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Instructional Scaffolding in Education Presentation by Melinda Jean Wilson and Gustavo Pina

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Page 1: Week 11 presentation

Instructional Scaffolding in Education

Presentation by Melinda Jean Wilson and Gustavo Pina

Page 2: Week 11 presentation

What is Scaffolding?Scaffolding is essentially breaking up the learning material into smaller chunks along with providing a structure and/or technology tool with each chunk to facilitate learning new concepts.

“Like training wheels, computer scaffolding enables learners to do more advanced activities and to engage in more advanced thinking and problem solving than they could without such help. “- NRC, 2000

Retrieved November 2, 2013 from: http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/webdesign/Scaffolding/index.html

Page 3: Week 11 presentation

Scaffolding is like scaffolding in construction Scaffolds provide temporary support for students to assist in learning new,

more complex tasks that learners may not be able to achieve on their own.

http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.elcosh.org/record/document/192/1.jpg&imgref

Page 4: Week 11 presentation

Scaffolding aligns with ObjectivesLearning Objectives guide the use of scaffolding and what types

of scaffolding are used.

“The objective of the activity is made clear at the outset and a "big-picture" point of view dominates in each individual activity.”

Retrieved on November 2, 2013 from: http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/webdesign/Scaffolding/index.html

Page 5: Week 11 presentation

Benefits of Scaffolding Provides learning and discovery challenges for students.

Allows meaningful discussion and debate.

Motivates learners by teaching them how to learn.

Amplifies chances of student success in achieving objectives.

Presents opportunities for individualized instruction.

Engages learners in peer-to-peer teaching and learning.

Delivers a welcoming, supportive, and caring learning environment.

Page 6: Week 11 presentation

Cue Cards or Flash Cards Cards to give to individuals or groups of students to start discussions about a

particular topic or content area.

Cards with vocabulary words or definitions of concepts.

Cards with content-specific stem sentences to complete.

Cards with formulas to solve problems.

Cards with qustions for students and groups to quiz each other (Spectrum, 2008).

Page 7: Week 11 presentation

Illustrate with Concept Maps and Mind Maps

Illustrate concepts and content with concept maps that show relationships.

Illustrate partially completed maps for students to complete.

Illustrate processes with Mind Maps.

Illustrate current knowledge of the task or concept by having students create their own maps (Spectrum, 2008).

Page 8: Week 11 presentation

ExemplifyExemplify samples.

Exemplify specimens.

Exemplify illustrations.

Exemplify problems.

Exemplify real objects (Spectrum, 2008).

Page 9: Week 11 presentation

ExplainExplain more detailed information to advance students forward

on a task or in developing their critical thinking of a concept.

Explain with written instructions for a task.

Explain with verbal descriptions of how a process works (Spectrum, 2008).

Page 10: Week 11 presentation

Give a Hand and Some Hints Handout prepared documents that contain task and content related

information.

Handout guides, but leave room for student creation or student notes.

Handout visual aids for learning the concept.

Hints to suggest direction and clues move students forward.

Hints to create a content scavenger hunt.

Hints for the steps to solve the problem (Spectrum, 2008).

Page 11: Week 11 presentation

Guide Conceptual Guide in what to consider

Metacognitive Guide I ways to think

Procedural Guide in use of affordances

Strategic Guide in approaches

(Hannafin, Land, & Oliver, 1999, p. 123)

Page 12: Week 11 presentation

Launch New Ideas with Prior KnowledgeLaunch new concepts with references to prior concepts.

Launch new concepts with prior knowledge as the framework.

Launch new concepts by relating previous experiences to new ideas.

Launch new concepts by showing transferrable skills that can be used (Alber, 2011; Spectrum, 2008).

Page 13: Week 11 presentation

Prompt LearnersPrompt with physical movements such as pointing and nodding.

Prompt with words or statements.

Prompt with question stems for learners to complete and answer.

Prompt with incomplete sentences for learners to finish.

Prompt with “what –If” questions (Spectrum, 2008).

Page 14: Week 11 presentation

Story TellingStories can relate complex and abstract material to situations

more familiar to students’ previous experiences.

Recite stories to inspire and motivate learners.

Start stories and have learners finish them.

Tell a story as an example of a concept or content information (Spectrum, 2008).

Page 15: Week 11 presentation

Visually represent contentVisually represent content with graphs.

Visually represent content with pictures.

Visually represent content with charts.

Visual representations specifically assist children in representing their ideas, organizing new information, and grasping new concepts such as sequencing or cause and effect.

(Alber, 2011; Spectrum, 2008).

Page 16: Week 11 presentation

Software Tools for Scaffolding Several software tools have been developed to prompt students to reflect,

articulate, and complete the steps of a complex task.

Examples of such software include ThinkerTools (White & Fredrickson, 1998)

Knowledge Integration Environment or KIE (Bell & Davis, 2000)

Progress Portfolio (Loh et al., 1998)

BGuILE (Reiser et al., 2001) and Model-It (Jackson, Krajcik, & Soloway, 1998)

Retrieved on 11/1/2013 from: http://www.education.com/reference/article/scaffolding/

Page 17: Week 11 presentation

References Alber, R. (May 24, 2011). “Six Scaffolding Strategies To Use With Your Students”

www.edutopia.org/blog/scaffolding-lessons-six-strategies-rebecca-alber.

Hannafin, M., Land, S. & Oliver, K. (1999). Open learning environments: Foundations, methods, and models. In C. M. Reigeluth (Ed.), Instructional-Design Theories and Models (pp. 115-140), Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

http://www.education.com/reference/article/scaffolding/.

McKenzie, J. (October, 2013) “Scaffolding and Sequencing” On the Cutting Edge. Retrieved on November 1, 2013 from: http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/webdesign/Scaffolding/index.html

http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/webdesign/Scaffolding/index.html

Spectrum Newsletter, Fall, 2008 “Instructional Scaffolding to Improve Learning” by Faculty Development and Instructional Design Center, Northern Illinois University Retrieved November 1, 2013 from: www.niu.edu/spectrum/2008/fall/scaffolding.shtml