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Effective Teaching Strategies Make a Difference

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Develop school capacity to support research-validated effective teaching ... Keep a perky pace. Connect with students. Add joy. Teach with enthusiasm ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Effective Teaching Strategies Make a Difference


1
Effective Teaching Strategies Make a Difference
  • Assistance
  • for
  • Quality Instruction
  • Frank D. Smith
  • frank_at_franksmithconsulting.com

2
GOALS OF THIS TRAINING
  • Build instructor knowledge of effective teaching
    research
  • Develop school capacity to support
    research-validated effective teaching practices
    and active engagement
  • Provide a model to maximize instruction that
    helps ensure success for all students

3
EFFECTIVE AND INEFFECTIVE APPROACHES FOR SHAPING
STUDENT BEHAVIORADAPTED FROM STRUCTURING YOUR
CLASSROOM FOR ACADEMIC SUCCESS
  • EFFECTIVE
  • Preventive
  • Whole Class
  • Analytical
  • Standardized
  • INEFFECTIVE
  • Reactionary
  • Individual
  • Emotional
  • Random

4
EFFECTIVE INSTRUCTION
  • DELIVERY OF INSTRUCTION
  • DESIGN OF LESSON
  • MANAGEMENT OF THE CLASSROOM

5
Delivery of InstructionAdapted from Anita Archer
  • Gain and maintain attention
  • Elicit responses active engagement
  • Monitor students responses
  • Provide corrective feedback
  • Stay on topic

6
HOW TO GAIN AND MAINTAIN ATTENTION
  • Cue or words to ask for attention
  • Start only when you have attention
  • Maintain close proximity
  • Keep a perky pace
  • Connect with students
  • Add joy
  • Teach with enthusiasm

7
OTHER WAYS TO MAINTAIN ATTENTION
  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7.

8
MONITOR STUDENTS RESPONSES
  • Walk around
  • Look around
  • Talk around
  • Trying to be the omnipresent teacher

9
BENEFITS OF CONSTANT MONITERING
  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7.

10
Arthur Costa 5 Teacher Frustrations
  • They blurt out the answers
  • They depend on the teacher for the answers
  • They give up quickly on difficult tasks
  • They dont apply their existing knowledge
  • They dont work well in groups

11
Some Interesting Facts
  • Students are not attentive to what is being said
    in a lecture 40 of the time.
  • Students retain 70 of the information in the
    first ten minutes of a lecture but only 20 in
    the last ten minutes.
  • Meyer Jones, 1993.

12
What is active learning?
  • Active learning involves providing opportunities
    for students to meaningfully talk and listen,
    write, read, and reflect on the content, ideas,
    issues and concerns of an academic subject.
  • Meyers Jones, 1993

13
Benefits of Active Engagement
14
Types Active Engagement
  • Group responses
  • Paired partner responses
  • Individual responses oral
  • Individual responses written
  • Physical responses
  • - Anita Archer

15
Group Response Advantages and Disadvantages
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages

16
Paired WorkAdvantages and Disadvantages
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages

17
Individual Oral ResponsesAdvantages and
Disadvantages
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages

18
Individual Written ResponsesAdvantages and
Disadvantages
  • Advantages
  • Disadvantages

19
Types of FeedbackHattie and Timperley (2007)
  • Task Level High Effect
  • Processing Level High Effect
  • Self-regulation High Effect
  • General personal Low Effect
  • Within these studies, the highest individual
    effect size was for students receiving feedback
    in special education settings.

20
Video Segment 1
  • Good Practices
  • Questions/Suggestions

21
DESIGN OF LESSON
  • INTRODUCTION
  • Student friendly statement of the objective
  • Connect to previous learning
  • Review or teach crucial background knowledge
  • BODY
  • I do it!
  • We do it!
  • You do it!
  • CONCLUSION
  • Assess
  • Practice for fluency
  • Generalize

22
LESSON OBJECTIVE
  • Stated clearly in student friendly language
  • Overt
  • Can be measured
  • Related directly/indirectly to Big Idea
  • Useful
  • Generalizes to new settings

23
REVIEW OR TEACH BACKGROUND KNOWLEDGE
  • Related to objective
  • Specific rather than general
  • Necessary to be successful in body
  • May build interest
  • Should not replace objective
  • Short as possible

24
BODY..THE HEART
  • MODEL I DO IT!
  • LEAD WE DO IT!
  • TEST YOU DO IT!
  • ADAPTED FROM ANITA ARCHER

25
MODEL
  • Tell them exactly what to dobe direct
  • Show them what you dotalk what you think
  • Gain Responsesengage the students

26
LEAD/PROMPT
  • Guides studentsscaffold
  • Can be done togetherprobably more than once
  • Must be faded

27
CHECK
  • Check for understanding
  • Can be group, paired or individual
  • Verifies understanding before independent work
  • Monitor for corrective feedback
  • Continue until students reach mastery

28
Whole Class DifferentiationorSmall
GroupDifferentiation
29
Whole Group Versus Small Group
  • Whole group components should focus on grade
    level skills and concepts
  • Small group instruction should focus on
    scaffolding skills and strategies that support
    the core instruction
  • Intervention should be provided for students 2 or
    more grade levels below instruction in an
    additional time segment

30
MANAGEMENT OF ...
  • Room arrangement
  • Attention - interactions
  • Student time
  • Classroom rules

31
HOW TO ARRANGE THE ROOM
  • All students facing teacher
  • All students see board/overhead
  • All students accessible to teacher
  • All parts of the room can be seen by teacher
  • All necessary materials are accessible

32
MANAGING YOUR ATTENTION
  • Give positive attention to what you want
  • Ignore what you dont want, when possible
  • Be present continually
  • Make eye contact
  • Move around the room regularly
  • Use all inclusive questioning

33
Basic Truths
  • Intelligence is not fixed
  • Intelligence can be improved
  • Dont praise for intelligence
  • Praise for effort
  • Carol S. Dweck, 2007

34
MANAGING STUDENTS TIME
  • Anticipate and remove distractions
  • Be prepared for lesson
  • Increase actual time
  • Increase academic learning time
  • Use instructional routines
  • Avoid the void! Anita Archer

35
WAYS TO INCREASE ACTUAL TIME
  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7.

36
Classroom rules should be..
  • Explicit
  • Simple
  • Observable
  • Practiced
  • Consistently applied
  • Reviewed
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