89 Matching Annotations
  1. Aug 2015
    1. work together to protect the open Web

      how exactly?

    2. You cannot learn Web lit-eracy by separating the competencies contained in these strands from the act of doing (I

      Links to the braid of literacy of the chapter we read from Words their way

    1. “always connected”

      misconception that simply because they are able to download apps or use social media that they are fluent with technology

    1. In classrooms students are segregated by things like grade level, ability, and skills more often than they are mixed together across the whole continuum of these. E

      The mixture is needed to build one's knowledge across all aspects.

    2. eaders are resources

      this does not mean to simply spill everything out to the learner, they will be completely overwhelmed. Guide students through their learning and actively make yourself and resources available to further their engagement in learning.

    3. not necessarily always fit classrooms,

      Hm, I always though of classrooms as little communities of a wider town "the school"

    4. What all this means is that the player learns in the tutorial just enough to move on to learn more—and more subtle things—by actually playing the game, but playing it in a protected way so that deeper learning can occur through playing. T

      Thank you, very difficult for me to understand because I have never played games at all besides Crash Bandicoot, that is it!

    5. earners need to see this type of thing in action, not to be given static rules, if they are really to understand. I

      Often happens,

    6. We see clearly how each piece of information we are given and each skill we are learning (and doing) is interconnected to everything else we are learning and doing. W

      Gradually, education is becoming so rushed there is no time for the learner to connect the pieces to understand

    7. earning differs from individual to individual, so we need to base our discussions of learning around actual cases of actual people learning. Thi

      not seen through standardization.

    8. ith the current return in our schools to skill-and-drill and curricula driven by standardized tests, good learning principles have, more and more, been left on the cognitive scientist’s laboratory bench and, I will argue, inside good computer and video games

      Yes, focused to much on the skill-and-drill where are the students learning? Where are the hands on? Why are children now OWNING their learning as they do with games. The fun is missing, the adventure, the questioning.

    9. ther it is about communicating perspectives on experience and action in the world,

      links to students having to defend their thinking or reasoning.

    10. or humans, language, perception (including emotion), and action in the world are all tightly connected together.

      Yes, body language for texts also play a role I believe in how words are understood

    11. I am playing a game when I am being an academic, because I need to make certain sorts of moves to get recognized as being an academic, For example, I have to write and talk in a certain way. I

      We all play the game. Academics is one language, home is another language, with friends is another language. Our language is constantly changing based on the audience.

    12. Yes. The best way to learn is trial and error.

    13. But once you have one set of links relating various items and actions in your mind, another drops out just as you need it and you’re back to turning pages.

      I have done this a few times

    14. hey have different and specific meanings in different situations where they are used and in different specialist domains that recruit them

      Which is why you shouldn't teach vocabulary one word at a time but through context an

    15. he only realistic chance students with poor vocabularies have to catch up to their peers with rich vocabularies requires that they engage in extraordinary amounts of independent reading. F

      Gee is confusing me. I understand he is stating various researchers finding but what is he getting at?

    16. ultural learning always involves having specific experiences that facilitate learning, not just memorizing words.

      their life experiences don't stop at the door, they are brought into the classroom

    17. production of cakes within the family,

      all linked back to her grandmother birthday falling on friday the 13th

    18. rganization in Leona’s story

      evident

    19. is just such texts that children who experience the fourth-grade slump have trouble reading, fo

      CC has noticed this pitfall and built much more informational texts into the primary years.

    20. Second, she adopts a frame that mimics story book reading as it is often done by teachers and other teacherly adults: “

      students are aware of the components.

    21. Any variety of a language uses certain patterns of resources, and to know the language you have to be able to recognize and use these patterns. T

      Not only learn the skill but use the skill daily to build on vocabulary

    22. ways with words” th

      using the vocabulary in daily conversations

    23. sters (physicists) allow learners to collaborate with them on projects that the learners could not carry out on their own.

      building a culture of era in which learners feel safe making and discussing mistakes.

    24. instructed process.”

      students are not doing enough heavy lifting of their own learning -- they are able to with pokemon cards because they have to figure out and be coached or guided on how to advance pokemon figures to the next stage -- almost as if we are crippling the students ability to learn because we think they can't do it when in fact they can

    25. we need to spend billions of dollars on government-sponsored reading initiatives (l

      too many chiefs not enough Indians

    26. t the majority are poor or come from minority groups whose members have faced a history of prejudice and oppression (

      I wonder if it is because the resources are not available or strategies are not continously practiced in the home

    1. f some of the students are already making well-founded predictions regularly, they do not need this instruction.

      mini-lesson for those struggling

    2. found that an interactional read-aloud style resulted in greater gains in amount of vocabulary and reading compre-hension across both grade levels.

      the activities that are built within read alouds truly drives students comprehension and vocabulary

    3. present information again.

      visual, in a new form in which a different style learner may be able to better comprehend due to the way information is differently represented.

