Title: SIOP Component 4: Strategies
1SIOP Component 4 Strategies
2Component Review
- Lesson Preparation
- Building Background
- Comprehensible Input
- Strategies
- Interaction
- Practice / Application
- Lesson Delivery
- Review / Assessment
3Passing Notes Strategy
- On a clean sheet of paper, answer the following
questions - Have the SIOP strategies you have implemented
made teaching more fun, more rewarding? - If so, how?
- If not, why not?
4Passing Notes Strategy
- Exchange papers with a partner.
- Write a one or two sentence response to his/her
paper. - Return the paper to the owner.
- Complete cycle one more time.
- Write a one sentence summary of all information
written between you and your partner.
5Content Objectives
- Select learning strategies appropriate to lesson
objectives - Recognize value of scaffolding instruction and
identify techniques to scaffold -
- Language Objectives
- Identify learning strategies to use with students
- Recall and share details about this lesson with
the large group
6SIOP Features Component 4
- F13 - Ample opportunities to use Learning
strategies - F14 - Scaffolding techniques
- F15 - Variety of Questions to promote
higher-order thinking HOT Questions
7F13 - Ample opportunities to use learning
strategies
- The purpose of the SIOP Strategies component is
to examine our strategy instruction, not just the
strategies that we employ. - The purpose of strategy instruction is to help
students to access memory, make connections,
solve problems, and monitor their own learning.
8Learning Strategies
- Cognitive
- Rereading
- Highlighting
- Reading Aloud
- Taking notes
- Mapping information
- Finding key vocabulary
- Mnemonics
- Metacognitive
- Predicting / Inferring
- Self-questioning
- Monitoring / clarifying
- Evaluating
- Summarizing
- Visualizing
9SQP2RS Squeepers
- As a group, fill in the Before Reading sections
of the SQP2RS graphic organizer. - Skim/read the article highlight key points
- As a group, respond and write a brief summary of
what you read.
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11F14 - Scaffolding techniques
- Whole class
- 2. Small group
- Pairs
- 4. Individual
12Scaffolding Models
Teach
Model
Practice
Apply
Small Group
Whole Class
Partners
Independent Work
Teacher Centered
Teacher Assisted
Peer Assisted
Student Centered
13F15 - Variety of Questions to promote
higher-order thinking
Conversational Proficiency
Knowledge Comprehension Application Analysis Synt
hesis Evaluation
Academic Proficiency
Dr. J. Cummins
14F15 - Variety of Questions to promote
higher-order thinking
- 80 of questions teachers ask are at the literal
or knowledge level - Higher level questions require learners to
elaborate and help improve their ability to speak
and use the vocabulary theyve learned
15Blooms Taxonomy
- Evaluation Determining value and providing a
rationale for the response. Must go beyond the
individuals opinion - Synthesis Creating something new from the
parts - Analysis Breaking the concept into component
parts and examining/explaining the parts. - Application Demonstrating knowledge by applying
concepts to ones own life - Comprehension Basic understanding of concept
(e.g., providing definitions) - Knowledge Simple recitation of information
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17Traveling Through the Dark
- Traveling through the dark I found a deerdead
on the edge of the Wilson River road.It is
usually best to roll them into the canyonthat
road is narrow to swerve might make more
dead.By glow of the tail-light I stumbled back
of the carand stood by the heap, a doe, a recent
killingshe had stiffened already, almost
cold.I dragged her off she was large in the
belly.
18- My fingers touching her side brought me the
reason-her side was warm her fawn lay there
waiting,alive, still, never to be born.Beside
that mountain road I hesitated.The car aimed
ahead its lowered parking lightsunder the hood
purred the steady engine.I stood in the glare of
the warm exhaust turning redaround our group I
could hear the wilderness listen.I thought hard
for us all--my only swerving--then pushed her
over the edge into the river. - by William Stafford
19Blooms Questions
- Knowledge Who is the author of the poem?
- Comprehension Summarize the events in the poem.
- Application Write a list of interview questions
you would ask if you had the opportunity to talk
to the narrator. - Analysis Select a word or phrase from each
stanza of the poem. How do these words / phrases
contribute to the story told by the poet? - Synthesis Imagine that you had been the person
who found the dead deer. Write a new stanza for
the poem, telling what you would have done. - Evaluation Did the narrator make the right
choice? Why or why not?
20Question-Answer Relationships
- Right There What does the author find on the
road? - Think Search The narrator refers to our
group in stanza 4. To whom is he referring? - Author Me Do you think the narrator made a
wise decision? - On My Own What would you have done if faced with
the same decision the narrator in the poem had to
make?
21Writing HOT Questions
Select a topic. Write six questions or tasks
related to the topic, one at each level of the
taxonomy OR four questions, one for each QAR Type.
- Blooms Taxonomy
- Evaluation
- Synthesis
- Analysis
- Application
- Comprehension
- Knowledge
- QAR
- Right There
- Think Search
- Author Me
- On My Own
22Whip Around Strategy
- On your Whip Around handout, record five things
that you learned about Component 4 Strategies.
Please work by yourself. - After recording your ideas, please stand.
- Each person should state one thing from his/her
list. If you hear something from your list, cross
it off. - When all your ideas have been crossed off, please
sit down.
23Content Objectives
- Select learning strategies appropriate to lesson
objectives - Recognize value of scaffolding instruction and
identify techniques to scaffold -
- Language Objectives
- Identify learning strategies to use with students
- Recall and share details about this lesson with
the large group
24Teaching Challenge
- Teach students thinking strategies to facilitate
their learning of your subject - Scaffold learning so that all learners can be
more successful - Increase higher-order thinking questions (Blooms,
QAR)