Wednesday, September 21, 2016

POWER PIX ELA VOCABULARY PDF WORD WALLS

Kindergarten, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th , and 5th-grade WHOLE BRAIN TEACHING POWER PIX ELA WORD WALL Vocabulary PDF | POWER PIX ELA VOCABULARY PDF

Power Pix WORD WALLS are the core academic vocabulary used
for multisensory whole brain teaching word work. The Power Pix WORD ELA and Math words are critical words students need to know to thrive academically. The Power Pix is not the complete list of academic vocabulary yet a very good place to start teaching.

PPT]3rd Grade Math Power Pix.ppt

Third Grade Math Power Pix. This document highlights 30 topics specific to 3rd grade Math as defined by the Common Core State Standards. Based on an idea ...


Whole Brain Teaching (WBT) is a teaching style that combines direct instruction, sharing, and immediate feedback. Some of the most powerful WBT strategies include: Power Pix, Practice Cards, Genius Ladder, Brainies, Super Improvers.

In WBT, each core concept is represented by a Power Pix. For example, a Power Pix might represent a table of contents, author, prime number, or chronological order.

WBT also includes rules for students, such as:

Following directions quickly
Raising your hand for permission to speak
Raising your hand for permission to leave your seat
Making smart choices
Making your teacher happy
WBT is an effective approach because it's engaging and well-structured. The techniques can help teachers address common issues and ensure that all students remain actively involved in the learning process

Monday, September 19, 2016

CLOSE THE READING & VOCABULARY GAP!

PROVEN STRATEGIES TO HELP TEACHERS ENHANCE VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT IN THEIR CLASSROOMS!

Children use vocabulary stored in their auditory memory to make sense of the words they see and read in print. Readers must understand what they read if they are to develop strong word recognition and automaticity. Explicit vocabulary instruction is needed to build up a rich store of semantic meanings associated with the words, phrases, sentences and text they read.

THE DALE-CHALL READABILITY SAMPLES

Tier 1 Academic Vocabulary
Tier 1 vocabulary comprises the basic words commonly appearing in a spoken language — clock, baby, happy and walk for example. These words are often experienced in a variety of contexts, including that of nonverbal communication. Tier 1 vocabulary rarely requires explicit instruction.

Tier 2 Academic Vocabulary
Mature language users across several academic content areas are familiar with the less frequently encountered words in the Tier 2 category. Words such as: obvious, complex, establish and verify. Cognitive verbs are also included in the Tier 2 word category. Because of their lack of redundancy in text, oral language and their multiple meaning or descriptive nature, tier 2 words challenge students who primarily meet them in print and on test. Bloom’s and Webb's DOK cognitive verbs are integral to any successful reading instruction or intervention.

Tier 3 Academic Words
Tier 3 vocabulary consists of infrequently used words. These words are central to building CALPS knowledge and conceptual understanding and should be integral to instruction of content.
Though infrequently used in day to day language, they are common except in various academic domains such as in the disciplines of medicine, law, biology, and mathematics.

Academic Vocabulary K-12

HOW MANY WORDS DO KIDS NEED TO LEARN EACH YEAR?

CLOSE THE VOCABULARY GAP!

What the Research Tells Us about Vocabulary Instruction in Early Childhood

Educational Leadership:Reading to Learn:Closing the Vocabulary Gap
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Develop...Moreover, teachers face the challenge of identifying which words are most important for their students to learn, especially given the large gap in vocabulary size ...
Language Magazine Closing the Vocabulary Gap - Language Magazine
Why is the socioeconomic achievement gap in part a vocabulary gap? ... Many academic programs rely solely on conversation and reading to teach vocabulary, ...

Closing the reading gap with vocabulary and content | The Thomas B ...
Thomas B. Fordham InstituteDec 12, 2012 - Closing the reading gap with vocabulary and content ... explicit vocabulary instruction can only make a small dent in closing the word gap.

[PDF]CLOSE THE VOCABULARY GAP!
ENHANCE VOCABULARY. DEVELOPMENT IN ... million word gap between children in low income settings ... Syntax. □ Reading Comprehension ...

Vocabulary Development with ELLs | Reading Rockets
Reading RocketsMar 25, 2013 - Using a combination of the following strategies will help ELLs to close the gap. ... You can pre-teach vocabulary by using English as a second ...

