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Science and Social Studies Integration

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Title: Science and Social Studies Integration


1
Science and Social Studies Integration
Math
Science
Social Studies
Language Arts
Mia Johnson, Lora Drum
Curriculum
Specialists
2
Brainstorming Activity
  • Before, During, and After Reading
  • Highlight
    strategies you use
  • to
    teach reading in your classroom.

  • Circle strategies you use to

  • teach science and social studies.

3
What does the research say?
  • One position -- interdisciplinary curriculum --
    emphasizes connections between language arts and
    content area learning (e.g., Grisham, 1995
    Roehler, 1983) or problem-centered, thematic
    pursuits (e.g., Anders Pritchard, 1993 Powell
    Skoog, 1995).
  • From this perspective, language and literacy are
    "functional tools, rather than curricular
    entities to be studied or mastered in their own
    right" (Pearson, 1994, p. 19).
  • In these definitions, the curricular unit must be
    seen to involve more than one discipline or
    school subject.

This conception highlights the integration of
content by blending the disciplines through
"overlapping skills, concepts, and attitudes"
(Fogarty, 1991, p. 64).
4
  • Bristor's (1994) research provides an example
    of a study focusing on science and language arts
    integration. Motivated by efficiency and a desire
    to make content area literacy instruction more
    meaningful, the investigator designed a program
    drawing on literacy research to build students'
    background knowledge prior to reading content
    texts. Relevant language arts curriculum
    objectives from district guidelines were linked
    to science activities. Bristor drew on literature
    with science content from trade books and the
    basal reading program, and engaged students in
    dramatic play related to science themes. Based on
    results from subtests of standardized tests, the
    researcher reported gains in achievement in both
    reading and science for students in the
    integrated program as compared to those following
    traditional distinct curricula in the two areas.
    Further, on a six-scale inventory of affect,
    students in the integrated program showed more
    positive attitudes and greater self-confidence
    than comparable students in the separate
    curricula.

A little more research
5
Why Integrate?
Most classrooms emphasize recall of specific
information and rely heavily on round-robin
reading, which has been proven to be
ineffective. - Laura Robb, Teaching Reading in
Social Studies, Science and Math, 2003
6
So, whats a SS or Science teacher to do?
Lets talk about the Do NOTs
first The following models of instruction have
no research to support their effectiveness
assign chapters to read
silently round robin
read aloud text
answer questions at the end of
the chapter
deliver a lecture and students
copy or take notes
show a video without an activity

7
Okay, so whats most effective?
  • Research shows that effective teachers
    intersperse questions throughout all classroom
    activities
  • (Something to think about No doctor

  • asks questions after the patient has

  • passed! Doctors ask questions

  • during the treatment of the patient!)
  • Hint Does this
    sound like formative assessment?

8
So, Tell me more
  • Students focused on educational goals do best in
    mastering the subject matter.
  • Students working in small groups can support and
    increase one anothers learning
  • Extensive reading promotes increased vocabulary
    and comprehension.
  • Increasing wait time to 3-5 seconds after asking
    a question increases more thoughtful responses
    and increased achievement.
  • - The First Days of School by Harry K. Wong
    Rosemary T. Wong (2001)

9
Traditional Format
New Format
Prereading activities Activating Prior Knowledge
Discussion Predictions
Questioning Brainstorming
Setting purpose
Reading assignment given
ACTIVE reading
Silent or Round Robin reading
Activities to clarify, reinforce,
extend knowledge
Discussion/Activity to see if students learned
main concepts, what they should have learned
10
  • The boys arrows were nearly gone so they sat
    down on the grass and stopped hunting. Over at
    the edge of the wood they saw Henry making a bow
    to a small girl who was coming down the road.
    She had tears in her dress and tears in her eyes.
    She gave Henry a note which he brought over to
    the group of young hunters. Read to the boys it
    caused great excitement. After a minute, but
    rapid examination of their weapons, they ran down
    to the valley. Does were standing at the edge of
    the lake, making an excellent target.

What strategies did you use to read successfully?
Syntax, context, background knowledge, rereading,
vocabulary building
11
Before Reading
Set a purpose Activate prior
knowledge Preview the reading Introduce
important vocabulary
12
How to Activate Prior Knowledge
Before
  • K-W-L
  • Predictions
  • Concept Map
  • Preteach Vocabulary

13
Prior Knowledge
Before
  • The questions that p______ face as they raise
    ch_____ from in______ to adult life are not easy
    to an_____. Both fa____ and m_____ can become
    concerned when health problems such as co____
    arise any time after the e_____ stage to later in
    life. Experts recommend that young ch______
    should have plenty of s____ and nutritious food
    for healthy growth. B_____ and g_____ should not
    share the same b____ or even sleep in the same
    r____. They may be afraid of the d______.

