strategies siop model making content comprehensible for english language learners
TRANSCRIPT
Strategies
SIOP Model
Making Content Comprehensible for English Language Learners
Content objectives
Select learning strategies appropriate to a lesson’s objectives
Incorporate explicit instruction and student practice of metacognitive and cognitive strategies in lesson plans
Identify techniques for scaffolding verbal, procedural, and instructional understanding
Language Objectives
Identify language learning strategies to use with students
Discuss the importance of higher order questions to students of all English proficiency levels
Write a set of questions with increasing level of difficulty on one topic
An Important Distinction
Instructional StrategiesActivities, techniques, approaches, and
methods that teachers use to promote student learning and achievement.
Learning StrategiesConscious, flexible plans learners use to
make sense of what they’re reading and learning; these reside in the learner’s head.
Three types of Learning Strategies
1. Metacognitive Strategies:1. Matching thinking and problem solving
strategies to particular learning situations2. Clarifying purposes for learning3. Monitoring one’s own comprehension
through self-questioning4. Taking corrective action if understanding fails
1.Metacognitive Strategies
Gist (page 98 in red book) Assist students in “getting the Gist” Open book to first article after Strategies tab (blue notebook) Read introduction together at table. Underline ten or more words that you believe are “most
important.” Without using text write a summary sentence or two using as
many words from your list as possible. Repeat the process. Write an introductory sentence. What do you have?
2. Cognitive Strategies
Helping students organize the information they are expected to learn through the process of self-regulated learning.
Directly related to individual learning task; students apply a specific technique to a learning task.
Examples Rereading Highlighting Mapping information Taking notes Graphic organizers Visualization
2.Cognitive Strategies
Mnemonics Rhythm: Rhythm Helps Your Two Hips
Move Write one at your table.
3.Social/Affective Strategies
Learning can be enhanced when people interact with each other to clarify a confusing point or when they participate in a group discussion or cooperative learning group to solve a problem.
Interaction Questioning Clarification Cooperative Learning Groups Self-talk
3.Social/Affective Strategies
Think Aloud and Think Aloud Clouds.
~Read either the math or reading Think Aloud conversation with partner.
~Extra Credit: Using the clouds, you and your partner will model thinking aloud with the second assignment.
Practice with Bloom’s Taxonomy
Paper Throw Read the first two paragraphs in the baseball cards
article. Using the question stems from the blue Bloom’s
sheet, write a question on the sticky note. Throw the sticky note. Answer the question you receive. Repeat..
Scaffolding
When scaffolding is consistently used, it assists and supports student understanding.
SCAFFOLDING is associated with Vygotsky’s Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD).
The ZPD is the difference between what a child can accomplish alone and what he or she can accomplish with the assistance of a more experienced teacher.
In a classroom, teachers scaffold instruction when they provide substantial amounts of support and assistance in the early stages of a new concept or activity.
Two types of scaffolding
Verbal Scaffolding: Use prompting, questioning, and elaboration to
facilitate student’s movement to higher levels of language proficiency, comprehension, and thinking.
Procedural Scaffolding/Instructional Scaffolding Tasks are divided into simpler components. Teacher focuses on proper level of difficulty to avoid
frustration. Teachers model thinking. Teachers respond to what they see.
Conga Line
Content objectives
Select learning strategies appropriate to a lesson’s objectives
Incorporate explicit instruction and student practice of metacognitive and cognitive strategies in lesson plans
Identify techniques for scaffolding verbal, procedural, and instructional understanding.
Language Objectives
Identify language learning strategies to use with students
Discuss the importance of higher order questions to students of all English proficiency levels
Write a set of questions with increasing level of difficulty on one topic