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New Teacher Academy Session 2 Far West GREAT Center

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One reason is that information that is not used for an extended period of time ... Technology. Visualization. Visuals. Work study & action research. Writing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: New Teacher Academy Session 2 Far West GREAT Center


1
New Teacher Academy Session 2 Far West GREAT
Center
  • November 18, 2006
  • Presenter Barbara Baird
  • 831-5105
  • Barbarab_at_epcc.edu

2
3 Types of Memory
  • Sensory memory information we receive through
    our senses. This memory is very brief lasting
    only a few seconds
  • Short Term we can remember approximately 5 to 9
    (7 /- 2) bits of information for a short time
  • Long-Termrelatively permanent and practically
    unlimited storage capacity

3
Long-term Memory
  • Consists of information you have
  • Heard often
  • Seen often
  • Used often
  • Deemed necessary
  • Cornerstone Building on Your Best by Robert M.
    Sherfield, Rhonda J. Montgomery, Patricia G.
    Moody. Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005

4
Forgetting Curve
  • There are many reasons we forget things
  • One reason is that information that is not used
    for an extended period of time decays or fades
    away over time

5
Forgetting Curve
  • The forgetting curve illustrates the decline of
    memory retention in time.
  • A typical graph of the forgetting curve shows
    that humans tend to halve their memory of newly
    learned knowledge in a matter of days or weeks
    unless they consciously review the learned
    material.

6
Forgetting Curve
  • In 1885 German philosopher Hermann Ebbinghaus
    conducted one of the first studies on memory,
    using himself as a subject.
  • He memorized lists of nonsense syllables and then
    tested his memory of the syllables at intervals
    ranging from 20 minutes to 31 days.
  • As shown in this curve, he found that he
    remembered less than 40 percent of the items
    after nine hours, but that the rate of forgetting
    leveled off over time.

7
Forgetting Curve
8
Forgetting 1 hour lecture
  • On Day 1, at the beginning of the lecture, you go
    in knowing nothing, or 0, (where the curve
    starts at the baseline).
  • At the end of the lecture you know 100 of what
    you know, however well you know it (where the
    curve rises to its highest point).

9
Forgetting 1 hour lecture
  • By Day 2, if you have done nothing with the
    information you learned in that lecture, didn't
    think about it again, read it again, etc. you
    will have lost 50-80 of what you learned.

10
Forgetting 1 hour lecture
  • By Day 7, we remember even less, and by Day 30,
    we retain about 2-3 of the original hour!

11
Forgetting 1 hour lecture
  • Here's the formula for remembering material
    Within 24 hours of getting the information -
    spend 10 minutes reviewing and you will raise the
    curve almost to 100 again.
  • University of Waterloo Counseling Services
    http//www.adm.uwaterloo.ca/infocs/study/curve.htm
    l
  • A week later (Day 7), it only takes 5 minutes to
    "reactivate" the same material, and again raise
    the curve.
  • By Day 30, your brain will only need 2-4 minutes
    to give you the feedback, "Yes, I know that..."

12
Forgetting Curve
  • Amount you are likely to recall if you do review
  • VS.
  • Amount you are likely to recall if you do not
    review
  • http//www.ucc.vt.edu/lynch/SSForgetting.htm

13
Forgetting Curve
  • Reviewing notes after class each day, or at least
    before going to bed, will help recall. 
  • At the end of nine weeks, those who reviewed
    their notes within a day recalled about 75 of
    the information. 
  • Those who did not review their notes were unable
    to recall even 50 of the information after one
    day and only a little more than 20 of the
    information after nine weeks.
  • http//www.ucc.vt.edu/lynch/SSForgetting.htm

14
Increasing Memory Power
  • With effort and memory techniques, you can file
    and retrieve information in long-term memory
  • Rehearsal
  • Practice
  • Concentration
  • Visualization

15
Increasing Memory Power
  • A related concept is the strength of memory that
    refers to the durability of memory in the brain.
    The stronger the memory, the longer we can
    remember it.
  • Strategies that engage the brain strengthen
    memory.

16
20 Professional Learning StrategiesSit and Get"
Won't Grow Dendrites by Marcia L. Tate
  • Brainstorming discussion
  • Drawing and artwork
  • Field trips
  • Games
  • Graphic organizers
  • Humor celebration
  • Manipulatives models
  • Metaphors, analogies, similes
  • Mnemonic devices
  • Movement
  • Project and problem-based instruction
  • Reciprocal teaching, cooperative learning, peer
    coaching
  • Role-plays, drama, pantomimes, charades
  • Storytelling
  • Technology
  • Visualization
  • Visuals
  • Work study action research
  • Writing reflection

17
Story Time
  • Metacognition
  • Think Aloud
  • Graphic Organizers
  • Pre During Post Questions
  • Blooms Taxonomy
  • Cooperative problem-based learning

18
Metacognition to think about your own
thinking
  • to be aware of and monitor your learning
    processes
  • self-assessment
  • the ability to assess your own thinking and
    understanding
  • self-management
  • the ability to manage your own further cognitive
    development

19
Think Aloud
  • Modeling by the teacherThe teacher models
    his/her comprehension strategies while reading
    sample text
  • The teacher verbalizes the thought process he or
    she is using to gather meaning from the text

