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Learning Strategies

Learning Strategies. Alternatives to Whole Class Question/ Answer Ways to Engage All Learners Communicate High Expectations Check for Understanding. Active Learning Strategies. Think – Pair – Share Ask a Question Discuss with Neighbor Share Responses with Whole Group or Table.

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Learning Strategies

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  1. Learning Strategies

  2. Alternatives to Whole Class Question/ Answer • Ways to Engage All Learners • Communicate High Expectations • Check for Understanding Active Learning Strategies

  3. Think – Pair – Share • Ask a Question • Discuss with Neighbor • Share Responses with Whole Group or Table If You Want Students to Work in Pairs

  4. 3 -2 - 1 • 3 Important Events in Person’s Life • 2 Questions You Would Like to Ask This Person if You Could Talk to Them • 1 Way in Which You Are Like This Person If You Want Students to Summarize Their Learning

  5. Use Signal Cards • Instruct Students to Raise Signal Cards to Answer Questions • Example: Mean, Median, Mode, Range If You Want to Check for Understanding

  6. 4 Corners • Pose a Question That has Multiple Answers. • Ask Students to Move to the Corner of the Room With Other Students Who Share the Same View. If You Want Students to Activate Prior Learning

  7. Ticket to Leave • To Provide Formative Assessment Data • Name Something Learned Today. • What Will You Tell Your Parent That You Learned Today? If You Want Students to Summarize Their Learning

  8. Motivation to learn or participate is essential to the success of any intervention approach. • For an intervention to be effective for a student with learning problems, the individual must be motivated. • For adolescents with learning problems, it’s a roadblock to school success. Motivation

  9. The adage “You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him drink.” May be altered to … “Although you can’t make a horse drink the water, you can salt the hay.” Motivation to Participate

  10. Examples of Extrinsic Motivation • Time for listening to music on a CD or MP3 player • Tokens for progress on academics • Tangible reinforcers such as restaurant coupons, magazines, and movie tickets • Exemption from some homework or assignments • Extra time for a break or lunch

  11. The most useful techniques include: • token economies • contingency contracting • verbal feedback Extrinsic Motivation Cont.

  12. Content Instruction • In most educational programs, adolescents with learning problems spend the majority of their school day in general education classes. • The general education teacher must individualize and modify instruction to accommodate the needs of students with learning problems.

  13. Determine the requirements for “making it” in the general class. • Specify the course requirements that the student is not satisfying. • Identify factors hindering the student’s performance. • Brainstorm possible classroom accommodations. • Select a plan of action. • Implement the plan. • Evaluate the plan. Problem-Solving Sequencefor General & Special Educators

  14. Developing parallel curriculum • Simplifying texts • Using audio texts Adapting Materials

  15. Effective Teaching Strategies for Direct Instruction • Specify clear lesson objectives • Teach directly to those objectives • Make learning as concrete and meaningful as possible • Provide relevant guided practice • Provide independent practice • Provide transfer practice activities • Teacher Vision

  16. Strategies for Students with Disabilities * • Sequence – Break down the task, step by step prompts. • Drill-repetition and practice-review – Daily testing of skills, repeated practice, daily feedback. • Segment – Break down targeted skill into smaller units and then synthesize the parts into a whole. • Direct question and response – Teacher asks process-related questions and/or content-related questions.

  17. Strategies Cont. • Control the difficulty or processing demands of a task – Task is sequenced from easy to difficult and only necessary hints or probes are provided. • Technology – Use a computer, structured text, flow charts to facilitate presentation, emphasis is on pictorial representations. • Group Instruction – Instruction occurs in a small group, students and/or teacher interact with the group. • Supplement teacher and peer involvement – Use homework, parents, or others to assist in instruction. • Strategy clues – Reminders to use strategies or multi-steps, the teacher verbalizes problem solving or procedures to solve, instruction uses think-aloud models. • H.L. Swanson

  18. Many students with learning problems lack study skills and need instruction to learn them. • 11 study skills: (Hoover, 1993) • Reading rate • Listening • Note taking/outlining • Report writing Study Skills

  19. Oral presentation • Graphic aids • Test taking • Library use • Reference/dictionary use • Time management • Self-management of behavior 11 Study Skills (cont’d)

  20. Students with learning problems frequently have difficulty displaying their knowledge or skills on tests. Modifications in test formats often help them perform better. Testing

  21. Give frequent, timed mini-tests. • Use alternative response forms. • Multiple choice alternatives. • Short answer alternatives. • Essay alternatives. • Provide a tape of the test items. • Leave ample white space between test questions, and underline key words in the directions and test items. • Provide test-study guides that feature various answer formats. • Provide additional time for the student who writes slowly, or use test items that require minimal writing. Oral tests also may be given and the answers recorded on tape. Suggestions for Improving Test Performance

  22. The five strategies to help students with disabilities get the most from their homework are:  Give clear and appropriate assignments.  Make accommodations in homework assignments.  Teach study skills.  Use a homework planner.  Ensure clear home/school communication.  Cynthia Warger, 2001

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