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Instructional Practices For Middle School By: Alexandra Adams
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As cited by Dean, C. B., Hubbell, E. R., Pitler, H., & Stone, B. (2012): 1. Helping Students Develop Understanding 2. Helping Students Extend and Apply Knowledge
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Helping Students… -Cues, questions, and advanced organizers -Nonlinguistic representations -Summarizing and notetaking -Assigning homework and providing practice -Identifying similarities and differences -Generating and testing hypotheses
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-Cueing and questioning both “activate students’ prior knowledge and give them an idea of what they will learn” (Dean et al., 2012, p. 50). -Advance organizers allow students to use background knowledge to learn new concepts.
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1.Focus on what is important 2.Use explicit cues 3.Ask inferential questions 4.Ask analytic questions
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- Examples for middle school students -Narrative- “hook” activity -Skimming- “book walk” activity -Graphic- graphic organizer before lesson
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1.Graphic organizers 2.Physical models 3.Mental pictures 4.Pictures, illustrations, pictographs 5.Kinesthetic activities
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-Both linguistic and nonlinguistic -Common organizers: -Time Sequence -Process/Cause-Effect -Goal is for students to make on their own (Richard Strong, Educational Impact, n.d., Hidden Skills of Academic Literacy).
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-Ask students to generate mental pictures -Enables students to “make sense” of their learning so they can retrieve it later. -Great strategy to use with ESOL.
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-All strategies all the student to create their own meaning behind the material. -Great way to integrate technology into the lesson. -Another excellent strategy to use with ESOL students.
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-More neural networks (Jensen) -Includes: o Role playing o Acting out vocabulary words o Using the body to illustrate concepts o Gestures -Great ESOL strategy
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-Facilitate learning through: -Capturing -Organizing -Reflecting -Involves higher order thinking skills
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-Better results with other cognitive strategies -Can be confusing -Taught to be descriptive -Asked to be concise -Summarize essential information -Benefit from a variety of formats -Not intuitive, must be taught explicitly
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-Series of questions to point out elements in a text. -6 frames: 1. narrative 2. topic-solution 3. definition 4. argumentation 5. problem-solution 6. conversation
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1.What is the basic claim or focus of the information? 2.What information is presented that leads to a claim? 3.What examples or explanations support the claim? 4.What restricts the claim? What evidence counters the claim?
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-4 comprehension strategies: -Summarizing -Questioning -Clarifying -Predicting
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Teacher Prepared Notes -“create notes for students as information is presented” (Dean et al., 2012, p 91). -Models how to create notes -Prepared notes can be in template form.
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Webbing “Nonlinear and uses shapes, colors, and arrows to show relationships between ideas” (Dean et al., 2012, p. 93). Students share deepen knowledge Informal Outlining Students can handwrite notes, type outlines. Can be paragraphs, bullet points, etc.
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Web 2.0 Tools for Notetaking -Live Binders -Diigo -Evernote -Twitter -Edmodo -Symbaloo
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Assigning Homework -Effects are not clear; mixed results -Positive- -Traditionally thought to yield positive results -Access to corrective feedback -Practice more than 1 skill at a time -Negative- -Conflicts between parents & students -Physical and mental fatigue -Limited time for leisure activities -Disrupt family time
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-Develop school homework policy -Provide assignments that support academic learning -Provide feedback
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-Identify and communicate purpose of practice activities -Practice sessions are short, focused, and distributed overtime -Provide feedback on practice sessions (as cited by Dean et al., 2012, pp. 109-110)
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-Students can focus when short. -Designed to focus on specific multistep or complex skills. -Practice sessions should be immediate and closer together. -Students build understanding before speed.
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-Formative practice should not be graded -Grades do not help students shape their practice and improve performance (Dean et al., 2012, p. 114). -Multiple formative summative practice -Grade summative after exposure to feedback on formative.
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-Strategies: -Comparing/contrasting -Classifying -Allows students to compare information, sort concepts, & make connections to existing knowledge (Dean et al., 2012, p. 119)
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-Dean, C. B., Hubbell, E. R., Pitler, H., & Stone, B. (2012). Classroom instruction that works, 2 nd ed. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development. -Educational Impact (n.d.). Hidden skills of academic literary: What do94% of all test items require? [Video file]. Retrieved from http://www.educationalimpact.com/programs/programs/act ivity/5pract_01a_02/ http://www.educationalimpact.com/programs/programs/act ivity/5pract_01a_02/ -Educational Impact (n.d.). Research-based strategies; compare/contrast: The four phases of thorough comparison. [Video file]. Retrieved from https://d12rnmudv4wd3a.cloudfront.net/ei_resources/reso urces/5pract/pdf/5practices_3A_transcript.pdf https://d12rnmudv4wd3a.cloudfront.net/ei_resources/reso urces/5pract/pdf/5practices_3A_transcript.pdf
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