Saturday, December 28, 2013

Vocabulary - Teaching Words That Matter Most - A Scholastic READ ABOUT


Common sense can tell us that we are the words that we know.   We are doctors, lawyers, teachers, researchers, technicians and scientists, to give a few examples, because of the words we know.  Vocabulary is important to effective communication in an ever changing and competitive world, where understanding one another in clear definitive way is not as commonplace as we would like it to be.  When it comes to the success of our children today, what emphasis do we place on learning vocabulary at home and in our schools?  Are the results our children are getting good enough for what we as parents would like from them or what the world expects of them? The following article from Scholastics Read About entitled Narrowing the Language Gap: The Case for Explicit Vocabulary Instruction takes a look at how vocabulary is taught in schools and given the pivotal role of vocabulary in virtually all aspects of academic competence, it is alarming that classroom research consistently reveals how relatively little focused academic vocabuarly instruction actually occurs in the typical K-12 classroom. 

http://teacher.scholastic.com/products/authors/pdfs/Narrowing_the_Gap.pdf

The article is upfront, to the point and backed by vocabulary research and with combined  50+ years of classroom experience of the authors and provides a clear foundation for an effective and efficient vocabulary instructional routine. The magic word here would be 'foundation' as without a proper foundation within words, how strong would the future of our children actually be? Imagine yourself standing on a 12 story building you personally built not realizing until the 12th floor that you did not even use footings.   Would you want to stand on that building or want your children to stand on it? The authors look at what a foundation with proper footings can look like at the instructional level within the classroom. 

"Something as rudimentary and essential to teachers as how to teach an important new word effectively is rarely mentioned in both language arts and content area curricula. Surprisingly, teacher’s editions of core curricula routinely direct teachers to address central lesson vocabulary with little more than the brief exhortation to preview, cover, review, or introduce key terms. Meanwhile, they neglect to provide any explicit direction in how to effectively and efficiently teach word meanings. The following steps can most certainly be elaborated and adapted, depending upon the relative importance of the words in question and students’ background knowledge. However, in our experience, students greatly benefit from a consistent and recognizable approach that incorporates the following steps:

1) Pronounce- Classroom observations indicate that, far too frequently, the teacher is the only person who pronounces and uses the academic language of the disciplines. Thus, the first step in teaching a new term is guiding students in correctly pronouncing the word.
2) Explain - Understanding the meaning of a new term requires a clear explanation
of the meaning, using language familiar to the student.
3) Provide Examples- Students will usually need at least two or three examples of a new term to firmly grasp the meaning. Moreover, these examples should be drawnfrom a variety of contexts, not only the one used in the reading or lesson.
 4) Elaborate - Research in cognitive psychology consistently indicates that learners understand and remember information better when they elaborate on it themselves.
 5) Assess- Researchers such as Baker et al., (1995) and Marzano (2004) have documented the importance of incorporating regular informal vocabulary assessment into the instructional process, especially with academically diverse learners. Assessment of vocabulary involves both formative, quick informal checking for understanding during the lesson, and summative evaluation as students subsequently take a formal quiz or test. In all forms of assessment, it is helpful to go beyond simple memorization or matching tasks and require students to demonstrate some deeper level of thinking and understanding.
The basic instructional process outlined above is offered as a foundational strategy, not an end point"

The above is just a snapshot view given as the authors go into more detail with comparisons of the how and the why as a building block and while looking at the information provided in the professional report it should be considered as parents that we can also follow this same consistent and recongizable approach and bring it to the home environment as well. We do not have to wait for a child to attend school before implementing what can easily be done at home.   The reality is for example, Durkin (1979) found that upper-elementary teachers spent less than 1% of their overall reading instruction focused on vocabulary. More recently, Scott and Nagy (1997) documented the paucity of vocabulary instruction in 23 ethnically diverse upper-elementary classrooms, reporting that only 6% of school time was devoted to vocabulary, with only 1.4% allotted to content area vocabulary. Biemiller (2001) reached a similar conclusion, noting that there appears to be relatively little explicit vocabulary teaching in the elementary grades. 

We have more responsibility as parents to set that foundation strong and secure and we as parents at the end of the day, know and understand the true potential of our own chidren better than anyone else and given a good blueprint for understanding words and how words create our world, we can ensure the success or our children so that their starting point or 'footings' is based on vocabulary and clear meanings of words that ultimatley ensure their success in life and the success of our nation. 

