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Theory Base. October 4, 2012. DLGE Presentations. A Marsdan giberter for farfie. A Mardsan giberter for Farfie. Work with a partner and determine: Who are the main characters? How do you know this? What is your evidence? What is the problem?
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Theory Base October 4, 2012
A Mardsangiberter for Farfie • Work with a partner and determine: • Who are the main characters? • How do you know this? What is your evidence? • What is the problem? • How do you know this? What is your evidence? • How is the problem solved? • How do you know this? What is your evidence?
Reading Processes Readers USE language cue systems: • Semantic – meaning • Syntactic – how language works • Graphophonic – how we spell what we say • AND PRIOR KNOWLEDGE
Experiment #1 • Think about the story, “A MardsanGiberter for Farfie” • Would you have been able to comprehend the story if I had: • Given you a hint: “birthdays” • Brainstormed with you about birthdays • Whistled “Happy Birthday” as you read
Prior Knowledge • Must be activated
Experiment #2 • You will each get a story to read. • I will activate your prior knowledge – • Read the header at the top of the page • Follow those directions • Underline ONLY information related to your role • Read and underline!
After Reading the Story • Compare your underlining with a partner at your table • Did you select similar information? • Talk for a minute about any differences
Prior Knowledge • Must be activated • Must be appropriate
Experiment #3What is this passage about? The Stone Foxes I was lookin’ over this audience and I see nothin’ but stone foxes. I thought to myself, as soon as the eagle flies, I’m gonna go out and rent me a hog or maybe a deuce-and-a-quarter, I’m not sure. Then I wanna find the honcho of this organization to let him know I’m gonna lay dead ‘cause I’m goin’ with my hog and stone fox to the killin’ floor.
Prior Knowledge • Must be activated • Must be appropriate • Must be sufficient
Experiment #4 • You have a list of 20 words • You have 1 minute to memorize this list • After 1 minute: Write as many of the words as you can remember • How many items did you remember? • Compare your list with your neighbors list • Any comments?
Prior Knowledge • Must be activated • Must be appropriate • Must be sufficient • Needs to be organized
PRIOR KNOWLEDGE • …is the most important factor in learning, according to Schema Theory
But . . . • If prior knowledge is so important • If you need prior knowledge in order to learn, then . . . How do we ever learn anything in the first place??
Think about the Mardsan text • What if you had had to read that text individually and answer the questions? • Did talking with a peer help you comprehend the text?
Vygotsky and learning • Sociocultural learning theory: • Language and thought mediate learning • Knowledge is generated through activity-centered social interactions • Zone of Proximal Development • Students should be presented with tasks that are just beyond their capabilities – in their Zone of Proximal Development • With appropriate scaffolding, students can be successful with help from more knowledgeable others
Think about Complex Topics • Is there one clear answer to questions involving genetic engineering? • How about issues involved in the present war? • Are you in favor of using student test scores to evaluate teachers’ job performance?
Cognitive Flexibility • Sometimes, we need to use more than one schema in our learning. • When schema theory is too simple, cognitive flexibility comes into play. • Applicable in the case of complex concepts, situations, and problems • Medical, legal, education professions
Reader Response • Write the first three words/adjectives you think of when you think of: • Reading a favorite kind of text: (i.e., newspaper [sports, comics], magazine, mystery, short story, blog, entertainment or hobby website • Reading a textbook • Share your responses with a neighbor
Reader Response Theory • Two stances / purposes / responses to reading: • Efferent – focus on facts / information • Aesthetic – personal reactions and associations efferent aesthetic • Readers remember relevant ideas and concepts • Have students associate concepts with real-world applications
For Next Week – Oct. 11 • Read Ch. 6 pp. 166-173, 180-184, & 187-189 • Read either the Lloyd (1998) OR Santa & Pearson (1995) • You DO NOT have to bring a secondary text to class next week • Your second reflective post is due by midnight next Thursday, Oct. 11
Reading From Teacher Man by Frank McCourt