Students from families with little formal education often learn rules about how to speak, behave, and acquire knowledge that conflict with how learning happens in school.
Educational Leadership:Poverty and Learning:Nine Powerful Practices - 0 views
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Both school and work operate at the consultative level (which mixes formal and casual speech) and the formal level (which uses precise word choice and syntax).
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Teachers should use consultative language (a mix of formal and casual) to build relationships and use formal register to teach content, providing additional explanation in consultative register.
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But if the school provides a time and place before school, after school, or during lunch for the student to complete homework, that intervention will be more successful.
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If laughter is often used to lessen conflict in a student's community, that student may laugh when being disciplined. Such behavior is considered disrespectful in school and may anger teachers and administrators.
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For example, to survive in many high-poverty neighborhoods, young people have to be able to fight physically if challenged—or have someone fight for them. But if you fight in school, you're usually told to leave.
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You don't use the same set of rules in basketball that you use in football. It's the same with school and other parts of your life. The rules in school are different from the rules out of school. So let's make a list of the rules in school so we're sure we know them.
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Plan to use the instructional strategies that have the highest payoff for the amount of time needed to do the activity.
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To teach students how to ask questions, I assign pairs of students to read a text and compose multiple-choice questions about it. I give them sentence stems, such as "When ___________ happened, why did __________ do ___________?" Students develop questions using the stems, then come up with four answers to each question, only one of which they consider correct and one of which has to be funny.
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greet the parent five minutes before the meeting starts and tell him or her who will be present and what is likely to happen.
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A teacher or administrator who establishes mutual respect, cares enough to make sure a student knows how to survive school, and gives that student the necessary skills is providing a gift that will keep affecting lives from one generation to the next. Never has it been more important to give students living in poverty this gift.
Educational Leadership:Helping All Students Achieve:Closing the Achievement Gap - 0 views
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Between 1970 and 1988, the achievement gap between African American and white students was cut in half, and the gap separating Latinos and whites declined by one-third. That progress came to a halt around 1988, however, and since that time, the gaps have widened.
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Stunned, first, by how little is expected of students in high-poverty schools—how few assignments they get in a given school week or month.
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Clear and public standards for what students should learn at benchmark grade levels are a crucial part of solving the problem.
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Ample evidence shows that almost all students can achieve at high levels if they are taught at high levels. But equally clear is that some students require more time and more instruction.
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doubling—even tripling—the amount of instructional time devoted to literacy and mathematics for low-performing students and by training all of its teachers.
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We take the students who most depend on their teachers for subject-matter learning and assign them teachers with the weakest academic foundations.
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In just one academic year, the top third of teachers produced as much as six times the learning growth as the bottom third of teachers.
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By the time their students reached high school, these districts swapped places in student achievement.
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no more low performing schools and increased achievement for all groups of students, with bigger increases among the groups that have historically been behind.