Thursday, June 27, 2013
I-Search Paper-Revisions
I revised my paper by adding a more attention grabbing introduction. I made the reader want to learn more about my quest to understand my topic of boys and literacy. I went back and checked over my interview summary to make sure it was concise enough. I also checked to make sure each section transitioned well from one to the next. I then looked over my conclusion and it seemed like I didn't need to change it in looking at my first draft. Overall, I think I learned a lot about my topic after this assignment.
Learning Blog 8
I
really enjoyed Ch.11 in our book Reading to Learn in the Content Areas.
This chapter is perfect and very important. As a future elementary school
teacher, I know that all students are unique and can often struggle with academic
courses, especially reading and writing. This chapter provides teachers with
strategies to use to support those diverse learners in all content areas in classrooms
and schools.
As educators we often define diverse learners as those who might be at risk for academic failure and who need special understanding and attention. In every classroom, teachers find students who are diverse in many different ways. As educators we cannot treat all students the same because, they are all uniquely different and learn differently as well. I was very excited when the authors indicated that all content teachers, not just special education teachers, must practice equity pedagogy. This means striving to educate all students and not treating or instructing each individual the same way-but rather with respect to their different diverse needs.
I
really enjoyed this chapter because the area of special education is of great
interest to me even though I am getting my license in Elementary Education. As
a first year teacher I could be put into an inclusion classroom so I want to
understand what that is like. Also I am later on considering getting my masters
in special education. I know a little about IDEA and differentiated instruction
and they are important to the success of us as teachers meeting the diverse
needs of our students. Also I learned more about RTI, or Response to
Intervention, than I previously knew and definitely see it as a very useful
tool. The RTI model is used as an alternative approach to determine the eligibility
for special education and related services. This approach can be used on all
students to determine where their strengths and weakness are.
At
risk students are in danger of dropping out of school because of low
achievement, because of educational disadvantages, low socioeconomic status, or
underachievement. There are also many other reasons for underachievement such
as poverty, low self-esteem, and poor school attendance. Teachers might see to these students as the “lazy”
or “hard to teach.” But it could be a product of learned helplessness; in that they
have failed so many times that they believe they cannot do it. It is also very important for educators to be patient with these students. Educators need
to be positive and caring enough to realize that change for the students takes
time both academically and emotionally. It is important for educator to understand
that not all students are able to be resilient to the long term and short term
challenges they face. Teachers need to encourage resilience in their students
by fostering positive communication and encouraging them that you will be with
them every step of the way.
Students
from low-socioeconomic status, low self-esteem, ESL students, and ELL students may
need more encouragement and assistance in the classroom. But ultimately
what the need the most is, a teacher who is patient in working them, positively
encouraging them to do their best, and reassuring them that you will be with
them every step of the way. These students often struggle with reading the most
and as a result, they will try to avoid reading at all costs. As a future
teacher I want to help change their attitudes toward reading and help develop a
desire and joy for learning and reading that they can enjoy forever. The
chapter gave some great strategies I can use to help my students like differentiation
for struggling learners or the PLEASE strategy. The chapter also gave some
great strategies for struggling readers like concept formation study guides, beginner-oriented
texts, and interactive notebooks.
As a future teacher doing all I can to help
all my students succeed will require extra effort, patience, time, require the
use of many different strategies, but in the end all my students deserve the
best education possible if they are to develop a desire and joy for learning
and can feel safe in my classroom because they will know that I will be with
them every step of the way.
What are some of the cultural and economic issues that students have to deal with? The military has a huge impact on the drop-out rate of students. Resources are another key factor as well as lack parental involvement. No Child Left Behind has significantly impacted the drop-out rate in schools. Support systems are also very important. As teachers we need to need to take all these factors into account in trying to help our students.