Billmeyer, Rachel and Mary Lee Barton. Teaching
Reading in the Content Areas If Not Me, Than
Who? Aurora McREL (Mid-continent Regional
Education Laboratory),1998
14
A word is not a crystal, transparent and
unchanged it is the skin of living thought and
may vary greatly in color and content according
to the circumstances and time in which it is
used. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
Before
5-10 words a week cumulative
In content areas 3T words can become 2T words
15
VOCABULARY STRATEGIES
Before
  • WORD PARTS
  • Morphemic Analysis
  • WORD ASSOCIATIONS
  • Illustrate Associate
  • CATEGORIZATION
  • Semantic Features Map
  • CONTEXT
  • Read Alouds Questioning
  • CONCEPT
  • Frayer Model
  • Concept Definition Map

16
Reading with a Purpose
Before
  • Fundamental purposes for reading to learn
  • To grasp a certain message
  • To find important details
  • To answer a specific question
  • To evaluate what you are reading
  • To apply what you are reading
  • To be entertained

Activity Look at the reading materials and
decide how you would set the purpose for
students.
Authors Purpose
17
During
Make connections Graphic Organizers Check your
understanding Get the Gist Reciprocal
Teaching Partner Reading Use fix up strategies
What am I doing to make meaning while I
read? What did I just read? What will I learn
next?
18
AFTER THE READING
  • Check for understanding decide if the purpose
    was met
  • Draw conclusion/evaluate information
  • Apply learning
  • What did I just learn?
  • What were the main ideas?
  • What do I need to do with this information?

19
What could this look like in my classroom?
20
Tea Party
  • This is an interactive pre-reading strategy
    that frontloads students knowledge of text
    information and also allows them to
  • become
    familiar with
  • phrasing and
    content
  • words. The
    strategy
  • can be used
    with both
  • narrative and
  • expository
    texts.

21
Anticipation/Reaction Guide
  • This strategy is used to activate
    background
  • knowledge before reading or doing and
  • activity, stimulate interest and
    discussion
  • during
    reading, compare
  • before an
    after decisions,
  • reverse
    misconceptions,
  • and assess
    students
  • application of
    new
  • knowledge
    and/or skills.

AG in Action
22
List-Sort-Label
  • This is a form of semantic mapping. This strategy
    encourages students to improve vocabulary and
    categorization skills as well as organize
    concepts. Categorizing listed words, through
    sorting/grouping and
  • labeling, helps
    students
  • organize new
    concepts
  • in relation to
    previously learned concepts.

List Group Label in Action
23
Science and Social Studies!

  • Science Article
  • Is this something
  • you think you could
  • do in your class-
    room?

24
More activities to share
  • The National Science Teachers Association
    supports the
  • notion that inquiry science must be a basic in
    the daily
  • curriculum of every elementary school student at
    every
  • grade level. In the last decade, numerous reports
    have
  • been published calling for reform in education.
    Each report has highlighted the importance
  • of
    early experiences in science
  • so
    that students develop

  • problem-solving skills that

  • empower them to

  • participate in an increasingly

  • scientific and technological

  • world.

25
  • Elementary school students learn science best
    when
  • instruction builds directly on the student's
    conceptual framework.
  • content is organized on the basis of broad
    conceptual themes common to all science
    disciplines.
  • mathematics and communication skills are an
    integral part of science instruction.
  • http//www.aimsedu.org/Activities/

26

Kidspiration/Inspiration
PowerPoint Photostory
Glogster!
Voice Threads
Live BindersWriting
Interactive Notebooks
Science Notebooking SS
Scrapbooking/Lapbooking
  • How can I integrate technology, literacy, science
    and social studies?

