Title: Instructional Strategies
1Instructional Strategies
with Angela Stevens
2Sensing
MASTERY Sensing and Thinking
INTERPERSONAL Sensing and Feeling
S
Practical, Matter of fact, And work-oriented
sympathetic, friendly, and work, for group harmony
T
F
insightful, imaginative and creative
logical, ingenuous, and curious
Thinking
Feeling
SELF-EXPRESSIVE Intuition and Feeling
UNDERSTANDING Intuition and Thinking
N
Intuiting
based on Carl Jungs learning personalities
3Mastery Strategy Graduated Difficulty
4Graduated Difficulty
What is it? In the graduated difficulty
strategy, students are provided with options from
which to choose. Options are based on a
sequential analysis of the subject to be learned
and the degree of difficulty of tasks to be
performed. Students are responsible for
assessing their own abilities and for choosing
the task and level of performance they consider
best suited to them.
5Graduated Difficulty
More explanation The graduated difficulty
strategy involves students in the assessment of
their own abilities, and encourages them to make
responsible choices of tasks and levels of
performance within an instructional program. The
teacher must have trust in the students and their
ability to make judgments about themselves, to
work independently for prolonged periods of time
and to identify and correct their own mistakes.
6Graduated Difficulty
- Goals of the strategy -
- Provide an opportunity for students to succeed by
encouraging them to select their own appropriate
level of performance and to work at their own
pace - To help students practice previously taught
information and skills - To help students explore their own
decision-making process - To help student improve their decision-making
process
7Graduated Difficulty
- Steps in the strategy -
- Determine what is to be taught
- Provide options on three levels of difficulty
- Encourage students to select the level with which
they feel most comfortable - Prepare criteria for evaluation
- Circulate and observe the performance of students
- Acknowledge performance of students, and invite
students to change their choices if necessary - Guide self-assessment by asking questions focused
on criteria and student performance - Record student self-evaluations to improve
decision-making and task management.
8Graduated Difficulty
- What does it look like?
- Math Adding and subtracting decimals
- Level I
- 4.76 3.03
- 9.45 8.96
- Level II
- .42 .06 1.11
- 20.48 16.6
- Level III
- 1. 19.5 21.1 21
- 2. 19.5 6.274
9Graduated Difficulty
What does it look like? English Poetry
Analysis Level I My First Memory (of
Librarians) by Nikki Giovanni Level II The Road
Not Taken by Robert Frost Level III The Second
Coming by W.B. Yeats
10understanding Strategy Inquiry Strategy
11Inquiry Strategy
What is it? In the inquiry strategy, the teacher
presents students with a discrepant event. A
discrepant event is a statement that appears
untrue, but upon examination has a rational
explanation. Students collect data through
observation and experimentation, and by asking
yes and no questions. Students formulate
explanations and theories to explain the idea
under consideration.
12Inquiry Strategy
More explanation In the inquiry strategy, the
process of gathering, analysis, and
experimentation is under the control of the
learners. The inquiry strategy is designed to
move students from a traditional, intuitive, and
concrete process to a more decentralized,
analytical and abstract one.
13Inquiry Strategy
- Goals of the strategy -
- To help students become more autonomous learners
- To encourage students to question why things
happen as they do - To help students develop the intellectual
discipline necessary to search out data, process
it and apply logic to it
14Inquiry Strategy
- Steps in the strategy -
- Provide a climate suitable for inquiry
- Select and demonstrate a discrepant event, or
design a situation in which students will
encounter a problem - Guide the inquiry process through which students
collect, verify and experiment with data in the
following ways identify invalidated points, and
ensure that students phrase questions so they can
only be answered with a yes or no - Press students to make clear statements and
support generalizations - Encourage students to support hypotheses
- Press students to formulate rules or explanations
- Analyze the inquiry process
15Inquiry Strategy
What does it look like? Science Determine
why a towns action with an expected result
(eliminating wolves, which killed deer, expected
to increase the deer population) turned out to
have the opposite result (the deer population
actually decreased). Use two beakers with a
clear mystery liquid and study its affect on ice
cubes dropped into them.
16Inquiry Strategy
What does it look like? English Analyze the
basic characteristics of a tragic hero, to
compare with the 20th century examples of
American tragedies, and speculate why the heroes
of American tragedies dont fit the classic
definition of a tragic hero.
