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Ruby Payne Teaching StrategiesResearch-Based Strategies: Narrowing
the Achievement Gap for Under-Resourced Learners
Vocabulary – Let’s think about why students may have issues with it…
Number of words exposed to
Economic group
13 million words Welfare
26 million words Working class
45 million words Professional
Fostering Student Engagement
“When working with kids (or adults) who come from difficult backgrounds … you’ve really got to understand these kids. You’ve got to understand what they don’t understand and what their misunderstandings are, and you’ve got to have the confidence to say, ‘If these children tell me what they are thinking, I can clear up any confusions that they have.’”
–Ronald Ferguson
3
Recent Research on the Achievement Gap with Ronald Ferguson. Harvard Education Letter. November/December 2006. www.edletter.org/current/ferguson.shtml
What can teachers do to foster student engagement and create positive peer culture?
Ruby’s Response To This:
More than 80% of kids in any classroom say they plan to do their best all year long—if you ask them in the fall.
Do adults do this too?
We need to give teachers the learning techniques that help them reach and teach some of the kids they are struggling to understand. We must make an effort if we want kids to persist and do their best work all year.
What is Content Comprehension?
We want more than just “understanding” information, content comprehension is also understanding content so we may “manipulate” it.
(Blooms) – what is the highest level?
Applying content comprehension to Language Arts: Purpose – to study the structure of language
Structures – genres, (poetry, drama, etc.)
Patterns – units of study
Processes – reading, writing, speaking, filmmaking and listening.
Once a student has accomplished content comprehension, the teacher then may spend the bulk of the time teaching the use and manipulation of the content.
Then this leads to higher order questioning and learning.
So What???
Instead of asking :
“what color was the girl’s dress” you can ask
“What specific techniques did the writer use to make the reader feel empathetic toward
the girl?”
Mental Models Cont.
When mental models (graphic organizers) are directly taught, abstract information can be learned much more quickly and retained because the mind has a way to contain or hold it.
How do we do this?
Allow the student to sketch his/her
understanding of a story, concept,
vocabulary word or what they think about
a person or idea.
Mental Model
Beginning
Learner•Sensory-based, situated learning•Tied to what is already known
•Abstract respresentational world – formal schooling•Expertise
When a great discrepancy exists between the way the learner creates understanding and the way the
expert communicates understanding, failure results.
Skilled Learner
Asking Questions
Many of our students speak in a “Casual Register” and they also do not know how to ask questions.
To do any task, one must be able to go inside his/her head and ask questions and if s/he cannot ask questions, then the information cannot be retreived in a systematic way. (And of course this can lead to escalation!)
Asking Questions
Ways to teach students to ask questions:
Play “Jeopardy” – this exercise involves the student forming the answer in the form of a question
For young students teach them to start questions with who, what, when, where, which or how
Have students write their own questions in multiple-choice answers
Always have students explain why the wrong answers on a MC test are wrong.
Tried and true:
Instead of having the students answer questions at the end of the chapter, have the students
ask their own questions from the chapter.
Research shows that if by the end of the 2nd grade, a student cannot ask questions, it could impact his/her reading.
If a student cannot ask questions with purpose it will be difficult for him/her to raise his/her reading level past the 3rd grade.
Keep in mind, in poverty, sometimes if kids ask questions, they get slapped!
Studies show that by students asking questions as a part of learning, scores will go up!
Writing a Multiple Choice Question
Question:
a.
b.
c.
d.
Three Rules:
1. One wrong-answer choice must be funny
2. Only one answer choice can be right
3. May not use “all of the above,” “none of the above”, etc.
How for the Student Question Stem
Defining and describing
Knowledge• What is (are) ...• Where is (are) ...• Which is (are) ...• How is (are) ...
Comprehension• What conclusions can you draw from ...• What observations did you make?
Application• Why does ... work?• Sketch your mental model of ...
Analysis• Explain how ...
Synthesis• How could you explain ... to your friend?• Design a model of ... to represent ...• Write a letter to ... giving a summary of ...• What facts can you compile about ...• Rewrite the definition of ... in your own words.
Evaluation• Describe the importance of ...
SCIENCE QUESTION/WRITING STEMS
How for the Student Question Stem
Representing data and interpreting representations
Knowledge• Describe what happens when ...
Comprehension• Describe what happens when ...• Construct a model to explain your data ...
