1 / 22

In-Class Interventions

In-Class Interventions. Sherrard Lewis I3/COMPASS Proj . Dir. Feb. 13, 2012. What is the Goal?. The Reality. Learning Objectives for today:. I can explain one proven strategy to increase student engagement .

Download Presentation

In-Class Interventions

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. In-Class Interventions Sherrard Lewis I3/COMPASS Proj. Dir. Feb. 13, 2012

  2. What is the Goal?

  3. The Reality

  4. Learning Objectives for today: • I can explain one proven strategy to increase student engagement. • I can explain the classroom structure that supports the 5 learning-centered questions. • I can explain an aligned strategy/intervention for my students who did not master the skill after my instruction. • I can select an aligned activity for my students who have already mastered the skill.

  5. Engagement Ensuring the Literate Engagement of EVERY Student, EVERY day – EVERY Lesson!

  6. Literacy: It’s EVERYONE’S Responsibility • √ reading, writing AND speaking, listening (THINKING) • √ across the grades, content area disciplines • √ each discipline has unique critical thinking skillsstudents must master to access the content

  7. Engagement is the Foundation We can’t wait for the students to engage themselves….The teacher must find ways to engage the student!

  8. Essential Questions: What is engagement to you? What does it look like/sound like? Think, Ink, Link • Think- Process for one minute • Ink- Write for one minute (summary, big idea, etc) • Link- Discuss with partner

  9. A Working Definition: • ENGAGEMENT, at its core, is the observable evidence of a learner’s interest and active involvement in all lesson content and related tasks, with clearly articulated “evidence checks” of concrete, productive responses to instruction. Engagement is not optional – it’s how we play the “game” of schooling/learning. In other words it is..... “Visible Evidence”

  10. Goal: Make Thinking Visible Wow, in this class I not only have to think, I’ve got to explain my thinking !! EVERY student explains their thinking & receives feedback from peers and the teacher – multiple times in EVERY lesson

  11. Academic Engagement at its Coreis the Quantity & Quality of Student: • Saying - Oral Language • Writing- Written Language • Doing - pointing, touching, demonstrating, etc. ** NEVER more than 2-10 Rule ** Never more than 2-10 minutes without processing time…..

  12. An Engagement Bottom Line: How Well We Structure = How Engaged They Are

  13. Motto of the Highly EngagedClassroom... If it’s worth doing, then I am going to ensure that ALL students are “doing the doing”...

  14. Think, Ink, Link Think- Process for one minute Ink- Write for one minute (summary, big idea, etc) about how you will use this strategy in your classroom within the next 5 school days Link- Discuss with partner

  15. Basic Structure • Provide foundational instruction (explain vocabulary, give context, connect to prior learning, etc.) – 25 min. broken up with engagement activities every 2-10 minutes. • Quick/formatively assess understanding – 3-5 questions that quickly & thoroughly probe a student’s mastery • Split students into those who #4 Didn’t get it (today’s lesson contains their “n”) • Those who didn’t get it learn from you in a different, concrete way to correct misunderstandings, receive feedback and clarify information (Interventions) #5 Already have it • Those who already have it work on an engaging task that allows them to be curious about applying the information you are facilitating (Blended Learning)

  16. What are you asking them to be CURIOUS about? What learning are you asking them to play with and explore?

  17. Quick assessments • 3-5 thorough teacher-created questions • http://blog.web20classroom.org/2013/01/formative-assessments-are-easier-than.html • http://www.mathycathy.com/blog/2012/09/number-line-app/ • http://wallwisher.com/ • http://www.obsurvey.com/ • The goal is for the teacher to have confidence that the questions accurately assess understanding while still taking little time. This is typically NOT graded. Purpose: adjust instruction

  18. What do we do if they didn’t learn it?

  19. #4 – What will we do if they didn’t learn it? • Informational Text • Page protector • Vis-à-vis pens • Text • Chunking, ranking, paraphrasing/summarizing

  20. #5 - What will we do if they already know it? • http://www.sascurriculumpathways.com/portal/ • http://www.khanacademy.org/

  21. Final thoughts: • Depending on the skill for the lesson/unit, I may/may not be AIG, EC, ELL, etc. My ability and potential changes with every new learning target. • NO ONE is interesting for more than 10 minutes…what other delivery methods can you use? • Your students should be tired (physically or mentally) when the day is done, not YOU!

  22. Teaching in the 21st Century • The Master doesn't talk, he acts. When his work is done, the people say, "Amazing: we did it, all by ourselves!“ • Lao-tzu

More Related