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Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

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Page 1: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled

Students

Presented By

Dr. Shelia Martin

February 18, 2009

Page 2: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

If you have a room of students with different clothes sizes, how can you presume that when preparing a lesson that “one size fits all?”

Page 3: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

What Types of Students Do We Have in Our Classes? •Students where the grade level standards or curriculum is not appropriate based on their developmental levels

•Students where grade level curriculum is appropriate with intensive instruction and specific accommodations or modifications

Page 4: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

•Students where grade level curriculum is appropriate

•Students where grade level curriculum is appropriate, but not sufficient

Page 5: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Dissimilar Learners (Sherman, Richardson, & Yard, 2005)

•Rebellious

•Dysfunctional

•Lack of academic success

•Inaccurately diagnosed with disability

•Requires remediation

•At-risk of dropping out of school

Page 6: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

“Corrective instruction is never a matter of applying a formula of methods or activities. . . Understanding why is fully as important as knowing how.” (Jean Gillett, 1990)

Page 7: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Characteristics of Older Disabled Readers

• Poor recognition of words at sight• Poorly developed decoding and word analysis

skills• Poor comprehension of what is read• Deficits in the amount of reading they have done• Less information about text and about the world

in general• Attitude and motivation problems and low self-

esteem

Page 8: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Categories of students with reading problems

Students who are reading to learn usually have

1. Mastered learning to read

2. Difficulty using reading to learn in subject areas

Students who have an inability to read all types of reading material usually are

1. Unable to read well enough to do much with any printed material

Page 9: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Two Common Characteristics of Students with Learning Disabilities

•Learned helplessness

•Passive learners

Page 10: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Corrective Strategies for Struggling Readers

•Identify strengths and needs of student

•Plan instructional time

•Develop sight vocabulary

•Develop reading fluency

•Develop word analysis

Page 11: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Corrective Strategies for Struggling Readers

• Develop reading comprehension

• Develop skills in locating, summarizing, and interpreting information

• Provide trade books or other readers

• Develop listening comprehension

• Increase time spent reading

Page 12: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Vocabulary knowledge is directly connected to reading comprehension.

(Anderson & Nagy, 1991; Baker, Simmons, & Kame’enui, 1998; Becker, 1997; Cunningham & Stanovich, 1998)

Page 13: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Vocabulary Instruction for Students With Disabilities

Encourage poor readers to read.

•Use of text is vital in vocabulary development and word learning

•Select texts that support the overall context needed for students to learn words (e.g., children’s stories)

Page 14: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Vocabulary Instruction for Students With Disabilities

• Teach vocabulary directly and sequentially.– Vocabulary for understanding text– Functional words and words frequently encountered– Word’s context and definition and opportunities for

processing (e.g., finding synonym or antonym, using word in novel sentence, relating definition to own experience)

• Teach vocabulary through productive approaches to optimize word learning.

Page 15: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

“Overall, differences in the amount of independent reading, lack of strategies to learn words from content, and diffuse word knowledge appear to be the most critical obstacles to vocabulary development for students with disabilities.”

Stahl & Shiel, 1999

Page 16: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Characteristics of Students Who Struggle with Mathematics (Sherman et al, 2005)

Two categories:

1. Environmental Factors

Instruction

Curricular Materials

Gap Between Learner and Subject Matter

Page 17: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Characteristics of Students Who Struggle with Mathematics (Sherman et al, 2005)

2. Personal or Individual Factors Locus of Control Memory Ability Attention Span Understanding the Language of

Mathematics

Page 18: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Deficits Areas That Affect Math Performance in the Disabled Student (Mercer & Pullen, 2005)

• Visual Perception

• Auditory Perception

• Motor

• Memory

• Attention

Page 19: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Deficits That Affect Math Performance cont’d

• Language

• Reading

• Cognition and Abstract Reasoning

• Metacognition

• Social and Emotional Factors

Page 20: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

What do we know about the use of instructional strategies with struggling learners?

Page 21: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Effective teachers integrate an array of strategies!!

Page 22: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Because of several essential aspects of effective strategy instruction, certain behaviors were noted (Allington,2001; Pressley, et.al 2001):

• The teacher provided support initially.

Page 23: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

•The teacher created shared/collaborative activities and activities that involved students verbalizing their thinking.

•Teachers provided unrelenting engagements with the summarizing activity.

Page 24: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

• The teacher gradually moved students to greater independence in using the strategy.

• The teacher developed high expectation of self-monitoring and sustained independence resulted in intrinsically motivated students.

Page 25: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Effective Classroom Indicators

H ig h d en s ity o f s ki lls in s tru c tio n . 1 0 -2 0 ski lls /p e r h r.