Application• How could you organize your data to help you draw your
conclusion?• How could you change the process/procedure to
increase/decrease the ...Analysis• How can you sort the parts of ...• What order can you place the data in to make them easier
to interpret?Synthesis• How could you compile the data/facts for ...• What plan do you have for collecting your data?• What format will you use to represent your data?
Evaluation• What data will you use to evaluate ...• How could you verify the interpretation of your
graph/table/map?• What is your interpretation of your data?
SCIENCE QUESTION/WRITING STEMS
QUESTION STEMS FORFIFTH- AND NINTH-GRADE READING
1. In paragraph _____, what does _____ mean?2. Paragraph _____ is mainly about _____.3. From the article, the reader can tell …4. From the passage, the reader can tell …5. From the paragraph, the reader can tell …6. From what the reader learns about _____, which statement
does not make sense?7. How does _____ feel?8. Why is it important …9. Which of these is the best summary of the selection?10.Look at this web (flow chart, graph, charts, etc.). Which
detail belongs in the empty space?11. An idea present in both selections is …12.One way these selections are alike is …13.One way these selections are different is …14.Paragraph _____ is important because it helps the reader
understand …15.The reader can tell when _____, he/she will probably …16. How does _____ feel?
QUESTION STEMS FORFIFTH- AND NINTH-GRADE READING
17. In paragraph _____, why is _____ sad? (happy, confused, angry, etc.)
18.What is this article mainly about?19.What can the reader tell about _____ from information in
this article?20.The author builds suspense by …21.One way this story resembles a fable is that …22. In paragraph _____, the author uses the word _____ to
emphasize _____.23.Which of the following words is a synonym (antonym) for the
word _____ in paragraph _____?24.What is the overall theme expressed in this article?25.Which of the following sentences from the article explains
the author’s primary conflict?26.The audience that would probably relate most to the article’s
central message would be …27.Why …28.How ...
(continued)
SOCIAL STUDIES QUESTION STEM STARTERS Elementary (K–4)1. What does the map (chart, drawing, timeline,
graph) illustrate?2. Which statement BEST explains (summarizes)
_____?3. What was the main cause of _____?4. One advantage of _____ is _____.5. The primary function (purpose, goal,
objective) of _____ is _____.6. Which of the following were consequences of
_____?7. What is the BEST definition of _____?8. Which of these is a past (current) trend in
_____?9. Approximately when did _____ occur?10. Which date is associated with _____?11. Which of these statements explains how
_____?12. What is an example of _____?13. Which of these would be the BEST solution to
_____?
SOCIAL STUDIES QUESTION STEM STARTERS Secondary (Grades 5–12)1. How are different ways of life determined by
location?2. How do/did _____ adapt to their environment?3. How are/were the roles of the _____ different
from the _____?4. What circumstances led to changes in the
lives of _____?5. What would happen to the _____ civilization if
_____?6. How are the _____ and the _____ similar and
different?7. What connects the grouping?8. What was the response by _____ to the _____?9. How did the actions of _____ conflict with
_____?10. How did the _____ feel about _____?11. What is the correct sequence for the events?
Strategies
Students ask questions, open ended, multiple choice, on content at least 2 times a week.
Use the stems to create the questions.
Use the outline to create multiple choice questions
Always have students identify why answers are wrong
How can this help your students?
This is working toward students asking more and more complex questions. This can help them in the future to resolve conflict and plan.
This evolves into self-talk and being able to create order and process. “… first I need to do this, next…”
Reading Non-Fiction
It has been found that when individuals do not have a systematic way to do anything they miss up to 50% of the data.
This could be an issue when reading non-fiction!!
Answer the questions
Did this help you with your comprehension??
As always… design your own process!
Another Strategy… Let’s Box!
The local high school is putting on the play “West Side Story”. Mrs. Falbo bought 9 adult tickets and 5 children’s tickets for the recital. The total she paid was $67. Mrs. Ustinov bought 7 adult tickets and paid $38.50. How much does each type of ticket cost?
A) adult = $7.44; children’s = $13.40
B) adult = $5.50; children’s = $3.50
C) adult = $6.59; children’s = $7.70
D) adult = $3.50; children’s = $5.50
E) adult = $13.40; children’s = $47.44
Sketching for Vocabulary
If a student cannot sketch a word, they likely do not know it
Idea:
Divide the paper into two columns
Write a word in the first column and then draw a picture or a visual representation of the word with an explanation.
