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Mar 26, 2015

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Page 1: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

www.fisherandfrey.com

Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane LappSan Diego State University

Pam Cole Kennesaw State University

Teaching English Learners with the Brain in Mind

Page 2: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

This Session’s Agenda

• Examine reading processes from a neurological standpoint

• Review brain anatomy• Discuss the unique characteristics of the

bilingual brain• Analyze mirror neuron systems and their role

in teacher modeling• Consider the linkage between neuroscience

and academic discourse for English learners

Page 3: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.
Page 4: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Pyramid of Reading Behaviors

Wolf, 2007Genetic Foundation

Neurons and circuits

Neural structures

CognitivePerceptual/Motor

Behavioral

Page 5: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

It took the species 2000 years of insights to develop an

alphabetic system. A child is given 2000 days to gain the

same insights. --Maryanne Wolf

Page 6: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

A Quick Tour of the Brain

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2 Hemispheres

Left and Right

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are needed to see this picture.

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The hemispheres are connected by the

CORPUS CALLOSUM

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Each Hemisphere has Four Lobes

• Frontal

• Parietal

• Occipital

• TemporalQuickTime™ and a

decompressorare needed to see this picture.

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Frontal Lobe

• Memory, emotion, planning

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Temporal Lobe

• Auditory processing

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Occipital Lobe

• Processes visual information and integrates vision with other senses

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Cerebellum

• “Small Brain” responsible for movement and motor control (balance, posture, automatic motor functions)

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“Specialized Areas”

• Sensory strip

• Motor strip

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QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

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Fitting Two Languages Into One Brain

Page 18: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Neuroanatomy of the Bilingual Brain• Competition for cortical space (Doidge, 2008)• Neuroplasticity: Learning and experiences

change the way the brain physiologically (Mahncke & Merzenich, 2006)

• Bilingual brains have more dense grey matter (Mechelli et al., 2004)

• Recruit more parts of the brain than monolinguals including those not typically utilized for language, especially right hemisphere (Price et al., 1999)

• Pathways utilized for listening differ from those used to speak, read, and write

Page 19: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Educating the Bilingual Brain• Translation is typically approached as a non-automatized

task (Dehaene, 1999)• Automaticity frees working memory• Exposure to two languages does not leave children

language delayed, or language-confused (Petitto, 2002)• Students must learn English, not just in English (Dutro &

Moran, 2003)• Late-bilingual students (second language after the age of

5) achieve mastery of a new language through “highly systematic and multiple contexts that are richly varied involving both home and community” (Petitto & Dunbar, 2004)

Page 20: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

The Power of Modeling

• Why?– Humans mimic or imitate– Mirror neuron systems activate

pathways similar to the pathways used by the person performing the action

– Reading about the actions of characters in a narrative activates similar pathways (Zacks, 2009)

Page 21: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Mirror Neuron Systems

• Brain cells that respond both when we do something, and when we watch someone else do it

• The more expert the observer is, the more brain cells are fired (Glaser et al., 2004)

• Evidence that mirror neuron systems are necessary for social cognition, especially for predicting another person’s intentions (Iacoboni & Dapretto, 2006)

Page 22: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Embodied semantics

Hypothesis: The same brain area that processes sensory-motor

experiences also processes the semantics related to that

experience

Page 23: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

What Do Effective Teachers Model?

• Analysis of the practices of 25 expert teachers, as identified by principals and coaches in San Diego County

• Observed 75 lessons

Fisher, D., Frey, N., & Lapp, D. (2008). Shared readings: Modeling comprehension, vocabulary, text structures, and text features for older readers. The Reading Teacher, 61, 548-566. ,

Page 24: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Selecting Participants

• 100 site administrators and peer coaches

• Expert classroom teachers in grades 3-8

• Expert (models for others, presents in professional development forums, recognized as excellent in teacher

Page 25: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Participants

• 74 responders

• 67 experts identified

• 25 teachers representing 25 schools

Page 26: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

What Happened?

• 3 x 2

• Inter-observer reliability for the 75 lessons was .88.

