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Effective Pedagogical Practices for Fragile Learners California Educational Research Association December 2011 Alicia Henderson, Ph.D. Franklin-McKinley School District
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Effective Pedagogical Practices for Fragile Learners Robust “First Time Instruction” 1.Basic Skills Instruction 2.Subject-Area Considerations 3.Clarity in Communication Differentiation / Adaptations
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Fragile Learners “Fragile Learners” include all students with challenges that impact the learning of new content and skills, including English learners Students with disabilities Students living in poverty At-risk students who remain in school but have become disengaged for any number of reasons
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Fragile Learners Many fragile learners can be successful with robust “first time instruction” Most Fragile learners can be successful with robust “first time instruction” coupled with appropriate differentiation and adaptations Some fragile learners have special needs that require the support of experts
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Robust “First Time Instruction” relies upon Quality Core Instruction Rigor: alignment of curriculum, instruction & assessment Frequent formative assessment: instructional decisions are based on data about student learning Robust: employing UDL principles Relevance: consideration for prior knowledge Relationships: respectful & joyful Shared responsibility for learning: teacher & student
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Robust “First Time Instruction” Includes essential UDL components: 1. Basic Skills Instruction 2. Subject-Area Considerations 3. Clarity of Communication
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Robust “First Time Instruction” 1. Basic Skills Instruction Teach preskills Select & sequence examples Decide rate of introduction of new skills Provide direct instruction Offer practice & review opportunities
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Teach Preskills (not always possible by core instruction teacher at secondary level) Preskills: basic skills necessary for performing more complex tasks Assess students on relevant preskills Teach preskills to entire class or to individual students
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Select and Sequence Examples Focus on and prepare selection of examples (aka: exemplars) Range of example selections should match range of problems types to be used in assessments Be aware that sequencing of examples has an impact on learning
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Rate of Skill Introduction Introduce new skills in small steps Teach skills at a rate slow enough to ensure mastery Due to pacing guides and high-stakes testing, it may be difficult to slow down Slowing down the rate may require identification of essential skills to be mastered
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Direct Instruction, Practice, and Review Fragile learners typically require more direct instruction Indirect instruction is rarely sufficient Practice should follow direct instruction, not act as a substitute for direct instruction Problems with retention is common, spiral review assists to cement new learnings
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Robust “First Time Instruction” 2. Subject-Area Considerations Set up the lesson Activate background knowledge Include conceptual supports for learning Frontload key vocabulary
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Set Up the Lesson Determine depth of prior knowledge on topic May include a pre-test Bridge prior knowledge with new information Present 1-3 Big Ideas in lesson Explicitly state learning objectives Catch interest and give reason for engagement Prompt students to predict
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Activate Background (Prior) Knowledge New learnings are more likely when facilitated with explicit connections to background knowledge Plan lesson to relate new material to information they already know Consider background knowledge of your students (it may be different from your own)
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Include Conceptual Supports for Learning New Content Advance organizers Concept maps Study guides Graphic organizers PowerPoints w/ handouts Cornell notes
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Frontload Key Vocabulary Identify key vocabulary / terms in lesson Introduce (1-5 per lesson) prior to teaching new material Consider multiple representations of key vocabulary: definition, part of speech, visual image, synonyms, antonyms
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Robust “First Time Instruction” 3. Clarity in Communication Use Language Intentionally Avoid “bird walks” that distract from delivery of new content Use precise language to deliver content, monitor use of pronouns and other nonspecific terms Clarity in Written Communication Clarity in Oral Communication
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Clarity: Written Communication Ensure all written material on whiteboards, overheads, PowerPoints etc. is large enough & legible enough for all students to read Utilize considerate text versions of adopted curriculum when available Ensure written tests do not introduce confounds to assessing learning of new content (either by test format or language used)
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Clarity: Oral Communication Project voice so all students can hear Enunciate clearly Support delivery of “signal” and monitor “noise” Utilize specific strategies Giving directions Asking questions Presenting subject matter
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Giving Directions State command specifically Use concrete terms Give “bite size” directions Avoid long series of directions Demonstrate what you want them to do Use cue words for routine directions
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Asking Questions Phrase questions clearly Ensure students know how to respond Balance high-level and low-level questions (ala Bloom’s levels) Adapt questions to language and skill level of class, and individual students Vary wait time based on the question Call on volunteers and nonvolunteers
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Presenting Subject Matter Use clear and relevant language Explain how points relate to main topic Avoid vague or abstract terms that do not directly relate to new content Use multiple modes (oral & written) to deliver new content Include multiple representations of new content (e.g., graphs, diagrams, pictures)
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Example of multiple representations for a math concept
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Differentiation & Adaptations Differentiated Instruction Flexible grouping Process, content, product Adaptations - Grid of 9 Accommodations Modifications
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Grid of 9
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Support from Experts Reading specialist Speech pathologist Occupational therapist Psychologist Behavioral therapist Special education teacher
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