Title: Tutor Training
1______________________________________
2Welcome
3Overview
- Introductions/Questions
- Background on Adult Learning Theory and Literacy
- Instructional Approaches
- Components of Reading Instruction
- Components of Written Instruction
- Teaching Strategies for ELL
4Introductions
- Pick a partner
- Spend 2-3 minutes interviewing your partner
- Find out their name, occupation, hobbies,
interests and the favorite book they have read - Take notes
- Switch places
- Introduce your partner to the group
5Questions you have about tutoring
- Write on a post-it
- What are you hoping to learn in this training?
- Turn it in
6History of Literacy in _________
7 Mission and Vision
8What is literacy?
- an individuals ability to read, write, and
speak in English and compute and solve problems,
at levels of proficiency necessary to function on
the job, in the family of the individual, and in
society. - 1998 Adult Education and Family Literacy Act
9What is Literacy?
- What are some of the things that you should be
able to do if you are literate? - Decision making on the job
- Budgeting
- Job applications
- Questions for your Dr. visit
- Understand health information
- Use 911
- Memo to childrens teacher
- Use computers
- Communicate with a team member on the job
- Read a Newspaper
- Make informed political decisions
- Know where to get outside help
10National Literacy Statistics
Americans spend more on premium label ice cream
each year than on adult basic education and
literacy programs
11National Literacy Statistics
- 93 million Americans function at the two lowest
levels of literacy (National Assessment of Adult
Literacy, 2003). - 14 at the lowest level cannot
- Locate an intersection on a map
- Calculate the total cost on an order form
- Understand directions on a prescription label
- 29 of the population at the second lowest level
cannot - Use a bus schedule
- Balance a check book
- Write a note explaining an error on a bill
12More National Statistics
- The U.S. is the only industrialized nation where
young people are currently less likely than their
parents generation to be high school graduates
(Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Sept. 2009). - 46 of prison inmates do not have a high school
diploma (NCFL, 2002). - Almost 50 of adults on public assistance do not
have a high school diploma or GED (National
Institute for Literacy)
13In Wisconsin
- Over 1.5 million adults in Wisconsin (nearly 39)
qualify for literacy services as they struggle
with the functional literacy skills required to
succeed in everyday life (National Institute for
Literacy, 1998) - Wisconsin has the second highest high school
graduation rate in the country for white
students. In contrast, Wisconsin has the worst
graduation rate (50th out of 50 states) for
African-American students. (Center on Wisconsin
Strategy, 2002)
14Health Literacy Facts
- Literacy skills are the strongest predictor of an
individuals health status more than age,
income, racial or ethnic group, education level
or employment status (Institute for Medicine). - 36 of the U.S. population have poor health
literacy skills (National Center for Education
Statistics) - Another 53 of the population is challenged by
health literacy. Only 12 of the U.S. population
is proficient in health literacy (NAAL Health
Literacy, 2003). - Those with limited health literacy skills have an
average healthcare cost of 13,000 compared to
3,000 for those with higher health literacy
levels (American Medical Association).
15More Health Literacy Facts
- 106-236 billion is lost every year on
healthcare costs due to health literacy issues
(University of Connecticut, 2007) - In Wisconsin, between 3.4 and 7.6 billion dollars
each year is lost to the issue of low health
literacy (J. Vernon, 2009).
16The Big Secret
- of low literate adults who have not told their
- Children 52
- Friends 62
- Spouse 68
- Health care providers 75
- Co-workers 85
17Guidelines For Tutors
18Adult Learning
- What makes working with adults different from
working with children? - How have any classes you have taken as an adult
been different from those taken as a child? - How did instructors treat you differently as an
adult compared to as a child?
19Adult Learning Theory
- What are the key concepts for Adult Learning?
- Relevance
- Respect
- Experience
- Barriers
- Multi-sensory approach (Doing!)
20 Relevance
- Learning needs to relate to their needs and
experience (it needs to be worth their time) - Goal setting is crucial
- Learners come voluntarily and therefore are
usually highly motivated - Learners are often self directed and know what
they want - How do you build relevance into a tutoring
session?
21Respect
- Many of our learners have not been successful in
school in the past - We all deserve respect
- Many tutors learn more from their learners than
they feel they have taught them - Learners need to feel they can safely take risks
in their learning - How can you build respect into your tutoring?
22Experience
- Our learners come with a life time of experience
- They have held jobs, traveled, had relationships,
had families and held adult roles - Their experience is part of their self-identity
- Life experiences can be barriers.
- What life experiences can be hindrances to
effective learning?
23Barriers
- Lack of time
- Child care issues
- Transportation issues
- Work commitments
- Health issues
- Can you list some other barriers that may
challenge your tutoring and how you can overcome
them?
24Multi-sensory
- We learn
- 20 of what we hear
- 40 of what we hear and see
- 80 of what we do
- Teaching should be participatory
- Use
- I Do
- We Do
- You Do
25Self-determination
- The six components are
- Gain Self Awareness
- Learn to Value Yourself
- Plan
- Be Proactive
- Reflect and Readjust
- Environment
- Which component would you think would be the most
challenging for an adult learner?
