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HighYield Strategies

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Title: HighYield Strategies


1
HIGH-YIELD STRATEGIES
May 2009
2
What are High-Yield Strategies?
High-yield strategies are strategies that have
been proven through a combination of research and
best practice evidence to contribute to
improved student learning. (The Literacy and
Numeracy Secretariat Webcast Professional
Learning Series, High-Yield Strategies to Improve
Student Learning, May 2008)
3
Teacher Moderation/Collaborative Marking
  • This is a highly effective assessment strategy
    that involves teachers coming together to look at
    student work based on pre-determined assessment
    criteria.
  • By working together, teachers assessment
    practices become more aligned, professional
    dialogue occurs and teachers gain confidence in
    their own ability to assess student work
    accurately and fairly to improve student work.
  • Building trust among teachers is essential!

4
Teacher Moderation/Collaborative Marking
  • Some examples of Teacher Moderation include
  • DRA and CASI assessments (P/J/I)
  • Running Records (P)
  • TLCPs (P/J/I)

The LNS Capacity Building Series , TEACHER
MODERATION COLLABORATIVE ASSESSMENT OF STUDENT
WORK, September 2007 www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/literac
ynumeracy/inspire/
5
Uninterrupted Blocks of Literacy Numeracy
  • Literacy Blocks 100-120 minutes
  • Numeracy Blocks 60-75 minutes
  • BENEFITS
  • Allows teachers to optimize instruction
  • Provides students with sufficient time to learn
    and to process information
  • Allows teachers to differentiate instruction
  • Allows teachers to implement ongoing instruction,
    as well as student-based, open-ended activities
    that encourage higher-order thinking

LNS What Works? Research into Practice Series,
LEARNING BLOCKS FOR LITERACY AND NUMERACY, May
2007 www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/literacynumeracy/inspi
re/research/whatWorks.html
6
Ongoing Assessment Feedback
  • The purpose of ongoing feedback is to inform
    students about their progress and what they can
    do to move their learning along.
  • Feedback should be timely, explicit/specific and
    focused on curriculum expectations.
  • Ongoing assessment also helps the teacher inform
    his/her own teaching practice.

7
Assessment FOR, OF AS Learning
  • Dr. Lorna Earls diagram best illustrates the
    difference between the three.

OF
FOR
AS
Assessment AS Learning needs to be the biggest
focus for teachers.
8
Assessment OF Learning This is summative
assessment. This type of assessment is the
decision-making piece. This includes the
collecting the evidence needed to make judgments
and to report to parents and to
students. Assessment FOR Learning Teachers use
formative assessment to see what students are
thinking and then decides what needs to be done.
This is gathering data with a purpose in
mind. Assessment AS Learning Students can
self-assess and decides NEXT STEPS through this
process. As teachers, we are encouraging
students to be self-reflective and
self-monitoring thinkers. We want them to
monitor their own progress toward achieving their
learning goals. As teachers we are looking for
triangulation. We need to have conversations
with students along the process. All pieces need
to come together!
9
Another way of thinking about ASSESSMENT
  • Diagnostic Assessment the try out or the
    audition
  • Formative Assessment the practice or the
    rehearsal
  • Summative Assessment the game or the final
    performance

10
  • Every time you carry out an
  • assessment, it is not a decision point, it is a
    TEACHING POINT!
  • (Dr. Lorna Earl)

WEBCAST Rethinking Classroom Assessment with
Purpose in Mind, April 27, 2006, Dr. Lorna Earl,
CSC
11
Points for Discussion
  • What do we, as teachers, need to do to ensure
    that students get the most out of feedback
    sessions?
  • What is the students role during feedback
    sessions?
  • What questions should we ask ourselves during the
    assessment process to ensure that we are meeting
    the specific needs of every student?

12
The Gradual Release of Responsibility Model
  • The teacher models the steps, provides support as
    the students learn the steps. The teacher
    gradually shifts responsibility to the students
    to apply the steps independently.

13
Differentiated Instruction
  • What is DI?
  • Differentiated Instruction is based on the idea
    that because students differ significantly in
    their interests, learning styles, and readiness,
    teaching strategies and decisions involving
    issues of content, process, and product should
    vary accordingly.
  • (Tomlinson, Differentiated Instruction Model,
    1999)

WEBCAST Differentiated Instruction Continuing
the Conversation, March 29, 2006, CSC
14
Differentiated Instruction (contd)
  • Teachers must provide a variety of ways for ALL
    students to feel affirmed and challenged.
  • DI is student-centered.
  • Effective DI offers ALL students the opportunity
    to succeed from their individual points of entry.
  • Teachers must manipulate the program in order to
    maximize the potential for ALL children to learn.

15
Differentiated Instruction
  • Instruction can be differentiated by
  • CONTENT
  • PROCESS
  • PRODUCT

16
DI Instructional and Management Strategies
  • ?anchor activities (on-going) ?jigsaw
  • ?interest centers, groups, and surveys
    ?small-group instruction
  • ?scaffolding ?literature circles
  • ?flexible groupings ?assessment (i.e. EXIT
    CARDS)
  • ?independent projects and study ?multiple
    intelligences
  • ?tiered lessons, centers, and products ?adjusting
    questioning strategies
  • ?May Dos and Must Dos ?Points Quiz
  • ?Totally 10 Projects ?Tic-Tac-Toe or Menus
  • ?Technology
  • (i.e. WebQuests, SMART Boards, computers)

