Advance Organizers and Nonlinguistic Representation
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Transcript Advance Organizers and Nonlinguistic Representation
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Advanced Organizers and
Nonlinguistic Representation
A Hoover CITW Session
December 2012
CITW Team
Advance Organizers and
Nonlinguistic Representation
Educational
researchers have
shown that the activation of
prior knowledge is critical to
learning of all types.
•In what ways do you activate prior
knowledge in your classroom?
•What role does this prior knowledge play
in new learning?
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Generalizations from the Research:
Advance Organizers
Focus on what is important as opposed to what
is unusual
Higher level organizers produce deeper
learning than lower level organizers
Organizers are most useful with information
that is not well organized
Different types of organizers produce different
results
Classroom Practice In
Advance Organizers
Expository
Advance Organizers (describing the
content)
Narrative
Organizers (telling the information in a
story format)
Graphic
Advance Organizers
Classroom Practice In
Advance Organizers
Skimming
the Text
(read the bold print
or summary)
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Research on Learners
18%
are auditory learners
32%
are visual learners
25%
are tactile learners
25%
are kinesthetic learners
Greater than 50% of learners are
nonlinguistic!
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What is Nonlinguistic
Representation?
Expressing
as/through
information
Mental pictures
Physical sensations such
as smell, taste, touch
Kinesthetic association
Sound
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How to Use Nonlinguistic
Representation
Graphic
Make
organizers
Physical Models
Generate
Draw
Mental Pictures
Pictures and Pictographs
Engage
in Kinesthetic Activity
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Examples of Nonlinguistic
Representation
Descriptive
Patterns
Time-Sequence
Patterns
Process/Cause-
Effect Patterns
Episode
Patterns
Generalization/
Principle Patterns
Concept
Patterns
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Descriptive Patterns
They
can be used to represent facts about specific
persons, places, things, and events.
The
information does not need to be in any
particular order.
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Time-Sequence Patterns
Organize
events in a specific
chronological order
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Process/Cause-Effect Patterns
Organize
information into a casual network
leading to a specific outcome or into a
sequence of steps leading to a specific
product
EFFECT
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Episode Patterns
Organize
information about specific events
including:
- a setting (time and place)
- specific people
- specific duration
- specific sequence of events
- particular cause and effect
Episode Patterns
PLACE
DURATION
TIME
CAUSE
PERSON
EPISODE
PERSON
EFFECT
PERSON
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Generalization/Principal Patterns
Organize
information into general
statements with supporting examples
Principle
Example
Example
Example
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Concept Patterns
The
most general of all patterns
Organize
information around a word
or phrase that represents entire
classes or categories of persons,
places things, and events
Concept Patterns
Example
CHARACTERISTIC
CONCEPT
CHARACTERISTIC
CHARACTERISTIC
Example
Example
Example
Example
Example
Example
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Make Physical Models
Concrete
representation of the knowledge that is
being learned
Souvenirs/tokens
3D
models – dioramas
File
folder reviews
Do the students know how the model
connects to the learning?
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Draw Pictures and Pictographs
Symbolic
pictures that represent the
knowledge that has been learned
Flip
books
Illustrate
vocabulary
Do the students know how the
picture connects to the learning?
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Engage in Kinesthetic Activity
Physical
movement associated with
knowledge generates a mental image of the
knowledge in the mind
Mental
Role
images/pictures
playing/charades
Hand/body
movements
“Actions speak louder than words”