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Close the Achievement Gap: Simple Strategies That Work

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'What is it about me you can't teach? Is it that I am hearing impaired? ... (Schmoker, 1996; Reeves, 2001; Marzano, 2001; Haycock, 2001) The Challenge 'Nothing! ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Close the Achievement Gap: Simple Strategies That Work


1
Close the Achievement Gap Simple Strategies That
Work
  • Chapter 5 Make No Excuses Encourage At Risk
    Participation
  • March 2005

2
  • What is it about me you cant teach? Is it that
    I am hearing impaired? Is it that I speak a
    different language? Is it because my parents
    dont come to conferences? Is it that I am a
    different color? Is it because I am ADD? Is it
    because Im late for school? Is it because I
    learn more quickly than some? What is it about me
    you cant teach?
  • Eleanor Renee Rodriguez (1996)

3
One of the most powerful strategies to close the
gap
  • The frequent, fluent, and full participation by
    all students.
  • If learners are there, in the moment, ready and
    willing to learn, the chances of them learning
    are increased greatly (62).

4
The Challenge
  • No matter how much they care or how hard they
    try, many teachers feel that the situation in
    their school is hopeless for these youngsters.

5
The Challenge
  • This is the most difficult issue in school
    reform convincing teachers that they can, and
    do, make the difference. (Schmoker, 1996 Reeves,
    2001 Marzano, 2001 Haycock, 2001)

6
What is it about me you cant teach?
  • Nothing! There is nothing about you I cant
    teach. In fact, I believe that I can teach any
    kid anything. I am a master teacher. I have a
    vast repertoire of instructional tools to work
    with. Among my most valued tools are
  • Active Learning
  • Mindful Engagement
  • Intense Involvement
  • Invested Stakeholders

7
Active Learning
  • Cooperative Learning
  • Let students feel like part of a team
  • Give students roles and responsibilities
  • Multiple Intelligences
  • Allow different entry points and end points for
    learners
  • Find the gift in every student (M. Kennedy)
  • Higher Order Thinking
  • Challenge kids to think, make decisions, and
    solve problems
  • Leave kids wanting more than the tip of the
    iceberg

8
Mindful Engagement
  • Solitary Endeavors
  • Learner searches for meaning in very individual
    way.
  • Highly reflective
  • Connects new learning to existing schema or
    background knowledge.
  • Team Efforts
  • During cooperative task, learner becomes actively
    committed and begins to explore, examine, and
    extrapolate ideas that fit with previous learning.

9
Intense Involvement
  • Highly Focused
  • Highly focused, persistent, and even
    tenacious define this state of intense
    involvement
  • Level of concentration that defies interruption
  • Flow
  • When the learner has a level of expertise that
    allows him/her to enter into a state of
    awareness, of an intense enjoyment, of time
    passing without noticing.

10
Invested Stakeholders
  • Relevance
  • Key to authentic learning
  • The solution to problem solving becomes a
    personal victory
  • Point of View
  • When learners take on a point of view, they have
    a built in bias that causes emotional involvement
    and real investment of time, energy, and emotion.

11
Strategies
  • Fishbowl, Card Game, and TAG
  • Random systems that ensure all students get
    called on to participate
  • Call on students using a fishbowl of names
  • A deck of cards
  • TAG Talk Around the Group. Students pass an
    object to the next person in the group.

12
Strategies
  • Cooperative Learning
  • Encourages at-risk students who may be least
    willing to talk in class.

13
Strategies
  • Whole Group Strategies
  • The People Search
  • Prepared by the teacher, prior to kids arriving,
    The People Search asks kids to Find someone
    who
  • Used before a lesson, it allows students to
    interact and stir up prior knowledge
  • Used after a lesson, it allows students to
    revisit and review ideas from the lesson.

14
Strategies
  • Whole Group Strategies
  • The Human Graph
  • Requires kids to stand along a continuum based on
    their opinion of a given statement and physically
    form a graph of human beings.
  • The Three Musketeers
  • Three students meet and discuss a specified
    topic. The team then reports back a summary
    statement.

15
Strategies
  • Partner Strategies
  • 2-4-8 Focus Interview- Students tell three
    stories, each one different from the last
  • Two kids begin by sharing an artifact of their
    work (ex. A book report)
  • Four kids meet as a pair of pairs and retell
    their partners stories
  • Eight kids meet, 2 sets of 4, and each tells a
    story from the previous group of 4.

16
Strategies
  • Partner Strategies
  • TTYPA
  • Stands for Turn to your partner and
  • Students discuss an assigned topic or idea
  • Think/Pair/Share
  • A more formal interaction
  • Students think on their own time and then pair up
    to generate a shared answer

17
Teachers who take the time to encourage all kids
  • are the teachers who understand that the
    achievement gap affects the entire child, not
    just his academic standing.

18
Youre a hero to someone
  • act like the hero you are. Say something so
    profound and lasting to some kid who needs that
    energy and encouragement at that very moment.
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