In terms of resources talk to local businesses about donation resources like time funds toward resources. In terms of parental involvement offer parents to come in volunteer in your classrooms and establish a connection with parents of your students so they can be involved with their child's education as much as possible,
What are some of the cultural and economic issues that students have to deal with? The military has a huge impact on the drop-out rate of students. Resources are another key factor as well as lack parental involvement. No Child Left Behind has significantly impacted the drop-out rate in schools. Support systems are also very important. As teachers we need to need to take all these factors into account in trying to help our students.
In terms of resources talk to local businesses about donation resources like time funds toward resources. In terms of parental involvement offer parents to come in volunteer in your classrooms and establish a connection with parents of your students so they can be involved with their child's education as much as possible,
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Learning Blog 7
I
really enjoyed reading Chapter 8 in our book, Reading to Learn in the
Content Areas, and how it talked about writing to learn in the different
content areas. The quote at the beginning of the chapter “To read is to
empower, to empower is to write, to write is to influence, to influence is to
change, to change is to live", by Jane Evershed, really made me see the
impact writing to learn can have on my students.
Writing
is one of the most complex communication processes. It’s easy to express
yourself verbally because people can see your body language and gestures but
it’s another thing entirely express yourself in written form using careful word
choice and organization in order for the reader to comprehend. It requires the
students to understand thinking in abstract terms, synthesize information
coherently, and their ability and skill to apply other abstract skills. Writing
truly complements to reading, if it allows the students to clarify and think
critically about what they encounter in reading, and because of this it should
be included in all content areas Writing is a process. It’s a process that
includes: drafts, grammar, spelling, revisions, formatting, etc. In writing especially I think rubric are
important because they allow for students to write for a purpose and know
exactly what is expected of them for each assignment.
I
think computers and technology can not only keep the students engaged and spark
their interest but, they can be a very helpful tool in the writing process. With
computers and technology students are able to write drafts quickly, revise them
easily, and save anything they have written. It also makes things easier for
the teacher because they are better able to look at students drafts early to
see if they are going in the right direction with the assignment as opposed to
paper and pencil drafts.
Writing
fits right into every stage of the P.A.R. Lesson Framework and this chapter has
some really good writing strategies for each stage of PAR. Some strategies to
use in the Preparation phase are Cubing and Brain writing. Those in the
Assistance phase include: Learning logs and poetry/bio poem. Those in the Reflection
phase include: Guided reading procedure and GIST strategy.
Writing
and reading go hand in hand with each other and depend on each other. They are
both just as important. Reading to learn is just as important as writing to
learn. The author says in trying to explain writing to learn, it is a “catalyst
for further learning and meaning making” (214). It is a complex process that
you can discover a lot about the world around us and the same for our students.
The book states “When writing is viewed as way of discovering rather than as
merely an avenue for testing knowledge, learning is the result” (214). As a
future teacher I want my students to investigate, explore, and discover all
they can about themselves and the world around them through reading and
writing.
Overall
this was a great chapter and I learned a lot of different strategies that into
every stage of the P.A.R. Lesson Framework that I could definitely use in my
future classroom. I also learned a lot about how complex writing can be and as
a future teacher I want my students to become great writers and develop the
desire writing just as much reading. I want them to see the impact that writing
has on their daily lives and the world around them and in all the different
content areas. One of my favorite quotes from the book sums it up best “Writing
is a skill, an art, and a tool that can be effectively used for learning in all
content areas” (251).
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Practice Quiz 9 Questions
Questions
1) True or False: Previewing activates schema, establishes purposes for reading, engages students in asking questions about text headings, and directs them to important information.
2) Which of the these study strategies would you use in the assistance phase?
A. Previewing
B.Interpreting Graphic Aids
C. Mnemonics
D. Songs and Raps
1) True or False: Previewing activates schema, establishes purposes for reading, engages students in asking questions about text headings, and directs them to important information.
2) Which of the these study strategies would you use in the assistance phase?
