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Shaeley Santiago

Language Magazine » Cutting to the Common Core: Making Vocabulary Number One - 0 views

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    Cutting to the Common Core: Making Vocabulary Number One. Dr. Kate Kinsella. I am just LOVING @langmag!! http://t.co/FKDpefAf1V #K12EL #ELL
Shaeley Santiago

Whose Student Is She? | Teaching Tolerance - 1 views

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    via @danielscib Daniel Scibienski
Shaeley Santiago

Heavily Decorated Classrooms Disrupt Attention and Learning In Young Children - 0 views

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    Maps, number lines, shapes, artwork and other materials tend to cover elementary classroom walls. However, too much of a good thing may end up disrupting attention and learning in young children, according to research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. Psychology researchers Anna V.
Shaeley Santiago

LendMeYourLiteracy | Inspiring Young Writers -LendMeYourLiteracy | Inspiring Young Writ... - 1 views

  • And how much of their leisure time to do they spend reading nonfiction? Less than 4 minutes a day.
  • Even in classrooms, nonfiction appears to be in short supply
  • just 9.8 percent of texts in classroom libraries. The mean number of informational books per child was just 1.2 in low-income districts and a still relatively paltry 3.3 in high-income districts.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • For years, we've known that the amount of independent reading students do contributes to their reading skills. Students who read more tend to learn more vocabulary, become more proficient readers, find reading more enjoyable, and thus continue to read more and become ever better readers (Stanovich, 1986).
  • cite a compelling research base supporting the shift to more complex, nonfiction texts. They note, for example, that students who are able to answer questions related to complex text have a high probability of earning a C or better in an introductory-level college course in U.S. history or psychology.
  • helps students develop their background knowledge, which itself accounts for as much as 33 percent of the variance in student achievement (Marzano, 2000). Background knowledge becomes more crucial in the later elementary grades, as students begin to read more content-specific textbooks (Young, Moss, & Cornwell, 2007) that often include headings, graphs, charts, and other text elements not often found in the narrative fiction they encountered in the lower grades (Sanacore & Palumbo, 2009).
  • the goal is to get students to see how beliefs and biases can influence the way different people describe the same events.
  • the potential to motivate young children to read by tapping into their interests (Caswell & Duke, 1998)
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    via @LiteracyNetwork
Shaeley Santiago

http://www.wodb.ca/ - 0 views

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    via @famouspeitra
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