    4. graphic organizers,

      forever and always the best tool, haven't heard anyone critic this yet

    5. ecome set in stone.

      a lesson is not set in stone which I think teachers focus to much on. A lesson is a guide of the content, within the lesson should be areas of misconceptions that may need to be addressed or questions to be asked (but do not have to be asked)

    6. who provide explicit teaching but expect students to independently apply strategies too soon.

      no, do the opposite

    7. will ask each of you to stop and make a prediction. We will talk about your predictions and then read on to see if they come true.”

      I've always enjoyed this

    8. o accomplish this goal, students are engaged in reading and writing daily, all in the service of learning about the con-ceptual theme

      What learning is all about cross-curricular but requires teachers to be all on the same page. Active communication!!!

    9. didn’t do this using interesting texts alone.

      well I mean yes I knew to use interesting text and I knew you weren't going to stick just to that

    10. qually as important are informational genres, whose primary purpose is to convey information about the natural or social world (

      especially since we are pushing for college ready students in which 95% of texts are informational

    11. In addition to volume as an influencing factor, the quality and range of books to which students are exposed (e.g., electronic texts, leveled books, student/teacher published work) has a strong relationship with students’ reading comprehension

      How in urban communities when they are given year old texts that libraries do not want. I mean a book is a book, meaning can be gathered no matter what. However, there is a difference of knowledge within newer and older books for young children.

    12. Thus, skilled readers are more readily able to integrate broader arrays of relevant elements from the text base and bring wider and deeper knowl-edge to the task of constructing a situation model.

      Less skilled readers can learn much from their skilled reader peers. Some may not agree, but I do believe that in discussion there should be all level readers involved within a small group discussion to be able to hear the wider and deeper knowledge of the high skilled reader peers to build on the low skilled readers knowledge

    13. These new constructs will modify or replace those currently in long-term memory.

      metacognition

    14. read closely to determine what the text says explicitly”

      a difficult task for many students to read between the lines

    15. Engage students in discussion.

      Pose one question, a "meaty" question and have students interact with each other.

    16. trong teach-ers of reading comprehension for two consecutive years.

      consistency, rare within urban school districts

    17. If learning to read effectively is a journey toward ever-increasing ability to comprehend texts, then teachers are the tour guides, ensuring that students stay on course, pausing to make sure they appreciate the landscape of understanding, and encouraging the occasional diversion down an inviting and interesting cul-de-sac or byway.

      Yes! I love how this is put, I have been saying students should de the heavy lifting and the teachers are their guide.

    1. nasals.

      If you have never tried sounding out words and really paying attention to what your lips, teeth, nose, and throat do I highly suggest it.

    2. Given that fis a much more familiar letter, stu-dents often choose it to represent the /v/ sound. Ne

      I have seen this in student writing. I find it very interesting to examine students spelling when they are semi-phonetic because they are spelling how it sounds, they haven't really learned vowels and those are usually omitted because they are in the middle of the word and the students are so focused on the initial and ending sound.

    3. Students need hands-on experience comparing and contrasting words by soundso that they can categorize similar sounds and associate them consistently with let-ters and letter combinations. T

      This is so important that I feel sometimes is overlooked through a worksheet. Worksheets are good but they need to align to your objective

    4. eated practice. Un

      Practice does make you better at something but if the students are not understanding what they are doing then the practice just becomes memorization which we do not want

    5. Even more words areacquired when they are explicitly examined to discover the orthographic relationshipsamong words—their sounds, spelling patterns, and meaning

      Goes along with what we've been reading on how to teach vocabulary not through individual words but how they are written.

    1. One key reason for this failure is linguistic. In school, words often take on meaning only in terms of yet other words.

      very difficult for ELL's

    2. ore advantaged learners have a problem as well (B

      but are we just going to focus on them? no.

    3. ll children,

      ALL CHILDREN!!!!!!! Low income families I feel weren't well addressed within this article. Unless, it is coming.

    4. he literacy skills now necessary to succeed in the 21st century must go beyond decoding and literal meaning to the ability to draw inferences from complex academic texts and use such texts as resources to solve problems,

      I am unsure of what more they are asking?

    5. The young girl becomes a “prosumer

      Students have to build character skills to have motivation to do something like this young girl.

    6. The most important issues are how this time is spent, how the technology is or is not built into a good learning system, whether good mentors are involved, and how the technology is being related to other technologies and other areas of learning.

      Exactly.

    7. his can transform our traditional notions of assessment. W

      Yet, these students who are savvy in the virtual world are going to be assessed and labeled based on the literacy world and incapable? Or no?

