Thursday, October 27, 2011
During Reading
A goal of any reading strategy it to ensure that your students are comprehending, or understandinga and applying, the material. To evaluate students' comprehension, the teacher must check for understanding throughout the reading. Continually check students' understanding, especially when reading long works. Students need to construct meaning from all three levels of comprhension. These three levels are literal, interpretive, and applied. A literal level of comprehension is a question formed from something that can be literally found in the text. Literal questions are the easiest to identify and do not require any schema. An interpretive level of comprehension is a question that often requires prior schema about the information in the quesiton. Interpretive questions have the students' read between the lines or make inferences about what they are being asked. Interpretive questions require prior knowledge on the subject of the question. An applied level of comprehension is a question that takes what is literl and what is interpreted and then finding out how to apply it to a situation. Applied questions often ask students to analyze, discover, create, or synthesize an answer. As a teacher, I think it will be important to include all three levels of comprehension. All three levels are important and to apply knowledge students need to know how to interpret literal and interpretive questions. Based on my students schema and reading level will determine how many questions are literal, interpretive, or applied.
Friday, October 21, 2011
Before Reading Strategies
The purpose for before reading strategies is to engage students' prior knowledge and interests. It builds a common foundation for knowledge, which in turn will result in success. Teaching essential vocabulary before the reading also helps the student when reading. Before students begin reading, engage them. Engagement involves cognitive and affective aspects. Using their cognitive abilities, the student can generate intellectual interest, or schema. An affective aspect is motivating the students by giving praise and by making the reading relevant. Brainstorming activities, commonality or relatability with the reading, movement, discussions, humor, videos, technology, and personal stories can all help engage students. Some engagement strategies are anticipation guides, vocabulary strategies, list, group, label exercises, concept maps, opinionaires, and story or text impressions. In PE I think I would use a lot of relatability strategies or ones that are very hands-on. In PE I want my students to be constantly moving, so if I wanted them to read an article about baseball I may have them play a game before they go home to read the article.
Sunday, October 16, 2011
Information for Teaching Vocabulary
When teaching vocabulary, teachers want to use words that are applicable to the students’ lives and that they are going to be able to find interesting. Words need to be conceptually related, or words that deal with the students’ schema. The students need to be able to connect with a word. Vocabulary needs to be taught within context before teaching the actual definition. The word should not be taught in isolation. Students learn more through the context in which the word is used. Words need to be used in high utility, so that students become more familiar with the words. Words that are important to the class need to be used often; however, limit the amount of words you want to teach. Too many words cause an overload. Keep in mind that words require time to be a part of generative vocabulary, which is Stahl’s deep processing theory. Strategies for teaching vocabulary are also very helpful in helping students become familiar with and retain words. I think the key component of helping students retain vocabulary is to engage them in activities. Getting the students as involved as possible is important because it causes effective learning. By engaging students through doing, watching, and making words relevant, they will start to feel more comfortable with the word and use it more frequently. Something I have done when teaching young children basketball terms is to have them associate a long whistle with the phrase triple threat. When a long whistle is blown, everyone has to stop what they are doing and get into triple threat while yelling “triple threat.” After they are all in triple threat, I ask what they can do out of triple threat. Everyone then has to yell, “shoot, pass, dribble.” I have found it very successful because it is repeated over and over again at random times during practice. It is a great way to help them remember a key term and it is also a classroom management tool. It gets them to stop moving and engaged in what I am about to say.
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Vocabulary Strategies
There are many different vocabulary strategies that can be implemented into a classroom. It is also important as a teacher to realize the different types of knowledge. Declarative knowledge is a concept explaining what. Procedural knowledge explains how. Conditional knowledge explains where and when. Schema comes into play with conditional knowledge. Volitional knowledge is why this is important for you, as the teacher. Metacognitive knowledge is being aware, monitoring, adjusting, and orchestrating. Some common vocabulary strategies are tossed terms, semantic feature analysis, concept of definition map, VSS, keyword strategy, scavenger hunt, graphic organizer, knowledge rating chart, list-group-label, and CSSR. My personal favorite is scavenger hunt. In scavenger hunt, the teacher has artifacts or definitions that the student must bring to the classroom. The teacher can do it before a lesson because no schema is required. An example of how I might use scavenger hunt is to place vocabulary cards all over the gym floor and categories on the walls. The students must run around and place the vocabulary word under the correct category. I think this would be great for learning diseases, muscles, bones, or nutrition. The words on the vocabulary cards can even come from the students. As a way to extend the lesson outside of the classroom, I could have the students identify at least one word dealing with physical education that they do not understand and then use those words in the game. I think implementing vocabulary lessons into my PE classroom will be difficult because I want to keep my students moving as much as possible, but I do believe I can be creative enough to achieve it.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)