10 Ways to Use Technology to Build Vocabulary | Reading Rockets
Reading RocketsThe results of this gap are manifested in students' literacy learning, particularly reading ... Whether directly teaching vocabulary and word learning strategies, ... What is important in this kind of prereading discussion is students' close attention ...

How Can Book Reading Close the Word Gap? Five Key Practices ...
John Wiley & Sons by EK Snell - ‎2015 - ‎Cited by 2 - ‎Related articlesMar 5, 2015 - Vocabulary development is critical for children's ability to learn to read ... reading has long been celebrated as an effective way for teachers to ...

[PDF]K-4 Vocabulary Instruction
Closing the. Reading Gap. Through Explicit. Vocabulary. Instruc;on: Wrapped in. Words. Linda Dorn, PhD.! University of Arkansas at Little Rock! Children with ...

[PDF]Bridging the Vocabulary Gap - National Association for the Education ...
National Association for the Education of Young Child...
by T Christ - ‎Related articleschildhood reading intervention, particularly supporting children's vocabulary acquisition to facilitate ....Teach word-learning strategies while reading aloud.

[PDF]Narrowing the Language Gap - Scholastic
Scholastic Corporation
by K Feldman - ‎Related articlesLanguage Gap: The Case for Explicit ... their overall reading instruction focused on vocabulary. .....Closing the gap: Addressing the vocabulary needs of English ...

AMAZING SCIENCE BRAIN BREAKS

SCIENCE BRAIN BREAKS
BACKGROUND MUSIC IS "PG" NOT APPROPRIATE FOR YOUNG VIEWERS!
TURN  THE VOLUME DOWN AT BEGINING! 

Sunday, September 11, 2016

WORKING MEMORY TEST & CLASSROOM RTI SCREENING


Working memory helps students learn new information, retrieve and remember new information and make connections to background knowledge. Students with poor working memory will struggle with learning to read, spell, memorize math facts, follow directions, and actively listen to oral instructions.  Testing the range of a students visual sequential memory, and auditory memory is a place to start looking for student interventions. The skills involved with working memory are seeing or listening for new information, attending the information,  processing (making meaning), storing (making connections), and recalling (using the information). 


Are your students having difficulty with: 
  • following oral directions
  • memorizing basic spelling words
  • remembering new words
  • learning math facts
  • concentrating on oral presentations
  • renaming words or switching words
  • note taking during lectures 
  • remembering days, months or schedule times

THE DIGIT MEMORY TEST

QUICK WORKING MEMORY TEST
TEST ITEM
DIGITS FORWARDS
Y/N
TEST ITEM
DIGITS BACKWARDS
Y/N
TOTAL
SCORE  
A
87

A
46


B
307

B
925


C
4963

C
3452


D
96380

D
17395


F
375204

F
754286


G
1976308

G
3416875


H
03851679

H
93615827


I
916352048

I
760158342


J
2830147695

J
0269474153



TOTAL


TOTAL



AGE
6-8
8-12
12-ADULT
NEEDS IMPROVEMENT
0-4 CORRECT
0-8 CORRECT
0-10 CORRECT
SATISFACTORY
5-10 CORRECT
9-14 CORRECT
11-14 CORRECT
EXCELLENT
11- AND ABOVE
15 - AND ABOVE
15- AND ABOVE

DIRECTIONS:  “Listen carefully as I say some numbers. When I finish, you say them.”

[PDF]How is Working Memory - Brain & Cognitive Sciences
University of RochesterCapacity Measured? • Digit span task -- how many sequential numbers can you remember? • Average is 7±2 (5-9 numbers). • The number of digits you can ...

[PDF]V5-D MESA Digit Span Test (4243
Oct 23, 2009 - Digit Span Test. Date: /. /. Month. Day. Year. Acrostic: Participant Id#: DST (10/23/2009). Page 1 of 2. DIGIT SPAN TEST - - FORWARD.



[PDF]Visual Sequential Memory Practice Set 1
Visual Sequential Memory. Practice Set 1. 1. 2.

