What's this blog about?

I teach several courses under the broad topic of "Multicultural Education," prioritizing social justice issues of access, power/privilege, & narrowing the academic achievement gap. I am a person of color and I almost always have a white co-teacher. We include topics, such as: racism, sexism, heterosexism, ableism, ethnocentrism, deculturalization, transforming curriculum, etc. This is a place where I post information that we teach; lesson plans for activities; and resources we use and/or which are shared with me by my adult students.
Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts

Monday, July 4, 2016

Carol Ann Tomlinson and Edwin Lou Javius - Teach Up For Excellence

In a course, Strategies to Close the Achievement Gap, that my colleagues, Elli Stern/Jennifer Wolfrum, and I teach, we ask participants (teachers, counselors, administrators, tutors, nurses, etc.) to get into a group and "become the expert" on an article that we have assigned for homework.  To this end, we then ask the group to construct a graphic organizer, mnemonic, or other visual aid to help "teach" the other groups about the article.  


An important strategy for teachers is to have a growth mind set for their students so that they will adjust their instruction and practices to meet the students needs as they grow.  The greatest barrier to learning is often not what the student knows, but what the teacher expects of the students” (Good, 1987)

Having a community where all children feel comfortable allows the children to take some risks.  If teachers have high expectations for all students and they know teachers believe in them, they also willing to take more risks.  The environment needs to be full of trust, high expectations, and a lot of support for all to succeed.  

Joshua Aronson - Knowing Students As Individuals

In a course, Strategies to Close the Achievement Gap, that my colleagues, Elli Stern/Jennifer Wolfrum, and I teach, we ask participants (teachers, counselors, administrators, tutors, nurses, etc.) to get into a group and "become the expert" on an article that we have assigned for homework.  To this end, we then ask the group to construct a graphic organizer, mnemonic, or other visual aid to help "teach" the other groups about the article. 

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Joshua Aronson - Knowing Students as Individuals

This article underscores the importance of "at potential students" feeling that they are known and appreciated by their teacher.  For example, model and express curiosity as the students share their workKnowing their interests and experiences also informs instructional approaches and materials. 
Developing a curious mindset in class can also be through modeling of probing, higher-level questions is a start.  Open Circle and Responsive Classroom (Advisory) are also good vehicles for interjecting, modeling, and eliciting this type of questioning.

Joshua Aronson cites research by Thomas Dee who found that when students of color and teachers had more opportunity to know each other as individuals, it did not negatively impact how students of color performed on tests, even if the teachers were of a different race than their students.   

Aronson urges teachers to “cultivate a mindset of insatiable curiosity about…students as individuals,” not only for the teacher to learn about his/her students, but also for the students to cultivate a curiosity about their fellow classmates in order to eliminate a classroom culture of “mistrust, separateness and exclusion.”  When teachers and students know each other well, negative stereotypes can be dispelled.  It helps to create a classroom community where students feel included, safe, heard, and validated.  When these crucial pieces are in place, then the work of learning can truly begin.

“Stereotypes are a lazy mind’s best friend, a mental shortcut to save us the trouble of asking and listening.”

Friday, August 14, 2015

The A.B.C. of Self Efficacy and Effective Feedback

In a course, Strategies to Close the Achievement Gap, that my colleagues, Elli Stern/Jennifer Wolfrum, and I teach, we ask participants (teachers, counselors, administrators, tutors, nurses, etc.) to get into a group and "become the expert" on an article that we have assigned for homework.  To this end, we then ask the group to construct a graphic organizer, mnemonic, or other visual aid to help "teach" the other groups about the article.  


Adapted from the work of Susan Brookhart, John Hattie, Katie Rapp, and Grant Wiggins  

“Whether or not feedback is effective depends on what students need to hear, not what you need to say,”
~ Susan Brookhart

Appeal to the mind (cognition) and the heart (motivation).
Once students feel they understand what to do and why, they are more likely to develop a feeling that they have control over their own learning.

Be explicit and clarify the goal
Expectations and goals need to be described. It is important to give students, a clear picture of end-of-unit achievement standards and how mastery will be assessed.

Create a climate of trust
Students must understand that errors and misunderstandings are part of learning and not be afraid of negative reactions from peers – or the teacher – if they make mistakes. They need to “trust” that you care about them and want them to achieve.

Describe, not judge
Feedback needs to be actionable information describing what the student did in relation to goals, empowering intelligent adjustments. The best feedback compares work to specific criteria or exemplars.

