle Brazeal. Transfer Training Why do we teach?
Programming the New Syllabuses (incorporating the Australian Curriculum)
Differentiation PLC.
Critical Thinking By: Nakendra Jones Tyrone Salmon-Jarrett Nikia Johnson Peta-ann Rowe Tiffany Brown.
New Pathways to Academic Achievement for K-12 English Learners TESOL March 26, 2009 Anna Uhl Chamot The George Washington University.
Chapter 12: Strategy Cards Michele Nunnelley ED751A 27 October 2015 For Differentiated Instruction.
Constructing Knowledge “The single most important factor influencing learning is what the learner already knows.”
Inclusion and the Differentiated Classroom By Jennifer Cucinotta.
Facilitating Life-Long Learning Shelby County Schools ELL – PDA Session 6.
Adapting Materials for the Inclusive Classroom
Intentional - Purposeful - Explicit NOT SCRIPT Don’t need more prescription but more precision. Precision requires: 1.Teachers know students 2.Teachers.
Explicit Instruction vs. Inquiry Make-up Professional Development for Induction Please view this PowerPoint presentation in Notes Pages.
Learner Strategies Gagne and Driscoll Chp. 7. Self-learners/Independent Thinkers: A priority goal  Seek self-generated strategies l that activate internal.
Standard Five Teachers reflect on their practice..
Ideas and Activities to Differentiate Instruction through Lesson Delivery.
Differentiation Presented by Redwood Teachers. Differentiation in a Nutshell Differentiated Instruction is multiple ways to structure a lesson so that.
LOEX 2016 MAY 6, 2016 LOEX Making the Invisible Visible: Metacognition and the Research Process.
MEtacognition Sangeeta Agnihotri
Metacognition and its effects on teaching and learning of mathematics
ED 260-Educational Psychology
Teaching Everybody’s Children
指導教授:Chen, Ming-puu 報 告 者:Chen, Wan-Yi 報告日期:
Stematic instru Content instruction Grade level appropriate Tied to the content standards and Frameworks Context embedded and cognitively demanding.
Module 6: Planning Rich Instruction with OER
Instruction for Students Struggling with Math
How are HLPs used? Components of HLP identified.
DEVELOPING ACADEMIC LANGUAGE AND TEACHING LEARNING STRATEGIES
Metacognition for revision
The Role of Metacognition in
Presentation transcript:

Executive Function Skills and Academic Success in College: Supporting Students with Executive Function Challenges Rebecca K. Shankland Monica A. Lambert Executive Functions Executive function processes critical to success in college-level academics include planning and prioritizing goal setting organization retaining and manipulating information in working memory shifting flexibly self-monitoring/self-checking Students with Executive Function Challenges (EFCs) have chronic difficulty in one or more of these key executive functions. What are Executive Functioning Challenges (EFCs)? Students with EFCs have chronic difficulty planning, organizing, executing, and evaluating their performance on tasks which can make success in college-level academics much more difficult. Students with EFCs may struggle in any of these areas: planning and prioritizing goal setting organization task initiation task completion retaining and manipulating information in working memory shifting flexibly between self-monitoring/self-checking time management inhibition / impulse control emotional control Why Teach Executive Function Skills? Teaching Executive Function Skills Teach a few strategies well. Match strategies taught to the needs of the students and the tasks they need to accomplish. Teach one or two strategies at a time to mastery; then add additional strategies. Model the strategy for students by thinking aloud. Provide ample opportunities for students to practice in small groups or pairs BEFORE expecting independent use of the strategy. Help students reflect on their use of the strategy. Talk with students about other situations in which the strategy could be used and how they might adapt the strategy to that situation (generalization). Strategic learners Know a number of useful learning strategies Know when, where, and how to use strategies Know why a strategy is useful and important Know how to select an appropriate strategy for a particular task and how to monitor their strategy use Know how to create and modify strategies Are reflective and planful in their use of strategies Constantly increase their knowledge base and connect new information to prior knowledge (Hock, 1992, 1993; Hock, Schumaker, & Deshler, 1999) Academic Success Cycle (Meltzer, 2010) Strategy instruction plays a critical role in enhancing students’ conceptual understanding, their ability to reflect on their own learning and the learning process, their creative use of knowledge, and their ability to transfer skills to novel situations (Brown, 1997; Deshler, Schumaker, & Lenz, 1984, Pressley & Woloshyn, 1995). Successful learners use effective and efficient strategies to process information (Brown & Campione, 1986; Harris & Graham, 1992; Meltzer, 1993; Palincsar et al., 1993; Pressley et al., 1989). “Explicit instruction plays a critical role in helping all students to use metacognitive strategies to learn more easily” (Deshler et al., 2001; Graham & Harris, 2003; Meltzer et al., 2004b; Swanson, 1999; Zimmerman & Schunk, 2001). Effective and efficient learning strategies serve as a bridge between skills, content, and complex academic demands (Meltzer, 2010).