supporting students after instruction karan khanna

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REMEDIAL TEACHING SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

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Page 1: SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

REMEDIAL TEACHING

SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION

KARAN KHANNA

Page 2: SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

Why do students continue to struggle?

Even after you have supported students prior to the lesson, provided them with targeted intervention during the lesson, you still have a handful of students who do not understand the concepts or still cannot demonstrate mastery of the required skills.

Page 3: SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

What is Remediation?

Acceleration was offered before students started the unit of study.

Intervention was offered during the instruction.

Remediation is an opportunity to provide additional support to those students who still do not understand key concepts in spite of attempts to support them.

Page 4: SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

Two Types of Remediation

Short-term remediation is designed to get students ready for the summative assessment.

Ongoing remediation focuses on long-termed skill development to address large gaps in background knowledge or basic skills.

All remediation usually occurs outside the classroom.

Page 5: SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

What do You Remediate?Not everything being taught needs to be

remediated. Skills taught again in later units or “nice-to-knows” that are not essential to mastery may not be necessary.

Material that makes up a substantial part of the assessment content or skills.

Material that is critical to the next unit or later units or study.

Specific concepts with which the student struggles.

Page 6: SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

Selecting Remediation Strategies

Selecting effective remediation strategies requires that at teacher find out as much as they can about why a student is still struggling. Students don’t have to be re-taught all the material, they probably have gaps in understanding that have prevented them from grasping key concepts.

Page 7: SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

Re-teachTeach concepts the students don’t

understand a different way.Focus on only the key concepts and skills

students need to know.Re-teaching should occur shortly after a

students’ assessment shows they did not understand much of the material.

Teaching should be different than regular instruction.

Should not create additional work for students.

Page 8: SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

TutoringCan use teacher or peer tutoring or both.Should help students develop specific skills.Should target the learning task with which

they are struggling.Should be temporary.Electronic or on-line tutorials can be used.

Page 9: SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

Additional PracticeNot drill and kill!Practice should focus on helping students

develop fluency and proficiency.Practice should be distributed over a period

of time. Use several sessions.Should be meaningfulShould be shortShould have built in feedback.

Page 10: SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

Organization and Study HabitsNot drill and kill!Practice should focus on helping students

develop fluency and proficiency.Practice should be distributed over a period

of time. Use several sessions.Should be meaningfulShould be shortShould have built in feedback.

Page 11: SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

Alternative Instructional StrategiesMatch students best learning style.Hands-on verses lecture.Working with a partner or small group.Breaking information down into small

learning targets and teaching small chunks at a time.

Remediation is not simply going over the material more slowly. Its teaching concepts a different way.

Page 12: SUPPORTING STUDENTS AFTER INSTRUCTION KARAN KHANNA

Reassessing

After providing the corrective action.Reassess to improve learning not grades.Reassess only when it helps students learn

information they need to move on.Reassess in a new or different format, as

applicable.Reassess as close to the original assessment

as possible.