[PDF]Article > Visual Sequential Memory and the Effect of Luminance Contrast
visual sequential memory, which is given in standard contrast. The raw scores (number correct) of each test were compared using an unpaired t-test. Results: A ...

[PDF]Testing and Interpretation of Visual Perceptual Skills - Colorado ...
https://colorado.aoa.org/.../Testing%20and%20Interpretation%20of%20Visual%20Per...


More (important?) Goals. • learn how test results correspond with patient ... Test of Visual Perceptual Skills (7 subtests) .... Sequential Memory. • Ability to ...


[PDF]Visual Sequential Memory in Reading Disability - Semantic Scholar
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/c3de/c347983a5737256a2ef9eed828a23436e73c.pdf




by JT Guthrie - ‎Cited by 40 - ‎Related articlesPartial correlations between three tests of visual sequential memory and three tests of reading were computed. Significant, positive associations were identified ...

[PDF]Visual Sequential Memory - Summit School
www.summit-school.com/OT_Cog_Perc.../Visual%20Sequential%20Memory.pdf



Visual Sequential Memory. Definition: A child's ability to remember a series of forms/number/letters/objects, in order. Activities: ❑ Have your child put a border ...
Missing: test ‎| ‎Must include: ‎test


[PDF]Description of the Instrument - Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt UniversityDigit Span script and list of test items are not included in this manual since these ... Span forward and backward subtest to obtain a copy of the administration ...

Effect of age on forward and backward digit spans (PDF Download ...
ResearchGateDownload Full-text PDF. Effect of age on forward and backward digit spans ... was used to test this hypothesis. the results show no significant effect of age on the ...

[PDF]Cole Gilbert CCHS Audio and Visual Digit Span Test.pdf
Central Catholic High School
by C Gilbert - ‎Related articlesDigit Span Test. • This test was created by J. Jacobs in 1887 to test the memory span of his students. • From then on it has been an important tool in the study of ...

Digit Span Test
Saint Anselm CollegeThe Digit Span test was originally a subtest part of the Wechsler-Adult Intelligence Test. The WAIS-1 was created to evaluate the participants IQ otherwise known ...

Measuring Working Memory With Digit Span and the Letter-Number ...
by J Egeland - ‎2015 - ‎Cited by 5 - ‎Related articlesIn the fourth edition of the test (WAIS-IV), the subtests Digit Span ... higher manipulation load and to consider testing visual span as well before drawing.

[PDF]Improving digit span assessment of short-term verbal memory - EBIRE
by DL Woods - ‎2010 - ‎Cited by 34 - ‎Related articlesINTRODUCTION. Measures of forward and backward digit span (DS) are among the oldest and most widely used neuropsychologi- cal tests of short-term verbal ...

Thursday, September 8, 2016

VKAT Multisensory Learning | Multi-sensory Spelling

Multisensory Learning Strategies for Spelling and Vocabulary: Integrating Total Physical Response (TPR)

Introduction

Multisensory integration, also known as multimodal learning, is a powerful approach to learning and retaining new information. It involves engaging all sensory modalities - visual, auditory, kinesthetic, and tactile (VAKT). Recent research has further emphasized the importance of emotional engagement in learning, leading to the expanded VAKTE model (Visual, Auditory, Kinesthetic, Tactile, and Emotional).

Total Physical Response (TPR), developed by Dr. James Asher, is a language teaching method that coordinates speech and action, enhancing the benefits of multisensory learning. By incorporating TPR into multisensory spelling and vocabulary strategies, we can create a more effective and engaging learning experience.

Benefits of Multisensory Learning and TPR

Recent studies have shown that multisensory learning strategies, especially when combined with TPR, can:

1. Enhance working memory capacity and efficiency
2. Improve visual and auditory sequential memory
3. Boost verbal short-term memory
4. Accelerate word, vocabulary, and spelling acquisition
5. Enhance listening comprehension
6. Improve the ability to follow verbal directions
7. Increase retention and recall of learned material
8. Reduce cognitive load by distributing information across multiple sensory channels
9. Enhance motivation and engagement in learning

Updated Multisensory Strategies for Spelling and Vocabulary

1. Partner Study with TPR Integration

- Student A reads the word aloud and performs a related action
- Student B repeats the word and mimics the action
- Student A chunks syllables with rhythmic movements
- Student B repeats syllables and movements
- Student A air spells the word with large arm movements
- Student B repeats the air spelling
- Partners use the word in a sentence with accompanying gestures

