550 likes | 715 Views
Classroom Systems School-wide PBIS Opportunities to Respond. Chris Borgmeier, PhD Portland State University cborgmei@pdx.edu www.pbisclassroomsystems.pbworks.com. Opportunities to Respond - OTR.
E N D
Classroom SystemsSchool-wide PBISOpportunities to Respond Chris Borgmeier, PhD Portland State University cborgmei@pdx.edu www.pbisclassroomsystems.pbworks.com
Opportunities to Respond - OTR • An instructional question, statement or gesture made by the teacher seeking an academic response from students. Can be provided individually or to whole class. • Sprick, Knight, Reinke & McKale2006 • The number of times the teacher provides academic requests that require students to actively respond. • Teacher behavior that prompts or solicits a student response (verbal, written, gesture). • Includes strategies for presenting materials, asking questions, and correcting students’ answers to increase the likelihood of an active response.
Active Participation - Why? Opportunities to respond related to: • Increased academic achievement • Increased on-task behavior • Decreased behavioral challenges Caveat • Only successful responding brings these results Initial Instruction - 80% accuracy Practice/Review - 90% or higher accuracy Anita Archer
OTR Guidelines • Teacher talk should be no more than 40-50% of instructional time. • New material: a minimum of 4-6 responses per minute with 80% accuracy. • Review of previously learned material: 9-12 responses per minute with 90% accuracy. • (CEC, 1987; Gunter, Hummel & Venn, 1998)
Multiple opportunities for student responses One Way Input Input Input Input Input Input Input See you tomorrow Better Way Input Question Response Feedback Input Question Response Feedback Feedback works 2 ways: Not Only from the teacher to the student, but From the student to the teacher
By giving a chance for multiple responses, students are retrieving, rehearsing and practicing what has been taught.
Activity: Personal Reflection • Think about the amount of opportunities to respond you gave your students during the most recent day you taught. • How would you compare to these response guideline? • New material–a minimum of 4-6 responses per minute with 80% accuracy. • Review of previously learned material–8-12 responses per minute with 90% accuracy
Opportunities to RespondCritical Features • Strive for all students to participate: reduce reliance on student volunteer responses & increase random selection of responders to keep students actively engaged • Choose strategies that best fit your style and instructional content, structure and activities • Use wait time of 3-5 seconds before students respond to increase participation • Use clear, consistent prompts to elicit responses effectively
Verbal Responses - Individual Turns • Less desirable practices #1. Calling on volunteers Guidelines: • Call on volunteers only when answer relates to personal experience • Don’t call on volunteers when answer is product of instruction or reading • Randomly call on students #2. Calling on inattentive students Guidelines: • Don’t call on inattentive students • Wait to call on student when he/she is attentive • To regain attention of students: • Use physical proximity • Give directive to entire class • Ask students to complete quick, physical behavior Anita Archer
Procedural Steps for using OTR • Identify context, subject for increasing engagement & on-task behavior • Choose the strategy(ies) that best fit your for need for increasing OTR; • chorale responding, partner responding, and non-verbal responding • Teach and rehearse the Response Strategy • Prompt Wait time Response Cue Response • Reinforce correct response with behavior specific praise or provide corrective feedback for incorrect response.
Increasing Active Participation Opportunities to Respond Verbal Responses Written Responses Action Responses All Students Respond. When possible use response procedures that engage all students. Anita Archer
Verbal Responses- Individual Turns • Individual Questioning– calling on students unpredictably heightens student attention • Procedures for Random Selection of students Procedure #1 - Call on students in different parts of roomProcedure #2 - Write names on cards or sticks Procedure #3 - Use ipad or iphone app (e.g., Teacher’s Pick, Stick Pick, or Pick Me!) Procedure #4 - Use two decks of playing cards. Tape cards from one deck to desks. Pull a card from other deck and call on student. • Use above random strategy, and call on a student to repeat or summarize what the student just said. Anita Archer
General Recommended Response FormatVerbal Responses - Individual Turns • Ask a question • Raise your hands to indicate silence • Give thinking time • Cue Response • Individual Student response, Chorale response, Response card, whiteboard, thumbs up, etc. Anita Archer
Verbal Responses- Individual Turns Option - Whip Around or Pass • Use when many possible answers • Ask a question • Give students thinking time • Start at any location in the room - Have students quickly give answers - Go up and down rows, limiting comments- Allow student to pass Examples: “Tell me the months of the year in Spanish – think (pause 5 sec.) – we’ll with the front row” “Tell me the universities in the Pac-12 – think (pause 3 sec.) – we’ll start in the back and work across” Anita Archer
Verbal Responses • Choral Responding – all students in class respond in unison to a teacher question. • Suitable for review, to teach new skills, as a drill, or as a lesson summary.