17Self-Expressive Strategy Inductive Learning
18Inductive Learning
What is it? In the inductive learning strategy,
students are engaged in grouping and labeling
data in order to form original conceptual
frameworks. As a result students are able to
form generalizations, make predictions or
establish rules of principle.
19Inductive Learning
More explanation In the inductive learning
strategy, students use what they have studied or
observed to enumerate related items. They then
group the information they have generated, and
label and categorize it to form concepts. The
strategy requires that students find and identify
a variety of ways of grouping details which are
similar to or related to each other, label the
groups appropriately, and determine the
inclusiveness of the groups by subsuming items
using subgroups where possible.
20Inductive Learning
- Goals of the strategy -
- To help students formulate concepts and
generalizations - To help students see relationships and patterns
in what is taught - To help students explain reasoning clearly
- To help students learn to cite evidence when
necessary
21Inductive Learning
- Steps in the strategy -
- Generate the data
- Record the data
- Organize the data into groups
- Use a label to describe each group
- Place additional groups into categories
- Subsume items and labels into larger groups
22Inductive Learning
What does it look like? Social Studies
Colonial New England Imagine that you are
observing a day in the New England inhabitant in
1750. What items would you expect to see? What
words would you expect to hear? Make a list of
these items. Group any words that have common
features together. Decide what the words in each
group have in common and use this characteristic
label. Based on your groupings, draw three
conclusions about life in the Colonial period.
23Inductive Learning
What does it look like? English
Vocabulary Sweat Vocabulary
24Interpersonal Strategy Reciprocal Learning
25Reciprocal Learning
What is it? A unique partnership between pairs
of students working together to practice
previously presented skills and information, to
increase reading comprehension of
information-rich texts, and to develop the
thinking processes needed to become competent
problem solvers. As a result students will
master important skills needed to be effective in
a helping relationship, learn how to be active
listeners and how to provide constructive
feedback, and develop patience and the ability to
praise.
26Reciprocal Learning
More explanation The Reciprocal Learning
Strategy is often used when you want your
students to develop helping skills while
practicing previously taught information. It
provides a framework in which students of
differing achievement levels can work together to
improve their knowledge of the content, the
worksheets help students learn how to become
active listeners and how to provide constructive
feedback.
27Reciprocal Learning
- Goals of the strategy -
- To improve student self-concept by giving them a
framework within which they are able to work with
and help someone else - To help increase student decision-making
responsibility - To make students less dependent on teacher
feedback - To increase the number of people providing
feedback and evaluating each students
performance - To modify and widen the patterns of social
interaction in the classroom - To create a classroom structure within which all
students (not only the best) can provide support
for others - To increase student academic achievement by
creating situations in which students learn both
by doing the task themselves and by actively
observing the task performed by another.
28Reciprocal Learning
- Steps in the strategy -
- Select or design the practice exercises to be
used - Provide answers and include hints or other forms
of helping information to be used by the guides - Arrange students into pairs randomly
- Review briefly the kind of work students will be
doing - Model and review roles students will play and
teach the cooperative skills necessary to be
successful as doer and guide - Help the guide (not the doer) is a partnership is
experiencing difficulty - Help students process the encounter by discussing
positively what happened in the partnership
29Reciprocal Learning
What does it look like? English Contractions
- TASK A
- Directions Form a contraction from the two
words - She will
- We will
- ANSWERS TO TASK B
- Directions Check to see the right letters have
been thrown away and the apostrophe has been
added. - Ill
- Didnt
- TASK B
- Directions Form a contraction from the two
words - I will
- Did not
- ANSWERS TO TASK A
- Directions Check to see the right letters have
been thrown away and the apostrophe has been
added. - Shell
- Well
30Reciprocal Learning
What does it look like? Math Math Terms
- TASK A
- Directions Answer the following questions.
- A whole number greater than 1that has exactly two
factors one and itself - A composite number expressed as a product of
primes - ANSWERS TO TASK B
- Integers
- Composite number
- TASK B
- Directions Answer the following questions.
- The whole numbers and their opposites
- A whole number that has more than two factors
- ANSWERS TO TASK A
- Prime number
- Prime factorization
31Works Cited
Silver, Harvey, J. Robert Hanson, Richard W.
Strong, and Patricia B. Schwartz. Teaching
Styles and Strategies Interventions to Enrich
Instructional Decision-Making. New Jersey
Thoughtful Educational Press, 2003.