2. Kinesthetic Phonics

- Create body movements to represent different phonemes or spelling patterns
- Students perform the movements while saying the sounds or spelling the word

3. Emotional Anchoring

- Encourage students to associate words with personal experiences or emotions
- Have them express the emotion through facial expressions and body language while saying the word

4. Multisensory Mnemonic Devices

- Create memorable phonetic cues that incorporate visual, auditory, and kinesthetic elements
- Example: For "believe," students can pretend to "leave" a "bee" (emphasizing the "be-" and "-lieve" parts)

5. TPR Storytelling

- Create short stories or scenarios that use target vocabulary words
- Students act out the stories while saying the words, reinforcing meaning through context and movement

6. Tactile Spelling

- Use various textures (sand, playdough, fabric) to spell words
- Incorporate temperature sensations (warm water, cool surfaces) for added sensory input

7. Rhythmic Learning

- Set spelling words to simple tunes or rhythms
- Students clap, tap, or move to the beat while spelling

8. Visual-Spatial Mapping

- Create mind maps or graphic organizers that visually represent word relationships
- Include images, colors, and spatial arrangements to reinforce connections

9. Sensory Vocabulary Stations

- Set up learning stations with different sensory experiences related to target words
- Students rotate through stations, engaging with words through various sensory modalities

10. Digital Integration

- Utilize educational apps and software that incorporate multisensory elements
- Ensure technology use complements, rather than replaces, physical engagement

Implementation Tips

1. Customize activities to suit different learning styles and preferences
2. Gradually increase complexity as students become more comfortable with multisensory techniques
3. Encourage metacognition by having students reflect on which strategies work best for them
4. Create a safe, supportive environment that encourages movement and expression
5. Use formative assessment to monitor progress and adjust strategies as needed

Conclusion

By integrating Total Physical Response with multisensory learning strategies, educators can create a dynamic, engaging environment for spelling and vocabulary acquisition. This approach not only enhances cognitive processing and memory but also promotes active, enjoyable learning experiences. As research continues to evolve, it's crucial to stay informed about the latest findings in neuroscience and cognitive psychology to refine and improve these strategies further.


Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Dyslexia & Auditory Processing Disorder

Auditory Processing Disorders and Dyslexia. Children with dyslexia may also have a condition that makes it difficult to distinguish the differences between letter sounds and phonemes in words.  
I was diagnosed with dyslexia and dysgraphia in elementary school, I was told I would never read or write. Please email me if you have any questions at seansart@hotmail.com

Students with reading deficits often have difficulty with short-term
auditory memory, auditory discrimination (the ability to hear and discriminate between the smallest unit of sound in a language), the inability to retain or remember words, letters, phrases, and passages that are read or presented orally. Students with dyslexia often have difficulty with short-term verbal memory, they may be unable to remember names, telephone numbers, verbal directions and experience difficulties with reading comprehension activities.  


Are your students having difficulty with: 
  • following oral directions
  • memorizing basic spelling words
  • remembering new words
  • remembering numbers in sequence
  • concentrating on oral presentations
  • renaming words or switching words
  • note taking during lectures 
  • remembering days, months or schedule times
CLASSROOM STRATEGIES that promote self-monitoring of listening skills
  • Read aloud and talk, question, reflect on listening skills
  • Listen to old radio serials and AUDIO BOOKS
  • Play board games that require following directions
  • Play Simon says on the computer 
  • Student read aloud using read to self-phones
  • Read using tape recorders  
  • Teach spelling and reading vocabulary out loud (say the words, the number of syllables in the word, the number of letters in the word and then spell the word in the air as you say the letters)
  • Teacher uses KISS Micro-lectures that keep it simple and short 
  • Students repeat all classroom directions 
  • Total Physical Response (TPR) TOTAL PHYSICAL RESPONSE FOR NEWCOMERS TPR is a well-known beginning ESL method, but TPR-based activities can be adapted and incorporated into mainstream or multi-level classes, particularly in .
  • WHOLE BRAIN TEACHING WBT QuickstartWhole Brain Teaching (WBT), with 50,000 members, outposts in 30 foreign countries and over 2 million YouTube views, is one of the world's fastest growing.

