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Researchbased Instructional Strategies That Work

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Instructional Strategies. Identifying Similarities and Differences. Summarizing and Note Taking ... Instructional Model for Metaphors ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Researchbased Instructional Strategies That Work


1
Research-based Instructional Strategies That Work
Based on Classroom Instruction that Works
Research-Based Strategies for Increasing Student
Achievement (2001) by Marzano, Pickering, and
Pollock
2
Powerful Instructional Strategies
  • Identifying Similarities and Differences
  • Summarizing and Note Taking
  • Reinforcing Effort and Providing Recognition
  • Homework and Practice
  • Nonlinguistic Representation
  • Cooperative Learning
  • Setting Objectives and Providing Feedback
  • Generating and Testing Hypothesis
  • Questions, Cues and Advance Organizers
  • Background Knowledge
  • Vocabulary Development

3
Meta-analysis
  • A meta-analysis combines the results from a
    number of studies to determine the average effect
    of a given technique. When conducting a
    meta-analysis, a researcher translates the
    results of a given study to a unit of measurement
    referred to as an effect size.

Effect Size
An effect size expresses the increase or decrease
in achievement of the experimental group (the
group of students who are exposed to a specific
instructional technique) in standard deviation
units.
4
Research Findings
5
Research Findings
6
Research Findings
7
Identifying Similarities and Differences
  • Student understanding of and ability to use
    knowledge are enhanced by
  • Presenting students with explicit guidance in
    identifying similarities and differences
  • Asking students to independently identify
    similarities and differences
  • Representing similarities and differences in
    graphic or symbolic form

8
Identifying Similarities and Differences
  • Identification of similarities and differences
    can be accomplished in variety of ways. The
    identification of similarities and differences is
    a highly robust activity. Four forms of
    similarities and differences are
  • Comparison
  • Classification
  • Metaphors
  • Analogies

9
Comparison
  • Comparing is the process of identifying
    similarities and differences between or among
    things or ideas
  • Common attribute
  • Venn Diagram
  • Comparison Matrix

10
Instructional Model for Comparisons
  • Select the terms you want to compare
  • Select the characteristics (attributes) of the
    items on which you want to base your comparison
  • Explain how the items are similar and different
    with respect to the characteristics

11
Classification
  • Classification is the process of grouping things
    that are alike into categories on the basis of
    their characteristics.

Instructional Model for Classification
  • Identify the items you want to classify
  • Select what appears to be an important item,
    describe its key attributes, and identify other
    items that have the same attributes
  • Create the category by specifying the attributes
    that the item must have for membership in the
    category

12
Metaphors
  • Creating metaphors is the process of identifying
    a general or basic pattern in a specific topic
    and then finding another topic that appears to be
    quite different but has the same general pattern.

Instructional Model for Metaphors
  • Identify the important or basic elements of the
    information or situation with which you are
    working
  • Write that basic information as a general pattern
    by
  • Replacing words for specific things with words
    for more general things, and
  • Summarizing information whenever possible

13
Analogies
  • Creating analogies is the process of identifying
    relationships between pairs of concepts In
    other words, identifying relationships between
    relationships.

Instructional Model for Analogies
  • Identify how the two elements in the first pair
    are related
  • State their relationship in a general way
  • Identify another pair of elements that share a
    similar relationship

14
Resource ExchangeInvestigation
  • Identifying Similarities and Differences
  • Comparison
  • Classification
  • Metaphors
  • Analogies

15
Summarizing and Note Taking
  • Summarizing
  • To effectively summarize, students must delete
    some information, substitute some information and
    keep some information.
  • To effectively delete, substitute and keep
    information students must analyze the information
    at a fairly deep level.

16
Reciprocal Teaching
  • A scaffolding discussion technique that is built
    on four strategies that good readers use to
    comprehend text
  • Predicting
  • Questioning
  • Clarifying
  • Summarizing

Reference
17
Note Taking
  • Verbatim note taking is, perhaps, the least
    effective way to take notes
  • Notes should be considered a work in progress
  • Notes should be used as study guides for tests
  • The more notes that are taken the better

18
Resource ExchangeInvestigation
Summarizing and Note Taking
19
Nonlinguistic Representation
  • The imagery mode of representation
  • A variety of activities produce nonlinguistic
    representations
  • Graphic organizers
  • Physical models
  • Generating mental pictures
  • Drawing pictures and pictographs
  • Engaging in kinesthetic activity

20
Resource ExchangeInvestigation
Nonlinguistic Representation
21
Generating and Testing Hypotheses
  • Types of tasks
  • Systems analysis
  • Problem-solving
  • Decision making
  • Historical investigation
  • Experimental inquiry
  • Invention

22
Instructional Model for Generating Testing
Hypothesis
  • Give students a model for the process
  • Use familiar content to teach students the steps
    for process
  • Give students graphic organizers
  • Provide needed guidance
  • Ask students to explain hypotheses and conclusions

23
Cues, Questions and Advanced Organizers
  • Focus on important information
  • Use explicit cues
  • Ask inferential questions
  • Ask analytic questions

24
Cues and Questions
  • Cues are explicit reminders or hints about what
    students are about to experience.
  • Questions perform the same function as cues.

25
Types of Questions
  • Knowledge
  • Comprehension
  • Application
  • Analysis
  • Synthesis
  • Evaluation

26
Instructional Model for Advance Organizers
  • Use expository advance organizers
  • Use narrative organizers
  • Teach students to skim
  • Use graphic organizers

27
Resource ExchangeInvestigation
Generating Testing Hypotheses Cues, Questions
Advance Organizers
28
PowerfulInstructional Strategies
  • Identifying Similarities and Differences
  • Summarizing and Note Taking
  • Reinforcing Effort and Providing Recognition
  • Homework and Practice
  • Nonlinguistic Representation
  • Cooperative Learning
  • Setting Objectives and Providing Feedback
  • Generating and Testing Hypothesis
  • Questions, Cues and Advance Organizers
  • Background Knowledge
  • Vocabulary Development

29
Research-based Instructional Strategies That Work
Based on Classroom Instruction that Works
Research-Based Strategies for Increasing Student
Achievement (2001) by Marzano, Pickering, and
Pollock
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