For my artifact I am including an article/document on explicit instruction. This article helped me to better understand what explicit instruction was. The document defines the role of the teacher, the role of the student and 6 components of explicit instruction.
What is Explicit Instruction?
Explicit
Instruction is another way of saying effective,
meaningful direct teaching.
A.
What is
Explicit Instruction?
What Explicit Instruction is
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What Explicit Instruction is not
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Explicit
Instruction is skill based, but students are active participants in
the learning process.
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Explicit
Instruction is not skill and drill.
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Explicit Instruction is holistic. For example, teachers can use Explicit Instruction to teach
everything that is included in “literacy” (i.e., decoding, comprehension,
spelling, and the writing process)
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Explicit Instruction is not just used to teach isolated
facts and procedures.
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Explicit
Instruction integrates smaller learning units into meaningful wholes
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Explicit
Instruction does not teach basic skills in isolation from meaningful
contexts.
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Explicit
Instruction is developmentally appropriate. Instruction is tailored specifically to students’ learning and
attentional needs
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Explicit Instruction is not “one size fits all”.
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The
teacher constantly monitors understanding to make sure students are deriving
meaning from instruction.
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Explicit
Instruction is not rote
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Explicit
Instruction is used in diverse contexts and curricular areas.
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Explicit
Instruction is not basic skills only
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Students like
it because they are learning!
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Explicit
Instruction is not boring and alienating
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Students
are cognitively engaged throughout the learning encounter. They have opportunities throughout the
lesson to self-monitor and direct their own learning and participation.
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Explicit
Instruction is not all teacher directed
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Explicit Instruction shares
similar goals with other approaches to teaching (e.g., constructivist,
holistic, or student centered). These goals
include teaching students to enjoy and be competent at reading, writing, and
math; to understand what they read and how math works; and to apply their
skills in meaningful ways.
[Goeke,
Jennifer L. Explicit Instruction: A
Framework for Meaningful Direct Teaching
Pearson, 2008. page 10.]
B. Explicit
Instruction is a sequence of supports:
- Setting
the Stage for Learning
- Clear
explanation of what to do
- Modeling
the process (showing)
- Guided
Practice
- Independent
Practice (When teacher is confident students will be successful)
- Assessment/Closure
(informal or formal)
**Every
lesson may not have every component, or a lesson may span several days, so not
all components would be seen each day.
“A great
deal of content I must teach is based on the assumption that my students have
certain skills, which they do not possess.
When students are given strategies for accomplishing a task, they
perform with greater success. One of the
greatest issues of concern to me is that many of my colleagues do not want to
spend time teaching something they feel students should have learned prior to
entering their class. What difference
does it make who teaches the student as long as the student is taught? If they do not learn skills and strategies
they need, they cannot possibly move forward and access the content of any
curriculum. Often my colleagues assume
that a student can do the work, but chooses not to. This is difficult to assess. How do I know when a student is choosing not
to work? If they are making that choice,
why are they making it? Are they
frustrated? I think most often the
student is not taught strategies for how to react when they do not understand
something. Also, they may not be taught
how to generalize a strategy – that a strategy that was helpful in sixth grade
may also be helpful in seventh.”
- A fifth grade resource teacher quoted in Explicit
Instruction (by Goeke)
During Explicit Instruction, teachers have a great deal of responsibility
to monitor student needs and provide the kind of scaffolding most appropriate
throughout the learning process. However, students have responsibility too.
They must realize that they will be expected to perform the task by themselves,
and they should then work toward achieving that goal.
At the outset of any lesson –
before the teacher explains, models, distributes the organizer or frame, the
teacher should make the responsibility clear to the students: “I’m going to teach you how to write a good
paragraph. First I’ll tell you what to do. Then I’ll show you how to do it.
Then what do you think I’ll expect you to do?” The students discern that
they will need to produce something themselves. “So, what do you think you should be doing while I teach you?” The
consensus is “pay attention.” “Yes,”
- by directing student attention toward purposeful learning – “You should be thinking about how YOU will
write YOUR paragraph when it is YOUR turn.”
C. When is
Explicit Instruction Appropriate?
One of the first orders of
business when considering a concept, skill or standard to teach is what format
would help the most students be successful.
Explicit Instruction is one of several successful teaching strategies
that teachers can choose to incorporate.
“Explicit instruction must be used for appropriate purposes and in
response to identified student needs.” (Goeke, p. 12) Explicit instruction is provided when the
following occur:
- “The goal is teaching a well-defined body of information or
skills that all students must master.
- Assessment data indicate that students have not acquired
fundamental skills, strategies, and content.
- Assessment data indicate that student progress toward mastery
of skills, strategies, or content needs to be accelerated.