20
Think Aloud
  • Read a passage aloud to the learners and give
    voice to how you process the information
  • Talk about what
  • You are thinking
  • Your predictions
  • The images you see
  • The questions you have
  • How the reading fits with what you know
  • When you run into problems, express your
    confusion and talk through your thinking as you
    solve the problem

21
Think Aloud Strategies
  • Stopping to reread or restate a difficult section
  • Summarizing long sentences and putting them in
    your own words
  • Looking back in the text to locate the person or
    thing that a pronoun refers to
  • Identifying important or not-so-important
    information
  • Using various strategies to identify or determine
    the meaning of an unknown word
  • Relating the information to your prior
    knowledge

22
Graphic Organizers
  • Power Pictures that paint important pictures on
    the brain
  • Diagrams or charts that represent concepts and
    the relationship of ideas and information
  • They often illustrate the organization and
    structure of text

23
Links for Graphic Organizers
  •  Education Place Graphic Organizershttp//www
    .eduplace.com/graphicorganizer/index.html
  •   Ed Helper
  • http//www.edhelper.com/teachers/graphic_organize
    rs.htm
  •    

24
Links for Graphic Organizers
  • Graphic Organizershttp//www.writedesignonline.co
    m/organizers/index.html
  •   
  •  Region 15 Graphic Organizershttp//www.region15
    .org/curriculum/graphicorg.html

25
Pre, During, Post, Questions
  • 1. Identify "what you know" and "what you don't
    know
  • 2. Talk about thinking
  • 3. Plan, predict, self-regulate, self-evaluate
  • 4. Blooms Taxonomy
  • Knowledge, Comprehension, Application, Analysis,
    Synthesis, Evaluation

26
Blooms Taxonomy
  • Benjamin Bloom developed his Taxonomy of
    Learning Domains in the mid-1950s. His hierarchy
    of skills is key to developing authentic
    objectives for learning.
  • These are the six levels in ascending order
  • Knowledgeto observe and recall information
  • Comprehensionto understand knowledge
  • Applicationto use knowledge
  • Analysisto interpret and value knowledge
  • Synthesisto integrate, own, and combine ideas
  • Evaluationto assess, verify, and make choices
    based on information and knowledge

27
Blooms Taxonomy
28
Links Blooms Taxonomy
  • University of Victoria
  • http//www.coun.uvic.ca/learn/program/hndouts/bloo
    m.html
  • Valdosta State University
  • http//chiron.valdosta.edu/whuitt/col/cogsys/bloom
    .html

29
Links Blooms Taxonomy
  • University of Washington
  • http//faculty.washington.edu/krumme/guides/bloom1
    .html
  • Teachers pages
  • http//www.teachers.ash.org.au/researchskills/dalt
    on.htm
  • http//nerds.unl.edu/pages/preser/sec/articles/blo
    oms.html
  • University of Washington
  • http//faculty.washington.edu/krumme/guides/bloom1
    .html
  • Teachers pages
  • http//www.teachers.ash.org.au/researchskills/dalt
    on.htm
  • http//nerds.unl.edu/pages/preser/sec/articles/blo
    oms.html

30
Cooperative Problem-based Learning
  • Cooperative learning
  • working in small groups allows students to help
    each other learn and apply learning strategies
  • Problem-based instruction
  • provides opportunities for problem solving,
    communication, divergent thinking, linking new
    information

31
Afternoon
  • True/False Review
  • Metaphors
  • Mnemonics
  • Gallery of Learning
  • Post test Bloom
  • Meet with Mentors

32
Metaphors, Analogies, and Similes
  • Metaphor - figure of speech that implies
    comparison between two unlike entities
  • Analogy - based on the assumption that if two
    things are known to be alike in some respects,
    then they must be alike in other respects
  • Simile - figure of speech comparing two unlike
    things. The resemblance is explicitly indicated
    by the words like or as"

33
Mnemonics Memory Tricks
  • Techniques that assist in putting information
    into long-term memory and accessing when needed
  • Jingles/Rhymes
  • Sentences
  • Words
  • Story lines
  • Acronyms
  • Pegs

34
Mnemonics Memory Tricks
  • Order of the Planets in the Solar System
  • My Very Elegant Mother Just Served Us Nine Pies
  • My Very Elegant Mother Just Served Us Nachos

35
Mnemonics Memory Tricks
  • Arithmetic
  • Lucky Cows Drink Milk
  • The ascending order of Roman numerals LCDM
  • Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally
  • Parentheses, Exponents, Multiplication,
    Division, Addition, Subtraction

36
Mnemonics
  • As a group, develop a mnemonic device for
    remembering Bloom's Taxonomy such as an acrostic
    making a silly sentence using the first letter of
    each component (see pages 49 - 51 of "Sit and
    Get" Won't Grow Dendrites)

37
Gallery of Learning
  • New Knowledge
  • New Skills
  • Improvement in
  • New or renewed interest in
  • Confidence in

38
20 Professional Learning StrategiesSit and Get"
Won't Grow Dendrites by Marcia L. Tate
  • Brainstorming discussion
  • Drawing and artwork
  • Field trips
  • Games
  • Graphic organizers
  • Humor celebration
  • Manipulatives models
  • Metaphors, analogies, similes
  • Mnemonic devices
  • Movement
  • Project and problem-based instruction
  • Reciprocal teaching, cooperative learning, peer
    coaching
  • Role-plays, drama, pantomimes, charades
  • Storytelling
  • Technology
  • Visualization
  • Visuals
  • Work study action research
  • Writing reflection
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