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Instructional Practices to Support ALL Learners:. Supporting Rehearsal, Elaboration, and Organization of Key Content in Your Lessons . Objectives: You will be able to: . Describe instructional techniques for supporting rehearsal, elaboration, and organization of key content
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Instructional Practices to Support ALL Learners: Supporting Rehearsal, Elaboration, and Organization of Key Content in Your Lessons
Objectives: You will be able to: • Describe instructional techniques for supporting rehearsal, elaboration, and organization of key content • Cornell Notes: Rehearse and Elaborate • Graphic Representations: Organize and see relationships • Use signal words and expository text structures to inform note-taking organizers (you or your students create) • Seminar: Share example(s) of how these techniques might be useful in your discipline
Instructional Practices to Support Learners M&MDAAVISS • Rehearsal: Determining important ideas (vs. Drive-by Reading) and summarizing • Judgment and Decision Making • Text-marking & note-taking • Elaboration: Making connections; generating questions; visualizing; interpreting; transforming • Clarify understanding and personal your message • Retell > paraphrase > summarize > synthesize • Quick writes, text coding, double entry journals • Organization: Noting relationships between ideas • Pyramid notes, text frames, graphic representations
Supporting Rehearsal and Elaboration of Key Content Cornell Notes • Document with Notes • Jot down Key Points • Summarize • Study
Supporting Organization of Key Content with Graphic Organizers • Problem-Solution for Science Report (science news: problem solution; your thoughts; key words) • Problem-Solution for History Text (who; problems; what changes affected these people; what did they do to solve their problem) • Quick Sketch of Chemical Reactions (draw a picture of each step of the process as a cycle or cause/effect)
Using Graphic Organizers to Represent Relationship Between Key Ideas • Five common informational text structures? Corresponding “signal words”? Enumeration Time Sequence Compare/ Contrast Cause/ Effect Problem/ Solution
Signal Words (Mortar) How can we teach students to recognize these signal words and use them to organize their notes in ways that connect key ideas?
Signal Words (the mortar that links the bricks together) How can you teach students to recognize these signal words and use them to organize their notes in ways that connect key ideas?
Can You Identify (And Help Your Students Identify) Examples of Common Expository Text Structures? See your handout • Enumeration • Time Order • Comparison-Contrast • Cause-Effect • Problem Solution
Time Order JFK • Signal words: • Specific dates • After • It wasn’t until
Freedom of Religion • Signal words: • several points • one point • finally Enumeration
Castles Compare & Contrast • Signal words: • for X, not Y • in spite of • except for • Not only
Fire Cause-Effect • Signal words: • was started by • left by • before it was… • as a result • were all that remained
Problem-Solution Price of Oil • Signal words: • created a serious problem • responded to.. by • this resulted in • they began… and discovered…
Seminar: Applying Instructional Techniques to Your Content • Share a technique that can help support students’ rehearsal, elaboration, andorganization of content you plan to cover in your lesson plan assignment. • Identify a feature of this technique that would be especially useful for supporting struggling readers and/or English language learners.
Homework • CHANGE IN SEQUENCE ON SYLLABUS! • Next: Using Assessments To Guide Learning • Read: • Tovani, Ch. 8 All These Sticky Notes • #16 Guskey: The rest of the story.