A. Previewing
B.Interpreting Graphic Aids
C. Mnemonics
D. Songs and Raps
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Learning Blog 6
I
really enjoyed and learned a lot from Chapter 6 in our book, Reading to
Learn in the Content Areas, and how the authors discussed incorporating
other types of resources into the classroom instead of or in addition to the
traditional textbooks used in schools now. I was really excited that the
authors saw this as an important topic to be included in this book, which is
mainly geared toward future teachers, because I feel strongly that as future
teachers we need to diversify our resources in the classroom and incorporate
diverse text forms as much as possible. The chapter discussed different
multi-modal methods that can be used in the classrooms today. It showed the
reader the importance of the use of technology in their classrooms to challenge
students to become educated citizens in the 21st century. The
learning blogs we do for this class is a great example of this. As students we
are engaged in the realm of technology that will give us as future teachers, a
knowledge of and desire to integrate it into our curriculum as much as possible to help our future students succeed in the 21st century.
I
liked how the chapter talks about why textbooks cannot stand alone. All
textbooks have limitations. The strength of a textbook can provide one source
of great information and over viewing of information of topics, but the
inability to provide the depth of information on a topic or concept that is
truly needed in terms of reading comprehension.
It is hard to draw a line when it comes to textbooks because educators
say they do not go in depth enough, but complain that they can sometimes be too
long or too difficult for the students to use.
If used as an overview source and supplemented with quality outside
sources textbooks can be a great asset. A
great way to supplement text books is through the use of trade books, or books
that are considered to be in general use that the students can get from a
library or book store. They are useful when students are starting to
write research papers, or reading stories on certain topics and subjects,
because textbooks only give an overview of different topics.
I
really liked the Literature circles strategy mentioned in the chapter. The
literature circles are highly interactive, which I think is one of the best ways
for students to learn, and are appropriate for a wide range of topics and
concepts. As a future teacher I could definitely see myself using this in my
future classroom along with some of the other strategies mentioned in the
chapter.
Overall
I liked this chapter because it was a very student-centered chapter. It
encouraged me as future teacher to step outside my comfort zone the same as I
would ask my students to as they read, spend time looking into the textbooks
and clarify any problems that my student are having with any part of it, and
encourage my students to be critical learners of what and how they read no matter
what the content area was. It also has made me more aware of the importance of
going beyond the textbook and traditional instruction models in the classroom and
made me aware of how textbooks can no longer stand alone and need to be supplemented with
additional resources and text.
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Stop at Incidental Vocabulary 170-176
“A strong vocabulary equips students to
actively participate in society as educated citizens and informed consumers”
(169).
“Word knowledge is not static, but rather dynamic—changing and growing over time as a learner experiences, hears, and reads a word in a variety of places and circumstances” (170).
Content-specific vocabulary relates to terms that are critical, yet specific, to a particular discipline or unit of study.
Academic vocabulary encompasses a set of terms often found among expository texts and formal presentations or speeches but which is not unique to any con ten or academic discipline.
The 5 Facets of Word Knowledge
Polysemy: multiple meanings associated with a word
Multidimentionality: many different types of knowledge to be learned abut a word
Interrelatedness: connections are made between or among words
Heterogeneity: word type, purpose, and prior knowledge influence word knowledge required
7 Tasks and Considerations
Learning to read known words
Learning new words representing known concepts
Learning new words representing new concepts
Learning new meanings for known words
Clarifying and enriching the meanings of known words
Moving words into students' expressive vocabularies
Preventing Vocabulary and School Failure
Teaching vocabulary through rote exercises that require dictionary definitions of extensive numbers of technical and specialized terms is a recipe for failure. True knowledge is applied knowledge. Unlike the "definition only" method of learning vocabulary, the teacher should start with concrete experiences in order to instill concepts and words. Full-concept learning of vocabulary, according to Simpson, requires for mental operations:
seeing relationships between the concept to be learned and what is already known
applying the concept to a variety of contexts
Incidental vocabulary development occurs through conversation, word play, exposure to spoken words from a variety of sources, and reading.
“Word knowledge is not static, but rather dynamic—changing and growing over time as a learner experiences, hears, and reads a word in a variety of places and circumstances” (170).
Content-specific vocabulary relates to terms that are critical, yet specific, to a particular discipline or unit of study.