Encourage
If a teacher cannot find something positive to say, then feedback is not what needs to come next. Additional teaching needs to come next.   Also, publically encouraging some students and not all students, discourages many.

Focus on students’ work and work processes, not on them personally
It’s not helpful to talk about how smart or lazy a student is. Talk about the work. When students generate their own feedback, set their own learning goals, and lead conferences with their teachers, they become more empowered learners.

Give feedback in small chunks
Focus on a few bite-size chunks rather than trying to give feedback on everything. Struggling students need to focus on one or two small steps they can take to improve, with simple, clear vocabulary to help them out. Hold a 2-3-minute mini-conference with each student once a week, giving concentrated bursts of usable feedback.

Hold high expectations
Hold high expectations for your student and with reminders that you are there to help them meet those expectations to do the work.

Identify one or more strengths and at least one next step
Sometimes students aren’t aware of their strengths and need them reinforced. They often need next steps pointed out. A teacher might say to a struggling student, “I see you skipped this line. It might help to keep your place with your finger.”

Join with students in the process
Students should generate their own feedback and set their own learning goals. Rather than telling the student all the things you notice about his or her work, start by helping them ask good questions and notice areas for improvement, ”How does this sound when I read it aloud?”  What do I notice about my sentences?“ When students lead conferences with their teachers, they become more empowered learners.

Keep a progress chart
Teachers, who show a completed example and explain the steps needed for a successful product, can help students break down a project and chart their progress with incremental deadlines.

Link feedback to criteria
The learning target and the performance of understanding should match. The criteria should be clear so that students receive the feedback as information for improvement and not an evaluation.  Formative assessments tell students where they are on the continuum of proficiency.

Make sure feedback is positive, clear, and specific
Specific praise is better than “Great job!” – for example, “This is a great paper. I especially appreciated the way you made a chart to summarize your information and then discussed results point by point. That made it really clear.”
Feedback should not be overly technical or more than the recipient can handle. With peer editing, students need to also practice giving effective feedback to each other.

Notice and comment on improvement
Teachers should tell students one important thing they noticed that, if changed, will likely lead to improvement.

Opportunities for practice are essential
Feedback should be followed by the opportunity to digest, understand, and use it .The follow-up work should happen before grades are given, ideally in the classroom where supervision and time for questions is available.

Provide opportunities to demonstrate improvement
What makes any assessment in education formative is not merely that it precedes summative assessments, but that the student has opportunities, if results are less than optimal, to reshape the performance to better achieve the goal.

Quick responses are important
The quicker the better, so students get feedback while they still remember the assignment and why they were doing it... Feedback can arrive more quickly when teachers use technology or peer reviewers.


Refer to goals
The information you give should tell the student whether he/she is on track or needs to change course, A teacher might say, “The point of this writing task is to make readers laugh. So, when rereading your draft or getting feedback from peers, ask yourself:  How funny is this? Where might it be funnier?”

Seek feedback from students
Ask students, “How can I help you?” Teachers who listen to students can adapt lessons, clarify work demands, and provide missing information, all of which helps students do better. It also helps student analyze their own work/thinking, become reflective, and practice advocating for themselves.

Tailor feedback to students
Novice students benefit most from task feedback, somewhat more proficient students from process feedback, and highly competent students thrive on feedback aimed at self-regulation or conceptual understanding.
  • Task feedback – This feedback shows students how well they are doing on a particular task and how to improve it.
  • Process feedback – This feedback might be suggested strategies to learn from errors, cues to seek information, or ways to relate different ideas.
  • Self-regulation feedback – This feedback helps students monitor, direct, and regulate their own actions as they work toward the learning goal – and helps build a belief that effort, more than raw ability, is what produces successful learning.

Understanding should be checked
“Do you understand?” is not enough. Better to ask, “In your own words, tell me the steps you need to take next.”  “What is the most important thing you heard me say?” or “What is the very next thing you’re going to do on this paper?”

View all students as a potential Martin Luther King, Jr., Eleanor Roosevelt, Louise Erdrich, and/or Cesar Chavez.
You cannot know what future potential is in your classroom, nor where your influence will end.  A teacher is a tree, the seeds of which will populate the world.

Words should convey your confidence
The tone of feedback, whether written or oral, should convey your confidence in the student as a learner.

eXamine your own biases.
Students notice who you help, praise, call on, etc. more or less than others.

You, the teacher, have the power to encourage or discourage.
Choose your words carefully.  Be aware of your actions.

