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Douglas Fisher & Nancy Frey 
Teaching Literacy in the Visible Learning Classroom, Grades K-5 

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Portada de Douglas Fisher & Nancy Frey: Teaching Literacy in the Visible Learning Classroom, Grades K-5 (ePUB)

It could happen at 10:10 a.m. in the midst of interactive writing, at 2:30, when listening to readers, or even after class, when planning a lesson. The question arises: How do I influence students’ learning–what’s going to generate that light bulb Aha-moment of understanding? 

In this sequel to their megawatt best seller Visible Learning for Literacy, Douglas Fisher, Nancy Frey, and John Hattie help you answer that question by sharing structures and tools for effective literacy instruction that have high-impact on learning—and insights on which stage of learning they have that high impact. 
  
With their expert lessons, video clips, and online resources, you can deliver sustained, comprehensive experiences in phonics, guided reading, interactive writing, content-area discussions—in virtually all you teach:



  • Mobilizing Visible Learning: Use lesson design strategies based on research that included 500 million plus students to develop self-regulating learners able to ‘see’ the purpose of what they are learning—and their own progress. 

  • Teacher Clarity: Articulate daily learning intentions, success criteria, and other goals; understand what your learners understand, and design high-potency experiences for all students.

  • Direct Instruction: Embrace modeling and scaffolding as a critical pathway for students to learn new skills and concepts. 

  • Teacher-Led Dialogic Instruction: Guide reading, writing, and thinking by using questioning and other teacher-led discussion techniques to help learners to clarify thinking, disagree respectfully, and reach consensus. 

  • Student-Led Dialogic Learning: Foster cognitive growth with peer-mediated learning —reciprocal teaching, QAR, fish bowl, and more. 

  • Independent Learning:  Ensure that students deepen learning by designing relevant tasks that enable them to think metacognitively, set goals, and develop self-regulatory skills. 

  • Tools to Use to Determine Literacy Impact:  Know what your impact truly is with these research-based formative assessments for K-5 learners. 


With Teaching Literacy in the Visible Learning Classroom, take your students from surface to deep to transfer learning. It’s all about using the most effective practices—and knowing WHEN those practices are best leveraged to maximize student learning. 

€39.99
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Tabla de materias

Introduction

Chapter 1. Mobilizing Visible Learning for Literacy

Visible Learning for Literacy

Components of Effective Literacy Learning

Knowledge of How Children Learn

Developmental View of Learning

Meaningful Experiences and Social Interaction

Surface, Deep, and Transfer Learning

Phases of Reading Development

Phases of Writing Development

Formats and Scheduling

Time Organization

Across a Week

Across Content Areas

Spotlight on Three Teachers

Conclusion

Chapter 2. Teacher Clarity

Understanding Expectations in Standards

Learning Intentions in the Language Arts

Student Ownership of Learning Intentions

Connecting Learning Intentions to Prior Knowledge

Make Learning Intentions Inviting and Engaging

Social Learning Intentions

Success Criteria in Language Arts

Success Criteria Are Crucial for Motivation

Conclusion

Chapter 3. Direct Instruction

Relevance

Teacher Modeling

Pair With Think-Alouds

The “I” and “Why” of Think-Alouds

Students Should Think Aloud, Too

Checking for Understanding

Use Questions to Probe Student Thinking

Guided Instruction

Formative Evaluation During Guided Instruction

Independent Learning

Fluency Building

Application

Spiral Review

Extension

Closure

Conclusion

Chapter 4. Teacher-Led Dialogic Instruction

Effective Talk, Not Just Any Talk

Foster Deep Learning and Transfer

Listen Carefully

Facilitate and Guide Discussion

Teacher-Led Tools for Dialogic Instruction

Anticipation Guides

Guided Reading

Write Dialogically With Shared Writing

Language Experience Approach

Interactive Writing

Close and Critical Reading

Conclusion

Chapter 5. Student-Led Dialogic Learning

The Value of Student-to-Student Discussion

The Social and Behavioral Benefits of Peer-Assisted Learning

Fostering Collaborative Discussions

Teach Children to Develop Their Own Questions

Student-Led Tools for Dialogic Learning

Fishbowl

Collaborative Reasoning

Gallery Walks

Literature Circles

Readers Theatre

Reciprocal Teaching

Peer Tutoring

Conclusion

Chapter 6. Independent Learning

Finding Flow

Learning Words Independently

Independently Working With Words

Open and Closed Concept Word Sorts

Vocabulary Cards

Spelling Words

Acquisition

Retention

Automaticity

Word Games

Building Fluent Readers

Reading Into Recorder

Neurological Impress Model

Independent Reading

Independent Writing

Power Writing

Extended Writing Prompts

Big Ideas About Independent Learning

Does It Promote Metacognition?

Does It Promote Goal-Setting?

Does It Promote Self-Regulation?

Conclusion

Chapter 7. Tools to Use in Determining Literacy Impact

Do You Know Your Impact?

Do You Know Your Collective Impact?

ASSESSING READING

Assessing Emergent and Early Readers

Language Comprehension

Decoding

Early Language Learning Assessments

Concepts About Print

Yopp-Singer Test of Phoneme Segmentation

Sight Words

Retellings

Decoding Assessments

Letter Identification

Phonics

Assessing Reading of Meaningful Text

Miscue Analysis

Assessing Developing Readers

Assessing Reading Comprehension

Informal Reading Inventories

Cloze Procedure

Reading Fluency

Metacomprehension Strategies Index

Assessing Attitudes Toward Reading

Elementary Reading Attitude Survey

ASSESSING WRITING

Assessing Spelling

Assessing Writing Fluency

Assessing Writing Holistically

Literacy Design Collaborative Student Work Rubrics

Assessing Writing Attitude and Motivation

Writing Attitude Survey

Why Assess? Know Your Impact

Conclusion

Compendium of Assessments

Appendix: Effect Sizes

References

Index

Sobre el autor

John Hattie, Ph D, is an award-winning education researcher and best-selling author with nearly thirty years of experience examining what works best in student learning and achievement. His research,  better known as Visible Learning, is a culmination of nearly thirty years synthesizing more than 2, 100 meta-analyses comprising more than one hundred thousand studies involving over 300 million students around the world. He has presented and keynoted in over three hundred international conferences and has received numerous recognitions for his contributions to education. His notable publications include Visible Learning, Visible Learning for Teachers, Visible Learning and the Science of How We Learn; Visible Learning for Mathematics, Grades K-12; and 10 Mindframes for Visible Learning.
Idioma Inglés ● Formato EPUB ● Páginas 272 ● ISBN 9781506378503 ● Tamaño de archivo 20.5 MB ● Editorial SAGE Publications ● Ciudad Thousand Oaks ● País US ● Publicado 2017 ● Edición 1 ● Descargable 24 meses ● Divisa EUR ● ID 5498148 ● Protección de copia Adobe DRM
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