27
Text Features!
Is this the missing piece?
28
Text Feature Instruction
  • Science and SS are the perfect areas to address
    text features and text structures

Examples of Text Features With
Definitions Explanations for How Text Features
Help Readers
Text Features Help Students Understand
Nonfiction Text
29
Text Features
  • Title
  • Table of Contents
  • Photographs
  • Drawings
  • Lists
  • Descriptions
  • Directions
  • Headings
  • Captions near pictures
  • Labels on pictures
  • Different kinds of print (bold, italic, etc.)
  • Drawings that compare things
  • Diagrams
  • Cross-section drawings/cut aways
  • Glossary
  • Index
  • Questions/answers
  • Charts
  • Maps
  • Graphs
  • Bullets
  • Information about the authors research
  • Other

30
Teaching Text Features
  • Model, Model, Model
  • Shared/Guided Reading, Interactive/Shared writing
  • Text Feature Scavenger Hunt
  • Students search through informational text with a
    partner
  • looking for as many features as they can find.
    They record
  • the feature and its purpose.
  • Investigations
  • Synthesize learning and use informational text
    features to teach the craft writing expository
    text.

31
Lets take a look at some text featuresWhat do
you notice?
32
Text Features BB in 1st grade classroom
33
Text Feature Search-Partner Activity
  • Using the list of Text Features in the table
    folder and a non-fiction text- identify 5 text
    features from the list and put a sticky note on
    the page with an explanation of how this feature
    helps the reader understand the information better

Your turn!
countdown timer
34
Text Structures
  • Description
  • Sequence
  • Compare and Contrast
  • Cause and Effect
  • Problem and Solution

35
Text Structure Foldable

36
Text Structure Foldable
  • Label outside tabs Inside
    tabs
  • Description jot down key
    words
  • Sequence to help identify
    type of
  • Compare Contrast text structure
  • Cause Effect draw any visuals
    for
  • Problem Solution clues

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Why teach Text Structures?
  • Understanding the expository text
    structures gives readers a better shot at
    determining important information when reading
    nonfiction The text in standardized tests and
    traditional textbooks frequently falls into one
    or another of these text structures. If students
    know that to look for in terms of text structure,
    they grasp the meaning more easily.
  • - Nonfiction Matters, by Stephanie Harvey

45
Research on Informational Text
  • In a set of studies about teaching reading
    with information texts in first grades, Nell Duke
    (2000) described experiences offered to children
    in 20 first-grade classrooms selected from very
    low and very high socio-economic-status school
    districts. She found a scarcity of informational
    texts in these classrooms (particularly the low
    socio-economic status schools). There were
    relatively few informational texts included in
    classroom libraries and on classroom walls and
    other surfaces. The most startling finding was
    children in low socioeconomic classrooms had
    access to and read in information trade books
    about 3.6 minutes per day on average.
  • Duke, N. K. (2000). For the rich its richer
    print experiences and environments offered to
  • children in very low- and very high-socioeconomic
    status first-grade classrooms. American
  • Educational Research Journal, 37, 441-478.
  • Duke, N. K. (2000). 3.6 minutes per day The
    scarcity of informational texts in first grade.
  • Reading Research Quarterly, 35(2), 202-224.

46
Science Frames
Start with how things are same or similar. Then
add more as needed.
The ____ and the ___ are the same because they
both______. In addition, they______________.

They are different because the ___________________
_, but the ____________________. Also,
the____________________ but ______________________
Explain how they are different. You can compare
the same property or characteristic in the same
sentence.
Betsy Rupp Fulwiler, K-5 inquiry Based Science
47
Lets look at a few Text Structure Examples
  • Sequence
  • Goose bumps make me shiver. First I get cold.
    Then I shake all over.
  • Description
  • Goose bumps make me shiver. I get little bumps
    on my skin. They look like sesame seeds.
  • Compare and Contrast
  • Some people get goose bumps from fear. Others
    get goose bumps when they are cold.
  • Cause and Effect
  • Goose bumps make me shiver. When the temperature
    drops below 45 degrees , my skin crinkles into
    goose bumps.
  • Problem and Solution
  • Goose bumps make me shiver. But they disappear
    as soon as I cover up with a jacket or blanket.

48
Lets give it a try
Working with a partner, you will use the
following basic sentence and develop text
structure example sentences similar to the ones
we just reviewed on the previous slide.
Your turn!
The first day of school is always an interesting
day.
  • Sequence
  • Description
  • Compare and Contrast
  • Cause and Effect
  • Problem and Solution

Online Timer
49
Strategy Groups
  • In your group folder, find an activity titled
    Teaching Reading in a Content Area (small group
    activity)
  • Your group will need a piece of chart paper and
    markers
  • Lets take a look at your assignment.

Online Stopwatch
50
Now it is your turn to add the last piece
51
Thanks for coming today and enjoy your summer!
Please email us with any questions or
comments Lora Drum Mia Johnson
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