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Cues, Questions, and Advance Organizers. Classroom Instruction that Works: Research-Based Strategies for Increasing Student Achievement by Marzano, Pickering, and Pollock. Review HYIS. Frayer Activity
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Cues, Questions, and Advance Organizers Classroom Instruction that Works: Research-Based Strategies for Increasing Student Achievement by Marzano, Pickering, and Pollock
Review HYIS • Frayer Activity • What strategies are you using in core? With your intervention students (tier 2)? With the other students while you are working with your intervention students?
Cues, Questions, and Advanced Organizers…… • Before learning new information, teachers should help students retrieve what they already know about a topic or “activate prior knowledge.” • The activation of prior knowledge is critical to learning because it helps students understand new information, predict what might be coming, and clarify misconceptions. • Cues, questions, and advance organizers are three common ways that a classroom teacher helps students use what they already know about a topic.
The Research • Teachers form 6 groups • Each group reads the research about one of the 6 strategies: cues, questions, expository advance organizer, narrative advance organizer, skimming as an advance organizer, and graphic organizers presented in advance • Each group presents their research on a poster (definition, examples, non-linguistic) • Use the graphic organizer to take notes
Cues • Cues involve “hints” about what the students are about to experience. • Cues and questions should focus on what is important as opposed to what is unusual. • Use Explicit Cues: • Preview of what students are about to learn • Activates prior knowledge • Should be straightforward • Teacher can elicit from students what they already know about a topic. ***Classroom Examples?
Questions • Questions perform the same function as cues. • The teacher may write a list of questions on the board to provide a focus for learning new information. • Should focus on what is important not unusual- Cues and questions should focus on what is important as opposed to what is unusual • Use Bloom’s: “Higher level” questions produce deeper learning than “lower level” questions 3. Increasing wait time increases depth of answers 4. Questions are an effective tool even before a learning experience ***Classroom Examples?
Advance Organizers • An organizational framework teachers can present to students prior to teaching new content to prepare them for what they are about to learn. • Advance organizers take the surprise out of what is to come, help students retrieve what they already know about a topic, and focus them on new information. • Students are able to see the connections and/or the relationship between pieces of information.
Expository Advance Organizers • An expository advance organizer may simply provide students with the meaning and purpose of what is to follow. • On the other hand an expository organizer may present students with more detailed information of what they will be learning especially the information that may be difficult to understand. ***Classroom Examples?
Narrative Advance Organizers -A narrative advance organizer takes the form of a story. Here the teacher provides the essential ideas of a lesson or unit she plans to teach by telling a story that incorporates the ideas. -Stories can make something distant or unfamiliar seem personal and familiar. -Stories can stimulate students’ thinking and help them make personal connections to new information ***Classroom Examples?
Skimming as a Graphic Organizer • When a teacher asks students to skim learning materials, he/she provides them with the opportunity to preview the important information that will encounter later by focusing on and noting what stands out in headings, subheadings, and highlighted information. -Preview important information quickly by noting what stands out in headings and highlighted information -Pre-reading questions or SQ3R (survey, question, read, recite, review) can be helpful before skimming ***Classroom Examples?
Graphic Organizers Presented in Advance • Graphic organizers also provide students with guidance on what the important information is in a lesson or unit. • They visually represent information students are about to learn. • They give students direction and also provide a visual representing of the important information. • It is easy to see what is important and the relationships between the ideas and patterns in the information where they exist. ***Classroom Examples?
In Conclusion • Before learning new information, teachers should help students retrieve what they already know about a topic or “activate prior knowledge.” • Cues, questions, and advance organizers are three common ways that a classroom teacher helps students use what they already know about a topic to learn new information. • Cues give hints of what is to be learned. • Analytical and inferential questions asked of students before learning help fill-in the gaps and provide a focus for learning. • Narrative advance organizers, expository advance organizers, skimming, and graphic organizers help students focus on important information by providing a mental set.
WORKTIME • Go to tech4hyis.pbworks.com • Use the handout to find specific strategies you can use with your students (in core or tier 2) • Record your next steps and how Kiser can help you (turn in to Kiser!)