Zoom in on appropriate behavior.
Notice when positive things are happening and use them to model in front of others.

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Reading Inventories

Analyze Reading Inventories here.
As a classroom teacher, reading specialist, and university professor, I have always found helpful published summaries or syntheses of professional-related information relevant to my work. In this article, I review the current editions of eight informal reading inventories (IRIs) published since 2002 that are available at the time of this writing. Specifically, I identify key issues surrounding the use of IRIs and examine ways in which the various IRIs reviewed approach them. A goal of this undertaking is to guide teachers, reading specialists, reading coaches, administrators, professionals in higher education, and others charged with the education or professional development of preservice or inservice teachers in their quest to find IRIs best suited to their specific needs. I hope the findings point to new ways in which IRIs can be made even more effective in the near future.

North Central Regional Educational Laboratory

By 2004, we knew how to do it. Citing the Learning Point 2004 publication, "All Students Reaching the Top:  Strategies for Closing Academic Achievement Gaps" by the North Central Regional Educational Laboratory.

Affirmative development of academic ability is nurtured and developed through:
(1) high-quality teaching and instruction in the classroom,
(2) trusting relationships in school, and
(3) supports for pro-academic behavior in the school and community.”

In the August 2004 article by Kiley Walsh Symonds titled, “After the Test: Closing the Achievement Gaps With Data,” Schools and districts may benefit from the following recommendations:
1. Schools need frequent credible data.
2. Teachers need support to use data.
3. Race matters.
4. Focus, especially on reading, is essential.

Closing the achievement gaps between white/Asian students and Hispanic/Latino or African-American students is a primary goal for school leaders.  We do not have to reinvent the wheel. We just have to act… NOW!

Teachers are not in this alone. Although it hurts to read Pedro Noguera’s article, “Closing the Racial Achievement Gap: The Best Strategies of the Schools We Send Them To” (August 2007) in which he states…
Children know when they are taught by adults who care about them and who believe in them. They typically respond by displaying the qualities that are so essential to school success – self-motivation, self-discipline and resilience.

Friday, February 27, 2015

Quick Link to Authors, Summaries, and Graphic Organizers for Courses I Teach

In courses (named below) that my colleagues, Elli Stern/Jennifer Wolfrum, and I teach, we ask participants (teachers, counselors, administrators, tutors, nurses, etc.) to get into a group and "become the expert" on an article that we have assigned for homework.  To this end, we then ask the group to construct a graphic organizer, mnemonic, or other visual aid to help "teach" the other groups about the article.  

BUILDING BRIDGES FOR UNDERSTANDING

Kevin Washburn - Inspiring Others
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2015/08/kevin-washburn-inspiring-others.html 

Christine Sleeter - Involving Students in Selecting Reading Materials
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2011/07/christine-sleeter-involving-students-in.html

Priya Parmar and Shirley Steinberg - Locating Yourself for Your Student
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2015/08/priya-parmar-and-shirley-steinberg.html


Heather M. Pleasants - Showing Students Who You Are 
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2015/08/heather-m-pleasants-showing-students.html 

Dorinda J. Carter - On Spotlighting and Ignoring Racial Group Members in the Classroom
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2015/08/dorinda-carter-on-spotlighting-and.html

STRATEGIES TO CLOSE THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP


Carol Ann Tomlinson and Edwin Lou Javius - Teach Up For Excellence

Mneumonics & Raps (Larry Bell, Beverly Daniel Tatum, Amanda Taylor, Julie Landsman, Chike Akua) - http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2012/03/mneumonics.html

Bonnie Davis - Unlocking Potential of Diverse Learners
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2012/03/bonnie-davis-unlocking-potential-of.html

Lisa Delpit - Raising Expectations for Other People's Children
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2012/12/lisa-delpit-raising-expectations-for.html 

Gail Thompson - Through Ebony Eyes
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2012/03/gail-thompson.html

Larry Bell - Strategies That Close the Achievement Gap

http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2012/03/larry-bell.html
  
Doug Lemov - Teach Like a Champion
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2012/03/doug-lemov.html
UNDERSTANDING SELF-EFFICACY

Geoff Cohen - Providing Supportive Feedback
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2012/03/geoff-cohen-providing-supportive.html

Ron Ferguson - Helping Students of Color Meet High Standards
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2015/08/ronald-ferguson-helping-students-of.html

Marina Krakovsky - The Effort Effect
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2012/03/marina-krakovsky-effective-effort.html

