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Building Background Knowledge for Academic Achievement

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Title: Building Background Knowledge for Academic Achievement


1
Building Background Knowledge for Academic
Achievement
  • Sioux Falls School District

2
Introduction
  • Knowing strong academic background knowledge
    impacts students academic achievement in school.
    We must use the most effective strategies to
    create indirect experiences to build student
    background knowledge.

3
How does building background knowledge fit with
what we are already doing?
  • The processes involved in Marzanos Building
    Background Knowledge are aligned with Value
    Added.
  • The Sheltered Instruction model being used by ELL
    supports the instructional process in Building
    Background Knowledge.
  • Key vocabulary emphasized
  • Student journals
  • Word study books
  • Contextualizing vocabulary

4
Food for Thought
  • What does the research say?
  • How do we build background knowledge for our
    students?
  • The power of wide reading and language
    experience.
  • Direct vocabulary instruction.
  • Defining an academic vocabulary.

5
Overview
  • In order to bridge the gap for our students we
    must provide them with indirect experiences that
    build their academic background knowledge.

6
The Importance of Background Knowledge
  • What students already know about the content is
    one of the strongest indicators of how well they
    well learn new information relative to the
    content.
  • Academic background knowledge affects more than
    just school learning.
  • Studies have also shown its relation to
    occupation and status in life.

7
Knowledge is Power
  • A students academic background knowledge has
    impact on the rest of their lives
  • Success in school has strong bearing on their
    earning potential.

8
How we acquire background knowledge
  • Our ability to process and store information
  • Fluid intelligence
  • The number and frequency of our academically
    oriented experiences

9
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10
The Consequences of Poverty
  • Findings in Figure 1.4 characterize the
    relationship between poverty an academic success
    after controlling for ethnicity, family
    structure, and mothers education.

11
The Consequences of Poverty
  • Findings in Figure 1.4 characterize the
    relationship between poverty an academic success
    after controlling for ethnicity, family
    structure, and mothers education.

12
Schools can Make a Difference
  • Direct approaches to Enhancing academic
    Background Knowledge
  • Provide enriching experiences
  • Establishing mentoring relationships
  • Indirect Approaches A Viable Answer

13
Six Principals for Building an Indirect Approach
14
1. Background Knowledge is stored in bimodal
packets in the episodic memory
  • Glossary of terms
  • Episodic memoryspecific learning episodes
  • Semantic memorygeneral understandings over time
  • Bimodal memory packets
  • Linguistic-logogen episodic semantic
    propositional networks (The smallest unit of
    knowledge that can stand as a separate
    assertion.)
  • Nonlinguistic-imagensnonlinguistic
    representations that accompany the propositional
    networks)

15
Propositional networks depicting a specific event
16
Information moves from propositional to
de-contextualized propositional
17
2. The Process of Storing Experiences in
Permanent Memory Can Be Enhanced
  • First we must understand the three functions of
    our memory

18
Three Functions of Memory
19
3. Background Knowledge is Multidimensional and
Its Value Is contextual
  • No general set of background knowledge helps us
    learn in every situation.
  • Little or no carry over between subjects
  • Common core some carry over
  • Enhancement of Academic background knowledge must
    be done subject by subject.

20
4. Even Surface level Background Knowledge Is
Useful
  • When we retrieve a packet of information for use
    in working memory, we initially access its
    surface-level characteristics only.
  • Knowledge of a given topic is organized in a
    hierarchy.
  • Top level knowledge - specific facts
  • The next level more general characteristics
  • The next level even more general characteristic
    associated with the broadest category the word
    would fit

21
5. Background Knowledge Manifests Itself as
Vocabulary Knowledge
  • Hard facts to support this statement
  • Research indicates that vocabulary knowledge is
    highly correlated with family income
  • Estimated 4,700 word difference between High and
    low socioeconomic students (SES)
  • Mid-SES 1st graders know 50 more words than
    Low-SES
  • High SES 1st graders know twice the words of
    Low-SES

22
What does this mean for out ELL students?
  • Children from culturally and linguistically
    diverse backgrounds may struggle to comprehend a
    text or concept presented in class because their
    schema do not match those of the culture for
    which the text is written or because they do not
    understand the academic vocabulary written in
    English.
  • Teachers must also be aware of the level of
    vocabulary knowledge students, especially at
    secondary levels, nee in order to be successful
    in content classes. Both Sheltered Instruction
    and Marzanos Building Background Knowledge
    emphasizes the need to practice key terms that
    will strengthen students vocabulary knowledge.

