Active Engagement Strategies Foothill Farms Neighborhood Network Woodridge School November 12, 2010...

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Active Engagement Strategies Foothill Farms Neighborhood Network Woodridge School November 12, 2010 Marcie Nichols, Ken Dandurand, Will Pope

description

Let’s Get Situated! Signals for attention and transition Signals for recognition and feedback Hey, Pardn’er!

Transcript of Active Engagement Strategies Foothill Farms Neighborhood Network Woodridge School November 12, 2010...

Page 1: Active Engagement Strategies Foothill Farms Neighborhood Network Woodridge School November 12, 2010 Marcie Nichols, Ken Dandurand, Will Pope.

Active Engagement Strategies

Foothill Farms Neighborhood Network Woodridge School

November 12, 2010

Marcie Nichols, Ken Dandurand, Will Pope

Page 2: Active Engagement Strategies Foothill Farms Neighborhood Network Woodridge School November 12, 2010 Marcie Nichols, Ken Dandurand, Will Pope.

Main Objective

To learn instructional techniques that will increase student participation and achievement.

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Let’s Get Situated!

• Signals for attention and transition

• Signals for recognition and feedback

• Hey, Pardn’er!

Page 4: Active Engagement Strategies Foothill Farms Neighborhood Network Woodridge School November 12, 2010 Marcie Nichols, Ken Dandurand, Will Pope.

Think, (Write), Pair, Share

Begin a list of words A – Z that relate to active engagement strategies.

From Pohl’s Thinkers Keys (2000)

Page 5: Active Engagement Strategies Foothill Farms Neighborhood Network Woodridge School November 12, 2010 Marcie Nichols, Ken Dandurand, Will Pope.

Active Engagement Defined

A consistent, frequent, often simultaneous

engagement of the students’ minds with that which is being learned.

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Graphic Organizer

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Research

High levels of active engagement during lessons are associated with higher levels of achievement and student motivation.

Ryan and Deci, 2000

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Research

Studies on effective teachers have clearly established that interactive direct instruction is more effective in producing student achievement gains. Students learn best when the teacher is actively teaching and interacting with students.

AFT, 2001

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Arguments for the Use ofActive Engagement Strategies

Teacher benefits:• More effective teaching• Fewer behavior problems• Opportunities to C.F.U.• Fun!

Student benefits:• Increases focus and participation• Increases retention• Ownership of learning• Students are validated

Page 10: Active Engagement Strategies Foothill Farms Neighborhood Network Woodridge School November 12, 2010 Marcie Nichols, Ken Dandurand, Will Pope.

Whole Brain Teaching

http://www.youtube.com/v/h6WJdsb0dfM&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1

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Random Selection

After the first answer, the rest of you might be asked to…

• Paraphrase• Summarize• Add to or counter what another has said• Repeat• Agree or Disagree and tell Why

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Partner Walk

1. What did it feel like to be potentially “on the hook?”

2. What are positive/negative impacts of questioning through random selection?

3. How is random selection using sticks different from randomly calling on student without a selection tool?

4. How is random selection using sticks different from calling on students who raise hands?

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Random Selection

Students must listen intently as they do not know who will be called upon

• Ask question before selecting student• Use Wait Time• Provide scaffolds if student struggles• Dignify response; access support and

return to engage original student

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Group Alert

• Tell students you will ask a question, give wait time and call on random student to answer. After that person answers, someone else will be randomly chosen to:– Summarize – Paraphrase– Repeat– Add to or counter– Agree or disagree and tell why– Offer another opinion

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Choral Response

Respond orally either by repeating teacher or by answering a question in unison. (Best for one word or short phrases)

• State what is to be repeated or ask a question• WAIT (length depends on complexity of question• Give the signal (count of 3, hand gesture)• Monitor student simultaneity of response (i.e. all

students at the same time)

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Word Bank

• Micro lecture• Choral Response• Group Alert• Think-Pair Share• Random Selection• Partner Walk• Class-Yes

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Just one more…

http://www.youtube.com/v/dxPVyieptwA&feature=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1

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Think, (Write), Pair, Share

Write one or two questions for which the answer is…

“active engagement strategies!”