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Standards-Based Learning in Action: Moving from Theory to Practice
Get past the knowing-doing gap with the practical tools and actionable steps in Standards-Based Learning in Action: Moving from Theory to Practice. Authors Tom Schimmer, Garnet Hillman and Mandy Stalets offer implementation practices and processes that rightly compare students' comprehension to performance standards instead of comparing them to each other. The approach also gives explicit guidance for separating behaviours from academics. Delve into the research or go directly to the action plans and effective communication strategies for talking to students and parents about the classroom changes that occur while transitioning to standards-based learning.
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Teaching Words and How They Work: Small Changes for Big Vocabulary Results
Research shows that vocabulary is the best support for students’ comprehension of narrative and information texts. Often, vocabulary instruction focuses on a few target words in specific texts. However, to understand the many new words in complex texts students need to know how words work. This book, written by an award-winning authority on reading instruction, shows teachers how to make small changes to teach more words and also how words work. Many of these small changes involve enrichments to existing vocabulary practices, such as word walls and conversations with students. Each chapter includes descriptions of teachers’ implementation of small changes to support big gains in students’ vocabulary. This book offers practical steps that F-8 teachers can use in any reading program.
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How Do I Get Them to Write? Explore the Reading-Writing Connection Using Freewriting and Mentor Texts to Motivate and Empower Students
How Do I Get Them to Write? Investigates the vital connection between reading and writing. This remarkable book argues that reading, writing and the inevitable discussions that follow lead students to appreciate the experiences of others, open their minds to new possibilities, gain a glimpse into unknown worlds, make connections to their own live and reflect on their own choices and learning. How Do I Get Them to Write? is committed to helping teachers get all students writing regardless of their attitudes or their current abilities. Based on the premise that all students can learn to write with appropriate teaching, modelling and practice, this is an ideal resource for teachers who love writing as well as for those who find it a challenging process.
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Reading Power, Revised & Expanded Edition: Teaching Students to Think While They Read
Ten years ago, Reading Power was launched in an elementary school in Vancouver. Since then, it has evolved into a recognised approach to comprehension instruction and has been implemented across Canada, the US, the UK, Sweden and China. This ground-breaking approach showed teachers how to make thinking more visible to their students through explicit instruction of five comprehension strategies: connect, visualise, question, infer and transform. Adrienne Gear has continued to reflect and refine her understanding of metacognition, comprehension instruction, and the reading power strategies.
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Formative Assessment in a Brain-Compatible Classroom: How Do We Really Know They're Learning?
How can students knock the top of any test? That's one of the 14 key questions that Dr Marcia L. Tate, a highly regarded assessment authority, answers in Formative Assessment in a Brain-Compatible Classroom: How Do We Really Know They're Learning? Although teachers tend to avoid types of assessments that are difficult to mark, these assessments are often the only way to know how well certain students are learning. Tate describes the theories behind various assessment types and addresses specific ways to create brain-compatible learning environments that foster high achievement.
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Nonfiction Reading Power: Teaching Students How to Think While They Read All Kinds of Information
Nonfiction Reading Power shows teachers how to encourage students to recognise that reading is about using their brains. The well-designed lessons are easy to follow and include tips for effectively introducing and ending each lesson. Nonfiction Reading Power provides teachers with lessons and ideas for teaching five specific thinking strategies that support students while reading informational text. These strategies give students the tools they need to zoom-in on text features and conventions; improve comprehension by raising significant questions and making relevant inferences; determine importance and find the main idea in a variety of text; make connections to their own lives, other books and previous knowledge; transform what's on the printed page into new thinking.
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Embedding Formative Assessment: Practical Techniques for F-12 Classrooms
In this essential bestseller, authors Dylan Wiliam and Siobhán Leahy deliver a clear, practical guide for teachers, centred on five key strategies for improving teacher practice and student achievement. The authors provide an overview of each strategy and a number of very practical assessment techniques for implementing it in F–12 classrooms.
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Small Changes, Big Impact: Ten Strategies to Promote Student Efficacy and Lifelong Learning
Designed as a guide to school reform, this resource outlines a series of ten small-scale changes powerful enough to make a lasting impact. Promote F-12 student growth through research-based instructional strategies, performance-based assessments and social-emotional learning (SEL).
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Cooperative Learning & Music
In this massive, activity-rich resource guide, you will find cooperative structures and activities to teach the fundamentals for singing, playing instruments, reading and notating music. Use this book as an entire music curriculum or pick and choose activities to enliven your music class.
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Teaching for Deep Comprehension: A Reading Workshop Approach
Linda Dorn and Carla Soffos describe the process of comprehension as a reflection of the mind - a window into the reader's thoughts. In Teaching for Deep Comprehension they discuss comprehension from a socio-cognitive perspective - specifically, how teachers can use the social context of reading workshop to promote deep comprehension. Linda and Carla mesh complex theories of comprehension with everyday practical examples in such a way as to help teachers develop a better understanding of what it means to comprehend while reading. The book's appendix contains a wealth of reproducible materials, including text maps, graphic organisers, book lists and resource charts.
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Argument-Driven Inquiry in Physics, Volume 1: Mechanics Lab Investigations for Grades 9-12
Are you interested in using argument-driven inquiry for high school lab instruction but just aren't sure how to do it? Argument-Driven Inquiry in Physics, Volume 1 focuses on mechanics and will provide you with the information and instructional materials you need to start using this method right away. The book is divided into two basic parts: an introduction to the stages of argument-driven inquiry, and a well-organised series of 23 field-tested labs designed to be much more authentic for instruction than traditional laboratory activities. The book features easy-to-use, reproducible student pages, teacher notes and checkout questions. The labs also support today’s standards and will help your students learn science practices, crosscutting concepts and disciplinary core ideas.
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Metacognition: The Neglected Skill Set for Empowering Students, Revised Edition
How do we prepare our students for the test of life? We give them the gift of self-reflection, self-awareness, self-initiative, self-direction, self-assessment and self-regulation - the gift of knowing when they know, and when they don't know. Metacognition: The Neglected Skill Set for Empowering Students, is written with the teacher in mind. It is more practical than theoretical, but most definitely grounded in research findings and connected to emergent data. With the 30 ready-to-use metacognitive strategies in this book, teachers will deepen learning for their students through explicit reflections on planning, monitoring and evaluating their own work. As students learn how to think about their own thinking, they become more aware and better able to make adjustments on their own work.
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