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The Teacher Toolbox Project: Model Lessons

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What were the thinking skills used to comprehend and talk about the story? ... Read over the first two units you receive today. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Teacher Toolbox Project: Model Lessons


1
The Teacher Toolbox Project Model Lessons
  • Welcome

2

The Teacher Toolbox Project Model Lessons
3
The Teacher Tools Initiative
Teacher Toolbox
Teacher Tools
HISD Portal
Laptops
4
The Teacher Toolbox
  • Project CLEAR
  • Syllabi/Syllabuses
  • PASSLink
  • Model Lessons

5
Why Model Lessons?
  • To provide a baseline standard of the written,
    taught, and tested.
  • To provide a model of pacing and Project CLEAR
    implementation.
  • To provide a floor to ensure student
    achievement.

6
The Model Lesson Coordinator
  • Participate in the Project CLEAR Summer Institute
    and ongoing Model Lesson professional development
    sessions.
  • Teach the Model Lessons.
  • Disseminate Model Lessons and accompanying
    professional development to campus colleagues.
  • Facilitate implementation at the campus level.

7
Model Lesson Training
  • Periodic roll-out

MLC Training
Campus Training and Dissemination
Classroom Implementation
Debrief/Reflect
8
  • Model Lessons
  • Project CLEAR
  • Curriculum Background

9
Strands, Goals, ObjectivesProject CLEAR
Language Arts
  • In language arts, it is commonly accepted that
    there are six strands, or overarching behavioral
    categories. They are
  • listening
  • speaking
  • reading
  • writing
  • viewing
  • representing

10
Receptive Behaviors Reading Listening
Viewing
Literacy Thinking Communication
Speaking Representing Writing Expressive
Behaviors
11
Project CLEARFour Strands Twenty four goals
12
Objectives
ROCS Clarifications
13
ROCS
HISD TEA TEA TEA/ Objectives TEKS SEs HISD
Assessments
14
Prerequisites and Instructional Considerations

Content Specifications
Connections to Other Objectives and Content
Areas
Assessment Considerations
15
The English Language Arts Continuum of
Masteryprovides you with information to better
gauge expected levels of student performance and
instruction at the appropriate level. Each
Content Specification includes an icon to show
you the ideal level of mastery students should
achieve at the grade level under examination.
  • ? introductory level - background knowledge,
    explicit instruction should be provided to the
    student
  • ? increasing accuracy and/or acquisition - guided
    and independent practice should be provided to
    the student. Re-teaching and review is often a
    necessary component of instruction.
  • ? mastery - continued instructional support
    should be provided for the student
  • ? accomplished - enrichment and application
    opportunities should be provided for the student

16
Literature Circles
  • Integrating Reading, Writing, Listening, and
    Speaking

17
What are literature circles?
  • Student-led discussion groups of three to six
    children who select and read a common text

18
Students...
  • Read a wide variety of genres
  • Prepare for discussions by keeping a response
    log, jotting ideas on Post-it notes, or filling
    out role sheets
  • Meet regularly

19
Try Out a Literature Circle
  • Read Eleven silently. You may wish to make
    notes for discussion.
  • Hold an open-ended discussion with four or five
    others.
  • Share a sample of your conversation.

20
Reflect on your discussion
  • What were the social skills used to make this
    discussion work?
  • What were the thinking skills used to comprehend
    and talk about the story?
  • How did you learn these skills?

21
Discussion
  • What were your general impressions of the
    literature circles?
  • What social and thinking skills were evident?

22
Literature Circles in Your Classroom
  • Has anyone here already tried some form of
    literature circles? What is going well? What
    needs work?
  • What problems do you foresee coming up among your
    own students? How can they be resolved?

