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Chapter 10 Teaching and Learning Strategies. Agenda. Good News Educational Current Events: Jimmy Butts Corey Taylor Chapter Portion Erin Dutton. Why teach learning strategies?. Many students simply do not know how to get started Others do not know how to complete a task
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Agenda • Good News • Educational Current Events: • Jimmy Butts • Corey Taylor • Chapter Portion • Erin Dutton
Why teach learning strategies? • Many students simply do not know how to get started • Others do not know how to complete a task • Instead they tend to develop coping strategies to avoid embarrassment rather than succeed at the task • Teach them the strategies that successful students use • Learning strategies help students learn and perform by providing them with a specific set of steps for: • (a) approaching new and difficult tasks, • (b) guiding thoughts and actions, • (c) completing tasks in a timely and successful manner, • (d) thinking strategically.
Knowing When Students Need Instruction in Learning Strategies • Determine when students are not being successful in learning tasks and activities • Notice when you are helping individual students and repeating instructions about a particular task • Consult with special education teachers in your school
Are students meeting task demands? • What is expected of my students? • Where is student performance not meeting my standards? • Academic demands, secondary teachers expect students to gain information from lectures and written material, demonstrate knowledge on tests, and express information in writing • Secondary students face social demands, such as following rules in and out of school; • participating in social activities, discussions, and conversations with peers and adults; • accepting criticism and help; • recruiting assistance when needed; resisting inappropriate peer pressure; • being pleasant in social interactions
Difficulty with motivation • Plan for timely task completion and set short-, intermediate-, and long-term goals. • Executive demands that require them to • work independently with little feedback, • apply knowledge across content areas, • solve problems, and • organize information and resources. • Executive demands require students to think about how they learn best and make decisions about what they will do.
Are many students asking for help as they experience similar difficulties? • Pay attention to extra support you routinely provide students during learning activities • Sometimes the teacher recognizes that a number of students are having the same problem and may pause to clarify a point or process for all students.
Are there colleagues who can help me identify why some of my students are not being successful? • When deciding whether or not to teach students effective learning strategies, it is important to consider, • (a) the demands your students face every day in and out of school • (b) whether you find yourself repeating the same instructions over and over to students • (c) the results of consultations with resource personnel, like special educators and other teachers
Principles of Strategy Instruction • Three features that should be part of any learning strategy you develop • The steps in a strategy should cue students to do something like read, survey, or examine. • The strategy should offer a way to remember the steps to follow in using the strategy. • The strategy should address a process that students find difficult.
GRADE strategy • Gather missing information from your notes by asking the teacher or a friend for his or her notes. • Reread and highlight notes using different colors to code different levels of information. • Ask yourself questions as you study your notes. • Draw a visual device, like a chart, or graphic to organize the information. • Engage in positive self-talk after studying your notes so you will be mentally prepared when you take the test.
The Paraphrasing Strategy – “RAP” • “R” cues students to “read a paragraph” • “A” cues students to “Ask themselves, ‘What are the main idea and details in this paragraph?’” • “P” cues students to “Put the main idea and details into your own words”
Teaching Learning Strategies • Students learn when, where, and how the strategy can be used for maximum benefit • Students learn how to state main ideas and corresponding details in their own words • One good system for structuring information is to provide headings for main ideas and subheadings for details • Not only provide a specific set of steps for approaching a task, but they also guide thinking and performance.
How should I teach learning strategies? • Students must learn and apply strategies before they will experience any benefits. • Mastery, maintenance, generalization • Teaching learning strategies to your students is accomplished most effectively when • (a) students understand the purpose of the strategy, • (b) learn how, when, and why to use it, • (c) learn different ways to remember the strategy, • (d) develop goals for learning the strategy • (e) see the strategy modeled several times • Students must understand the purpose for a strategy and how learning it will benefit them personally. • Students must learn how, when and why to perform the actions of the strategy-both physical and cognitive actions.
How should I teach learning strategies? • Students learn different ways to remember the strategy to enable independent use in the future. • They can be encouraged to develop the habit of writing the memory device for a strategy on tests or written assignments. • As instruction progresses, students should monitor their own progress and set short-term goals for learning each step of the strategy. • Students should see the strategy modeled several times and hear how the teacher thinks through the process, using reasoning and problem-solving, as the process unfolds. • When you are teaching learning strategies to your students, you may want to use controlled materials initially • Teach when to use strategies in other settings
Developing Your Own Learning Strategies • To be effective and efficient, a learning strategy must • Address the learning demand of the task and setting • Provide steps to guide thinking and performance • Present the strategy in a format that students can readily learn and apply • Address problems that students are currently experiencing
Developing Your Own Learning Strategies • Identify one learning task or skill demand you have seen students repeatedly have trouble with in learning the content of you course • Develop a strategy that you can teach your students to help them address the problem. • No more than seven steps • Develop a plan for teaching the strategy to your students. • Evaluate your work – maintain good communication with students as you implement strategies instruction. • To fully evaluate the learning strategy you have developed, you need to teach it to students, and your students need to master it and use it.
Successful Strategy Instruction • Students internalize the steps of the strategy, understand when and where to apply it, and realize how it can help them learn and get better grades. • Provide students with cues to use the strategy. • Model the strategy. • Provide feedback on how well students are using the strategy. • Integrate strategy use with daily instruction and materials.
Supports for Learning Strategy Instruction • Teachers can help with ideas about how to practice and assess a particular strategy, as well as share strategies they have developed. • Parents can support strategy instruction in school and at home by prompting students to use the strategies they have learned in school to complete homework assignments and study for tests. • Provide classroom support by giving feedback, grading strategy practice attempts, and developing materials used to practice strategies. • Professional development opportunities.
WEB SITES • http://www.ldonline.org • articles related specifically to learning strategies can be found as well as a comprehensive reference list of research articles related to teaching learning strategies across the curriculum • http://www.teachingld.org • articles discussing the methods used to teach a range of learning strategies in classroom, as well as the resulting achievement of students • http://www.ku-crl.org • Strategic Instruction Model • http://www.ash.udel.edu/ash/teacher/standards.html • National Curriculum Standards