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Leading literacy by example. Credibility is enhanced when leaders can talk about what commentary and research has to say about literacy curriculum and pedagogyLeading is a performance profession. It involves coordinating mind, body, and heart in sometimes intricate ways (Donaldson, 2009). OECD: McK
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1. Leading literacy learning:Research, collaboration and new knowledge Northern Adelaide Region
May 19, 2010
anne.bayetto@flinders.edu.au
2. Leading literacy by example Credibility is enhanced when leaders can talk about what commentary and research has to say about literacy curriculum and pedagogy
Leading is a performance profession. It involves coordinating mind, body, and heart in sometimes intricate ways (Donaldson, 2009)
3. OECD: McKinsey ReportHow the worlds best performing school systems come out on top The quality of an education system cannot exceed the quality of its teachers
The only way to improve outcomes is to improve instruction
High performance requires every child to succeed
http://www.mckinsey.com/App_Media/Reports/SSO/Worlds_School_Systems_Final.pdf
4. UK: High challenge and high support Ambitious standards
Good data and clear targets
Intervention in inverse proportion to success
Accountability
Access to best practice and quality professional development
Some Teaching Assistants are asked to do too much e.g. teach reading and they hamper children's progress Rose
5. Assisting students struggling with reading Screen all students at beginning and middle of year
Provide differentiated instruction for all students based on assessments of students current reading levels (Tier 1)
Intensive, systematic group instruction (3-5 times a week) for students below benchmark on universal screening (Tier 2)
Monitor Tier 2 students at least once a month
Intensive daily instruction for students who show minimal progress after reasonable time in Tier 2 (Tier 3)
http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/practiceguides/rti_reading_pg_021809.pdf
6. Improving adolescent literacy:Effective classroom and intervention practices Explicit vocabulary instruction
Direct and explicit comprehension strategy instruction
Opportunities for extended discussion of text meaning and interpretation
Increase student motivation and engagement
Intensive and individualized interventions for struggling readers provided by trained specialists
http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/practiceguides/adlit_pg_082608.pdf
7. Using student achievement data to support instructional decision-making Make data part of an ongoing cycle of instructional improvement
Teach students to examine their own data and set learning goals
Establish a clear vision for schoolwide data use
Provide supports that foster a data-driven culture within the school
Develop and maintain a district-wide data system http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/practiceguides/dddm_pg_092909.pdf
8. Effective reading programs for elementary grades: A best-evidence synthesis One-to-one tutoring works
Teachers are more effective as tutors than teaching assistants or volunteers
Emphasis on phonics improves outcomes
Effects of phonics tutoring lasts into higher grades only if classroom interventions continue
Cooperative learning and structured phonics have strong effects for low-achievers (as well as other students)
Traditional instructional technology programs have little impact on reading http://www.bestevidence.org/word/strug_read_Jan_05_2010_guide.pdf
9. Literacy: National Inquiries USA: National Reading Panel
UK: Rose Report
Australia: National Inquiry into Teaching of Literacy (aka reading)
Key components: Phonological awareness, phonics, vocabulary, comprehension, fluency
Teachers must use practices based on rigorous evidence-based research (empirically-valid research)
Systematic and synthetic phonics instruction
Comprehensive, ongoing, assessment of all students
Whole school planning, monitoring and reviewing
10. Plus
Classroom organisation
Balance of whole group, small group, and one-to-one instruction
Matching students and texts
Making a Difference Means Making it Different (IRA, 2000)
Access to interesting texts, choice, and collaboration
Students need to feel confident and engaged, while learning good reasoning over correct responses (Corcoran & Mamalakis, 2009)
Making links between writing and reading
Expert teaching (Allington, 2005)
11. Four ResourcesFreebody & Luke (1990, 1999)
12. Emergent literacy Oral language
Phonological awareness
Print knowledge
Alphabet knowledge
Writing
13. Code-breaker Vocabulary divides us economically, linguistically, semiotically, academically (Pearson, 2009)
Intentionally teach new words
Beck, I. et al. (2002). Bringing words to life
Bear, D.R. et al. (2003). Words their way
Baumann, J.F., & Kameenui, E.J. (2004). Vocabulary instruction
Intentionally teach highly occurring words (sight words) that can be understood, read, and written
14. Code-breaker Phonological awareness is understanding the smallest units of sound that make up the speech stream: phonemes
Rhyme
Alliteration
Segmentation
Blending
Isolation
Exchanging
Syllables
Onset-rimes
Must be taught early with multiple opportunities for application Phonological checklist for usPhonological checklist for us
15. Alphabet recognition Capital and lower case Name and sound Vowels (V) and consonants (C) Range of fonts a/A/a/a/A Alphabetical order Alphabet production Capital and lower case Directionality of letters Teaching one letter a week is way too slow