ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA...

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ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence National Institute April 15, 2011

Transcript of ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA...

Page 1: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING:Getting the Most Out of Group

Instruction

Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBASEEM Collaborative

Blueprint for Educational Excellence National Institute April 15, 2011

Page 2: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

What is active student responding?

“Active Student Responding requires students to _________________________ in other ways that reveal understanding of ________in each step of the instruction.” Vargus 2009 (p. 189)

“Active responses are those that are_______________________and that include error correction responses as well (Barbetta, Heron, & Heward, 1993)

“Active student responding occurs each time a student makes a __________________________________” Heward 2009

answer questions or respond

observableand countable

content

detectable response to ongoinginstruction

Page 3: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Active STUDENT RESPONSES

The basic measure of ASR is_____,_____, _________of responses

The more the student________, the more likely they will _____

_______behavior is not the same as active student responding

Increasing on-task or _________behavior does not necessarily increase________

count tallyfrequency

respondslearn

On task

attendinglearning

Page 4: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

What’s so important about ASR?

When a student is attending, we do not know if they are ______ ________- the only way we know is if they make a ________to what they have_____________.

Children (particularly those with autism) must be involved in active learning involving consistent, repeated ______________ ________to stimuli and to respond, in turn, to the corresponding consequences Taylor, 2004, Green 1996.

Maximizes________________– number of responses versus time spent in an activity

More opportunities to respond and get_________, the ______ children will learn.

actuallylearning response

seen or heard

opportunities torespond

instructional time

feedback faster

Page 5: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Is this active student responding?

Reading out loud _____ Whole body listening _____ Doing math calculations _____ Listening to a story _____ Answering comprehension questions _____ Watching a video _____

YES

NO

YESNO

YES

NO

Page 6: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Benefits of ASR

More ________responding, improved _____ ______

Faster acquisition of___________ Increases _______behavior (Narayan et al

1990, Carnine 1976) _________________behavior (Lambert,

Carledge, Heward, and Lo 2006)

accurate testscores

information

on task

Reduces disruptive

Page 7: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Types of ASR

_______responding _________cards Peer ________or peer ______ ____________or fill-in sheets

Choral

Response

tutoring pairsGuided notes

Page 8: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Choral responding

An integral component of the _______________model Particularly useful for _______material math facts states and capitals rules Use ______________________ Provide feedback for the ________response ____________ pace of instruction Part of the _______ Reading program – sound drills Use in transitions – reciting _____ for walking in halls, etc. Students typically enjoy this!

Direct Instructionfactual

signal to begin and end

majorityFast, lively

Wilsonrules

Page 9: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

More on choral responding

Page 10: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Let’s watch!

Page 11: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Peer Tutoring

By definition it _________the rate of task presentation, and _________for correct responses as well as immediate error correction

Can be done with typical peers or pairing a typical peer with a non-typical peer.

Can use__________, worksheets, or reading to increase_________________.

__________activities can include having kids match units of measurement to each other, words to parts of speech

increasesfeedback

flashcardsfluency and accuracy

Peer pairs

Page 12: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Peer Tutoring

Kamps et a. 1994 used a classroom wide tutoring program with typical students and 3 high functioning ASD students. Their results showed an increase in reading _______and increased reading comprehension for ___students as well as increased duration of _______________between the student with ASD and their peer following the tutoring session.

Greenwood et al. 1984 – peer tutoring resulted in greater _______of academic responses as well as much better test scores than ________________instruction. There was twice as much ____________in the tutoring condition than in teacher condition

fluency

social interaction

varietyteacher directed

responding

all

Page 13: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Response Cards

Cards, signs, or items which are simultaneously ________by all students to display their ______________________ _______ presented by the teacher.

Can be _________or ______(write on).

held upresponse to a question or

problem

pre-made blank

Page 14: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Advantages of response cards

Student does not have to be ______(as with choral responding)

_____to use They can be a _________________ Allows for ____________of student’s response more

easily Students can learn by ______________ Affords many more learning opportunities than ____

_______as each student responds each time

verbal

Easypermanent product

assessment

watching others

handraising

Page 15: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Comparison to the one student at a time approach

Each student gets to respond at each ___________ Keeps the student _________all the time May reduce __________________behaviors over

not being _________ when they know the answer Allows teacher to see _______students are making Students report that it is much more ____than

traditional instruction.

opportunity

engaged

frustration/disruptivecalled on

errors

fun

Page 16: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Types of response cards

_________cards

__________on cards

Other variations

Preprinted

Blank/write

Page 17: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Preprinted cards

– Two sided cards on ______- good for two possible answers (e.g. true or false, odd or even, noun or verb, etc.

– “Pinch cards” – each card has several options listed horizontally. The student uses either a_________, clothes pin, or their ______to indicate their answer

sticks

paper clip finger

Page 18: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Blank cards

Can use pieces of ___________with dry markers and socks as erasers. Children write their answers on their cards and hold them up on the cue of “_______”.

Very often used in _____instruction, but also for language arts and other subjects.

Students must be able to ______in some fashion to use this option.

white board

cards upmath

write

Page 19: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Other options

Use individual felt boards with felt pieces to teach _________________–e.g. have students put the dog on top of the house, put the tree behind the house, etc.

Give each student their own ________with icons that they can velcro on when doing calendar activities, attendance, etc. as opposed to just one student getting to put up the items on the class calendar.

Constructed ________– give each student letter tiles. They have to manipulate their tiles to spell the dictated word.

directional concepts

calendar

spelling

Page 20: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Other ideas? How would you adapt a group activity to increase ASR?

Page 21: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

Guided notes

Originally used with ________________ students in _______school

Teachers noted that they also helped regular ed. Students

Advantages are that the student is directed via the guided note handout to _________ _________________________

Reduces the amount of __________the student is required to do.

learning disabledmiddle

recognizewhat information is important

note taking

Page 22: ACTIVE STUDENT RESPONDING: Getting the Most Out of Group Instruction Margery K. Lerner, M.A., BCBA SEEM Collaborative Blueprint for Educational Excellence.

References

Handouts:– Heward et. al. Article: Everybody Participates in

This class– References & Resources- From Heward’s

Presentation at Simmons College 11/5/09– Additional list of selected articles not cited by

Heward