Just a little note from Jeff Zwiers, our consultant guru of academic oral language (affectionately known as ORACY).
There is a voiced video that goes with his note (https://youtu.be/8_RwEmCRjaI?list=PLl6xJtr2L04a7Jcu3Hfy4l2VTPm2i98iW). If you'd like Stronger Clearer Modeled for you, please talk to Lisa Laurenz, Jamie Ditman or Jamie Martinson...there are some collegues who are also great at it like Alyssa and Carina at Blair.
Enjoy!!!
- JEFF ZWIERS: Hello, again.
- We looked at several ways
- to model conversation skills.
- We take a closer look at ways
- to support the development of conversation skills
- and to effectively scaffold conversations and their skills.
- We highly encourage you to take advantage
- of the interaction-based activities
- that you already use as ways to develop conversation
- skills, particularly the skills of clarifying and supporting
- ideas.
- For example, many of you use think-pair-shares or turn
- and talks.
- Within these, instead of just having the listener nod
- their head and offer eye contact,
- have the listener ask a clarifier or support question
- to the talker.
- Or in jigsaws, have the home groups
- ask clarifying support questions when the expert student is
- sharing his or her information.
- Similarly, in Gallery Walks, Socratic Seminars,
- and group work, you can push students
- to push themselves and each other
- to clarify and support their ideas.
- Get them into the habit, actually get
- them addicted to seeking and giving clarity
- and support whenever they interact.
- And you can use the stronger and clearer
- each time types of activities as well, a description of which
- is coming up next.
- This activity type is called the stronger and clearer each time.
- In a nutshell, the procedure is as follows.
- First, prompt students to come up with a response.
- For example, have them solve a problem and explain their ideas
- or answer an essential question.
- Then have students meet with successive partners.
- For each next partnership, they borrow and use
- the language, ideas, and justifications
- from previous partnerships.
- The responses should get stronger, often longer, but not
- always, with better supporting justifications and examples
- and clearer with more precise terms and linked, organized,
- and complete sentences.
- And scaffolds are reduced during the activity, if there are any.
- Here's an example from a middle school math lesson.
- I only showed two successive partnerships,
- but you can have three or more.
- The teacher, in this case, has told students
- that when they are listening, they need to ask at least one
- clarify or support question to the talker.
- The problem is Darla decides to buy a sports drink.
- Her choices are a 20-ounce bottle for $1.49
- or a 32-ounce bottle for $2.49.
- Which is the better value?
- Explain what you did to get your answer and why.
- First, students have some time to work on the problem
- and then they meet.
- Her first partner shows up.
- She says I think to draw it.
- Then cut up to ounces of each thing.
- Then he asks, what do you mean cut up to ounces?
- And she says, I mean you cut up the ounces,
- like 20 ounces and the $1.49 and see what for a dollar,
- each one.
- Now you go.
- He says, I think we've got to find
- like how much ounces like each ounce is.
- I don't know how.
- Why do you want to go so small like for one ounce?
- He responds, because maybe it'll help, like the big bottle one
- ounce costs something and the little one, one ounce costs
- different.
- Than the teacher says, take one or two word notes
- and then switch partners.
- Remember stronger and clearer next time.
- If the students aren't reminded to craft stronger and clearer
- ideas each time, they'll tend to say just the same thing
- each time.
- The second partner comes along and Sylvia
- says I want to find how much a dollar can get, like of ounces.
- So $1 is like 1 over 1.50, 2/3.
- So I take 2/3 of it?
- Notice how Sylvia's idea changed.
- And her partner asks, why do you do for a dollar?
- She says, because if I get more for a dollar for one
- drink, that's better I think.
- Now you.
- He says, I kind of did that, but I did for one ounce, it's cost.
- I did 1.49 over 20.
- I think it's like 70.
- And 32 over-- no, 2:49 over 32.
- I didn't finish it.
- And she asks, why did you do all that division?
- And he says, because, I don't know, I tried adding it
- and it didn't help.
- And we've done lots of ratio stuff this week.
- And you divide for ratio sometimes.
- Now did you notice what a difference
- the prompting for clarification and support made?
- Any time students talk or listen to one another,
- have them push each other and push themselves
- for clarification and support.
- You'll be pleasantly surprised at how this practice helps
- their conversations.
- Now we must also scaffold conversations and their skills.
- One guideline to remember is to provide just enough support,
- reducing it over time, while making sure
- that nothing falls, meaning that students can still
- engage in the learning.
- Watch this award winning animation in which the building
- represents student learning and the scaffolding represents,
- well, our scaffolding.
- Impressed?
- Now, we're trying to build their independence in conversations
- and trying to keep students from depending on us
- for all things conversation.
- Just as a real scaffold is used to support
- the construction of a building, so should we
- scaffold conversation skills.
- There are a few ways to structure a conversation
- work so that students build their skills over time.
- We can structure the duration of the conversations and the time
- for each turn, if needed.
- We can structure turns with tokens,
- for example, or by having certain partners begin or end
- the conversation, or by using cards that reminds students
- of the conversation turns, moves, or skills,
- as you've seen in previous sessions.
- And we can structure partners to be with certain other partners.
- And we can have students have second and third conversations
- without notes or supports.
- We can have some students be observer/coaches
- within a triad.
- We can also scaffold conversations
- with graphic organizers, charts, and other visuals.
- And we can provide texts, two different ones to A and B
- partners, as well as have them take notes or write
- before or after conversations.
- And we can provide language in the form
- of sentence frames ever mindful, of course,
- not to over sentence frame the five students.
- Sentence frames need to help students, not bog them down.
- Now, a helpful visual scaffold is a disciplinary thinking
- lens.
- It reminds students of the types of thinking that they should
- use as they engage in constructive conversations
- about a topic.
- The topic goes in the center.
- And there are six or so skills that go around the topic.
- In this example, for history, the skills
- are basics and background, causes, effects,
- sourcing and corroborating, empathy and perspective,
- and application.
- Then there are the questions that students
- pose related to the skills.
- And they can answer them on the outside of the lens like so.
- Any one of the thinking skills or questions
- can nudge a conversation in a deeper direction.
- A variety of holdable and movable things
- can also scaffold effective talk.
- In this picture, kindergarten students
- were asked to discuss which rules at school
- were meant for safety and which were meant
- to help lessons run smoothly.
- The rules had pictures with labels on separate cards.
- Students discussed which side of the T-Chart rule went under.
- Some actually fit into both.
- Students took turns placing cards and asking each other why
- it would go in a category.
- Some even came up with their own examples.
- In the following videos, and weeks,
- challenge yourself to observe conversations
- and how they are scaffolded and how they
- might be better scaffolded.
- Also think about how you might use
- interaction-based activities to build
- student habits of clarifying and supporting ideas and have fun.
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