[PDF]Auditory Processing Disorder and Reading Difficulties
... disorder (APD)? Auditory processing disorder (APD) is a sensory processing deficit found to ...Dyslexia is characterized by persistent difficulties in spelling.

[PDF]Recognizing and Treating Children with CAPD - Scientific Learning
Fast ForWordChildren and adults who have central auditory processing disorder (CAPD) ... language learning and contributes to reading disorder and dyslexia—and is well.

[PDF]Central auditory processing disorder is to the ear as dyslexia is to the ...
That's what happens when you have CAPD—central auditory pro- cessing disorder. ... ities such a sdyslexia, developmental language disorder, or attention.

[PDF]Auditory processing and dyslexia: evidence for a specific speech ...
by G Schulte-Körne - ‎1998 - ‎Cited by 307 - ‎Related articlesDyslexia is a specific disability in learning to read and spell in spite of ... and central auditory processing, 19 children with spelling disability and 15 controls at ...

[PDF]Auditory Processing Disorders I: definition, diagnostic ... - Phonak
Auditory Processing Disorder (APD) is a condition in which patients are experiencing listening ... confused with other disorders such as dyslexia, learning disabilities, attention ..... 98AA-3722C 82 4E3/0/v2PS_CAPD.pdf). Bamiou, D. E., Musiek ...

[PDF]Visual and Auditory Processing Impairments in Subtypes of ...
by KI McAnally - ‎Cited by 24 - ‎Related articlesKEY WORDS: visual processing; auditory processing; temporal processing; dyslexia ... ofdyslexia or do they occur only in specific varieties of reading disorder?

[PDF]Children and auditory processing disorder (APD) – information and ...
National Health ServiceSpeech and Language disorder means the child has difficulties ... may cause both APD and dyslexiaor that ... child may have an 'auditory processing disorder'.

Auditory processing disorder (APD), also known as central auditory processing disorder (CAPD), is an umbrella term for a variety of disorders that affect the way the brain processes auditory information. Individuals with APD usually have normal structure and function of the outer, middle and inner ear (peripheral hearing). However, they cannot process the information they hear in the same way as others do, which leads to difficulties in recognizing and interpreting sounds, especially the sounds composing speech. It is thought that these difficulties arise from dysfunction in the central nervous system.

Saturday, September 3, 2016

5 Plot Structures and Story Elements

Teaching plot structure and story elements through read alouds and short stories

The Five Elements of Plot. Every narrative story uses a plot structure and story elements to draw the reader into the authors world. that starts with an exposition beginning/introduction. The introduction or exposition, is where the characters, setting, conflicts/drama are established. The exposition is also where the main problems, main themes, or conflicts can be introduced. 


[PDF]Teaching Plot Structure Through Short Stories - ReadWriteThink
Plot Structure. Plot is the literary element that describes the structure of a story. It shows the a causal arrangement of events and actions within a story.

[PDF]Fables and Stories - EngageNY
Identify character, plot, and setting as basic story elements. ✓. Describe the characters, plot, and setting of a specific fable or story. ✓. Identify fables and folktales ...

[PDF]Stories - EngageNY
Lesson 8: The Story of Jumping Mouse, Part II . ..... Explain which elements of a given story are fantasy. ✓ ✓ ✓. ✓. Prior to listening to a fiction read-aloud, identify 

[PDF]Graphic Organizers - lapresenter.com
Story Elements. ➢ Theme, Setting, and. Relevance of Setting. ➢ Characters in the Story. ➢ Problems/Goals. ➢ Plot. ➢ Climax. ➢ Resolution. Story Map 1.