This creates a very fast way to teach vocabulary.
(This also works with a graphic organizer)
Draw and create a phrase for what one of the following terms mean to
you:
•Isosceles Triangle•Scalene Triangle•Rhombus•Vertices
Different
Same Sa
me
The Cereal of Winners!
TOASTIES
Vertices
I saw an isosceles triangle in my refrigerator.
I often see a scalene triangleon Kenny’s face.
My friend the rhombus is known as the “Dancing Wonder.”
I found four vertices on a box of cereal.
To help students pass the state assessment, a teacher did the following and was very successful. All of her students took a mock test in math. Then they scored their own papers. They made this grid:
Questions I got right and could get right again.
Questions I did or did not do correctly but am not sure how to do.
Questions where I had no clue.
How can this help?
After the students assess the questions missed, they can go back and count how many questions were in each category
Then have them take a similar test and the goal, of course, is that they would do better!
Also… this would be most useful in working with GED prep questions from the texts.
This is considered “Self-Advocacy” for a student to have more control over what s/he missed on a test.
Students Plan Their Own Grades
When you plan, you “keep the end in mind”.
Planning can help to control impulsivity
When students plan their grade and review it weekly, their academics can improve.
For adults:
Have a weekly review of what they have accomplished
A schedule of when they will take the OPT
TABE testing
Ideas?
MAKING THE GRADE 1. What work have I done well in my English class?
a.b.c.d.
2. What work have I done poorly in my English class?
a.b.c.d.
3. I was/was not satisfied with my grade in English III last semester. 1st _____ 2nd _____ 3rd _____ Exam _____ Average _____
MAKING THE GRADE(CONTINUED)
4. What grade do I realistically believe that I can earn this semester in
English III? 5. What will I do in my English class to earn that grade?
a.b.c.
Fourth Grading Period I want to earn ______.
Daily 10% Quiz 30%Test 60%
Fifth Grading Period I want to earn ______.
Daily 10% Quiz 30%Test 60%
Sixth Grading Period I want to earn ______.
Daily 10% Quiz 30%Test 60%
I am/am not satisfied with my grade in English III this semester. 1st _____ 2nd _____ 3rd _____ Exam _____ Average _____
SPRING SEMESTER
What about Adults?
Look at what the scores are for the OPT
TABE analysis
College 101??
Your ideas???
Five Models for Sorting
Students will get much higher comprehension if they use a technique for sorting.
In nonfiction, there are basically five kinds of text and each of the following icons give a student a quick memory tool.
Descriptive/Topical
Sequence/How-to
Story Structure
Compare and Contrast
Persuasive Reasons
DESCRIPTIVE/TOPICAL
Descriptive or topical is the hand.
• Use each finger to sort topics or descriptive details.
Middle
Characters
Beginning
Setting
End
Problem Goal
STORY STRUCTURE
What you sort for and remember in a piece of fiction are the people, the beginning, the middle, the end, the episode, the problem, the goal, the setting. Use the car as a model for sorting and remembering.
PERSUASIVE REASONS
Persuasive: If you use a hamburger, the top bun is the person's position. Each one of those pieces of meat is a piece of support. The bottom bun is a conclusion.
Word Know Think I know
Have heard
GUESS DEFINITION
saline X A liquid for contactlenses
A salt solution
macula a spot or blotch, especially on one's skin
torsade a twisted cord
KNOWLEDGE RATINGS •Using a graph like the one below, have students list the words in the first column to be studied. They evaluate their knowledge level of each word and check the appropriate box. If they have some idea of the meaning, they write in their guess.• Following discussion or study, they write the definition in their own words. This activity is particularly useful in helping students develop metacognitive (being able to think about one’s own thinking) awareness.Example:
I LOVE THIS ONE!!
Think about all of the vocabulary our students do NOT know and how that affects Westest, GED and TABE scores?
Picture it!!
With each new story/reading, assign each student one vocabulary word.
Students must:
• Find the word in the story/reading and record the page number (see form below).
• Find the word in the dictionary and record the pronunciation, number of syllables, part of speech, and definition used in the story.
• Create a picture of the word (on the form on the next page) to represent the word.
• Present the word to the class using the definition and picture.