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ACADEMIC CONVERSATION – TAKING IT FARTHER WITH ZWIERS/CRAWFORD David Irwin Language Development Opportunities
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LAST YEAR WE COVERED Academic Conversation – 5 skills Elaborate & clarify Support ideas with evidence Build on or challenge an idea Paraphrase Summarize/synthesize Questioning strategies & taxonomies – 3 kinds Leaf & root Depth of knowledge Costa Talk Write Learn – blending writing with conversation Talk Moves- brought by one of you, supported at MelroseMathGradeK Model lessons – several different ones The Stranger The Battle of Hastings One assessment model Conversation Counter
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WHAT DO YOU REMEMBER With your co-teacher, make a visual about what stuck, especially what you used, from each of these five areas. (If you weren’t here last year, join a group and listen in. If you’ve done something similar, add it!) Academic Conversation – 5 kinds Questioning strategies & taxonomies – 3 kinds Talk Write Learn – blending writing with conversation Model lessons – several different ones One assessment model
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TAKING IT FARTHER Teach students to identify each others’ body language and conversation markers (p74) What does it mean when your partner Makes a facial expression Leans in (or out) Pauses Speaks faster or louder What are more resources and methods of teaching students to recognize body language? Teach students to include compliments (p83) Be specific about what’s being complimented I like how you responded to my exact question I really like your examples – they support your claim perfectly What are more situations for compliments, and how can you teach them?
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TAKING IT FARTHER Stay on the road! (p84) Stay on the road Keep random ideas out of the conversation – keep out of the weeds Don’t lose your keys Keep thoughts and comments on the topic What do you think – about what superficially? Stop to get your bearings Pause to paraphrase every so often If it stalls, get out & push or ask for help Ask for more ideas or more insights What other ways can you promote to help students stay on topic at your grade level?
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TAKING IT FARTHER Preventing or Repairing Conversation Stoppers (P88) Ridicule – laughing, sarcasm, rolling eyes, etc. Popcorning – too many unrelated ideas at once Hogging the floor – one person likes the sound of his/her voice Going off the topic – squirrel, that poor animal Arguing – knows he/she will win if the bell doesn’t ring first Awkward silence – it died – get the paddles What are ways to teach students to correct these situations in your grade?
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TAKING IT FARTHER IN MATH How does conversation apply to math in your grade? Have you used MelroseMathGradeK? Have you used any other resources for math and language? What are your examples and successes with math and academic conversation?
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