ecse 602 instructional programming for infants and young children with disabilities

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10/23/2014 Dr. Y. Xu 1 ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and Young Children with Disabilities This week’s topics: Embedded learning opportunities (ELO) and Child-focused instructional strategies (CFIS) Material selection and prompting strategies

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ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and Young Children with Disabilities. This week ’ s topics: Embedded learning opportunities (ELO) and Child-focused instructional strategies (CFIS) Material selection and prompting strategies. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

10/23/2014

Dr. Y. Xu

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ECSE 602Instructional Programming for Infants and

Young Children with Disabilities

This week’s topics:Embedded learning opportunities (ELO)

and Child-focused instructional strategies (CFIS)

Material selection and prompting strategies

Page 2: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

Embedded Learning Opportunities Embedded Learning Opportunities (ELO) (ELO) (Sandall & Swartz, 2008)(Sandall & Swartz, 2008)

What are ELO? Short, well thought out and planned teaching;

episodes that occur within activities and routines

Why use ELO? No big changes in classroom activities or routines; Child is motivated because instruction is around their

interests; Increased ability to independently use new skills and

skills are easily generalized because skills are taught within a meaningful, relevant context.

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Page 3: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

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Child-focused Instructional Strategies Child-focused Instructional Strategies (CFIS) (CFIS) (Sandall & Swartz, 2008)(Sandall & Swartz, 2008)

What are CFIS?What are CFIS? Short, well thought out, planned and intensive teaching episodes Short, well thought out, planned and intensive teaching episodes

that require direct, explicit instruction during a specific timethat require direct, explicit instruction during a specific time

Why use CFIS?Why use CFIS? The childThe child’’s objective is uniques objective is unique Child must learn the skill to take advantage of the general early Child must learn the skill to take advantage of the general early

childhood curriculum (e.g., establishing joint attention, imitating, childhood curriculum (e.g., establishing joint attention, imitating, playing with toys)playing with toys)

To become as independent as possible (preschool survival skills)To become as independent as possible (preschool survival skills) Child is making very slow progressChild is making very slow progress

Page 4: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

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ELO and CFIS ELO and CFIS (Sandall & Swartz, 2008)(Sandall & Swartz, 2008)

How do you design an ELO? (Chapter 6)How do you design an ELO? (Chapter 6) How do you design a CFIS? (Chapter 7)How do you design a CFIS? (Chapter 7)

Page 5: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

Material selection Background assumptions

Characteristics of objects affect levels of interest The developmental level of the child affects level of

interest and action patterns

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Page 6: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

Material selection Novelty

The individual child’s past experiences with an object will affect interest level and this determine, in part, his willingness to “engage” the object or materials. For every child there is an optimal level of novelty.

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Page 7: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

Material selection Responsivity

What an object does in response to a child’s effort to manipulate it will determine, in part, his/her continued interest. For every child there is an optimal level of responsivity. Materials may be responsive in terms of any (or all) sensory dimensions.

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Page 8: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

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Material Selection

PERFORMANCE

RESPONSIVITY

Optimal level

Page 9: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

Material Selection Complexity

A child’s interest in an object will, in part, be determined by the number of turns and angles in the contours of the object. For every child there is an optimal level of complexity.

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Page 10: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

Material Selection Difficulty

The level of difficulty should be between their current level and potential level. Children will be highly motivated when the material is appropriately challenging, but not overwhelming.

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Page 11: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

Prompting strategies Fundamental areas that teachers must know to

implement successful instruction in inclusive classes: what to teach how to teach (what instructional strategies to use) when to teach (in what sequence) whether their teaching is working

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Page 12: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

Prompting strategies Prompts

Antecedent events that help to initiate aresponse. They come before a response isperformed and are designed to facilitate itsperformance. When the prompt does result in thetarget response, the target response may bereinforced. Prompts should be given in the least intrusive way,

and with the intention of fading them as soon as possible.

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Page 13: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

Prompting strategies Prompting & Fading

Fading: the gradual removal of a prompt. Abrupt removal of prompt: response may no longer

be performed. Prompts may be progressively reduced and finally

omitted. Not all prompts needed to be faded.

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Page 14: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

Prompting strategiesLeast-to-most prompting

Verbal

Gestural

Partial physical assistance

Full physical assistance

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Page 15: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

Prompting strategiesMost-to-least prompting

Physically assist the student to do the task. Then give what physical assistance is necessary

to complete the task. Give a gesture, or model the task, so that the

student can copy the action. Give a direct verbal prompt, such as: "Pick up

your pen." Give an indirect verbal prompt, such as: "What

do you do next?"

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Page 16: ECSE 602 Instructional Programming for Infants and  Young Children with Disabilities

Prompting strategies Graduated guidance

a less structured strategy of reducing prompts Cue

a prompt that directs attention to a specific dimension of an object/task

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