- Inquiry-oriented or discussion-based instructional approaches
have failed.”
~ Jennifer Goeke, p. 18
D.
Constructs that Facilitate Effective Explicit Instruction
1. Teacher Presentation Variables - Teacher presentation variables have been
identified as fundamental behaviors for communicating effectively with all
students and promoting student achievement (Mastropieri & Scruggs,
1997) Teachers should be conscious of
delivering clear, dynamic instruction that is appropriate to students’
needs. In the first four components of
Explicit Instruction, teacher presentation variables play a key role in the
success of the lesson.
a. Teacher
Clarity includes speaking clearly, avoiding unclear terminology and vague
terms.
b. Teacher
Enthusiasm involves varied inflection, actively accepting student ideas,
and maintaining a high overall energy level.
c. Appropriate
Rate of Presentation diversifies opportunities to participate, requiring
participation, and adjusting to student understanding.
2. Student Engagement - For Explicit Instruction to be
effective, “students must be encouraged to provide the second, complementary
half of the transaction: active engagement.
An optimal Explicit Instruction lesson involves an effective, dynamic
teacher and an active, engaged learner.” (Goeke, p. 37) Learning is an active process during which students
gain understanding by connecting new concepts, skills, and strategies to prior
understandings. Teachers should help
students stay actively involved in the lesson in order to have the greatest
impact on their learning. Jennifer Goeke
has identified three student engagement variables that can be used to help all
students become active and engaged during Explicit Instruction.
A. Students Actively Participate when they:
·
Focus on what is being taught
·
Try to understand and make sense of new material
·
Relate ideas and information to prior knowledge and experience
·
Use organizing tools (graphic organizers, etc.) or principles to
integrate ideas
·
Relate supporting details and evidence to conclusions
·
Thoughtfully respond after think time is provided
·
Look for principles or patterns
“Research has shown that when students
are required to give overt responses using response cards or other mechanisms
for simultaneously signaling their responses, participation and learning are
increased as compared to the ‘one student answering at a time’ method.”
(Gardner, Heward, & Grossi, 1994; Heward, 1994)
B. Procedural Prompts are concrete, skill-specific references on which
students can rely for support until they become independent. Fred Jones in Tools for Teaching
refers to these prompts as VIPs (Visual Instructional Plans). Prompts should show one step at a time,
include a picture for every step, and have a minimal reliance on words. A VIP is simple, clear, and self-explanatory.
Students can look at it whenever they need clarification. Keep in mind what Fred Jones shares: “Of course,
a VIP is not a substitute for teaching. You involve students in the activity of
the learning as you always have. Rather, a VIP is simply a permanent record of
that teaching. It serves as the set of plans for independent work during Guided
Practice so you won't have to reteach the same material over and over.”
C. Monitor Understanding - Monitoring students’ understanding is
critical throughout the lesson. It is a
way the students show their engagement in the lesson and their understanding of
the instructional objective. According
to Schmoker, feedback should be given 4-6 times per lesson. Monitoring student understanding involves two
complementary skills:
·
Checking for Understanding
·
Providing Corrective Feedback
According to Douglas Reeves, “Effective
feedback not only tells students how they performed, but how to improve the
next time they engage the task.
Effective feedback is provided in such a timely manner that the next
opportunity to perform the task is measured in seconds, not weeks or months.”
The 6
Components of Explicit Instruction In Detail:
Setting the Stage
- The anticipatory set – the teacher’s
hook to capture student interest and connect prior knowledge to the new
learning of the lesson
- The teacher states/clarifies the
standards/learning objective/goal
- The purpose of the lesson is explained
- Students are able to restate the lesson
objective back to the teacher in their own words.
- The teacher specifically connects the
lesson to:
- student interest
- background knowledge
- the big idea/concept that the
skill/standard is linked to, and/or
- the previous day’s lesson
Explaining to Students What to do
- Students need explicit details about the
lesson.
- The teacher re-explains in this
component what the task is, why it is important, and adds to
it how it is done.
- Give no-frills explanations that give
students just enough information to cover the basics and get them started.
Less is more.
- Don’t tell the kids that it will be
hard. That discourages kids right off the bat. They may tune the lesson out
right then and there.
- Make it simple and direct enough to make
the learning accessible to ALL students in the class.
- Divide the task into a few steps that
are logically ordered.
- Present the steps both orally and
visually to meet needs of kids with different modality strengths. (Visual
Instructional Plans – Fred Jones)
Modeling for Students
- Some people believe that explaining is synonymous with instruction. When the extent of the
instruction is ONLY an explanation, without modeling or guided practice,
teachers have no idea whether or not students understand the lesson
content until it is too late. Just hearing or reading directions is not
enough.
