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Fantastic Foldables. Using Foldables to Enhance Student Achievement. Presented by Lora Drum. What are foldables?. 3 dimensional interactive graphic organizers that students create Can be used as a self-check study guide
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Fantastic Foldables Using Foldables to Enhance Student Achievement Presented by Lora Drum
What are foldables? • 3 dimensional interactive graphic organizers that students create • Can be used as a self-check study guide • Can be used at any level and with any subject area • Learning/Assessment tools • Serve as mental models
Why use foldables? • Fun & motivating, hands-on approach • Study guides • Note taking to help organize information • Improve student note-taking skills • Reach all learners • Students retain information • Replace the use of worksheets/reduce copy counts • Projects • Integration of subject areas • Alternative assessments • Hold students accountable
When do we use foldables? • Introducing new vocabulary words • Introducing a new skill, topic, or concept • Before a chapter, lesson, story, etc. • During the lesson • After completing the chapter, lesson, story, etc. • Guided Instruction or Guided Reading • Writing process • Review • Anytime- daily
70% of input to the human brain is visual
And the research says… • Graphic organizers (such as foldables) can: - help students focus on text structure as they read - provide tools used to visually represent relationships in text - help students write well-organized summaries of text - retain information (mental models) - keep students actively engaged in the instructional process and learning as they create foldables
How should we use foldables? • Teacher directed- modeling • Guided Practice • Independent Practice- students create own folds/projects • Alternative Assessment Tools
Assessment Tools • rubrics • tests based on information • writing samples • journals • oral questioning
Basic Folds & Terminology Hamburger Hotdog Taco Burrito Valley Mountain Shutter Accordion Layered Book
Hamburger • Fold a rectangular piece of paper in half along the short side
Hamburger Fold Options
Three Door Books
Hot Dog • Fold a rectangular piece of paper in half along the long side
Taco • Fold the corner of a sheet of paper over to create a triangle. Trim any excess.
Burrito • A burrito fold rolls the page up (similar to hotdog fold) but without creating a crease in the paper. * Used in making a bound book
Shutter • Begin as if you were going to make a hamburger but instead of the creasing the paper, pinch it to show the midpoint. • Fold the outer edges of the paper to meet at the pinch, or mid-point, forming a shutter fold.
Accordion • Fold each sheet of paper into hamburgers. However, fold one side one half inch shorter than the other side. This will form a tab that is one half inch long. • Fold the tab the opposite way. • Glue together to form an accordion by gluing a straight edge of one section into the valley of another section.
Layered Books Take any number of sheets, stack them on top of one another, staggering them so that they is space between each, hold tightly to the side and fold the top layer over the bottom and crease
Hotdog fold- Vocabulary Book Layered Book with wrapping paper cover
Lapbooks are made from using a file folder or large sheet of construction paper as the base. Begin by shutter folding the base. Multiple foldables can be incorporated into the the lapbook. Lapbooks Great for projects!
Caves Lapbook Ladybug Lapbook
Dinosaur Lapbook Brazil Lapbook
Check out Dinah Zike books… www.dinah.com/ check out foldables by Google searching and checking out boards on Pinterest
Secret to Success: Model, Model, Model
Questions Comments: Contact Information Lora_Drum@catawbaschools.net Good Luck and Make a BIG Splash with FOLDABLES!