23
6. Virtual experiences Can Enhance Background
Knowledge
  • Virtual Experience
  • Information must move from the sensory memory to
    the working memory
  • (Remember the camping example of how the
    information moved from the episodic memory to the
    semantic memory. This is a necessary step in
    solidify the learning process.)

24
The continuous learning process
25
Reflect
  • How effective do you feel you are at planning and
    using strategies that support what we know about
    the brain and how it learns?
  • What teaching strategies support our brains
    process of storing information in both linguistic
    and nonlinguistic memory packets?
  • What components of your last years Value Added
    training utilizes this brain research?

26
Reading is a Form of Virtual Experience
  • In the working memory the virtual experience is
    for all practical purposes the same as the direct
    experience.
  • Although it is cliché, it is accurate think of
    reading as a magic carpet to new places and
    experiences
  • Reading provides the promise of every students
    having a rich array of virtual experiences

27
Sustained Silent Reading (SSR) supports the
positive impact reading can have on background
knowledge.
28
Language Interactions as a Form of Virtual
Experience
  • The more students talk and listen to others, the
    more virtual experiences are generated
  • Hart and Risleys research indicates
  • By the time children in welfare homes are 1 year
    only they have only about 50 of the language
    experience of children from working-class
    families and only 30 of the language experience
    of children from professional families.

29
Educational Television as a Form of Virtual
Experience
  • Research indicates
  • Watching general television programs little
    impact on the development of background knowledge
  • Watching educational television significantly
    enhanced the development of such knowledge.

30
Tapping the Power of Wide Reading and Language
Experience
  • Sustained Silent Reading (SSR)
  • To be effective the SSR program must have
    specific characteristics and must be continuous
    over many years
  • If done only a year or two the gains might by
    evident initially but will fade when the program
    ceases

31
More information to support wide reading
  • Research has shown that past the 4th grade, the
    number of words a person knows depends primarily
    on how much time they spend reading (Hayes
    Ahrens, 1988 Nagy Anderson, 1984 Nagy
    Herman, 1987 Stanovich, 1986)
  • Adults that make a habit of reading have a
    vocabulary that is about four times the size of
    those who rarely or never read.

32
Recommended Modified SSR
  • Eight Factors needed
  • Access (to wide selection of informational
    reading)
  • Appeal ( books with topics of interest to
    students)
  • Conducive environment (comfortable surroundings)
  • Encouragement (explicit praise)
  • Staff training ( consistent implementation using
    effective strategies)
  • Non-accountability (student choice and interest
    driven not teacher assigned)
  • Follow-up activities (cooperative
    grouping/relationship building)
  • Distributed time to read (non fiction)

33
A Five Step Process
34
Step One Students Identify Topic of Interest to
Them
  • I-Search helps with the process
  • Students gather information about a topic of
    interest, synthesize and organize the information
    and use it to complete a written response or
    project of some sort
  • Personal Read and Reflect Time (PRRT)
  • Students may change their topic at any time

35
Step Two Students Identify Reading Material
  • Students use the classroom library and the school
    library to begin choosing material from which to
    read and I-search their topic
  • ModelGuided selection and large group activity
    to begin the process

36
Step Three Students are Provided Uninterrupted
Time to Read
  • Teachers and students should have 20 to 30 minute
    sessions, twice a week for SSR /Personal Read and
    Reflect Time (PRRT)
  • Schedules can be building-wide, grade-by-grade,
    or class-by-class
  • Put class rules in place that all must follow
  • Consider best placement of SSR/PRRT during the
    school day

37
Step Four Students Write about or Represent
Information in Their Notebooks
  • Use of Academic Notebook (two sections-PRRT and
    vocabulary)
  • Responses to reading must be recorded in the
    notebook
  • Free responsesopen ended responses, expressive
    writing (linguistic and non-linguistic responses)
  • Structured responsesguided questions to promote
    moving knowledge to permanent memory

38
Step Five Students Interact with the Information
  • Student interaction doesnt just happenteacher
    serves as helper
  • Group activities must have explicit structure and
    purpose
  • Demonstrate interaction activities- taking turns
    speaking, listening and questioning
  • Organize into groups of three to five
  • Students share topic and one thing that they have
    learned about their topic
  • Not all students must share each time

39
Reflect on the SSR/PRRT process
  • What steps of this process are you already doing
    in your school day? What steps do you need to
    change in your instruction?
  • How do the steps of this process capitalize on
    what we know about how the brain learns best?
  • Which steps are in the process are value added
    components?
  • What would you have to do to fully implement this
    process?

