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Instructional Design. CRITICAL CONCEPTS Scaffolding Instruction Collaboration & Teaming Individualization Data-based decision making Inclusion & Diversity.

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Presentation on theme: "Instructional Design. CRITICAL CONCEPTS Scaffolding Instruction Collaboration & Teaming Individualization Data-based decision making Inclusion & Diversity."— Presentation transcript:

1 Instructional Design

2 CRITICAL CONCEPTS Scaffolding Instruction Collaboration & Teaming Individualization Data-based decision making Inclusion & Diversity Leadership & Advocacy

3 Direct Instruction Model Lead Test

4 Effective Curriculum Design Big Ideas Mediated Scaffolding Conspicuous Strategies Strategic Integration Judicious Review Primed Background Knowledge

5 Phases of Learning/Teaching Alberto & Troutman, 2009 Acquisition – student’s ability to perform a newly learned skill/response to some criterion of accuracy Fluency – describe the rate at which students accurately perform a response; learner begins to build speed & efficiency in use of the skill or knowledge (but may not remember skill/knowledge over time without prompting) Maintenance – student is able to recall & use the skill/ knowledge with a high rate of accuracy over more extended spans of time with limited review Generalization – student generalizes skill or knowledge to novel contexts and as prior knowledge for learning new information

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10 Activity Use the lesson plan to guide a lesson to begin teaching multi-digit multiplication to your students – Most of the students know their multiplication facts… but a few students are not fluent

11 What is CRA Instruction? Concrete. Each math concept/skill is first modeled with concrete materials (e.g. chips, unifix cubes, base ten blocks, beans and bean sticks, pattern blocks). Students are provided many opportunities to practice and demonstrate mastery using concrete materials. Representational. The math concept/skill is next modeled at the representational (semi-concrete) level, which involves drawing pictures that represent the concrete objects previously used (e.g. tallies, dots, circles, stamps that imprint pictures for counting). Students are provided many opportunities to practice and demonstrate mastery by drawing solutions. Abstract. The math concept/skill is finally modeled at the abstract level (using only numbers and mathematical symbols). Students are provided many opportunities to practice and demonstrate mastery at the abstract level before moving to a new math concept/skill. http://www.specialconnections.ku.edu/?q=instruction/mathematics/teache r_tools/concrete_to_representational_to_abstract_instruction

12 What are some important considerations when implementing CRA Instruction? 1)First use appropriate concrete objects to teach particular math concepts/skills. Discrete materials (e.g. counting objects such as beans, chips, unifix cubes, popsicle sticks, etc.) are especially helpful since students can see and feel the attributes of the objects they are using. Base-ten materials are excellent for building understanding of place value and other number and number sense relationships. Having students actually combine individual objects in groups of ten and hundreds first can solidify the process of regrouping and place value sense (e.g. bundling ten popsicle sticks with a rubberband or connecting ten unifix cubes to make "ten". Then expose students to already made base-ten materials. For additional ideas about concrete level instruction for students with special needs, visit the MathVIDS website at http://www.coedu.usf.edu/main/departments/sped/mathvids/i ndex.html.http://www.coedu.usf.edu/main/departments/sped/mathvids/i ndex.html

13 What are some important considerations when implementing CRA Instruction? 2)After students demonstrate mastery at the concrete level (e.g. 5 out of 5 correct for three consecutive days), then teach appropriate drawing techniques where students problem solve by drawing simple representations of the concrete objects they previously used. The use of tallies, dots, and circles are examples of simple drawings students can make. By replicating the movements students previously used with concrete materials, drawing simple representations of those objects supports students' evolving abstract understanding of the concept/skill. They replicate similar movements using slightly more abstract representations of the mathematics concept/skill. For additional ideas about representational level instruction for students with special needs, visit the MathVIDS website at http://www.coedu.usf.edu/main/departments/sped/mathvids/i ndex.html.http://www.coedu.usf.edu/main/departments/sped/mathvids/i ndex.html

14 What are some important considerations when implementing CRA Instruction? 3)After students demonstrate mastery at the representational level (e.g. 10 out of 10 correct for three consecutive days) use appropriate strategies for assisting students to move to the abstract level of understanding for a particular math concept/skill. Students with special needs often have difficulty developing abstract level understandings. Several barriers can make this situation occur. Sometimes students have never developed conceptual understanding of the target mathematics concept/skill. Typically this occurs when students have not been allowed to develop that understanding at the concrete & representational levels of understanding. Two ways to manage this situation are to re-teach the mathematics concept/skill using appropriate concrete materials and then explicitly show the relationship between the concrete materials and the abstract representation of the materials. For students who have a concrete level of understanding, provide students opportunities to use their language to describe their solutions and their understandings of the mathematics concept/skill they are learning. Other possible reasons students may have difficulty developing abstract understandings of a particular mathematics concept/skill are: they have difficulty with basic facts because of memory problems, they repeat procedural mistakes that can result from perceptual processing deficits, attention difficulties, memory problems, or they use faulty algorithms that result from non- understanding of prerequisite concepts/skills (e.g. place value). For additional ideas about abstract level instruction for students with special needs and how to manage barriers to their development of abstract level understandings, visit the MathVIDS website at http://www.coedu.usf.edu/main/departments/sped/mathvids/index.html. http://www.coedu.usf.edu/main/departments/sped/mathvids/index.html

15 As a teacher moves through a concrete-to- representational-to-abstract sequence of instruction, the abstract numbers and/or symbols should be used in conjunction with the concrete materials and representational drawings. This is especially important for students with special needs since it promotes association of abstract symbols with their concrete and representational understandings.

16 How do I implement CRA Instruction? 1)When initially teaching a math concept/skill, describe and model it using concrete objects (concrete level of understanding). 2)Provide students multiple practice opportunities using concrete objects. 3)When students demonstrate mastery by using concrete objects, describe and model how to perform the skill by drawing or using pictures that represent concrete objects (representational level of understanding). 4)Provide multiple practice opportunities where students draw their solutions or use pictures to problem-solve. 5)When students demonstrate mastery by drawing solutions, describe and model how to perform the skill using only numbers and math symbols (abstract level of understanding). 6)Provide multiple opportunities for students to practice performing the skill using only numbers and symbols. 7)After students master performing the skill at the abstract level of understanding, ensure students maintain their skill level by providing periodic practice opportunities for the math skills.

17 How does CRA help students who have learning problems? It teaches conceptual understanding by connecting concrete understanding to abstract math processes. By linking learning experiences from concrete-to- representational-to-abstract levels of understanding, the teacher provides a graduated framework for students to make meaningful connections. CRA blends conceptual and procedural understanding in structured way so that students learn both the "How" and the "Why" to the problem solving procedures they learn to do; and, they learn the "What," that is they develop conceptual understanding of the mathematics concept that underlies the problem solving process.

18 http://www.coedu.usf.edu/main/departments /sped/mathvids/plans/mtdod/C_intro.html http://www.coedu.usf.edu/main/departments /sped/mathvids/plans/mtdod/C_intro.html Lesson plan example – – 2 digit x 1 digit multiplication w regrouping


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