1 / 21

Model-Drawing Strategy to Solve Word Problems for Students with LD

Model-Drawing Strategy to Solve Word Problems for Students with LD. Olga Jerman and Jacqueline Knight The Frostig Center www.frostig.org DISCES CEC Riga, Latvia July 11- 14, 2010. Frostig Center. Example: Word Problems with Percentage.

vinson
Download Presentation

Model-Drawing Strategy to Solve Word Problems for Students with LD

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Model-Drawing Strategy to Solve Word Problems for Students with LD Olga Jerman and Jacqueline Knight The Frostig Center www.frostig.org DISCES CEC Riga, Latvia July 11- 14, 2010 FrostigCenter

  2. Example:Word Problems with Percentage 40% of the school students went to the National History Museum for a field trip. 20% of students went to the zoo. 50% of the remaining students went to a farm. Only 60 students didn’t have a field trip and stayed at school. How many students are there in this school? FrostigCenter

  3. Abstract • The study examined the effectiveness of using model-drawing methodology to solve problems for a group of high school students. • The 30-week intervention used a single-subject design to teach an 8-step model-drawing approach for solving problems with fractions and percentages. • The results showed improvement in solution accuracy. FrostigCenter

  4. Word-problem Solving and LD • difficult and frustrating • cognitive processes involved in successful problem completion. FrostigCenter

  5. Research findings indicate that the reduction of demands on the working memory system (WM) seems to be highly beneficial. • Different ways to minimize demands: • use of visual support via pictures, diagrams & schemas • use of cognitive strategies FrostigCenter

  6. Purpose of the Study • An 8-step model-drawing technique is intended • to enhance the conceptual understanding of the problem at task • to reduce the amount of information to be held in working memory • No prior studies done with students with learning disabilities • Primary purpose of this study-to assess the usefulness of Singapore model drawing technique for students with LD FrostigCenter

  7. Model Drawing Strategy • 8 Steps of Model drawing • Read the problem • Decide who is involved • Decide what is involved • Draw unit bars • Read each sentence • Put the question mark • Work computation • Answer the question FrostigCenter

  8. Example:Word Problems with Percentage 40% of the school students went to the National History Museum for a field trip. 20% of students went to the zoo. 50% of the remaining students went to a farm. Only 60 students didn’t have a field trip and stayed at school. How many students are there in this school? FrostigCenter

  9. Solution Step 1: Draw a unit bar and divide it into 10 equal parts 50% of remaining Farm 40% Museum 20% Zoo 60 school ? Total students = ? 100% remaining students One unit bar = ? • 60 / 2 = 30 • 30 x 10 = 300 Answer: There are 300 students in the school. FrostigCenter

  10. Example: Fraction Problems • Rosie baked 63 cookies. 3/7 of them were chocolate chip cookies and the rest were sugar cookies. How many sugar cookies did Rosie bake? 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 63 ? 63 / 7 = 9 (one unit bar equals 9) 3 x 9 = 27 (chocolate chip cookies) 63 – 27 = 36 (sugar cookies) 63 / 7 = 9 (one unit bar equals 9) 9 x 4 = 36 (sugar cookies) Rosie baked 36 sugar cookies. FrostigCenter

  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1) 5/8 - boys 3/8 - girls 1 2 3 4 5 5 units - boys 2) 1/5 – boys with black hair Or 4/5 without black hair 1 2 3 4 40 3) 40 / 4 = 10 (one unit bar) => 10 x 8 = 80 (students in the class) Example: Fraction Problems • 5/8 of the students in my class are boys. 1/5 of the boys have black hair. If 40 boys don’t have black hair, how many students are in my class in all? There were 80 students in the class. FrostigCenter

  12. Method • 5 students (2 control) • 2 girls & 3 boys (mean age 16-1) • 10th grade • 30 weeks intervention • 20 weeks for fraction problems, 10 weeks percent problems • Treatment fidelity 73% FrostigCenter

  13. Scores and Progress of a Control Student #1 FrostigCenter

  14. Scores and Progress of a Control Student #2 FrostigCenter

  15. Scores and Progress of a Tx student #1 FrostigCenter

  16. Scores and Progress of a Tx student #2 FrostigCenter

  17. Scores and Progress of a Tx student #3 FrostigCenter

  18. Conclusion • Model-drawing strategy can be an effective alternative method of teaching fraction and percent problems to students with LD; • Although the training yielded improvement, it took longer for the students to learn the technique than initially planned; • Students’ performance remained higher than their pre-intervention scores, though it slightly declined at the 4-week follow-up; FrostigCenter

  19. Implications Theoretical and Practical Considerations • Due to their abstract nature, word problems with percent and fractions are especially hard to tackle for students with LD. • The model-drawing approach gives students a more concrete method in comprehending and solving word problems in order to get past their language difficulties. • By drawing out what they are reading, the students are creating a concrete visual application of the problem. This helps them to manipulate the numbers more easily. FrostigCenter

  20. Implications (cont.) • The word problem instruction could also be applied in different ways: either in the large-group format or as part of differentiated instruction. • The model drawing gives students a clear procedure for comprehending and executing problems. • As students understand each level of a problem, the problem of the day or of the lesson can eventually be taught at grade level. FrostigCenter

  21. References • Jitendra, A. K., Griffin, C. C., McGoey, K., Gardill, M. C., Bhat, P., & Riley, T. (1998). Effects of mathematical word problem-solving by students at risk or with mild disabilities. Journal of Educational Research, 91, 345-355. • Marshall, S. P. (1995). Schemas in problem solving, Cambridge University Press. • Montague, M. Self-Regulation strategies for better math performance in middle school. (In M Montague and A Jitendra 2006, pp. 86-106). • Newcombe, N. S., Ambady, N., Eccles, J., et al (2009). Psychology’s Role in mathematics and Science Education. American Psychologist, 64, 6, 538-551. • Powell, S. R., Fuchs, L. S., Fuchs, D., Cirino, P. T., & Fletcher, J. M. (2009). Do word-problem features affect problem difficulty as a function of students’ mathematics difficulty with and without reading difficulty? Journal of Learning Disabilities, 42, 99-111. • Swanson, H. L. & Beebe-Frankenberger, M. (2004). The relationship between working memory and mathematical problem solving in children at risk and not at risk for serious math difficulties. Journal of Educational Psychology, 96, 471-491. • Xin, Y. P., Wiles, B., & Lin, Y. (2008). Teaching conceptual model-based word problem story grammar to enhance mathematics problem solving. The Journal of Special Education, 42, 163-178.

More Related