40
Building Academic Background Through Direct
Vocabulary Instruction
  • The Case for Direct Vocabulary Instruction
  • Three Generalizations
  • Estimates of vocabulary size vary considerably
  • Wide reading may not enhance vocabulary as much
    as once thought
  • Direct vocabulary instruction

41
Characteristics of Effective Direct Vocabulary
Instruction
42
Characteristic 1 Effective vocabulary
instruction does not rely on definitions
  • When people first learn words, they understand
    them more as descriptions of words as opposed to
    definitions.

43
Characteristic 2 Students must represent their
knowledge of words in both linguistic and
nonlinguistic ways.
  • For information to be anchored in permanent
    memory, it must have linguistic (language based)
    and nonlinguistic (imagery based) representations

44
Characteristic 3 Effective vocabulary
instruction involves the gradual shaping of word
meanings through multiple exposures
  • To understand words at a deeper level, students
    require repeated and varied exposure to words,
    during which they revise their initial
    understandings.

45
Characteristic 4 Teaching Word Parts Enhances
students Understanding of Terms
46
Characteristic 5 Different types of Words
Require Different Types of Instruction
  • Nouns
  • General
  • Specific
  • Verbs
  • General
  • Specific

47
Characteristic 6 Students should discuss the
terms they are learning
  • Discussion helps students encode information in
    their own words, helps them view things from
    different perspectives, and allows for
    self-expression

48
Characteristic 7 Students Should Play with Words
  • Games
  • Present manageable challenges for students
  • Arouse curiosity
  • Involve some degree of fantasy arousal

49
Characteristic 8 Instruction Should focus on
Terms that have a High Probability of enhancing
academic success.
  • Beck and Mckeown (1985) suggest that vocabulary
    be thought of in three tiers
  • Tier 1-most basic words
  • Tier 2-appear infrequently enough in reading that
    there is little chance of learning them in
    context
  • Tier 3- words specific to subject areas

50
Six Steps to Effective Vocabulary Instruction
  • Applying the Eight Characteristics of effective
    vocabulary instruction in a program to enhance
    background knowledge.

51
Step 1 The Teacher Provides a Description,
Explanation, or Example of the New Term
52
Step 2 Students Restate the Explanation of the
New Term in Their Own Words
  • Students construct their own explanations based
    on what the teacher has presented and write them
    in their academic notebooks, which are divided
    into subject areas.

53
Step 3 Students Create Nonlinguistic
Representation
54
Examples of nonlinguistic representations
  • Graphic organizers (Kidspiration)
  • Drawings
  • Photographs
  • Pictographs
  • Students can also be encouraged to create
  • mental pictures and act out meanings of new
  • words.

55
Step 4 Students Periodically Do Activities That
help Them Add to Their Knowledge of Vocabulary
Terms
56
Possible Activities
  • Comparing terms
  • Classifying terms
  • Generating Metaphors using terms
  • Generating Analogies using terms
  • Revising initial descriptions or nonlinguistic
    representations of terms
  • Using understandings of roots and affixes to
    deepen knowledge of terms

57
Step 5 Periodically the Students are asked to
Discuss the Terms with One Another
58
Ideas for student discussion
  • Organize students into small groups asking them
    to discuss terms in the vocabulary section of the
    academic notebook.
  • Prompts for discussion could include
  • terms interesting to students
  • questions about specific terms
  • identify terms with multiple meanings
  • favorite terms
  • terms that were difficult to learn and why

59
Step 6 Periodically Students Are Involved in
Games That Allow Them to Play with the Terms
60
Fun with Words
  • Charades
  • Pictionary
  • Gestures
  • Taboo
  • Hangman
  • Great web site for classroom games
    http//www.teachersdesk.org/spell_plans.html

61
Reflect on the Vocabulary development process
  • How is it different from traditional vocabulary
    instruction?
  • Which steps are in the process are value added
    components?
  • What parts of this are you already doing in your
    school day?
  • What would you have to do to fully implement this
    process?

62
As we look to utilizing this research, it is
imperative that we follow the guidelines and
maintain both the integrity of the program and
focus on building academic background knowledge.
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