26ELL ABE
- What does it stand for?
- ELL
- ESL
- ESOL
- EFL
- ABE
27Fish in a Tree
- What on earth are you doing? said I to the
monkey when I saw him lift a fish from the water
and place it on a tree. - I am saving it from drowning, was the reply.
28Goal Setting
- Long Range Goals
- Short Term Goals
29What are goals?
- Quantifiable
- Achievable
- Documentable
30SMART
- S Specific
- M Measurable
- A Achievable
- R Realistic
- T Timely
31Why Set Goals?
- Goal setting is the cornerstone of a
learner-centered environment - What parts of adult learning theory does goal
setting address?
32Why Set Goals?
- Sense of Direction
- Sense of Satisfaction
- Student Centered
- Facilitates lesson planning
- Administrative necessity
33How Do You Set Goals?
- Discuss why a student wants to learn what they
want to learn - ELL
- I want to learn to speak English better
- Who do you want to talk to?
- What do you want to tell them?
- What and where do you speak English now?
34How Do You Set Goals?
- Basic Literacy
- I want to learn to Read
- Why do you want to learn to read?
- What do you want to read?
- Who do you want to read to?
- What cant you do because you cant read well?
- What do you read now?
- I want to learn to write
- Who do you want to write to?
- What do you want to write?
- Do you need to write for your job?
35(No Transcript)
36Learning Styles
- How do you learn best?
- Visual learning through seeing
- Auditory learning through listening
- Tactile/Kinesthetic learning through doing,
moving and touching - Is it important to know how your learner learns
best?
37Multiple Intelligences
38Cultural Awareness
- Countries that our learners come from
39Cultural Awareness
- Activity
- Break into groups of 3-4.
- Think about what it is like to land in a country
where you do not speak the language - Brainstorm some of the things you would like to
know first - Come up with the first 4 questions you would ask
- Report out to the whole group
40LD
- A Learning Disability is a neurological
processing disorder. Its related to how the
brain functions in taking in, storing,
retrieving, and/or expressing information. For a
person with LD, certain processing avenues are
blocked.
41Learning Disabilities
- 50-80 of all students in literacy and/or basic
ed programs - LD students are NOT
- Lacking in intelligence
- Must have average to above average intelligence
to qualify - Due to cultural influence
- A result of inappropriate instruction
- Just Boys
- It is an equal opportunity disorder
- Due to lack of motivation
42Learning Disabilities
- LD refers to a wide variety of processing
disorders. - These are serious problems that effect major life
functions related to an individuals job
performance, academic endeavors, home life,
and/or community and social connections - LD isnt cured and LD doesnt go away.
43Famous People with LD
- Albert Einstein
- Agatha Christie
- Winston Churchill
- Walt Disney
- Tom Cruise
- Cher
- George Patton
44Activity
- Break into groups of 3-4
- You will be given instructions for your group
- The first group that is done wins!
45Questions? Comments?
- How did the activity make you feel?
- How did you feel when the other group could do it
and you could not?
46Strategies for working with LD
- 1. Structured Instruction
- 2. Connected Instruction
- 3. Informative Instruction
- 4. Explicit Instruction
- 5. Direct Instruction
- 6. Scaffolded Instruction
- 7. Intensive Instruction
-
47Strategies for working with LD
- 8. Process-Sensitive Instruction
- 9. Accommodating Instruction
- 10. Evaluated Instruction
- 11. Generalized Instruction
- 12. Enduring Instruction
48Dyslexia
- Reading or language processing learning
disability - Common problem involves letter reversals
- b
- d
- q
- p
49From Enchanted Gates
- Letters will not appear on one line
- Spacing may not be correct
- A P may be a Q or a B a D
- Try to read this slide
- How did this make you feel?
50Decoding Vs Comprehension
- How are you feeling right now?
- Who dropped the popcorn on the floor?
- When you are busy decoding, you dont necessarily
understand what you are reading.
51Instructional Approaches
- Direct and Explicit Instruction
- I Do
- We Do
- You Do
- Multi-sensory
- Scaffolding
- Activity In your groups, discuss several
activities that exemplify your assigned approach
52First Meeting
- SAMPLE OBJECTIVES OF A FIRST MEETING
- Spend some time getting acquainted
- Talk about learning goals
- Set tone of sessions
- Establish commitment
- Complete and sign tutor/student agreement (if
applicable) - Review student handbook (if applicable). Read
together. - Have some possible plans for activities
53Authentic Texts
- Real Life Materials
- What would you say would be a real life or
authentic text? - What adult learning theory items does a
real-life material address?
54Shoe Tying Activity
- Pick a partner
- Decide who will be the tutor and who will be the
student - Sit back to back
- Students untie one shoe
- Tutors instruct the student how to tie their shoe
without looking at them - 3 minutes
55Why is it Important to have a Lesson Plan?
- Keeps students goals in mind
- Record of students progress and materials used
- Helps plan for next session
56What should it look like?