E xp lic i tly te a ch stu d en ts to se lf- reg u la te . T e ach stu de n ts to u se m u lt ip le cu e s to re a d w ord s.

E ffec tive T e a ch e rs

Page 26: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Why Researched Strategy Instruction?It’s the Law!!•IDEIA and NCLB regulations require the use of research-proven strategies. •Federal legislative changes in IDEA and NCLB is based on diverse learners achieving high academic student achievement (IDEA; Pub.L. No. 105-17;

Page 27: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

• PL No.107-110). To accomplish this goal NCLB has set specific conditions such as

• (1) preparation, training, and recruitment of high-quality teachers;

• (2) language instruction for students with limited English proficiency and migrant children;

• (3) innovative, research-based instructional programs; and

• (4) accountability for educational outcomes.

Page 28: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Struggling learners do not have available to them the variety of strategies used by typical learners!!!

•Lower-achieving readers who are taught to use strategies that determine the most important concepts and include visualizing while reading, improve their comprehension (Taylor, Graves & Van Den Broek, 2000).

Page 29: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

• From grade 2 on, weaker readers benefit from instruction about how to use multiple comprehension strategies (Taylor, Graves & Van Den Broek, 2000).

Page 30: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Lessons designed for student success increases student engagement rates and student learning (Allington, 2001).

•Learning occurs when students are challenged beyond their independence level, but not so far ahead that frustration sets in (Howard, 1994; Vygotsky, 1962).

Page 31: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

• Very little new learning occurs when students are relegated to continue to work on skills/tasks already mastered or skills that were perceived as too difficult.

Page 32: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Minimize referrals to special education!!!

•BBSST preintervention strategies should be designed so that students do not need to be referred to special education.

Page 33: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

• Effective teachers affect student achievement through the variety of instructional strategies that are used as interventions.

Page 34: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Standards and Data-Based Decision Making

Effective teachers:

•Analyze student performance through assessments

•Identify gaps in skills and knowledge

Page 35: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Standards and Data-Based Decision Making

• Develop instruction to address those gaps

• Continue to analyze student performance over time and adjust instruction as needed

Page 36: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Standards and Access

•Access occurs when students with disabilities are actively engaged in learning the content and skills that define the general education curriculum.

•Access can occur through differentiated instruction.

Page 37: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Differentiated Instruction to Access the Curriculum and/or Standards

Effective teachers differentiate by:

•Providing instruction based on

•Review of state and classroom assessment data

•Progress toward standards

•Using research-proven practices and materials

•Support and scaffolding

Standards

Technology

Graphic Organizers

Big Ideas

Proven Practices

Flexible Groupings

Assessment Data

Focus on Individual Student Learning through Differentiated Instruction

Page 38: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Differentiated Instruction, Standards, and Curriculum Guides

•SDE developed curriculum guides for math and reading standards

•Curriculum guides provide a tool for differentiated instruction leading toward the standards

•Curriculum guides are designed for students who are not performing at grade level standards

Page 39: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Purposes of the Curriculum Guides

•Companion to the ACOS standards

•Lists prerequisites to the COS standards

•Provides information for planning instruction

•Assists in closing achievement gap

•Provides an avenue for students to work at individual instructional levels

Page 40: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Changes in the Process of Instructional Planning

• Traditional Practice– Selects a topic from

the curriculum– Designs instructional

activities– Designs and gives an

assessment– Gives grade or

feedback– Moves on to new topic

• Standards-Based Practice– Selects content

standards to plan instruction

– Designs and gives an assessment (pretest) through which students demonstrate the knowledge and skills to meet the standards

– Decides what learning opportunities students will need to learn

Page 41: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Changes in the Process of Instructional Planning

– Plans instruction to assure that each student has adequate opportunities to learn

– Uses data from assessment to give feedback, reteach, or move to next level

Page 42: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

In standards-based instruction, the teacher must plan backwards from the required content standards to the assessments then to the lessons that will be needed for students to achieve at that level.

Page 43: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Summary of Instructional Strategies Based on Research

Page 44: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Why Researched Strategy Instruction?

•It’s the law•Struggling learners do not have available to them the variety of strategies used by typical learners

•Effective teachers integrate an array of strategies

Page 45: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

• Lessons designed for student success increases student engagement rates and student learning (Allington, 2001)

• Can minimize referrals to special education

Page 46: Research-based Instructional Strategies For Disabled Students Presented By Dr. Shelia Martin February 18, 2009

Thank You For Sharing Your Time With Me This Afternoon

For Additional Information Contact Me At

[email protected]