• Observations and field notes

Page 27: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

What We Saw

• Four major areas of modeling instruction (comprehension, vocabulary, text structures, and text features)

• students could see the text – a class set of books– photocopies of specific texts– projected the text on a screen using an overhead

or document camera

• fluent reading • clearly practiced the selections

Page 28: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

What We Saw

• Teachers modeled their thinking, not ask students individual questions

• Students encouraged to partner talk, write reflections, indicate agreement through unison responses such as fist-to-five

• Students asking questions

Page 29: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

#1: They Model Comprehension B/D/A

• Inference

• Summarize

• Predict

• Clarify

• Question

• Visualize• Monitor • Synthesize• Evaluate• Connect

Page 30: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Bundled Strategies

“I used to do it that way, focus on one comprehension strategy at a time. But I think that’s a problem. I don’t really read that way and if I don’t read that way it’s not really an authentic shared reading and think aloud, right?”

Page 31: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Metacognition

“I hope you’re not suggesting that we should model one at a time. For me, the shared reading is about consolidation. We need to show students how to incorporate these things automatically and not artificially stop and summarize or question or whatever. I use my guided instructional time to focus on specific strategies with specific students who need attention in a specific area.”

“Yes, I agree. And it’s also about metacognition; knowing that you’re doing this but not paying a lot of attention to it.”

Page 32: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

#2: They Model Word Solving

• Context clues

• Word parts (prefix, suffix, root, base, cognates)

• Resources (others, Internet, dictionary)

Page 33: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

What Teachers Want

“I want students to have both inside and outside word strategies. I want them to be able to go outside of the word, to context clues. I also want them to be able to go inside the word, using parts of words, to figure out or make educated guesses about, the word’s meaning.”

Page 34: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

What Teachers Modeled

Context clues: Coming on Home Soon (Woodson, 2004)• “When she put her dress into the satchel, I held my breath” (p.

1) and said, “I’m not sure what a satchel is. I’ll read this page and check out the picture. If I can’t figure it out from this information, I’ll ask someone for some help.”

• “Mama folded another dress and put it in the bag” (p. 1) “Another dress in the bag? She already put a dress in the satchel. I bet that a satchel is a special kind of bag, but it looks like a suitcase in the picture. I’m going to re-read this page with the word suitcase in place of both bag and satchel to see if this makes sense… [Rereads sentences.] Yes, it does. So there’s another word for a suitcase, a special kind of bag for traveling.”

Page 35: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

What Teachers Modeled

Word Parts: 4th grade teacher

“Carnivore reminds me of carne in Spanish meaning ‘meat.’ It also reminds me of carne asada, a kind of meat, but that just makes me hungry. So, I use carne to remind me that carnivores eat meat.”

Page 36: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

What Teachers Modeled

Resources7th grade teacher Patrol: An American Soldier in

Vietnam (Myers, 2002):“Two clicks away, there are flashes of gunfire. Two

clicks is the distance of my enemy” (p. 15). She then paused and said, “I’ve heard of clicks before but mostly about the Internet, you know click on this page and stuff. I think I want to know what this is and I don’t have any context clues to use to figure it out. I’m going to look it up really quick.”

Page 37: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

What Teachers Modeled

Wide Reading

• “I know that students will learn a lot of words from reading, so I have them reading all of the time. I also know that they will learn to solve unknown words when they’re taught how to do this. They need my modeling to figure out how to do this.”

Page 38: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

#3: They Model Using Text Structure

• Informational Texts– Problem/Solution, Compare/Contrast,

Sequence, Cause/Effect, Description

• Narrative Texts– Story grammar (plot, setting, character) – Dialogue– Literary devices

Page 39: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Modeling Text Structures

7th grade teacher The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli: “I think that Machiavelli is comparing and contrasting here.

I’ve thinking that he wants me to understand the difference in the two types of fighting he discusses. I see here, where he says ‘You should consider then, that there are two ways of fight, one with laws and the other with force.’ I think he’s setting up to compare and contrast these two ways. This leads me to organize my thinking into to categories that I can use to help me remember what Machiavelli believes.”

Page 40: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

#4: They Model Using Text Features

• Headings

• Captions

• Illustrations

• Charts

• Graphs

• Bold words

• Table of contents• Glossary• Index• Tables• Margin notes

Page 41: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Modeling Text Features

“In some cases, the text features may even confuse the reader.” “At minimum, students need to know when to attend to the text features. For example, when should they read the graph? Before reading the text, while reading the text, or after reading the text? The answer is, it depends. And any time that’s the answer, students need a lot of modeling and practice.”