- Flexible
- Can be casual
- Break things down into small steps
- What does my student need to know before I can
teach him this concept? - Check writing
57Lesson Plan Formats
- Basic format
- Goals short term
- Objectives
- Materials
- Methods steps, activities and review
- Assignment
- Evaluation
- Suggestions for next lesson
58Graphic Organizers
59Components of Reading Instruction
- Phonemic Awareness
- Decoding
- Fluency
- Vocabulary
- Comprehension
60Phonemic Awareness
- A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound in a
spoken language - phonemic awareness is the ability to isolate and
manipulate those individual sounds within words - English has about 44 phonemes
61Decoding
- Decoding is matching letters to the sounds they
represent - Decoding is knowing that the letter B says /b/
- Decoding should also be integrated within all
other reading instruction activities
62Fluency
- Fluent reading is
- smooth and fluid
- where the words are read accurately with
appropriate - phrasing
- intonation
- Emphasis
- Breathing
- Research has shown that reading fluency is a key
piece necessary to achieve comprehension.
63Vocabulary
- Vocabulary is one of the fundamentals of English
- Vocabulary is the set of words a person is
familiar with in a language - The challenge of teaching vocabulary is creating
lesson plans that are both effective and
entertaining
64Activity
- Truth possible notion
- Are of those
- Functional propositions with
- Then an even
- Assumption state even
- Values any assignment
- If atomic nonatomic
- Rudimentary affairs being
- Is that to
- Accordance made possible
- More even standard
- A tables from
- The connectives predictable
65State of Affairs
- If the assumption is made that the connectives
are truth-functional, then an even more
rudimentary notion of state of affairs is
possible a state of affairs is any assignment of
truth values to the atomic propositions of the
system, with the truth values of the nonatomic
propositions being predictable from those of
atomic propositions in accordance with the
standard truth tables - Macawley, James D. (1980) Everything That
Linguists Have Always Wanted to Know About
Logic, pg 161. Chicago University of Chicago
Press. but were ashamed to ask
66Components of Written Instruction
- Mechanics and Grammar
- Structure
- Spelling
67Writing Anxiety
- Being a good writer does not mean having
everything right the first time, and not making
any mistakes. - They will not have to rely on their personal
experiences when writing - Writing does not require that they always edit,
rewrite, and revise a certain number of times - Writing should be fun
68Writing with Your Student
- How many of you like to write?
- What kinds of things do you write?
- Does anyone think of himself as a writer?
- How have computers affected writing?
69Why Write?
- Reinforces reading skills
- Provides material for future lessons
- GED requires it
70Creative Writing
- Topic ideas
- Captions for pictures
- Story about the picture
- Put yourself into the picture
- Cartoons
71Other Ideas
- Biopoem
- Fortunately, Unfortunately
- I used to..But now I
72Essay
- 5 paragraphs
- Introduction
- Body
- Conclusion
- At least 3 sentences per paragraph
- GED make notes on a separate piece of paper and
corrections on the essay
73Introduction
- Brainstorm 4 ideas that address the topic
- Topic sentence introduces what topic assigned is
- Introduce each of the 3 best ideas
74Body
- Each idea from the introduction is a paragraph
- Each paragraph has a topic sentence
- Each paragraph explains the idea
75Conclusion
- Re-state the introduction
- Sum up the ideas and thoughts
- No new ideas
76Expert Essay Tips
- Transitions between paragraphs
- No new ideas that are not in the introduction
- No unsupported ideas
- Good grammar
- Outline, rough draft, first draft, additional
drafts, final draft
77THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS BAD WRITING
78Lets Write
- Look at the pictures posted
- Pick one that stimulates your imagination
- Write one paragraph from the perspective of
either a person or animal in the picture
79Teaching Strategies for ELL
- Pronunciation
- Stress and Intonation
- Idioms
- Survival Vocabulary
80Pronunciation
- Minimal Pairs
- Practice helps learner hear differences in
pronunciation - For example
81Stress and Intonation
- Stressed Words Content Words
- Nouns (e.g. kitchen, Peter)
- (most) principal verbs (e.g. visit, construct)
- Adjectives (e.g. beautiful, interesting)
- Adverbs (e.g. often, carefully)
- Non-Stressed Words Function Words
- Determiners (e.g. the, a, some, a few)
- Auxiliary verbs (e.g. don't, am, can, were)
- Prepositions (e.g. before, next to, opposite)
- Conjunctions (e.g. but, while, as)
- Pronouns (e.g. they, she, us)
82Idioms
- Examples Body Parts
- a heart of gold be a very kind person
- learn something by heart learn something
completely - twist someone's arm persuade someone
- cost an arm and a leg cost a fortune
- foot the bill pay the bill
- put your foot in it say or do something you
shouldn't
83Survival Vocabulary
- Primary vocabulary to learn is based on the
learners needs - Real-life objects and pictures
- TPR Total Physical Response
84Final Questions and Comments
85Congratulations!
- You have finished Tutor Training.
- Thank you for giving the gift of literacy to
someone in________!