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Graphic Organizers. Lynn Public Schools Kavita Venkatesh October 25, 2013. Graphic Organizers. Visual or spatial representation of knowledge. Way to organize information or knowledge. Can generate new ideas as well as organize previous ideas. Can be used in all content / subject areas.
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Graphic Organizers Lynn Public Schools Kavita Venkatesh October 25, 2013
Graphic Organizers Visual or spatial representation of knowledge Way to organize information or knowledge Can generate new ideas as well as organize previous ideas Can be used in all content / subject areas
Types of Graphic Organizers • Hierarchical • Breaking down content into sub concepts or levels • Branching diagram web, classifying chart • Sequential • Sequence of events • Cause/effect, problem/solution, story board, sequencing chart • Cyclical • Natural cycles • Circle organizer • Circle diagram • Conceptual • Providing supporting evidence of a central idea • Concept map, KWL, compare/contrast, Venn Diagram
Timeline:Doesn’t need to be all content language First Then Finally At the beginning Afterwards At the end Subsequently At the conclusion
FlowchartThe language associated with the lines and arrows are vital
CycleAgain, not just about the language in the circles, but the lines and arrows as well.
Using multiple graphic organizers • By using multiple graphic organizers, you are offering students ways to organize, categorize, and make sense of the content in a way best for them. • You could provide a variety of graphic organizers for students to use (they select which ones) OR you can have students create their own
Graphic Organizers to Graphic Organizers • Taking a concept or an academic task and breaking it down to a graphic organizer, may need to be done many times • For example, when students are writing an essay, they could use a graphic organizer to write out their thoughts, but before that, they could use a graphic organizer to organize the big ideas, and before that, they could use a graphic organizer to pull big ideas from text / lecture
Creating your own graphic organizers • Alone or with a partner or group, select a topic you may teach in your classroom. • Develop at least three graphic organizers (with language embedded!) on this topic • If you think graphic organizers can be used in steps, develop each of those as well