23
Focus Lessons
  • Literature Circle Procedures
  • Reading Strategies
  • Writing and Response Strategies

24
Literature Circle Procedures
  • How to choose a book
  • How to start discussion quickly
  • How to listen attentively
  • How to keep the conversation going
  • The role of a discussion group member
  • What to write in your response journal
  • What to do when you dont understand
  • What to do when your group finishes
  • How to mediate conflicts
  • How to spice up a lagging discussion
  • How to tie extension projects back to the book

25
Reading Strategies
  • Predicting
  • Reading on to see if predictions make sense
  • Self-correcting when reading doesnt make sense
  • Thinking about what would make sense
  • Using what you already know (background
    knowledge)
  • Finding evidence to support a point

26
Reading Strategies
  • Building vocabulary through reading
  • Creating pictures in your head
  • Comparing/contrasting
  • Identifying important information
  • Using flexible strategies to identify unknown
    words
  • Previewing
  • Asking yourself (or the text) questions
  • Reading what you dont know slowly and what you
    do know quickly
  • Analyzing, interpreting, inferring

27
Writing and Response Strategies
  • Provide journal prompts
  • I liked
  • I noticed
  • I wonder
  • I felt ________ because
  • I think
  • This story makes me think of
  • I wish
  • If I were __________, I would
  • When I
  • I was surprised by...

28
Writing and Response Strategies
  • Choosing a topic or focus
  • Supporting ideas with information from the text
  • Elaborating using details
  • Writing with a purpose and for an audience
  • Using figurative, descriptive language
  • Using sketches and illustrations to spark or
    extend ideas
  • Developing criteria for effective writing
  • Incorporating ideas from Post-it notes into a
    written response
  • Incorporating ideas raised during discussion into
    a written response

29
Possible Roles
  • Discussion leader develops questions, talking
    points keeps discussion on track
  • Literary leader locates passages beautiful in
    craftsmanship to read aloud
  • Illustrator creates a visual representation of
    the passage (sketch, diagram, flow chart, etc.)

30
Possible Roles
  • Connector makes connections between text and
    outside world, other texts, and self
  • Summarizer prepares a brief summary
  • Vocabulary enricher selects a few special words
    from the passage (unknown, frequently used, etc.)
  • Investigator locates background information on a
    topic related to the book

31
The Literature Circle
A powerful structure to integrate reading,
writing, listening, and speaking through
collaborative learning
32
  • Think Alouds
  • Making Strategies Explicit

33
Why Think-Alouds?
  • Make the implicit explicit.
  • Emphasize strategy instruction.
  • Move students from decoding to comprehension.
  • Help students learn to make meaning (learn to
    read).
  • Negotiate various texts/genres.
  • Provide metacognative support for students.

34
What Can a Think-Aloud Do?
  • Model general strategies used for reading
    comprehension instruction.
  • Model specific elements of text.
  • Literary elements
  • Text-specific structures and characteristics

35
Who Can Do A Think-Aloud?
  • Teacher presents/students listen.
  • Teacher presents/students assist.
  • Students present/others assist.
  • Students present/teacher monitors.
  • In an oral and/or written form.

36
Thinking Through a Think-Aloud
  • What is the purpose of reading this text?
  • How can students be helped to access necessary
    background information that must be brought to
    the text?
  • How can students be helped to put the content
    they are reading into a mental structure?
  • How can students be helped to articulate the
    meaning of the text?
  • How can students be helped to name the structure
    of the text and determine how the structure helps
    communicate meaning?

37
The Steps of a Think-Aloud Jeffrey Wilhelm
Improving Comprehension with Think-Aloud
Strategies
  • Choose a short section of text or a short text
    (such as a picture book).
  • Provide each student a copy of the text
  • Retype or photocopy and provide margins for note
    taking.

38
The Steps of a Think-Aloud
  • Decide on the strategy or strategies you will
    highlight.
  • Activating Background Knowledge
  • Decoding
  • Determining Word Meanings
  • Setting Purpose(s) for Reading
  • Monitoring Repairing Comprehension
  • Prediction Visualizing
  • Questioning Summarizing
  • Paraphrasing Reflecting
  • Inferring Synthesizing

39
The Steps of a Think-Aloud
  • State your purposes.
  • Watch out for sensory overload.
  • Select your focus strategy/ies. It is better to
    work on one thoroughly than diffuse your effort
    and energy.
  • Use the think-aloud to reinforce attentive and
    active listening.
  • Expect students to be prepared to explain what
    you model and where in the text you use the
    strategy/ies.

