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Published byDaniel Morris Modified over 9 years ago
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The Process of Effective Instruction Includes Planning for Assessment in What and How You Teach
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How a Teacher Allows Student to Demonstrate Learning ◦ proficiently ◦ fluently ◦ at an appropriate level ◦ maintained over time ◦ generalized (transferred) over multiple settings
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Time/Chronology ◦ Daily Assessment ◦ Weekly Assessment By Concept or Curriculum Sequence ◦ Use of CBA/CBM/CDAP ◦ Criterion-Reference Summative Assessments Student Self-Monitoring ◦ Progress Charts ◦ Daily/Periodic Reflections
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◦ Identify quick student progress checks (Check-in) ◦ 5 minute teacher queries—tying information from previous day to what will be taught today ◦ Weekly reflections (e.g., KWLs, Group assessments/concept mapping and subsequent publishing) ◦ In general, describe how you assess student progress by day and collect information for analyzing your students’ progress that helps you to gauge how students are progressing with the curriculum
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Progress Charts (Sample)Sample ◦ Provide students with opportunities and instruction for monitoring individual progress ◦ Collect student progress charts and review with students ◦ Create portfolios ◦ Create Class Progress Charts (Sample)Sample ◦ Determine method for assigning/awarding credit for improved academic progress
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Exit Tickets Journaling ◦ Reflection/Analysis ◦ Work sample “artifacts” (photos, “temperature check” drawings) ◦ Blogs and Vlogs Class Temperature Checks ◦ Where do you stand?
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See presentations on CBM/CBA/CDAP In general, determine what you will teach, prepare objectives, determine pre-requisite skills, verify student readiness, teach and collect student performance data, review and analyze, move forward or reteach
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What to Teach in operational terms How to Teach to required levels of mastery. Instruction is delivered directly and systematically to ensure high levels of student competence ◦ To increase academic engaged time ◦ To maximize knowledge and skill
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Elements & Sequence Process of Academic Competence Essential elements ◦ Theory of Knowledge ◦ Theory of Observation ◦ Theory of Interpretation Sequence ◦ Assessment ◦ Instruction ◦ Verification ◦ Revision=>Continuation Consequent Generalization Far transfer Apply to other settings Expertise Teach oneself Dissemination Teach others Subsequent Generalization Application Use in the existing setting Synthesis Systemic conceptions of knowledge & skill Antecedent Generalization Foundational Knowledge Acquisition Comprehension Foundational Skill Production Maintenance Academic Competence FoundationApplicationExpertise
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Consequent Generalization Far transfer: Apply to other settings Expertise: Teach oneself Dissemination: Teach others Subsequent Generalization Application Use in the existing setting Synthesis Systemic conceptions of knowledge & skill Antecedent Generalization Foundational Knowledge Acquisition Comprehension Foundational Skill Production Maintenance Academic Competence FoundationApplicationExpertise
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What is the content? Vision, Goals, Objectives Who are the students? What do they know? What are the prerequisites to learn new content? Disposition (Pscho-Social Access) Preparation How are students connected to the content? What is their motivation to engage
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What assessments are needed to observe ◦ Content ◦ Student pre-requisites for the content to be taught ◦ Connection of students to content
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What was actually taught? What was actually acquired? How do you know?
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DI is appropriate for teaching basic skills SI is a general procedure based upon DI
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Cross-curricular skills (reading, writing, basic computation, study skills). Content-specific skills (learning science vocabulary, lab procedures, reading maps, etc.).
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Gain the students’ attention Structure the lesson (preview, advance organizer) Modeling Guided Practice Independent Practice Review
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Ask many task-related questions. Prompting ◦ Engage students during modeling Provide corrective/”non-corrective” feedback
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Maintain an appropriate pace Use an appropriate style-to-lesson format Monitor class behavior Review with reteaching
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Preparation ◦ Task analysis ◦ Determining level of mastery Delivery ◦ Using appropriate examples/non-examples ◦ Determining appropriate activities to frame learning objectives Evaluation ◦ Test what has been taught ◦ Testing based on how you taught
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High levels of academic engaged time ◦ Attending to assigned tasks ◦ Displaying appropriate classroom behaviors asking for help helping others appropriately—peer-assisted instruction listening and complying with teacher directions and instructions
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Systematically identify skill and knowledge requirements Objectives of instruction Sequence instruction Deliver instruction Evaluate, reteach, and/or continue
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