Verbal Responses - Choral Responses(Use when answers are short & the same.) • Students are looking at teacher • Ask question • Put up your hands to indicate silence • Give thinking time • Lower your hands as you say, “Everyone” Anita Archer
1. Ask Questions • Develop questions with only one right answer that can be answered with short, 1-3 word answers. • Examples: • What is the capital of California? (pause 4 sec.) Everyone (drop hands) • What are the 3 branches of government, in alphabetical order (pause 5 sec.) – First…. Second…. Third • What does DNA stand for? (pause 5 sec.) Everyone (drop hands)
2. Put up your hands to indicate silence • Students are looking at a common stimulus • Point to stimulus • Ask question • Give thinking time • Tap for response • Students are looking at their own book/paper • Ask question • Use auditory signal (“Everyone”) Anita Archer
3. Give thinking time • Think Time –pause for 5 seconds after question before calling on a student or cueing a group response. • Can have students put up thumbs, or look at you, to indicate enough thinking time • Engages students in thinking. • Increases participation. • Increases quality of responses. • Results in fewer redirects of students and fewer discipline problems. Rowe, 1987
4. Lower your hands as you say, “Everyone” • Use a clear signal or predictable phrase to cue students to respond in unison. • Provide immediate feedback on the group response. • If students don’t respond or blurt out an answer, repeat (Gentle Redo) • Keep a brisk, lively pace.
Choral Responding: Examples • What is the capital of California? (pause 4 sec.) Everyone (drop hands) • Sacramento • What are the 3 branches of government, in alphabetical order (pause 5 sec.) – First…. Second…. Third • Executive Judicial Legislative • What does DNA stand for? (pause 5 sec.) Everyone (drop hands) • DeoxyriboNucleic Acid • Name the 4 main bases in DNA – remember A,C,G,T (pause 5 sec.) Everyone (drop hands) • Adenine Cytosine Guanine Thymine
Ms. Finch’s first graders have just finished reading a story about a young boy named Howard. Ms. Finch puts her storybook on her lap and holds up her hand and says, “Class, get ready to tell me the main character in today’s story.” She says, “Think big,” drops her hand as a signal, and the students chime in, “Howard!” “Howard is right,” exclaims Ms. Finch. “Way to go!” She asks ten more quick questions–some about the setting and main idea. “Last one. Here we go. The problem Howard faced today was finding his lost dog. Is that true or false? Think about it.” She signals and the student eagerly respond, “False!” The students laugh and so does Ms. Finch. “I couldn’t trick you, could I?” she asks. “Tell me why that’s false.” She calls on James who is frantically waving his hand to answer. Wood and Heward, 2004
Teaching Active Participation Routines • Choral Responding • Think/Pair/Share • http://www.scoe.org/pub/htdocs/archer-videos.html • Click on link to : • Active Participation Instruction, 7thGrade • Specifically watch 3:00 – 5:35 & 6:40 – 8:05
Verbal Responses - Individual Turns Option #1 - Partner First 1. Ask a question 2. Give students thinking time 3. Have students share answers with partners using sentence starter 4. Call on student to give answer 5. Engage students in discussion Anita Archer
Verbal Responses - PartnersUse when answers are long or different Partners • Assign partners • Pair lower performing students with middle performing students • Utilize triads when appropriate • Sit partners next to each other • Give partners a number (#1 or #2) • Teach students how to work togetherLOOK, LEAN, AND WHISPER
Verbal Responses - PartnersUse when answers are long or different • Think • Have students think and record responses. • As students are writing, move around the classroom and write down students’ ideas and their names. • Pair • Have students share their ideas with their partners. • Have them record their partners’ best ideas. • As students are sharing, continue to circulate around the room, recording ideas and names. • Share • Display the ideas and names on the screen. Use this as the vehicle for sharing. Anita Archer
Shortly after science class started, the teacher announced, “We have a small block of ice and the same sized block of butter. Tell your neighbor which one would melt first.” A few seconds later the teacher said, “Please write down in one sentence an explanation for your answer.” A few minutes later, the teacher told students to share with their neighbor what they had written. Shortly thereafter, the teach called on one student to tell the class her answer. The teacher then asked to the class to raise their hand if they agreed with the answer. Then the teacher asked students to give a thumb down if anyone disagreed. Colvin, 2009
Watch this video and note the different response strategies being implemented • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_EBsPgyONew
Non-Verbal Responding • Every student actively answering or responding to each question or problem posed by the teacher. • Most common approaches: • Response Cards/Response Systems • white boards • written response cards • Movement Activities or Signaling • Thumbs Up/Down, Sit/Stand, 4 Corners • Guided Notes
Non-Verbal Strategies • White Boards/Response Slates – students have personal white board to write answers to teacher’s questions with an erasable pen. • Letters, words, numbers, draw symbols, or solve problems. • When cued, hold up board to display answers. • Students use an eraser, sponge, or cloth to erase their answer and await next question.
