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Learning Styles (TIU4) Learning styles with 2 examples – place a star by your preferred styles
Personal Dictionary
2. Word Walls 4.
1.
Individualized Instruction 3. Flexible Grouping
Example 1 Example 2
Four Corners Jigsaw
Cooperative Grouping
T-Chart
Similarities / Differences Rank 'Em!
Participation Notes:
Definition
Adapt the extent to which a learner
is actively involved in the task.
Example
In geography, have a student hold the
globe, while others point out locations.
Ask the student to lead a group. Have the
student turn the pages while sitting on
your lap (kindergarten).
Suggestions for working with Students in Poverty (E12)
Provide access to computers, magazines, newspapers, and books so Students who live in poverty may not always know the correct behaviors for
low-income students can see and work with printed materials. School may school situations. At home, they may function under a different set of social rules.
1. be the only place where they are exposed to print media. 4. Take time to explain the rationale for rules and procedures in your classroom.
3. Don’t make comments about your students’ clothes or 6. Arrange a bank of shared supplies for your students to
belongings unless they are in violation of the dress code. borrow when they are temporarily out of materials for class.
1. Anticipation Guide Before reading, individually, small groups students' prior knowledge and build curiosity about a new topic. Before reading, students
listen to or read several statements about key concepts presented in the text; they're often
or whole class setting structured as a series of statements with which the students can choose to agree or
disagree. Anticipation guides stimulate students' interest in a topic and set a purpose for
reading.
Reader's theater is a strategy for developing reading fluency. It involves children in oral
2. Reader’s Theater During reading with a small group reading through reading parts in scripts. In using this strategy, students do not need to
memorize their part; they need only to reread it several times, thus developing their fluency
skills. The best reader's theater scripts include lots of dialogue.
Framed paragraphs are pre-writing tools that help students write well-developed
Framed Paragraphs After reading, individually, with small paragraphs. They are skeleton formats containing information about the main ideas and
transition words that guide the organization and the development of supportive details.
3. groups or whole class Framed paragraphs offer a structure for students to use as they begin to write paragraphs
and essays.
Appropriate speech
3. Make verbal communication understandable Scaffolding
Wait time
Thinking aloud
4. Learning strategies (this one should be easy!) Summarizing strategy
Prompting, questioning and elaborating