17
GRAPHIC VISUAL ORGANIZERS
  • KWL Charts
  • Story Maps/Story Boards
  • Venn Diagram
  • Fishbone/Cause and Effect
  • Compare and Contrast
  • Problem-Solution Chart
  • Timeline/Chain of Events
  • Story Pyramid
  • Brainstorming Web
  • Alphaboxes
  • Hamburger
  • RAN Strategy
  • P-M-I
  • Flowchart
  • Placemat
  • Give em a Hand

http//freeology.com/graphicorgs/ http//www2.scho
lastic.com/browse/article.jsp?id2983 http//www.t
eachervision.fen.com/graphic-organizers/printable/
6293.html
18
Accountable Talk
  • Accountable Talk is talk by students and their
    teacher that responds to and further develops
    what others in the classroom have said. It is
    focused, meaningful, and mutually beneficial to
    speaker and listener.
  • Accountable talk stimulates higher order thinking
    by requiring students to clarify their thinking,
    ask questions, test their hypotheses, learn to
    respect, listen actively and build on the ideas
    of others, and articulate their views and
    opinions constructively.

19
Collaborative Learning
  • Cooperative learning is the instructional use of
    small groups so that students work together to
    maximize their own and each other's learning.
  • A Few Collaborative Learning Techniques
  • Think-Pair-Share
  • Jigsaw
  • Four Corners
  • Graffiti
  • Round Table / Rally Table
  • The Doughnut / Inside Outside Circle

20
  • Think-Pair-Share
  • The teacher sets a problem or asks for a response
    to the reading.
  • The students think alone for a specified time.
  • The students form pairs to discuss the problem or
    give responses.
  • Some responses may be shared with the class.
  • Jigsaw
  • This activity is characterised by participants
    within a cooperative group each becoming an
    expert on different aspects of one topic of
    study.
  • SEE HANDOUT
  • Four Corners
  • SEE HANDOUT
  • Graffiti
  • SEE HANDOUT

21
  • Round Table/Rally Table
  • The teacher poses a question that has multiple
    answers.
  • The first student in each group writes one
    response on a paper and passes the paper
    counterclockwise to the next student.
  • Teams with the greatest number of correct answers
    gain some type of recognition.
  • The Doughnut / Inside Outside Circle
  • Students stand in 2 concentric circles facing
    each other.
  • Facing each other they take turns sharing
    information and ideas or ask each other
    questions.
  • At a given signal from the teacher, the outside
    circle moves a number of places clockwise.
  • Students now give feedback on what was said
    between themselves and their previous partner.
  • SEE HANDOUT

22
Critical Literacies
  • Critical literacy allows children to challenge
    text in the service of understanding, to become
    active participants, to ask the questions, to dig
    deeper for meaning, and to deconstruct texts.
  • Critical literacies give students the tools they
    need to think deeply about text and to take
    analytical stances.

WEBCAST Critical Literacy, November 29, 2007,
CSC
  • HANDOUTS
  • Key Concepts of CRITICAL LITERACY
  • Questions to Promote CRITICAL LITERACY
  • School Talk Negotiating Critical Literacies by
    Barbara Comber

23
Professional Learning Communities
  • WHAT IS A PLC?
  • a group of educators whose common goal is to
    improve student achievement
  • a structured teacher collaboration
  • a group of educators who use data for reflection
  • Components of a PLC include ensuring learning
    for ALL students, focus on results,
    relationships, collaborative inquiry, leadership,
    alignment

The LNS Capacity Building Series, PROFESSIONAL
LEARNING COMMUNITIES A MODEL FOR ONTARIO
SCHOOLS, October 2007 http//www.curriculum.org/se
cretariat/criticalpathways/files/TLCPProfessionalL
earningCommunities.pdf
24
Informing Teaching with Data
  • Data should be used to
  • inform classroom instruction
  • inform student placement decisions
  • inform program and policy decisions
  • meet accountability demands
  • Data should be reviewed and interpreted for the
    purpose of student achievement.
  • WHAT TYPES OF DATA DOES OUR BOARD COLLECT? WHAT
    TYPES OF DATA DO YOU COLLECT AT A SCHOOL LEVEL?
    WHAT DATA DO YOU COLLECT IN YOUR OWN CLASSROOM?

LNS What Works? Research into Practice Series,
USING DATA TO IMPROVE STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT, August
2008 http//www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/literacynumerac
y/inspire/research/Using_Data.pdf
25
Teaching Non-Fiction Writing
  • According to Fountas and Pinnell, the purpose of
    NON-FICTION writing is to inform or persuade,
    while the purpose of FICTION is to entertain and
    involve readers (or listeners) in stories of
    life. (Guiding Readers and Writers, Grades 3-6,
    2001, p.393)
  • NON-FICTION writing is also called informational
    writing.
  • NON-FICTION writing is the most widely read genre
    in the world.
  • Research has shown that exposure to NON-FICTION
    (textbooks, reports, biographies) has increased
    enthusiasm for recreational reading and is also
    associated with higher test scores in Reading and
    Mathematics. NON-FICTION writing helps students
    think systematically.

26
Non-Fiction Resources
The LNS Capacity Building Series, Non-Fiction
Writing for the Junior Student, March
2008 http//www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/literacynumerac
y/inspire/research/Non_Fiction_Writing.pdf
  • WEBCAST Non-Fiction Writing,
  • April 18, 2008, CSC

27
IN CLOSING . . .
  • It is your responsibility to REACH EVERY STUDENT.
  • Remember to keep your teaching student-centered.
    Involve them in the entire process the
    planning, the teaching and the assessment and
    evaluation. KEEPING THEM ENGAGED IS KEY!
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