Written Responses • Response Slates (white boards) • Prepare questions to match your response option • Make response fairly short • Give directive • Have students write answers on individual whiteboards • When adequate response time has been given, have students display slates • Give feedback to students • Provide the correct answer and a brief explanation if a significant number of students did not respond accurately, then re-present the question. Anita Archer
Using a Slate • Video examples • http://explicitinstruction.org/?page_id=319 • Open – “Vocabulary Review – 8th grade Geometry” • Examples of: • Using response slates • 2:30 – 2:50; 3:30 – 4:00 • Partner Pair & Share • 1:00 – 2:00; 2:50 – 3:30; 4:00-4:50 • Choral Responding • 0 – 1:00 & 5:00 – 5:50
Non-Verbal StrategiesResponse Cards • Response Cards – pre-printed cards that have choice words on each side. • Yes/No, True/False, Odd/Even • Set of few choices (e.g., noun, pronoun, verb, adverb)
Action Responses Response cards • Have students write possible responses on cards or paper or provide prepared cards Examples: Simple responses: Yes, No; Agree, Disagree; a.b.c.d., I.2.3.4 Punctuation Marks: . ? ! , Math Operations: + - X Types of Rocks: Igneous, metamorphic, sedimentary Branches of Government: Legislative, Executive, Judicial Vocabulary Terms: perimeter, area • Ask a question • Have students select best response and hold it under their chin • Ask students to hold up response card • Monitor responses and provide feedback Anita Archer
13+28 = • 15 • 31 • 41 • 311
Non-Verbal Strategies–Continued • Signaling or Movement Activities • Thumbs up/thumbs down, stand up/sit down, move to four corners, etc.
Action Responses • Gestures • Students indicate answers with gestures • Facial expressions • Students indicate answer with facial expression • Example: “Show me glum.” “Show me not glum.” • Hand signals • Students indicate answer by holding up fingers to match numbered answer Anita Archer
Action Responses Hand signals • Thumbs up/thumbs down to indicate yes/no or agree/disagree • Level of understanding • Students place hand to indicate level of understanding (high-forehead, OK-neck, low-abdomen) • Students display one (no understanding) to five (clear understanding) fingers Anita Archer
Action Responses Hand signals • Display numbered items on the screen Example: 1 concentrate 2 absurd 3 enemy 4 disgusting • Carefully introduce and model hand signals • Ask a question • Have students form answer (e.g., 3 fingers to indicate item #3) on their desk • When adequate thinking time has been given, students hold up hand Anita Archer
Your Turn • Complete Steps 4-5 on your Worksheet o o
Active, Recurring Prompts & Supports to use your use of OTR strategies • ID a variety ways to support use of your identified strategy • Plan ways to actively support teachers to use the targeted practice -- Prompting, monitoring & rewarding • Not just tomorrow, but the next day & the next day & next week & the following week… until the habit is built • Provide Multiple Levels of Support for Classroom Improvement Efforts • Personal plan • Peer Support • Team • School-wide
Personal & Peer Supports • Personal Supports • Phone alarm • Bright Note on clipboard • Note in textbook as prompt at appropriate time • Daily self-check at end of day • Set weekly goal with self based on daily implementation • Ask a student to remind me or monitor implementation • Prompt written on board into daily classroom schedule • Poster in classroom on location • Peer Supports • Check-in or prompt w/ buddy before school/ at lunch/ end of day • Buddy sends me an email or text reminder or follow-up to check implementation w/ daily rating • Set weekly goal with buddy w/ reward contingent on meeting reward • Assistant in room gives a reminder just before time
Simple Daily Ratings Rate your level of implementation of your PreCorrection Strategy (today or this week) Low Medium High 1 2 3 Rate the effectiveness of your implementation on student behavior (today or this week) Low Medium High 1 2 3