    8. What exactly is the connection between digital media, on the one hand, and literacy, content learning, and complex academic language, on the other?

      My question exactly!

    9. he old reading gap can only worsen as the high-tech digital world makes larger and more complex demands on literacy and content learning. A

      Interesting never thought about

    10. digital gap, between those students who can leverage technical skills and technological “know-how” to learn content, produce knowledge, and develop high-level expertise, and those who cannot (

      Unfortunately, low income communities are unable to have technology available.

    11. Many students today, especially from low-income families, do not get the sorts of early language-based preparation for schooling that we have just discussed.

      Yes, the transfer of vocabulary from school to home is just not occurring because the parents of these students do not understand the vocabulary themselves!

    12. oundations are laid for meeting the demands of comprehending and using academic language connected to content. If

      Yes, learning to read

    13. ot just to settle for the ability “to read to learn” s

      Students need to read to learn. How are they to comprehend anything if they can't make meaning from the text

    14. If children cannot read well, they can hardly master new digital tools to innovate in knowledge domains —

      Or read for understanding.Students can't comprehend the text at all.

    15. any of our schools into test-prep academies focused on assessing standardized skill sets

      This is what annoys me most about education.

    16. Today that proportion has fallen to 14 percent and is continuing to fall (

      What are we doing as a country to prevent this number from falling other than continuously rewriting standards?

    17. en today’s U.S. students enter tomorrow’s workforce they will face intense international competition for jobs at every skill lev

      Shouldn't we teach more languages within our schools to work with these countries?

    18. it also requires the ability to infer the meaning of unfamiliar words and, eventually, to infer meaning from patterns of information

      Links to what the videos were saying about teaching vocabulary. Not about the individual words but how to derive the meaning of unfamiliar words through word families or context clues

    1. shark strolling in the park

      kids love creating non-sense sentences that rhyme!

    2. The Ants Go Marching”

      heard this song multiple times but never thought of it as a tool

    3. middle sounds

      middle sounds are usually vowels and vowels have multiple sounds so you really have to think back on the structure of the word

    4. Child-ren appear to be better able to capture and gaincontrol over larger units of sound before smallerunits of sound

      I think I knew this subconsciously but never thought about.

    5. purposeful

      yes! why is this important to the learning

    6. prioritygoal in kindergarten classrooms.

      yes, because although there are 26 letters there are 44 (I think) different phonemes

    7. Because an alphabetic orthography maps speechto print at the level of the phoneme.

      /st/ is one phoneme but contains 2 letters

    8. honemic awareness is a typeof phonological awareness, that is, the aware-ness of the sound structure of language in gen-eral.

      subset within phonological awareness

    1. o understand the history of reading research, we need to appreciate theimpact of these varied perspectives on learner and learning that become mir-rored in the research questions posed, the methodologies applied, and the inter-pretations made.

      everything in education always links back to research and the multiple ways students learn.

    2. ittle regard for motivation in the form of readers’goals, interests, and involvement in the learning experience (O

      heavy emphasis today

    3. e relativedominance of informal knowledge over formal understandings could be becausewhat is learned in a school setting appears of limited relevance and therefore lim-ited value to students (

      many schools have made the shift of students reading more informational texts

    4. ere was a shift away from the neurological orphysiological arguments central to that earlier period and more concern fornaturalism in the materials and procedures used to teach reading. O

      really? I always thought they linked

    5. ssential to unite all manner of language acquisitionand use.

      just because someone can speak the language does not mean they can write or read

    6. interaction of language as a system and languagein its particular social uses. S

      why low SES children have a smaller vocabulary

    7. st aschildren came to understand the spoken language of their surrounding communi-ty (Halliday, 1969), they would come to understand its written language givenenough exposure in meaningful situations (Goodman & Goodman, 198

      to an extent

    8. Two communities of theorists and researchers were especially influentialin setting the stage for this period of reading research, linguists and psycholin-guists. On the one hand, linguists following in the tradition of Chomsky (1957,2002) held to a less environmentally driven and more hard-wired view of lan-guage acquisition, and hence of reading. Psycholinguistic researchers, on the oth-er hand, felt that the attention to discrete aspects of reading advocated inbehaviorism destroyed the natural communicative power and inherent aestheticof reading

      both

    9. of these movementsturned attention back inside the human mind and away from the environme

      shift to science - cognitive

    10. William James (1890) endured in the notion that human thought mattered inhuman action and that introspection and self-questioning were effective tools foruncovering those thoughts.

      interesting

    11. onics in-struction came to be seen as part of the logical groundwork for beginning toread

      wow not long ago phonics became the groundwork

    12. The task for this generation of reading researchers, therefore, was to un-tangle the chained links of behavior involved in reading so that learners couldbe trained in each component skill. T

      edu573

      trained as in phonics so that children can enjoy reading texts