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Scaffolding Instruction: Gradually Releasing Responsibility

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Title: Scaffolding Instruction: Gradually Releasing Responsibility


1
Scaffolding InstructionGradually Releasing
Responsibility
Office of Literacy Dr. Audrey Cooper-Stanton,
Chief Officer Dr. Karen Boran, Manager Gertie
Brogsdale, Social Science Coordinator Lawanda
Funches, Mathematics Coordinator Carla Hunt,
Reading Coordinator Naeem Karriem, Science
Coordinator
Area Content Coaches Content Literacy PD,
December 8, 2004
2
Purpose of todays conversation
  • Extend our discussion of discipline specific
    content area literacy practices through the
    Literacy Instruction Handbook (Karen)
  • Examine how gradual release of responsibility can
    be modeled in the content areas using
    discipline-specific content area literacy methods
    (Office of Literacy Content Coordinators)

3
A recap of where weve been
  • Content Area Literacy, to date
  • Summer Institute (July-August)
  • Content Area Literacy and Standards-based
    Assessments (October)
  • The Role of Text in Content Area Literacy
    (November)
  • Literacy Instruction Handbook Scaffolding
    Comprehension -- Monitoring Comprehension
    (November)
  • and todaymore on Scaffolding Comprehension
    specifically, sequencing and supporting
    instruction

4
Scaffolding instruction
  • Teaching from School of Rock (Linklater, 2003)

5
What is scaffolding instruction?
  • Three perspectives
  • Gradual release of responsibility to learner in
    instruction design (today lesson level)
  • Supporting comprehension through coherent
    instruction (on-going intent of instruction and
    literacy SMART goals course level)
  • Supporting comprehension through careful unit
    design, implementation, and assessment (purpose
    of the course planning process district level)

6
The Gradual Release of Responsibility
  • Vygotsky (1978) believed that structured support
    for what a child was unable to do independently
    allowed that child to do the same task
    independently later.
  • This is the zone of proximal development The
    space between the child's level of independent
    performance and the child's level of maximally
    assisted performance (Vygotsky, 1978).

7
Gradual Release of Responsibility
  • This kind of teaching provides temporary support
    for tasks students would be unable to do
    independently.
  • Supports are removed when skills become
    internalized.
  • Teacher sets new mastery levels and creates new
    scaffolds, while student begins to internalize
    new skills.

8
Another way to look at this...
  • Teacher models, student observes.
  • Teacher models, student assists.
  • Student performs, teacher assists.
  • Student performs, teacher observes.
  • (According to Rodriguez as quoted by Rafael,
    2004)

9
SCAFFOLDING FOR INDEPENDENT STRATEGY ACQUISITION
AND APPLICATION
T e a c h e r R e s p o n s i b i l i t y
100

0
0

100
Student Responsibility
10
Some of the risks
  • If the support is removed too early, the child
    may have incomplete or incorrect understandings.
  • If the supports are left too long, the child will
    not be encouraged to move on to new learning.

11
Making the link
  • Why this discussion now?
  • Teachers structured release of responsibility
    empowers students to negotiate the gap between
    independent reading level and instructional
    reading level.
  • Discipline-specific knowledge about effective
    content literacy activities is necessary as
    teachers identify and sequence skills and
    concepts deemed necessary for students to
    demonstrate mastery.
  • Comprehension monitoring (our November PD) is a
    model of how that can look in an content lesson.

12
Steps in gradually releasing responsibility....
  • 1 Teacher selects appropriate Illinois
    Learning Standards, Standards for Transition
    (and, possibly, the Literacy SMART goal).
  • 2 Teacher builds assessment that requires
    students to demonstrate mastery of content
  • 3. Teacher examines assessment to determine
    what literacy skills are necessary for students
    to have internalized to demonstrate mastery of
    the content.
  • 4 Considers these questions What are the
    supports that some of the students need to do
    this? How should this be structured and
    sequenced?
  • 5 Unit is designed, lessons created.
    Instruction is implemented, using formative
    assessments to make on-going adjustments.

13
This is the same whether a teacher uses this
design.
Standards-Based Curriculum What do students need
to know and be able to do? What do students need
to learn?
Collect and Analyze Evidence of Student
Mastery Are the students learning? What have they
mastered? What do I need to reteach?
Identify and Plan Assessments How will I know if
students are learning? What will they need to do
to show mastery? What products will I collect?
Standards-Based Instruction What learning
activities must I provide to ensure that all
students show mastery?
14
Course Planning Process
Or this design
15
Continuing the conversation
  • Content Breakouts
  • Mathematics Lawanda Funches, Room 217
  • Science Naeem Karriem, Room 208
  • Social Science Harolyn McIntosh, Room 314
  • English Carla Hunt, Room 113a

16
The nature of the breakout sessions
  • Content based
  • Facilitator presents problem
  • Unit of study
  • Summative assessment provided
  • What literacy activities are embedded?
  • How do we scaffold that instruction within the
    unit so that gradual release of control is
    support and sequenced so that all students have
    opportunity to demonstrate mastery?
  • Coaches design plan of instruction

17
Connecting the dots
  • Content coordinator facilitates conversation
    about what coaching moves might be necessary to
    support this
  • In schools where this is happening?
  • In schools where this is not happening?

18
References
  • Bodrova, E., Leong, D. (1996). Scaffolding in
    the zone of proximal development. Of Primary
    Interest, 3(4). Available 11/29/04 at
    http//naecs.crc.uiuc.edu/opi-nl/volume3/number4.h
    tml
  • Linklater, R. (Director). (2003). School of Rock
    Motion picture. United States Paramount
    Pictures.
  • Vygotsky, L. (1978). Mind and society The
    development of higher mental function. Cambridge,
    MA Harvard University Press.
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