Title: Marzanos Top Strategies for Increasing Student Achievement
1Classroom Instruction that Works
- Marzanos Top Strategies for Increasing Student
Achievement - September 20, 2007
- Durfee-Lee
24 Ways to Get Kids into GATE
- Standardized Testing
- Specific Academic Achievement
- (one subject area)
- High Achievement
- (2 areas ELA and Math)
- I.Q. Testing
- Situational Placement
- TABS observation sheet
- Peer nomination form
- Portfolio
3Tips for GATE referral
- Use your CST data
- If the student scores in the advanced strand,
pull his/her CUM and see if they have a second
year in the advanced strand. - Even if the two years are not consecutive, the
child will qualify. - Peer Nomination Form -page 18 of tool kit
- The Peer Nomination Form is a tool that
teachers in grades 4-8 can use with their classes
to enlist the help of students in finding the
gifted among their peers. Teachers are to make a
class set and distribute. The teacher then
tallies the responses to see which names are
mentioned the most frequently. - Call Chantal at x 2302 and we can talk about how
to qualify a student that you feel is a GATE kid,
but whos test scores arent quite there.
4Where Do I find the GATE Id Tool Kit?
- Go to the district website www.emcsd.org
- Schoolsgt GATEgtID Project
- Its a PDF document
- If you right click on it, you can choose Save
As - Name it and save it on your computers desktop
5Gifted v. special
- Everyone is special in his or her own way. All
children are special. - But giftedness is not specialness.
- And all children are not gifted.
- Are all children tall? Are all children short?
Are all children hearing impaired? Are all
children athletic? Are all children musical? Are
all children brown-eyed? No. - Are all children marvelous? Are all children
beautiful? Are all children amazing? Are all
children special? Are all children inspiring? Are
all children unique? Are all children full of
potential and possibilities? Yes. Of course! - Gifted, as used in the field of gifted
education, does not mean having a gift. Rather,
it means that theres a significant learning
difference present in that individual. Everyone
has gifts that something special we each can
offer the world - but not everyone learns as a
gifted child learns.
http//blogs.edweek.org/teachers/unwrapping_the_gi
fted/
6Let's talk a little aboutEffect Size
- Measured in standard deviations or percentile
gains - Compares mean of control group to mean of
experimental group
2 14 34 34
14 2
Lets focus on Percentile Gain
1 S.D. 1 S.D.
7Similarities and Differences- 45 Gain
8Compare and Contrast
BUT...how about this instead?
9Compare and Contrast with Classification Chart
10- Young children and pre-readers are capable of
sophisticated thought. - Non-readers can think and reason.
Source Primary Analogies by EPS (Educators
Publishing Service)
11Metaphors- Why important
- Loose Cannon- two words conjure up a perception
about a co-worker. - Youll visualize many details, as long as you
know what a cannon is. - Metaphors are a type of creative thinking,
connecting two seemingly disparate things. - In problem solving, metaphors can generate new
solutions to personal, professional and technical
problems. - They are POWERFUL teaching tools.
12Think of...
- Langston Hughes Dream Deferred. He uses 5
metaphors in eleven short lines, such as - a raisin in the sun to express the
frustration of African Americans in continually
postponed justice and opportunity. - William Blakes To See the World in a Grain of
Sand, uses 4 metaphors in 4 lines to describe
how understanding significant ideas is found in
observing small things. -
13Classification
Boxed Table most appropriate when all
categories are equal in their level of
generalization.
Categories
Graphic organizers can be student created They
can be given as advance organizers (prime the
brain) Fill in as we go over the material, for
homework, done in pairs- class work, as a review,
or used as a study guide for a test.
14Process/Cause-Effect Pattern
- Process/Cause-Effect Patterns organize
information into a casual network leading to a
specific outcome
An example would be study habits that make a good
student
Handout, p.10
15Episode Pattern
An Example would be information leading up to the
Civil War
p.11 handout
16Generalization/Principle Patterns
- Gereralization/Principle Patterns organize
information into general statements with
supporting details. - An Example would be statements supporting a
hypothesis that economic conditions were the
cause of the Civil War.
p.12 handout
17Concept Pattern
A Concept Pattern could look like this
p. 13 handout
18Reinforcing Effort and Providing Recognition
29 gain
- Not all students realize the importance of
believing in effort. - Explicitly teach the connection between effort
and achievement. - Its obvious that you took a lot of time working
on this graph. - Sports analogies work very well...practice for
improvement and pushing yourself when you feel
your spent. - Recognition is not the same as PRAISE.