Page 42: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Teaching•Establishing a purpose

•Modeling

•Guiding Learning

•Supporting productive group work

Page 43: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Pam B. Cole, Ph.D.

Kennesaw State University

[email protected]

Classroom Discourse

Page 44: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Oral/written language used by teachers and students to communicate.

Pictorial, symbolic, numerical, and graphic, body language

Classroom Discourse

Page 45: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Language is the instrument of education.

Importance of Classroom Discourse

Page 46: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Teacher modeling requires discourse.

Importance of Classroom Discourse

Page 47: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

• Ex. Writing an argumentative paper

(focus on form)• Students need…

– to know how to question and disagree with points of an argument.

– to ask questions and have deep discussion based on those questions.

– to think through the process of constructing an argument.

– to “talk” through and develop their understandings

Show. Don’t Tell. Experience.

Page 48: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

• Pedagogic language routines take specific forms (Bernstein, 1990; Wells, 1999)

• Student learning takes place through these language routines

Discourse Patterns: Structure

Page 49: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

A. Teacher asks a question

B. One or two students answer

C. Teacher comments (sometimes summarizing and/or clarifying and/or evaluating)

D. Teacher asks another question

E. Cyclic Pattern Repeats

Discourse Pattern: Cyclic Structure

Page 50: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

• Question. Answer. Evaluation.

• Initiation. Response. Evaluation.

Most common pattern

Possibly accounts for 70% of teacher-student interactions (Nassaji & Wells 2000)

Q & A

QAE Pattern or IRE Pattern

Page 51: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Q & A routine marginalizes some learners

Enables different learners unequally

Closes classroom discourse

Privileged learners can readily recognize, predict, & recall patterns

Subject/content specific

Dense content specific vocabulary

Teacher controls conversation/vocabulary

Differs from home/social discourse

Why worth talking about?

Page 52: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

• Language Diversity

• Cultural differences (questioning patterns may be different; vocabulary/lexicon; home/family)

• Linguistic differences (confusion and miscues with vocabulary/sound-symbols)

• Dialectic (confusion with variations in language)

• Learning problems

Page 53: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Opening Up Classroom Discourse

Page 54: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Shared ownership in classroom discourse

Page 55: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

• Validating responses• Room for deep

conversation• Reading/Learning not on

a “fixed” schedule• Assessment isn’t a

“threat”• Safe environment• Sensitivity and

understanding of different belief systems

• Rewriting “classroom experience”

• Student choice• Student ownership• “Select” class activities• A level playing field• Multiple answers• Fluid curriculum• Respect for where

adolescents “are” cognitively/emotionally

• Comfortable in our own “skins”

• Opportunities for students to “see how we think” (modeling)

Page 56: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.
Page 57: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Tell yourself right now you can’t know everything, but you can be a lifelong learner.

Page 58: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Accept that you may stumble and feel awkward at times.

Page 59: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Enter class discussions expecting (and wanting) to learn from students.

Page 60: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Don’t fudge.

Page 61: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Recognize when a student’s intelligence intimidates you and learn to embrace and celebrate his/her aptitude.

Page 62: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Let students know you value learning from them.

Page 63: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Shock effect questions & your “Achilles’ heel”

Page 64: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Awkward silences are good.

Page 65: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Remember…

Some of the best questions have no answers, but multiple possibilities. They may raise additional questions.

Page 66: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

What questions do you have?

versus

Do you have questions?

Page 67: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Facilitate discussions.

Page 68: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

Spread the conversation around.

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Listen.

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Be aware of put downs.

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Scaffold students’ responses (avoid the laundry list of questions)

Page 72: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

QAR– Right there– Think and search– Author & reader– On your own

Question Guess

Categorizing Questions

Page 73: Www.fisherandfrey.com Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Diane Lapp San Diego State University Pam Cole Kennesaw State University Teaching English Learners with.

QtA (question the author)

(ex. “how to” instructions)

Thick & Thin(Harvey & Goudvis, 2000)

Ranking Questions

Questioning Circles(Christenbury & Kelly,

1983)

Socratic Circles