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Wilkinsburg School District Literacy Development Framework May 2011
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INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES Five Universal Instructional Design Principles Scaffolding Cues, prompts, hints, modeling, direct instruction Active Engagement Guided notes, teacher prompting, chunking, differentiated supports, activate prior learning, teamwork Meta-cognition Thinking aloud, teacher explaining steps to a solution, verbalization, documentation of individual thinking
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INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES cont’ Modeling Concept of skill clearly described, steps are explicitly modeled, think aloud utilized, cueing, questioning, checking for understanding throughout, teacher looking for concrete examples; imitation, task analysis Explicit Instruction Frequent student response, consists of essential design components, delivery components, appropriate pacing, adequate processing, monitor responses, provide feedback, explicit instructional design components, adequate wait time
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Before, During, and After Model for Effective Engagement Before Questioning (teacher and/or students) and Discussing, Brainstorming Extended Brainstorming + Categorizing + Mapping: Previewing Text Writing Enacting Constructing Viewing
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Before, During, and After Model for Effective Engagement During Teacher-directed Students independently
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Before, During, and After Model for Effective Engagement After Discussions Enactments Oral Presentations Writing Reading Constructing Viewing
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Vocabulary Development Rich vocabulary instruction requires the learner to process words, think about words, interact with words in some way and with others to promote comprehension facilitation.
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General Principles for Instruction Select challenging words: teach “above” not below spoken language knowledge. Do not always select words contained within the text: select words that the text is about – “idea” words. Use multiple contexts and rich examples for the students before expecting them to use the words at all.
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Choosing words based on Tiers Tier 3: Low-frequency words usually specific to an academic domain & best learned in the related content area, such as isotope, photosynthesis & psychologist. Tier 2: High-frequency words important for capable language learners to have in their vocabulary, such as remorse, capricious, distinguished, & devious. Tier 1: Basic Words ○ rarely need to be taught, such as hair, always, dress, & laugh. Beck, I., McKeown, M., & Kucan, L. (2002)
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Assessment Four types of assessment Diagnostic Formative Benchmark Summative
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Definition: PDE/SAS definition “Ascertains, prior to instruction, each student’s strengths, weaknesses, knowledge, and skills. Establishing these permits the instructor to remediate students and adjust the curriculum to meet pupils’ unique needs.” Diagnostic Assessment Examples: Classroom Diagnostic Tools (CDT); Teacher-created diagnostics How often? Three to four times per school year
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Definition: Inform ongoing classroom instruction so that adjustments to instruction can be made Formative Assessment Examples: Teacher-selected, Classroom, assessments, Response cards, White boards, Random selection How often? Every day, every class period
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Definition: Determine how well students are progressing toward demonstrating proficiency on a set of designated grade-level curriculum content standards Benchmark Assessment Examples: Acuity, 4-Sight How often? Usually four times per school year
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Definition: Determine the degree to which students have mastered a designated set of curriculum content standards Summative Assessment Examples: PSSA, Keystone Exams, End of Unit/Chapter Tests, District End of Course Exams How often? Varies depending on the assessment
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