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WHAT THE READER BRINGS TO THE LEARNING CONTEXT

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Presentation on theme: "WHAT THE READER BRINGS TO THE LEARNING CONTEXT"— Presentation transcript:

1 WHAT THE READER BRINGS TO THE LEARNING CONTEXT
PRIOR KNOWLEDGE WHAT THE READER BRINGS TO THE LEARNING CONTEXT R. Grant

2 Definition Reader’s background knowledge Knowledge the learner brings
Background knowledge broadly acquired R. Grant

3 Considerations How learner may interpret information
How information is filtered through race/ethnicity, cultural, language/dialect, social class, gender, power relations R. Grant

4 Considerations (cont’d)
Can cover a wide range of ideas, skills, and attitudes R. Grant

5 Schema & prior knowledge
Schema (plural schemata) Mental representations of knowledge Collection of organized and interrelated ideas or concepts A condition of prior knowledge and experiences Fluid, overlapping, intertwined R. Grant

6 Schema & prior knowledge
Constantly modified to assimilate or accommodate new information Enables people to draw generalizations, form opinions and understand new experiences R. Grant

7 Language Experience Approach
Why is it of value? How do we provide the experience? How can we expand on experiences to develop literacy? R. Grant

8 Activity #1-LEA -Using restaurant scheme
Group #1 Burger King- anywhere Group #2 the Four Seasons- Georgetown Washington, DC -Implement steps in LEA -Debrief -How can we expand literacy? R. Grant EDRD 615

9 Considerations What can get in the way of schema development?
No previous experiences Not enough experience Inability to change erroneous information Three different passages to represent failure to activate prior knowledge, inappropriate prior knowledge, insufficient prior knowledge. R. Grant

10 Strategies for activating prior knowledge
Discussion Brainstorming Quick writing Picture walk/text walk Semantic mapping Pre-questioning and purpose setting R. Grant

11 Strategies (cont’d) Anticipation guides Structured previews
Reading aloud to students Role playing Projects Concrete materials and real experiences R. Grant

12 Planning interest-generating instruction- (Ruddell, 1996)
Learning occurs most rapidly and efficiently when new concepts and information build on what is already known. The easiest way to gain and hold students’ interest and attention is by engaging them in intellectually rich activities that require problem solving, critical thinking, and active participation. R. Grant

13 Planning interest-generating instruction
3. Personal identification with and investment in an activity increases and sustains a learner’s persistence and productivity. R. Grant

14 REMEMBER PRIOR KNOWLEDGE IS THE SEED FOR ALL SUBSEQENT LEARNING
PRIOR KNOWLEGDE HONORS AND UTILIZES LEARNERS’ HOME AND COMMUNITY EXPERIENCES R. Grant


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