19 Providing Recognition
- Generalizations
- Alfie Kohn article Five Reasons to Stop Saying
Good Job http//www.alfiekohn.org/articles.htmnul
l - Preferred is Recognition or I appreciate... I
appreciate that you made your sisters lunch this
morning. It was thoughtful and kind and helped us
get out the door on time. - I enjoyed your comment in class. I can tell you
are a deep thinker. Merrill Harmin, Inspiring
Active Learning
20Effective Recognition and Encouragment
- Inspiring Active Learning by Merrill Harmin
yellow handout - Volunteer read point 20-4. Lets take one bullet
point at a time. - Volunteer to read bullets -Strategy 2-1 Plain
Corrects - Lets look at the explanation below the bullets.
- What if they get the answer wrong?
- Plain Incorrects- point 20-2. Volunteer- read
bullets - Lets look at explanations below the bullets.
21DESCA Strategy 20-9
- Dignity- student desire to live with personal
dignity - Energy-sustained energy
- Self-Management
- Community
- Awareness- open minded awareness
- Merrill Harmin, Inspiring Active Learning
When someone loves you, the way they say your
name is different. You know that your name is
safe in their mouth. Billy, age 4
22Homework and Practice
- Generalizations
- The amount of homework assigned to students
should vary be grade level- about 10 min./grade
level rule. - Purposeful- preparation and elaboration or
practice (rote-not conceptual). - Parent involvement in homework should be kept to
a minimum. (Marzano, book p.63)-We want to know
what kids dont know or cant do independently. - Clearly articulated homework policy.
11-30 gain Marzano, p.64
No effect on achievement in grades K-3.
23Homework
- Is it necessary to grade or comment on every
assignment? - See what the research says on page 64 Figure
5.3
24Homework
- How do I really know how much homework do I
really give out? - Some teachers have students write how long it
took them to complete an assignment right under
where they write their names on their papers. - Differences among learners- helps identify which
kids are still struggling with the material. - Is there a point where there are diminishing
returns in regards to amount of homework
assigned? - (See Alfie Kohn article on homework
http//www.alfiekohn.org/articles.htmnull
25Conceptual Knowledge
- More Practice doesnt increase conceptual
understanding. It reinforces it once it has been
conceptualized. - It is essential for students to understand how a
skill or process works. The student will be most
successful doing this in the classroom. - For example, a student may be able to compute
percentages when given a page of math problems
but not able to solve a word problem that
requires the use of percentages. - This is where more time spent in class on
real-life problems or using a hands-on approach
works best. - At this time, assign few homework problems and
spend time with quick checks and deep teaching of
the concept in class.
26Checking for conceputual knowledge
- During curriculum planning, a teacher must make a
commitment to increasing students understanding
of skills and processes and then plan activities
to achieve this goal. - Think about this How much instructional time is
spent on grading homework? - Can this time be reduced to increase
instructional time? - How can you use web-based resources and visual
aids?
27Note Taking
34 gain
- Notes are a work in progress. Students should
review and revise periodically in class. - Notes should be used as a study guide for tests.
- The more notes taken the better. There is a
strong relationship between the amount of
information taken in notes and student
achievement on tests. - Use graphic organizers.
28 Classroom Practice in Note Taking
- Teacher-Prepared Notes -Provides clear picture of
what the teacher considers important - Can be used as a study guide for tests
- Student-Prepared Notes
- -informal outline
- -webbing
- Class-Prepared Notes
- -Chunk material for pairs or trios to create
parts of a study guide - -Have them add diagrams or illustrations of
concepts and ideas
29 Vocabulary
- Directly Teach Critical Terms and Phrases (key
terms and glossary and terms on the
test/assessment that kids might not know) - Limit the number of critical terms and phrases
for any given topic.
30Active Engagement 5 step process
- Brief description/explanation
- Present a nonlinguistic representation
(drawing/other) - Ask kids to generate their own explanation/descrip
tion - Ask students to create their own non-linguistic
representation (picture) - Review and revise
31Student Example
Marzano.. R. 2004. Building Background Knowledge
for Academic Achievement
32www.inspiration.com
33Resources
- Marzano.. R. 2004. Building Background Knowledge
for Academic Achievement - Marzano, Pickering, Pollack, 2001. Classroom
Instruction that Works - Free online at http//www.mcrel.org/topics/Instr
uction/products/110/ - PDF What Works in Schools (older version of
CITW)-complete book - Marzano, Pickering, Paynter, 2001. A Handbook for
Classroom Instruction that Works - Swartz, R, Parks, S. 1994. Infusing the Teaching
on Critical Thinking into Elementary Instruction
(handout- p.4-7) Outstanding resource! - Harmin, Merrill. Inspiring Active Learning, A
handbook for Teachers - www.inspiration.com You can get a free 30-day
trial of this graphic organizer program - http//www.alfiekohn.org/articles.htmnull
Articles by Alfie Kohn, author Punished by
Rewards, The Homework Myth, Beyond Discipline