Robert Marzano - Teaching Self-Efficacy with Personal Projects
http://multiculturalinitiatives.blogspot.com/2015/08/robert-marzano-teaching-self-efficacy.html

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Mneumonics & Raps

Larry Bell’s UNRAAVEL For Math
Underline the questions
Now predict what you think you need to do to solve the problem
Read the word problem
Are the important words circled? (especially clue words)
Apply the step(s) you chose to solve the problem
Verify the answer (is it reasonable: does it make sense?)
Eliminate wrong answers
Let the answer stay or rework the problem

Larry Bell’s UNRAAVEL For Reading
Underline the title
Now predict the passage (in one sentence)
Run through and number the paragraphs
Are you reading the questions?
Are the important words circled? (Write down their meanings.)
Venture through the passage
Eliminate wrong answers in multiple choice.
Let the questions be answered (Write the paragraph number where you found the answers.)

“Cultivating the Trust of Black Parents” by Beverly Tatum
Teachers listening to the concerns of parents
Representation of all -environment, conversations, curriculum
Understanding potential for bias
Sensitivity toward parent distrust
Talking openly and truthfully

“Teaching and Transcending Basic Skills” by Amanda Taylor
Temporary and targeted
Readiness
Assessment and acceleration
Needed to
Scaffold
Critical thinking
Expectations high!
Necessary to
Demonstrate intellectual ability

“Confronting the Racism of Low Expectations” by Julie Landsman
New way of thinking
Ongoing dialogue
Intelligence refined
Do something
Immerse in other cultures
Open and safe environment
Tell them they can do it
Success for all

Grammar Rap by Chike Akua: (This came up in the small group on Engagement)
Good communication skills are essential.
The power of the word will make you influential.

We need to know the eight parts of speech.
Master the language; go as high as you can reach.

A noun is a person place or thing;
An idea in my mind that makes me dream.

A verb is a word that always shows action;
Like divide, multiply, and do subtraction.

An adjective always describes a noun,
Like a big, red truck you can drive around.

An adverb usually end in –ly;
Clearly a verb is what it modifies.

A pronoun takes the place of a noun;
Like when she, he and they walk around.

Conjunctions connect phrases, clauses and words;
And, but, or, nor and yet haven’t you heard?

Here’s a word that’s definitely on a mission,
Let me give you some examples of a preposition:
In, on, from, to and around:
During, after, up and even down.

Now we need to learn about interjections,
A word with enthusiasm, lots of expression
Like: Stop! Go! Wait! Yes! And No!
Wow! Great! Awesome! Uh-oh!

Now that you know the eight parts of speech,
Master the language, go as high as you can reach!

Larry Bell - Strategies That Close the Achievement Gap

In a course, Strategies to Close the Achievement Gap, that my colleague, Elli Stern, and I teach, we ask participants (teachers, counselors, administrators, tutors, nurses, etc.) to get into a group and "become the expert" on an article that we have assigned for homework.  To this end, we then ask the group to construct a graphic organizer, mnemonic, or other visual aid to help "teach" the other groups about the article.
 

Larry Bell cites the importance of getting students emotionally involved. The poetry template invites sharing emotional content, for example, with the starter, "I worry about__________," personal expression and deep insight is encouraged.

Larry Bell’s multiple “fishbowl” allows every child to both be seen and to see.

Increasing communication with parents is important. Little or no parent support is a characteristic of low performing students.

Larry Bell’s UNRAAVEL For Math
Underline the questions
Now predict what you think you need to do to solve the problem
Read the word problem
Are the important words circled? (especially clue words)
Apply the step(s) you chose to solve the problem
Verify the answer (is it reasonable: does it make sense?)
Eliminate wrong answers
Let the answer stay or rework the problem

Larry Bell’s UNRAAVEL For Reading
Underline the title
Now predict the passage (in one sentence)
Run through and number the paragraphs
Are you reading the questions?
Are the important words circled? (Write down their meanings.)
Venture through the passage
Eliminate wrong answers in multiple choice.
Let the questions be answered (Write the paragraph number where you found the answers.)

Larry Bell 12 Power Words
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dguxb5VuB0Y

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Christine Sleeter - Involving Students in Selecting Reading Materials

In a course, Building Bridges for Understanding, that my colleague, Elli Stern, and I teach, we ask participants (teachers, counselors, administrators, tutors, nurses, etc.) to get into a group and "become the expert" on an article that we have assigned for homework.  To this end, we then ask the group to construct a graphic organizer, mnemonic, or other visual aid to help "teach" the other groups about the article.