scs new teacher training series session iii january 27, 2015

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SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

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Page 1: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III

January 27, 2015

Page 2: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Be Present Please put all technology away as it will not be needed

Be Brave Be willing to take risks and try something new

Be Engaged Ask questions Engage in meaningful dialogue with your colleagues Engage with the content during each session and have fun

Group Norms

Page 3: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Stop and think about it and decide…

How do you put a giraffe into a refrigerator?

THE GIRAFFE TEST

Page 4: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Open the refrigerator

Put in the giraffe

Close the door

The correct answer is:

*This question tests whether you tend to do simple things in an overly complicated way*

Page 5: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Stop and think about it and decide…

How do you put an elephant into a refrigerator?

Page 6: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Did you say, open the refrigerator, put in the elephant, and close the

refrigerator?

Correct Answer:

Open the refrigeratorTake out the giraffePut in the elephant

Close the door

(WRONG ANSWER)

*This tests your ability to think through the repercussions of your previous actions. *

Page 7: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

The Lion King is hosting an animal conference. All the animals

attend.... except one. Which animal does not attend?

Stop and think about it and decide…

Page 8: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Correct Answer:

The Elephant.The elephant is in the refrigerator.

You just put him in there.

This tests your memory.

Okay, even if you did not answer the first three questions correctly, you still have one more chance

to show your true abilities.

Page 9: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

There is a river you must cross but it is used by crocodiles, and you do not have a boat.

How do you manage it?

Stop and think about it and decide…

Page 10: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Correct Answer:

You jump into the river and swim across. Have you not been listening? All the crocodiles

are attending the Animal Meeting.

This tests whether you learn quickly from your mistakes.

Page 11: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Turn and Talk

How does this relate to how we must instruct our students?

“A good teacher makes you think even when you don’t want to.”

(Fisher, 1998, Teaching Thinking)

Page 12: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Objectives

Participants will learn questioning strategies that will challenge students to probe for higher order understanding.

Participants will learn questioning strategies that will challenge students to synthesize complex materials and arrive at a new understanding.

Page 13: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

TEM 4.0 – Teach 5

Page 14: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

The Griny Grollers

Page 15: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Students can answer low- level questions

without thinking. They will enter or exit the classroom with no

more understanding of what they've

learned than what "The Griney Groller“

taught you!

Moral of the Story

Page 16: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Strategies

• Questioning• Inference Squares• Think Alouds• Teach Like a Champion

Page 17: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Why Questioning

Page 18: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Why Questioning

College Readiness

Historically, state and national surveys indicate that approximately 80% of the questions K-12 students are exposed to are lower-level questions. In college this trend reverses, and students are asked to deal primarily with high-level critical questions.

Page 19: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Why Questioning

Professional Performance and Growth

Teach 5: Higher Level Thinking Skills

Teacher ensures the lesson develops higher order thinking skills by modeling his or her own thought process for generating and asking questions, so that students begin to generate their own questions.

Page 20: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Why Questioning

• Leads to deeper exploration of the concept. • Helps students clarify understanding. • Guides the learning process. • Directs student thinking. • Identifies gaps in student learning. • Helps students make connections. • Challenges students’ thoughts, opinions, ideas. • Promotes “risk taking” in the learning process.

Factual learning alone does not develop full potential.

Page 22: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Open vs. Closed Questioning

Closed Questioning

• Almost always requires factual recall.

• Can be answered finitely by either “yes” or “no.

• Responses are restrictive. • Quick and easy for

students • to answer. • Keeps control of the

conversation with the questioner.

Open Questioning

• Almost always requires higher order thinking.

• Answers are not predictable.

• Responses require additional information from the inquirer.

• Requires students to think and reflect.

• Hands control of the conversation to the respondent.

Page 23: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Open vs. Closed Questioning

Closed Questioning

• Do you need more clarification?

• Is that correct/right/ok? • Do you understand? • What year was Theodore

Roosevelt elected? • Who is the protagonist in

The Great Gatsby?

Open Questioning

• What is your understanding of the adage “If you tell the truth, you don’t have to remember anything.”

• Why is this answer correct/not correct?

• How did the presidency of Theodore Roosevelt differ from his predecessor? Was it more effective?

Page 24: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Strategies

• Questioning• Inference Squares• Think Alouds• Teach Like a Champion

Page 25: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Inference Squares

What can I infer?

What questions do I want to ask?

What does the resource tell me for certain?

Page 26: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Inference Squares

Page 27: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Strategies

• Questioning• Inference Squares• Think Alouds• Teach Like a Champion

Page 28: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

What is the Process of Modeling Your Thinking (Think-Aloud)

We do

You do

I do

Scaffold & Cue

Think Aloud

Student explains thinking

Page 29: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Think Alouds

Think Alouds make the invisible mental processes visible.

Highly skilled readers use thought processes before, during, and after reading.

Think Alouds slow down the reading process and let students get a good look at how skilled readers construct meaning from a text.

Page 30: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Let’s See It in Action

https://www.teachingchannel.org/videos/theories-of-character

Page 31: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Let’s Practice It

• Turn to your elbow partner.

• One person be the teacher.

• One person be the student.

• Teacher (I do) - Think Aloud and problem solve 3+(2+5)=

• Student Explains (we do) - Think Aloud and problem solve 6+(1+7)=

• Teacher (scaffold and cue) - Follow up with the correct answer with a question.

Page 32: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Prompting Student Questioning

• Introduce and model different questioning strategies. • Develop student awareness of different types of

questions and the type of thinking required. • Promote and “celebrate” student questions. • Provide constructive feedback to student questions. • Provide clarity when needed.• Follow up questions with a higher-level question• Think Aloud

Page 33: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Strategies

• Questioning• Inference Squares• Think Alouds• Teach Like a Champion

Page 34: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Teach Like a Champion

Right is Right– This is the difference between an almost correct answer

and an 100% correct answer. The teacher should set a standard for 100% correctness 100% of the time.

Stretch It– This is a line of questions that extends the right answer.

Page 35: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Recap• Why Questioning

• Effective Questioning

• Bloom’s Level of Questioning

• Open vs. Closed Questioning

• Inference Squares

• Think Aloud

• Prompting Student Questioning

Page 36: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

Exit Ticket

What was one aha moment from today’s lesson?

Page 37: SCS New Teacher Training Series Session III January 27, 2015

QR Session Evaluation