40
The Steps of a Think-Aloud
  • Read the text aloud concurrently think aloud.
  • Target your focus strategy.
  • Be natural. Use normal routines, but stay
    focused.
  • Notice text features that are relevant to the
    genre.
  • Use age-appropriate language and anecdotes to
    help students understand the strategy.

41
The Steps of a Think-Aloud
  • Have the students underline the words, phrases,
    or sections of text where you use the strategy.
  • Have students underline in the provided text
    after you model.
  • Incorporate prediction as a natural strategic
    outgrowth of the think-aloud.

42
The Steps of a Think-Aloud
  • Discuss the cues in the text that lend themselves
    to the use of the selected strategy.

43
The Steps of a Think-Aloud
  • Connect the think-aloud to other reading
    situations and real life situations.
  • Summarize information Infer character...
  • Make judgements... Predict future actions...
  • Cite evidence... Reflect on ...

44
The Steps of a Think-Aloud
  • Provide practice.
  • Provide more modeling.
  • Have students participate in Think-Alongs.
    (Identify the strategies)
  • Provide strategy reference lists.
  • Have students write about the strategy
  • Logs/Journals
  • Thought Bubbles
  • Use Post-its.

45
Practicing a Think-Along
  • Follow a Think-Aloud preparation and delivery
    pattern.
  • Have students actively participate
  • Identify strategies
  • Add information
  • Debrief and provide practice opportunities

46
Practice a Think-Aloud
  • Choose a text.
  • Determine a focus strategy.
  • Develop your think-aloud.
  • Deliver your think-aloud.
  • State your purpose.
  • Target your strategy or strategies
  • Discuss the cues in the text.
  • Connect the strategy.
  • Think through practice opportunities and discuss.

Model
47
  • Model Lesson Overview
  • Components/Terminology
  • How to Use the Plans

48
Model Lesson Components
  • Overview
  • Lesson Plans
  • Appendix
  • Blackline Masters
  • Resources and Routines

49
Overview (General)
  • Unit Summary
  • Key Concepts
  • Key Terms and Vocabulary
  • Lesson Summary
  • Unit Assessment Plan
  • Objectives
  • Resources

50
Lesson Plans (Specific)
  • Objectives
  • Content Specification-level
  • Summarized
  • Often repeated in multiple lessons
  • Explicitly taught

51
Lesson Plans (Specific)
  • Lesson Cycle
  • Introduction
  • Concept Development
  • Student Practice
  • Assessment
  • Closure

52
Lesson Plans (Specific)
  • Because English Language Arts skills are not
    always developed in a linear format, there may be
    several concepts developed in one lesson.
  • Student practice and assessment may be developed
    for each concept or consolidated into one
    activity or assessment.
  • Check the whole lesson cycle before you make
    instructional decisions.

53
Supplementary Materials
  • Appendix A1 A __
  • Background Information
  • Lengthier explanations of concept development
    phase, student practice activity, or assessment
    instructions
  • Teacher Tips/Notes
  • Options
  • Blackline Masters B1 B __
  • Resources and Routines R __

54
How to Use the Plans Suggestions/Recommendati
ons
  • Read the Unit Overview. Focus on the
  • summary concepts vocabulary
  • lesson summary assessment
  • Glance through the Appendix - note especially
    unit background, strategies, and instructional
    methods.
  • Glance through the Blacklines - the first one or
    two generally include a unit overview or timeline
    for students.

55
How to Use the Plans Suggestions/Recommendati
ons
  • Read lesson-by-lesson.
  • Prepare lesson-by-lesson. Note resources and use
    the blacklines.

56
Homework...
  • Read over the first two units you receive today.
  • Return, with your questions, and be ready to
    practice some key activities necessary for the
    unit implementation.
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