- Modeling offers kids the opportunity to
watch the process unfold before their eyes. The teacher engages in
whatever is involved in the learning task EXACTLY as the students will be
expected to perform it.
- The teacher shares inner thoughts –
modeling the thinking process, and the teacher often uses a visual model
to demonstrate the concept being taught.
- It is important during this component
for the teacher to connect with the kids, to see their eyes alert and
focused, rather than glazed over!
- During this component, teachers need to
elicit informal input from the kids and keep them actively engaged –
ü Asking students to underline a portion of
text on board or overhead
ü Use the mini white boards
ü Repeat to a partner
ü Ask students to read the completed response
aloud with you to make sure it sounds good and makes sense.
ü Ask for possible revisions.
ü Teacher makes good strategies conspicuous for
kids
ü Ask lots of questions – use Bloom’s Taxonomy
ü Delve and probe into questions – trying to
elicit deeper responses from kids
ü Appropriate instructional pacing
ü Adequate processing time (Think Time)
ü Constant check for understanding
Guided Practice
Nancy Frey
and Douglas Fisher, in “The Release of Learning” (Principal Leadership,
February 2009) describe a gradual release of responsibility to students. “Unfortunately,” say the authors, “in all too
many classrooms releasing responsibility is too sudden and unplanned and
results in misunderstandings and failure.”
Frey and Fisher believe that guided instruction should consist of cues,
prompts and questions to help the teacher understand the students’ thinking,
provide scaffolding, get students doing some of the cognitive work, and
gradually increase their understanding.
Graphic organizers and frames
work GREAT during this component. These tools simplify the task of representing
knowledge on paper by providing graphic cues. They are helpful instructional aids that help kids move
easily from teacher-control toward their own independent application of the
learning. BUT…. They are NOT a substitute
for instruction. If kids are to do well in a testing situation, they need
to have heard the explanation, seen the model, practiced with the organizer or frame as many times as needed, and
then worked backward, removing one support at a time. After enough trials with
the graphic aide, the teacher can take that away and expect kids to be able to
be successful with just a review of the model. Eventually the model should
disappear too!
- Provide scaffolding as a temporary support/guidance in the
form of steps, tasks, materials, and personal support
- Provide examples/non-examples, and
graphic organizers, study guides, Kate Kinsella starter stems
- Check for understanding through ongoing
assessment and constant feedback
- Highly structured
- Use mini-white boards, highlighters
- Students summarize in their own words, turn
to a neighbor and tell them….
As students become successful with support
(80% for new material, 95% for review), begin reducing the level of support to
move students toward independence.
Independent Practice
- Students practice the SAME kinds of
problems as during the guided practice time.
- Don’t allow for too much time for this.
Students get off task, attention wanders, and time is wasted.
- During this time, teacher should be
moving about the room, watching, guiding, and moving students along.
- Be sure students are able to accurately
complete task independently.
Closure/Assessment
- The assessment portion can be informal - using Fist-to-Five, 12
Word Summary, Brain Bark, Exit Cards, Idea Wave, Thumbs Up, Thumbs Down,
etc.
- The assessment portion can be formal – a method to measure student
understanding or proficiency of the learning objective in test or quiz
format or essay writing, project, report, etc.
- It is a time to collect student learning
evidence of standards/objectives.
As a way to summarize…
What is Explicit in
Explicit Instruction (e.i.)?
What is Explicit?
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Why?
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The
teacher knows precisely what she wants students to learn (be able to do) at
the end of the lesson.
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Unclear
learning objectives result in vague teaching and learning.
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The
teacher tells students what they will be learning.
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Students
are given a sense of predictability and control. They are joined with the teacher in the
instructional encounter.
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The
teacher focuses her attention and students’ attention on the task at hand.
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Students
know where to direct their attention so that learning is maximized.
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The
teacher explains, models, gives examples and non-examples, restates when
necessary, and helps students to state and restate goals and strategies.
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Knowledge
that is usually covert is made overt and explicit; students are “let in” on
the secret of how independent learners learn.
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The
curriculum is arranged so that students are taught prerequisite skills ahead
of time.
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Students
are set up for success!
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The
learning is meaningful and purposeful.
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Students
are not taught useless facts and concepts; what students are taught now they
use now and in the future; explicit connections are made between prior and
current learning.
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The
instructional transaction follows a structured framework.
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The e.i.
framework combines elements that maximize achievement for many students.
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The
teacher provides corrective feedback.
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Particularly
in the acquisition stage, the teacher corrects all errors. Otherwise, students will practice errors
and have difficulty learning more complex skills later on.
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Taken from Explicit
Instruction: A Framework for Meaningful Direct Teaching by Jennifer L.
Goeke (2008), Table 1.4, page 11.
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