STORY ELEMENTS DEFINITIONS
  1. Setting – the time and place of a story or play. 
  2. Character – a person in the story. 
  3. Plot – the series of related events in the story 
  4. Exposition – The opening or the 1st part of the plot, Here the author describes the setting, introduces the characters, and gives background information. 
  5. Rising Action – the part in which the author describes the conflict or the problem in the story. 
  6. Climax – the turning point in the story, the part where the problem is at its worse. 
  7. Falling Action – the part where the author describes how the problem is solved. 
  8. Resolution - Comes after the falling action and it brings the story to a satisfactory end. 
  9. Antagonist – the opponent or rival of the hero in the story. 
  10. Protagonist – the central character in the story, novel, or play. 
  11. Foreshadowing – the use of clues to hint at what will occur later in the story. 
  12. Flashback – a scene in a movie, play, short story, novel, or narrative poem that interrupts the present action of the plot. 
  13. Theme – the message or meaning in a story, poem, or play. 
  14. Mood – the feeling the reader gets while reading the story. 
  15. Tone – The attitude a writer takes towards the audience, subject or character. 
  16. Narrator –the person telling the story. 
  17. 1st person point of view – The narrator tells the story from his own point of view saying, “I did this or I did that.” 
  18. 2nd Person Point of View - The book or story addresses the reader as if the reader is an active character in the book. For Example: You are walking down the street. 
  19. 3rd Person Limited – The narrator is outside the story, and sees the events through the eyes of only one character. 
  20. 3rd Person All Knowing – The narrator is not one of the characters in the story, but tells the emotions, motives, and actions of ALL the characters in the story. 
  21. Suspense – The I\uncertainty or anxiety we feel about what is going to happen next in the story.

[PDF]The Five Essential Elements Of A Story - Katie Kazoo, Switcheroo
Of A Story. A story has five basic but important elements. These five components are: the characters, the setting, the plot, the conflict, and the resolution.

[PDF]Elements of Plot
Bainbridge High School... of Plot. Structure and Elements ... Plot is... Plot is the order of events that make up a story. Theplot of a story is a series of interconnected events in which every.

[PDF]ELEMENTS OF LITERATURE All fiction is based on conflict and this ...
National Park ServiceThere are a number of different elements to a plot. They include: ... The use of hints or clues to suggest what will happen later in the story. Inciting Force.

[PDF]The Periodic Table of Writing Elements (PDF) - Abyss & Apex
Symbol: Elements. Symbol: Elements. Symbol: Elements. Symbol: Elements. Ad. Adnauseum. Di. Dischism. I. It was a dream. Pb. Plot Bunny. Si. Squid-in-mouth.

[PDF]Elements of Plot- pdf
Georgia Perimeter CollegeELEMENTS OF PLOT. The plot of a story refers to the sequence of the action which the author develops to build suspense and interest. This sequence or plot is ...

[PDF]Identifying the Elements of A Plot Diagram
Belmar School DistrictPlot (definition). • Plot is the organized pattern or sequence of events that make up a story. Every plotis made up of a series of incidents that are related to.

[PDF]The Five Essential Elements of a Mystery - Penguin
A mystery is a story that has five basic but important elements. These five components are: the characters, the setting, the plot, the problem, and the solution.

[PDF]Elements of a Short Story - S3 amazonaws com
Elements of a Short Story. Story Elements. Definition. Setting. &. Setting includes both time and place! 1. Time – day, month, year, time of day, season. 2.

[PDF]Elements of Fiction - Narrator/ Narrative Voice - Carrollwood Day School
Carrollwood Day Schoolstory, the narrator is never the author [never], not even if the character has the same name as the author. As .... Conflict: Some plot elements are optional. Conflict ...

[PDF]checklists for each of the 20 master plots - Writer's Digest
Writer's Digestfrom 20 Master Plots by Ronald Tobias. CheCklists ... Master Plot 12: Transformation. Master Plot ..... Emotion is an important element in writing about love. Not.

[PDF]Suggesting New Plot Elements for an Interactive Story - Association for ...
Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligen...
by S Giannatos - ‎2011 - ‎Cited by 13 - ‎Related articlesSuggesting New Plot Elements for an Interactive Story. Spyridon Giannatos, Mark J. Nelson, Yun-Gyung Cheong, and Georgios N. Yannakakis. Center for

[PDF]Comprehension - Florida Center for Reading Research
Students identify story elements by sorting them into appropriate categories. 1. ... Add plot and theme headers and story element cards and sort (Activity Master.

[PDF]Comprehension - Florida Center for Reading Research
Use other graphic organizers to compare characters in the same story or ..... Students answer questions related to story elements and record on a graphic ...