Title: Doug Fisher, PhD
1- Doug Fisher, PhD
- dfisher_at_mail.sdsu.edu
- Nancy Frey, PhD
- nfrey_at_mail.sdsu.edu
2A Case in Point
Ill go back to school and learn more about the
brain!
3400 Page text
- Somites are blocks of dorsal mesodermal cells
adjacent to the notochord during vertebrate
organogensis. - Improved vascular definition in radiographs of
the arterial phase or of the venous phase can be
procured by a process of subtraction whereby
positive and negative images of the overlying
skull are superimposed on one another.
4Skills Versus Strategies?
5I dont know how youre going to learn this, but
its on the test.
6Quick, Build Background!
7Expand Understanding Through Reading
8Reading Increasingly Difficult Texts
9Read Non-Traditional Texts
- To date, over 100 YouTube videos!
- PBS (The Secret Life of the Brain)
- Internet quiz sites about neuroanatomy
- Talking with peers and others interested in the
brain
10But, the midterm comes
11Using a Foldable to Support Your Learning
Increase Instructional Consistency
12Lets Make a Foldable
- Envelope fold Good for 4
- non-sequenced concepts
- Focus Lesson
- Guided Instruction
- Collaborative Learning
- Independent Learning
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14TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY
I do it
Focus Lesson
Guided Instruction
We do it
You do it together
Collaborative
You do it alone
Independent
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
A Structure for Instruction that Works
15In some classrooms
TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY
I do it
Focus Lesson
You do it alone
Independent
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
16In the worst classrooms
TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY
You do it alone
Independent
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
17The good enough classroom
TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY
I do it
Focus Lesson
Guided Instruction
We do it
You do it alone
Independent
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
18Time for a Story
19TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY
I do it
Focus Lesson
Guided Instruction
We do it
You do it together
Collaborative
You do it alone
Independent
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
A Structure for Instruction that Works
20Reading and the Brain
21What is reading and what components are required
to read?
- National Reading Panel (1990s)
22The National Reading Panel Report
- Alphabetics
- Phonemic awareness
- Phonics
- Fluency
- Vocabulary
- Comprehension
23Vocabulary
- Word volume - 88,500 word families (500,000
words) by high school - Word gap - estimated at 3,000 in kindergarten
between high and low income families
24Types of Vocabulary
General vocabulary Words used in everyday
language, with agreed upon meanings across
contexts (e.g., pesky, bothersome) Specialized
vocabulary Multiple meanings in different content
areas (e.g., loom, in, expression) Technical
vocabulary Specific to a field of study (e.g.,
concerto, meiosis)
25- Catherine the Great, a minor aristocrat from
Germany, became Empress of Russia when her
husband Peter, the grandson of Peter the Great,
was killed.
26- Catherine the Great, a minor aristocrat from
Germany, became Empress of Russia when her
husband Peter, the grandson of Peter the Great,
was killed.
27Comprehension
- Understanding
- Retelling and reading checks
- Making meaning from text
- Studies of good readers suggests that they
predict, infer, question, visualize, monitor,
summarize/synthesize, and connect
28Rich Semantic Knowledge Semantic Neighborhood
bites
king of jungle
mane
roars
big
animal
eats antelopes
furry
Leo
4 legs
lion
zodiac
green
lives in
zoo
Lion King
sour
famous lions
citrus
Africa
jungle
fruit
limeade
Wizard of Oz
Narnia
good in food and drinks
lime
key lime pie
Wolf, 2007
29Beyond the Big 5
- These top out
- Alphabetic knowledge
- Phonemic awareness
- Concepts about print
- Oral reading fluency both accuracy and rate
- These dont
- Vocabulary
- Comprehension
- Word reading and contextual reading ability
Paris, S. (2005). Reinterpreting the development
of reading skills. Reading Research Quarterly,
40, 184-202.
30Which is the greatest predictor of comprehension?
- Fluency
- Background knowledge
- Vocabulary
- Phonics
31Which is the greatest predictor of comprehension?
