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Best Practice: A System of Instructional Support. In regards to Best Practice… “Techniques and instructional strategies have nearly as much influence on learning as student aptitude.” ~ James Strong Qualities of Effective Teachers. Best Practice: What does it mean?. Common Characteristics
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In regards to Best Practice… “Techniques and instructional strategies have nearly as much influence on learning as student aptitude.” ~ James Strong Qualities of Effective Teachers
Best Practice: What does it mean? Common Characteristics • Based on current research • Includes latest knowledge, technology and procedures • Successful across student populations • Applies across content areas and grade levels
A Systems View: Strategies within a focused topic area Strategies within content areas Cross-content instructional strategies Structures Principles
Best Practice: A Bit of History • Research • Led by Zemelman, Daniels and Hyde – 1990s • Focus on teaching and learning • Purpose – to discover what’s working • Participants • Classroom teachers/students throughout U.S. • Professional Organizations • Research Centers • Process • Interviews • Meta-analysis of existing research
Processing Activity #1 Processing Time (10 minutes) • Review Common Conclusions of Learning & Teaming individually • Discuss at table: • Have you used these documents? • If so, how? • If not, how might you use them?
Strategies within a focused topic area Strategies within content areas Cross-content instructional strategies Structures Principles
Processing Activity #2 Processing Time (10-15 min) • Review the 13 Best Practice Principles • Review the four Michigan Teaching and Learning Standards • How do the two align?
Best Practice: A Comparative Look Best Practice Principles MI Teaching and Learning Standards
“The literature on instruction suggests that students whose teachers develop and regularly integrate inquiry-based, hands-on learning activities, critical thinking skills and assessments into daily lessons consistently out-perform their peers.” ~ Qualities of Effective Teachers, ASCD
Best Practice and Authenticity “Students provided with authentic curriculum achieved at levels 2-3 times higher than students in skills-oriented, ‘low authenticity’ classrooms.” ~ Fred Newman, University of Wisconsin
Strategies within a focused topic area Strategies within content areas Cross-content instructional strategies Structures Principles
Best Practice: Seven Structures • Reading as Thinking • Representing-to-Learn • Small Group Activities • Classroom Workshop • Authentic Experiences • Reflective Assessment • Integrative Units
Best Practice These seven structures are: • Validated • Documented • Supported
Best Practice They are also: • Rigorous • Recurrent • Overlapping • Interdependent
Best Practice: Reading as Thinking • Interactive • Constructive • Strategic Examples: • Brainstorming • Mapping • Questioning • KWL
Best Practice: Representing-to-Learn • Active construction of knowledge • Transferring ideas between mediums for deep understanding Examples: • Journals, logs, sketchbooks • Free writing, mapping, webbing • Variety of expressions; music, visual, etc.
Best Practice: Small Group Activities • Makes learning active • Stresses collaboration/teamwork • Preparation for real-life experiences Examples: • Buddy reading, lab partners • Peer response/editing groups • Literature circles
Best Practice: Classroom Workshops • Class as studio or lab • Student choice of topic • Process orientation – scientific process, writing process Examples: • Folder/portfolio work • Mini-lessons with teacher modeling • Sharing, presenting, exhibiting
Best Practice: Authentic Experiences • Bring school to life • Community connections • Invite world in – take students out Examples: • Speakers in classroom • Primary source books • Field trips, visits • Service projects
Best Practice: Reflective Assessment • Student reflection, self-assessment • Multiple measures • Formative assessments Examples: • Portfolios • Performance assessments with scoring rubrics • Student-led conferences
Best Practice: Integrative Units • Focus on broad problems, issues, themes across subjects, disciplines • Incorporates student interest • Creates extended inquiries Examples: • Thematic Units • Problem-based learning • Integrated programs (American Studies and Whole Language)
Processing Activity #3 Processing Time (10-15 min) • Using the Best Practice Principles/Structures Guide: • reflect on a unit • check which principles & structures apply • Share your thoughts
Strategies within a focused topic area Strategies within content areas Cross-content instructional strategies Structures Principles
Best Practice: Cross-content Instructional Strategies Marzano’s Classroom Instruction that Works Goal – to find strategies that work for: • all students • all grades • all subjects
Best Practice: Process of Identifying Strategies • Meta-analysis of research • Identified effect sizes
Best Practice: Effect Size An effect size will help answer the question… “Does the technique produce a large enough impact that it’s worthwhile to pursue?”
Processing Activity #4 Processing Time (5-10 minutes) Individually reflect and document: Circle – ideas going around in your mind Square – ideas that squared with your thinking Arrow – ideas you want to learn more about Puzzle Piece – ideas for connecting your learning
Elements of Effective Pedagogy:A Total Picture Instructional Strategies Management Techniques Curriculum Design Effective Pedagogy SOURCE: Classroom Instruction that Works, Marzano, et al
Processing Activity #5 Processing Time (10-15 min) Explain to your neighbor the difference as you see it between: • Best Practice principles • Seven classroom structures • Nine instructional strategies
Strategies within a focused topic area Strategies within content areas Cross-content instructional strategies Structures Principles
Break-out Session – ELA/Math ReadingWritingMath Best Practice Strategies that Work Increased Student Achievement
Strategies within a focused topic area Strategies within content areas Cross-content instructional strategies Structures Principles
Best Practice: Day Two Tomorrow’s workshops focus more specifically within content areas: • Informational Reading: What’s It All About? • Detail/ Examples in Writing: Where Art Thou? • Fun with Fractions (K-5) • Developing Abilities in Algebra (5-7)
Best Practice: Guiding Questions to Consider • Who is defining the principle, structure, or intervention as a best practice? (credibility) • Are there other researchers who are in agreement with this practice? • What is their reason or rationale for doing this? (purpose) • Is it an effective practice? When you use it with students are they more successful?
Best Practice: Resources Additional tools that can help you: • Recognized literature • Credible organizations • Notable websites • Useful rubrics
A final thought… “Best Practice – we admit it is just another name for progressive education.” ~ Daniels & Bizar