secondary curriculum, instruction & el services explicit direct instruction

25
SECONDARY CURRICULUM, INSTRUCTION & EL SERVICES EXPLICIT DIRECT INSTRUCTION September 2011

Upload: zahir-wilcox

Post on 03-Jan-2016

48 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction. September 2011. Today’s Outcomes. Coaches will be able to identify the five phases of EDI Coaches will be familiar with the components of each of the five phases - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

SECONDARY CURRICULUM, INSTRUCTION & EL SERVICES EXPLICIT DIRECT INSTRUCTIONSeptember 2011

Page 2: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

TODAY’S OUTCOMES

Coaches will be able to identify the five phases of EDI

Coaches will be familiar with the components of each of the five phases

Coaches will be able to articulate why teachers in SJUSD are using EDI

Training will continue through the coaching academy

Page 3: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

PRESENTATION PHASE

How we teach depends on what we teach

Procedural Knowledge - a skill, process or set of steps to produce an answer or product.

Declarative Knowledge -information such as facts, time sequences, names, generalizations.

Discuss what type of knowledge Higher Order Thinking skills would fall under and why.

Share out

Page 4: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

WHAT TYPE OF KNOWLEDGE? Procedural Knowledge = a skill, process or set of

steps to produce an answer or product. 1. Example – solve a two step equation2. Example – How to Compare and ContrastFacilitate students in learning to execute the steps.

Declarative Knowledge = information such as facts, time sequences, names, generalizations.

1. Example – US system of Checks and Balances2. Example – Geometric theoremsFacilitate students in understanding and remembering.

Higher order thinking????

Page 5: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

CHECK FOR UNDERSTANDING – WHITE BOARDS UP!

What type of knowledge is How a Bill becomes a Law?

What type of knowledge is how to carry out the steps in a science lab?

Page 6: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

THREE METHODS OF INSTRUCTION

Explain Model Demonstration

Page 7: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

THREE METHODS OF INSTRUCTION

Explain = What we usually think of as “teaching” or “lecturing”. Explain to students. Best used to deliver Declarative Knowledge.

2 Minutes – Discuss the following statement “I will never use EDI because I lecture most days”

Report out

Page 8: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

THREE METHODS OF INSTRUCTION

Model = Think Aloud. Describe your thought process or strategic thinking. You model the thinking more than the process.

Modeling is NOT just working a problem on the board! Highly effective and seldom used at Secondary. Highly effective for low performing students. Students learn from the expert. Explicitly teach higher order thinking skills by modeling. 2 minutes – What is the obvious type of

knowledge that would be best developed using a modeling approach to instruction.

Page 9: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

THREE METHODS OF INSTRUCTION

Demonstration = using physical objects to advance students’ understanding of the lesson. This does not include referring to a poster, using a power point presentation or demonstrating how to solve a problem.

Allow students to handle objects if possible Taps into kinesthetic and tactile modalities. Don’t force fit a demonstration for the sake of a demonstration. 2 minutes – Discuss a lesson that you have

taught but could have been improved with the addition of a demonstration.

Page 10: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

THREE METHODS OF INSTRUCTION

PAGE 101 Create a bullet proof definition for the three

methods of instruction: Explain, Model and Demonstrate.

Discuss an example and non-example of each type of teaching for a lesson in:

1. English 2. Math

7 minutes

Page 11: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

LET’S REVIEW – WHITE BOARDS UP!

What are the two types of knowledge? Is the water cycle Declarative or Procedural. Is the process of writing a 5 paragraph essay

procedural or declarative. List the three types of instruction. Which method of instruction teaches

strategic thinking? Which method is being used by a teacher

who is using algebra tiles with a doc viewer? Which method is being used when a teacher

explains or lectures?

Page 12: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

CONCEPT DEVELOPMENT, SKILL DEVELOPMENT AND LESSON RELEVANCE

Learning Objective includes a concept and a skill.

1. Concept = Main Idea in the objective. What is is, generalization, the Big Idea.

2. Skill = Measurable student behavior in the objective, how to do it.

Concepts: solutions to one step equations, inferences in To Kill a Mocking Bird, persuasive techniques, average speed, checks and balancesSkills: calculate, solve, build, describe, create, evaluate, compose, write

Page 13: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

WHY IS CONCEPT DEVELOPMENT IMPORTANT?

Students can generalize information or a skill to new situations in other examples or real life situations.

Students can internalize the information or process.

Students can perform well on tests.

Page 14: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

THESE LESSONS DO NOT DEVELOP A CONCEPT AND THE STUDENT WILL NOT INTERNALIZE THE INFORMATION.

Lessons that focus only on skills Lessons that focus only on details Materials become more important than the

development of a concept Completion of a worksheet becomes the

main objective.

Page 15: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

CHECK FOR UNDERSTANDING – WHITE BOARDS UP!

Identify one of the three reasons why Concept Development is so important to the success of or students.

Page 16: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

STEPS TO CONCEPT DEVELOPMENT

1. Identify the concept in the learning objective

2. Provide a bulletproof definition or rule that contains the concepts critical attributes

3. Provide examples and non-examples thus clarifying the concept by revealing critical, non-critical and shared attributes

4. Teach by Explain, Model or Demonstrate5. Have students interact with the concept6. Use CFU questions of the concept - RAJ

Page 17: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

YOUR TURN TO WORK – 15 MINUTES

Using the following list, sketch out the framework of a lesson.1. State Concept2. Bulletproof definition3. List critical attributes4. Give examples5. List noncritical attributes6. Give non-examples7. Choose Explain, Model or Demonstrate8. How would students interact with the

concept9. Describe the CFU

Page 18: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

SKILL DEVELOPMENT

Skill Development = Teaching students the steps or processes used to execute the skills in the Learning Objective. Teaching students how to apply the skill to the specific concept. The skill describes how the student will interact with the concept.

Page 19: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

SKILL DEVELOPMENT

Skill Development for Declarative Knowledge – focus on teaching the details about a concept or how to engage in the concept.

Examples: Describe the three types of rocks Explain how the food chain is essential to a

balanced ecosystem Compare and Contrast the causes of WWI

and WWII

Page 20: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

SKILL DEVELOPMENT

Skill Development for Procedural Knowledge – teaches how to do something.

Examples: Divide three digit numbers by one digit

numbers Analyze authors use of illiteration Identify the order of events leading to the

Civil War

Page 21: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

TIME TO REFLECT

Discuss the Idea of Skill Development as it differs for

1. Procedural Knowledge2. Declarative Knowledge

Refer to the book if needed.

Page 22: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

STEPS TO SKILL DEVELOPMENT

Skill Development for Procedural Knowledge

1. Identify the skill in the Learning Objective,2. Provide a step by step process, method or

approach for the student to use.3. Model the steps while using a real model.4. Provide CFU questions. Include questions on

Concept Development.

CFU questions on strategic thinking CFU questions that tie the process to the concept or the real example. Use what, why, how questions.

Page 23: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

STEPS TO SKILL DEVELOPMENT

Skill Development for Declarative Knowledge –

1. Separate Concepts from Skills. Identify the details related to the concept.

2. Provide a schema to organize the details.3. Teach the details by Explain, Model or

Demonstrate.4. Include methods to help students

remember the information. 5. Provide CFU questions.

Page 24: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

LESSON RELEVANCE

Personal Importance Academic Importance Real Life Importance

Can be addressed at any point in the lesson.Insert once students understand the concept and not before. Include more than one type of lesson importance and it can not always be academic.

Page 25: Secondary Curriculum, Instruction & EL SERVICES Explicit Direct instruction

WELCOME TO CHECK FOR UNDERSTANDING