Monday, December 23, 2013

If You Have Kids in School You Will Want to Hear This



Do you think there are problems with the modern education system today? Well so does the Techno Tutor Dr. Steven Lamer. With 30 years as a physician under his belt as well as a first hand account on the deterioration of the education system,which could in turn be ruining our society, Dr. Lamer as the practical solution to fix this. Here is a 45 minute Audio Interview that was recently done on AM 1530
WCKG in Chicago. Whether you have children in school or not what Dr. Lamer refers to is the case with all children and how our education system was designed. He poses the question that if we do not know where we came from then how do we know where we are going? Find out where our school system education came from so you can determine where you want to go with education in our communities and our country.

https://soundcloud.com/wckg3/dr-steven-lamer-the-techno
 

At about 12:18 he is asked what is the solution to what parents and educators can do about our current education system.  Find out at 14:00 how a child naturally learns in ways you may have not understood before. Be sure to follow along closely as he leads to the solution called Techno Tutor and how you can get it into your home to support your child's learning at about 20 minutes. You will be surprised at what the homeschool statistics are at about 24 minutes.   

You can find more information about this by contacting Dr. Lamer directly on the following website. Even though he is located in Chicago he is working and teaming with others across the United States from Coast to Coast and Canada.

 http://wckg.com/2013/11/28/dr-steven-lamer-the-techno-tutor/







Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Investments in Education During a Child's First 8 years...Crucial

Most parents would agree, if asked, that they want the best for their child and most understand that starts with education.  What that education costs and how early that education is started depends on many factors.  According to a recent report, investments in education during a child's first 8 years of life is crucial to academic, and overall success.   To help make its case, the report issued Monday by the Annie E. Casey Foundation highlighted a recent analysis of the Early Childhood Longitudinal study, which found just 36 percent of third graders had developed age-appropriate cognitive knowledge and skills. The longitudinal study started tracking 13,000 children who were enrolled in kindergarten during the 1998-1999 school year.

http://www.progressillinois.com/quick-hits/content/2013/11/04/report-investments-during-childrens-first-eight-years-crucial-school-l

According to the Casey Foundation's report, young children who do not hit these crucial developmental targets often have problems catching up in school and graduating on time. It is also less likely for such children to attain the future financial success and stability needed to support their families, the report noted.

If the first 8 years are that crucial then what can a parent do at home to ensure that their child gets off to a great start for cognitive knowledge and skills before they reach kindergarten or first grade?

"Research suggests that parents who are financially comfortable tend to devote more resources and time to their kids, in part because they can. In work they conducted at the University of Kansas and chronicled in their book Meaningful Differences in the Everyday Experience of Young American Children, Betty Hart and Todd Risley recorded, for two-and-a-half years, a full hour of conversation every day between parents and children from 42 American families of differing social classes. Children with professional parents heard about 30 million words by the time they turned 3, compared with 20 million in working-class families and 10 million in welfare families. In addition, the ratio of parental encouragements to reprimands was about 6-to-1 among professional families, 2-to-1 among the working class and 1-to-2 in welfare homes. These different experiences closely tracked with the children’s later academic and intellectual performance, and other studies have since supported these findings."

 http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/the_kids/2013/01/how_important_is_preschool_if_you_are_researching_early_education_philosophies.html

Mr.Shiver in the below article points out that investing in a comprehensive national early childhood program could add $2 trillion to the annual gross domestic product within a generation, according to the Brookings Institute, and result in a dramatic decrease to poverty rates.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-kennedy-shriver/america-cant-afford-to-wa_b_4265452.html?utm_hp_ref=education&ir=Education

To understand your role as a parent in the first 8 years consider your financial situation as lucky if you are in the professional parent category according to this study.  Whether we want to admit it to ourselves or not, money and social class background do play a strong role in the those formative years in a child's life.  The bottom line here is that it is our responsibility as parents and stewards of our planet to ensure all children are given the tools to succeed in school and in life. 


"Investing in a comprehensive national early childhood program could add $2 trillion to the annual gross domestic product within a generation, according to the Brookings Institute, and result in a dramatic decrease to poverty rates."  - See more at: http://pugetperspectives.blogspot.com/2013/11/how-will-society-as-whole-benefit-from.html#sthash.YmIqqJsS.dpuf
The bottom line is that it is our responsibility as parents and voters, and stewards of our planet to ensure children are given the tools to succeed in school. The benefit is not just to the individual or the family, but to society as a whole, as better educated children are more likely to go on to get a higher education, earn higher incomes, and become more productive, critically thinking members of society with a greater ability to take responsibility for their world - our world. - See more at: http://pugetperspectives.blogspot.com/2013/11/how-will-society-as-whole-benefit-from.html#sthash.ajUNDYBm.dpuf
The bottom line is that it is our responsibility as parents and voters, and stewards of our planet to ensure children are given the tools to succeed in school. The benefit is not just to the individual or the family, but to society as a whole, as better educated children are more likely to go on to get a higher education, earn higher incomes, and become more productive, critically thinking members of society with a greater ability to take responsibility for their world - our world. - See more at: http://pugetperspectives.blogspot.com/2013/11/how-will-society-as-whole-benefit-from.html#sthash.ajUNDYBm.dpuf