- Fluency
- Background knowledge
- Vocabulary
- Phonics
32Which is the second greatest predictor of
comprehension?
- Fluency
- Phonemic awareness
- Vocabulary
- Phonics
33Which is the second greatest predictor of
comprehension?
- Fluency
- Phonemic awareness
- Vocabulary
- Phonics
34Build Your Background Knowledge About the Brain
352 Hemispheres
36The hemispheres are connected by the CORPUS
CALLOSUM
37Each Hemisphere has Four Lobes
- Frontal
- Parietal
- Occipital
- Temporal
38Frontal Lobe
- Memory, emotion, planning
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40Parietal Lobe
- Integrates sensory information
- Maintains sense of self in space
41Temporal Lobe
42Occipital Lobe
- Processes visual information and integrates
vision with other senses
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44Brocas Area
- Located in frontal lobe
- Responsible for speech production
- Damage to this area can result in slow, halting
speech (Brocas aphasia)
45Wernickes Area
- Located where the temporal and parietal lobes
meet - Responsible for language comprehension
- Damage to this area can result in fluent, but
nonsensical speech (Wernickes aphasia)
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47Using a Foldable to Support Your Learning
Model Reading Comprehension
48Lets Make a Foldable
- 4-tab When you need a sequence
- Reading comprehension
- Word solving
- Text structures
- Text features
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50Modeling
- Why?
- Humans mimic or imitate
- Students need examples of the type of thinking
required - Facilitates the use of academic language
51Modeling Comprehension
- Inference
- Summarize
- Predict
- Clarify
- Question
- Visualize
- Monitor
- Synthesize
- Evaluate
- Connect
52Word Solving
- Context clues
- Word parts (prefix, suffix, root, base, cognates)
- Resources (others, Internet, dictionary)
53Using Text Structure
- Informational Texts
- Problem/Solution, Compare/Contrast, Sequence,
Cause/Effect, Description - Narrative Texts
- Story grammar (plot, setting, character)
- Dialogue
- Literary devices
54Using Text Features
- Headings
- Captions
- Illustrations
- Charts
- Graphs
- Bold words
- Table of contents
- Glossary
- Index
- Tables
- Margin notes
- Italicized words
55What Happened to Phineas?
- Attend the tale of Phineas Gage. Honest, well
liked by friends and fellow workers on the
Rutland and Burlington Railroads, Gage was a
young man of exemplary character and promise
until one day in September 1848. While tamping
down the blasting powder for a dynamite charge,
Gage inadvertently sparked an explosion. The
inch thick tamping rod rocketed through his
cheek, obliterating his left eye, on its way
through his brain and out the top of his skull.
56- The rod landed several yards away, and Gage fell
back in a convulsive heap. Yet a moment later he
stood up and spoke. His fellow workers watched,
aghast, then drove him by oxcart to a hotel where
a local doctor, one John Harlow, dressed his
wounds. As Harlow stuck his index fingers in the
holes in Gages face and head until their tips
met, the young man inquired when he would be able
to return to work.
57- Within two months the physical organism that was
Phineas Gage had completely recovered - he could
walk, speak, and demonstrate normal awareness of
his surroundings. But the character of the man
did not survive the tamping rods journey through
his brain. In place of the diligent, dependable
worker stood a foul-mouthed and ill-mannered liar
given to extravagant schemes that were never
followed through. Gage, said his friends, was
no longer Gage.
58Questions
- How did Phineas survive this penetrating brain
injury? - For how much longer did he live?
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60A dentist found the source of the toothache
Patrick Lawler was complaining about on the roof
of his mouth a four-inch nail the construction
worker had unknowingly embedded in his skull six
days earlier.
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63- Proust and the Squid The Story and Science of
the Reading Brain by Maryanne Wolf
64Dr. Jill Taylor
Listen to an 18-minute talk by Jill at www.ted.com
65Brain research, modeling, and comprehension
instruction