Academic vocabulary encompasses a set of terms often found among expository texts and formal presentations or speeches but which is not unique to any con ten or academic discipline.
The 5 Facets of Word Knowledge
Polysemy: multiple meanings associated with a word
Multidimentionality: many different types of knowledge to be learned abut a word
Interrelatedness: connections are made between or among words
Heterogeneity: word type, purpose, and prior knowledge influence word knowledge required
7 Tasks and Considerations
Learning to read known words
Learning new words representing known concepts
Learning new words representing new concepts
Learning new meanings for known words
Clarifying and enriching the meanings of known words
Moving words into students' expressive vocabularies
Preventing Vocabulary and School Failure
Teaching vocabulary through rote exercises that require dictionary definitions of extensive numbers of technical and specialized terms is a recipe for failure. True knowledge is applied knowledge. Unlike the "definition only" method of learning vocabulary, the teacher should start with concrete experiences in order to instill concepts and words. Full-concept learning of vocabulary, according to Simpson, requires for mental operations:
seeing relationships between the concept to be learned and what is already known
applying the concept to a variety of contexts
Incidental vocabulary development occurs through conversation, word play, exposure to spoken words from a variety of sources, and reading.
Learning Blog 5
I
really enjoyed Chapter 5 of our book, Reading to Learn in the Content Areas,
about teaching vocabulary. I definitely think it is important to know how
vocabulary impacts all subject areas. Each subject will have its own vocabulary
and key concepts that student should know, not just for reading and writing. One
of my favorite quotes from the book was “a strong vocabulary equips students to
actively participate in society as educated citizens and informed consumers”
(169). Which made me realize how important knowing and understand vocabulary
truly impacts comprehension and can impact how the students interact with the
world around them. Understanding vocabulary is very essential to reading
comprehension. As teachers, we cannot assume that the students always
understand the material they are reading. If they do not know the meanings of the key
vocabulary and concepts in a passage, they will have difficulty understanding
the passage.
The
text talks about the two different types of vocabulary, Content-specific
vocabulary and academic vocabulary. Content specific vocabulary relates to the
critical terms in a specific content area. While academic vocabulary is a set
of terms often found among many expository texts and speeches but are not
unique to any specific content area or academic discipline. When I think of academic vocabulary, I think
of words that students see frequently but might not know their meaning.
As a teacher I definitely think both types are very important for our
student to develop good reading comprehension skills and help them be able to
comprehend a very wide range of different texts.
Word
knowledge in terms of vocabulary can be confusing for students. The example in
the book of “John took a plane” (170), is a great example of how it could be
confusing because it could have many different meanings depending on how the
student interprets the sentence, so for the students knowing how to recognize a
word and actually know what the word means takes practice that comes with being
taught effective comprehension skills, and being able to apply them no matter
what text they are reading. One of the quotes from the book that really hit me
was “Word knowledge is not static, but
rather dynamic—changing and growing over time as a learner experiences, hears,
and reads a word in a variety of places and circumstances” (170). I want my
future classroom to be a text-rich environment, in which my students will
receive direct instruction as well as multiple exposures to many different
forms of text.
This
chapter does a great job of presenting many different effective strategies for
teaching vocabulary in each phase of the PAR Lesson Framework that I can use in
my future classroom such as context clue discovery, word inventories, the Toast
strategy and the Dissect strategy. As a future elementary school teacher I
really liked the Toast and the Dissect strategies because I think they will be
a great tool for younger readers to understand vocabulary. Overall I definitely
think learning vocabulary is very critical to developing and improving reading
comprehension and understanding for the students across all content areas. But
without a solid foundation and purpose there is little chance of meaningful
instruction taking place. I think the books says it best “Just as house needs a strong foundation, so reading comprehension
depends on a strong base of oral language and concept development” (171). By
giving students that base in the prep stage and clarifying in the assistance
phase and deriving more meaning in the reflection stage, they are building
skills they are necessary across all content areas and will help them develop more
in depth understanding from what they read.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)