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"Strategies"
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Common Themes in Teaching Reading for Understanding: Lessons From Three Projects
by
Goldman, Susan R.
,
Snow, Catherine
,
Vaughn, Sharon
in
3-Early adolescence
,
4-Adolescence
,
Adolescents
2016
This article reflects a metaview of the work of the three research projects funded through the Institute for Education Sciences under the Reading for Understanding competition that addressed middle‐grade through high school readers (grades 4–12). All three projects shared the assumption that instruction is necessary for successful reading to learn just as it is for learning to read. Through multiple studies conducted independently, the three projects arrived at common themes and features of productive instruction for reading for understanding with adolescent readers. These common themes are elaborated with instructional examples and include the following: (a) Students purposefully engage with multiple forms of texts and actively process them, (b) instructional routines incorporate social support for reading through a variety of participation structures, and (c) instruction supports new content learning by leveraging prior knowledge and emphasizing key constructs and vocabulary.
Journal Article
Learning as a generative activity : eight learning strategies that promote understanding
This book presents eight evidence-based strategies that promote generative learning, which enables learners to apply their knowledge to new problems.
The Science of Reading Comprehension Instruction
by
Ward, Alessandra E.
,
Pearson, P. David
,
Duke, Nell K.
in
1‐Early childhood
,
2‐Childhood
,
and materials
2021
Decades of research offer important understandings about the nature of comprehension and its development. Drawing on both classic and contemporary research, in this article, we identify some key understandings about reading comprehension processes and instruction, including these: Comprehension instruction should begin early, teaching word-reading and bridging skills (including graphophonological semantic cognitive flexibility, morphological awareness, and reading fluency) supports reading comprehension development, reading comprehension is not automatic even when fluency is strong, teaching text structures and features fosters reading comprehension development, comprehension processes vary by what and why we are reading, comprehension strategy instruction improves comprehension, vocabulary and knowledge building support reading comprehension development, supporting engagement with text (volume reading, discussion and analysis of text, and writing) fosters comprehension development, and instructional practices that kindle reading motivation improve comprehension. We present a visual depiction of this model, emphasizing the layered nature of impactful comprehension instruction.
Journal Article
Strengthening teaching and learning in research universities : strategies and initiatives for institutional change
This book offers a range of approaches and specific examples of how a sample of internationally leading research-intensive universities, from a variety of regions around the world, work to improve teaching and learning. It describes and analyzes broad university initiatives and approaches that have the potential of driving institution-wide change processes in teaching and learning, thus providing a link between strategic ambitions and cultural transformation in the universities. Globally, research-intensive universities are increasingly pressured to increase their performance in both research and education. However, while much focus internationally has been devoted to how universities are working to boost their research performance, less is known about how internationally leading universities are working to improve teaching and learning. Through comparative cases drawn from universities in Europe, Asia and the US, key practices and lessons are identified and showcased providing a unique insight into the ways internationally leading research universities work to support and enhance staff engagement in teaching and learning. It will be essential reading for researchers and advanced students working in Higher Education and Sociology, particularly those with an interest in comparative studies.
Centering Culture Through Writing and the Arts: Lessons Learned in New Zealand
by
Becker, Whitney
,
Kelly, Katie
,
Robards, Addie
in
1‐Early childhood
,
2‐Childhood
,
3‐Early adolescence
2020
Culturally relevant and sustaining pedagogy is an asset‐based approach to teaching and learning. In this way, students’ identities, languages, and cultures are centered in the learning experience, creating a sense of belonging. The authors observed culturally relevant and sustaining approaches to teaching and learning while visiting schools in New Zealand as part of a three‐week study abroad program. Specifically, the authors observed how teachers in New Zealand centered Maori and Pasifika cultures into daily instruction and learning. Together as teacher educators, an inservice teacher, and a preservice teacher, the authors examine the importance of culturally relevant and sustaining teaching and share their observations of how students’ cultures are honored through writing and arts integration in the classrooms visited in New Zealand. The authors describe how a fifth‐grade teacher applied lessons learned from her visit to New Zealand in her own classroom context in the United States.
Journal Article
Starting With Self
Young people in literacy classes sometimes think their teachers are not listening to them. The practitioners featured in this column listen to questions posed by their students and respond to them, with the goal of enhancing English language arts instruction for a range of young people and educators.
Journal Article
Why multimodal literacy matters : (re)conceptualizing literacy and wellbeing through singing-infused multimodal, intergenerational curricula
Literacy research has focused increasingly on the social, cultural, and material remaking of human communication. Such research has generated new knowledge about the diverse and interconnected modes and media through which people can and do make meaning and opened up definitions of literacy to include image, gaze, gesture, print, speech, and music. And yet, despite all of the attention to multimodality, questions remain that are fundamental to why multimodal literacy might matter to people and their communities. How, for instance, might multimodal literacy be implicated in wellbeing? And what of the little-researched sonic in multimodal ensembles? For centuries singing, as a basic form of human communication and tool for teaching and learning, has been used to share knowledge and pass on understandings of the world from one generation to another. What, however, are the implications of singing and its effects on people prospects for learning and making meaning together? In this thought-provoking book, the authors explore notions of wellbeing and what is created when skipped generations are brought together through singing-infused multimodal, intergenerational curricula. They argue for the import of singing as a multimodal literacy practice and unite theoretical ideas, practical tools, and empirical research findings from a ground-breaking seven-year study of intergenerational singing in multimodal curricula.
An Empirical Study on the Use of NSS-4 Reviewing Strategies by Second-Year Students of Japanese Majors in Mainland China
2021
This paper is undertaken to investigate the status quo of Japanese major sophomores’ use of NSS-4 reviewing strategies by adopting a self-designed questionnaire and interviews. The subjects are 126 second-year Japanese majors from three universities in Jiangsu Province. This finding showed that 1) Japanese major sophomores employed a wide variety of reviewing strategies and they reported to use Direct Reviewing Strategies a bit more frequently than Indirect Reviewing Strategies. 2) There existed some differences between high-score group and low-score group in the use of reviewing strategies. 3) A certain correlation was revealed between reviewing strategies and NSS-4 scores and both Direct Reviewing Strategies and Indirect Reviewing Strategies were highly and positively correlated with NSS-4 scores
Journal Article