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Meeting the Needs of Students with Learning Disabilities: The Role of Schema-Based Instruction

Meeting the Needs of Students with Learning Disabilities: The Role of Schema-Based Instruction. Asha K. Jitendra University of Minnesota Jon Star Harvard University Paper Presented at the 2008 NCTM Annual Convention, Salt Lake City, UT. Thanks to ….

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Meeting the Needs of Students with Learning Disabilities: The Role of Schema-Based Instruction

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  1. Meeting the Needs of Students with Learning Disabilities: The Role of Schema-Based Instruction Asha K. Jitendra University of Minnesota Jon Star Harvard University Paper Presented at the 2008 NCTM Annual Convention, Salt Lake City, UT

  2. Thanks to … • Research supported by Institute of Education Sciences (IES) Grant # R305K060075-06) • Project Collaborators: Kristin Starosta, Grace Caskie, Jayne Leh, Sheetal Sood, Cheyenne Hughes, Toshi Mack, and Sarah Paskman (Lehigh University) • All participating teachers and students (Shawnee Middle School, Easton, PA) April 9, 2008

  3. Mathematical word problems • Represent “the most common form of problem solving” (Jonassen, 2003, p. 267) in school mathematics curricula. • Present difficulties for special education students and low achieving students Cummins, Kintsch, Reusser, & Weimer, 1988; Mayer, Lewis, & Hegarty, 1992; Nathan, Long, & Alibali, 2002; Rittle-Johnson & McMullen, 2004). April 9, 2008

  4. To solve word problems, • Need to be able to recognize the underlying mathematical structure • Schemas • Domain or context specific knowledge structures that organize knowledge and help the learner categorize various problem types to determine the most appropriate actions needed to solve the problem Chen, 1999; Sweller, Chandler, Tierney, & Cooper, 1990 April 9, 2008

  5. Focus on math structure helps … • Allows for the organization of problems and identification of strategies based on the underlying mathematical similarity rather than superficial features • “This is a rate problem” • Rather than “This is a train problem” April 9, 2008

  6. Bridging the gap … Math education: A student-centered, guided discovery approach is particularly important for low achievers (NCTM) Special education: Direct instruction and problem-solving practice are particularly important for low achievers Baker, Gersten, & Lee., 2002; Jitendra & Xin, 1997; Tuovinen & Sweller, 1999; Xin & Jitendra, 1999 April 9, 2008

  7. Math Wars April 9, 2008

  8. Our approach Collaboration between special education researcher (Jitendra) and math education researcher (Star) Direct instruction However, “improved” in two ways by connecting with mathematics education literature: April 9, 2008

  9. Exposure to multiple strategies Weakness of some direct instruction models is focus on a single or very narrow range of strategies and problem types Can lead to rote memorization Rather, focus on and comparison of multiple problem types and strategies linked to flexibility and conceptual understanding Rittle-Johnson & Star, 2007; Star & Rittle-Johnson, 2008 April 9, 2008

  10. Focus on structure Avoid key word strategies in all means total, left means subtraction, etc. Avoid procedures that are disconnected from underlying mathematical structure cross multiplication April 9, 2008

  11. Theoretical framework for SBI … • Draws on Cognitively Guided Instruction (CGI) • categorization of problems as the basis for instruction (Carpenter, Fennema, Franke, Levi, Empson, 1999) • understanding students’ mathematical thinking in proportional reasoning situations (Weinberg, 2002). • Differs from CGI by including teacher-led discussions using schematic diagrams to develop students’ multiplicative reasoning (Kent, Arnosky, & McMonagle, 2002). April 9, 2008

  12. Prior research on SBI has focused on • Schema priming (Chen, 1999; Quilici & Mayer, 1996; Tookey, 1994), • Visual representations such as number line diagrams (e.g., Zawaiza & Gerber, 1993) or schematic diagrams (e.g., Fuson and Willis, 1989); Jitendra, Griffin, McGoey, Gardill, Bhat, & Riley, 1998; Xin, Jitendra, & Deatline-Buchman, 2005; Jitendra, Griffin, Haria, Leh, Adams, & Kaduvettoor, 2007; Willis and Fuson, 1988) • Schema-broadening by focusing on similar problem types (e.g., Fuchs, Fuchs, Prentice, Burch, Hamlett, Owen, Hosp & Jancek, 2003; Fuchs, Seethaler, Powell, Fuchs, Hamlett, & Fletcher, 2008; ) April 9, 2008

  13. SBI-SM: Our approach Schema-Based Instruction with Self-Monitoring Translate problem features into a coherent representation of the problem’s mathematical structure, using schematic diagrams Apply a problem-solving heuristic which guides both translation and solution processes April 9, 2008

  14. An example problem The ratio of the number of girls to the total number of children in Ms. Robinson’s class is 2:5. The number of girls in the class is 12. How many children are in the class? April 9, 2008

  15. 1. Find the problem type Read and retell problem to understand it Ask self if this is a ratio problem Ask self if problem is similar or different from others that have been seen before The ratio of the number of girls to the total number of children in Ms. Robinson’s class is 2:5. The number of girls in the class is 12. How many children are in the class? April 9, 2008

  16. 2. Organize the information April 9, 2008

  17. 2. Organize the information Underline the ratio or comparison sentence and write ratio value in diagram Write compared and base quantities in diagram Write an x for what must be solved The ratio of the number of girls to the total number of children in Ms. Robinson’s class is 2:5. The number of girls in the class is 12. How many children are in the class? April 9, 2008

  18. 2. Organize the information 12 Girls x Children April 9, 2008

  19. 3. Plan to solve the problem Translate information in the diagram into a math equation Plan how to solve the equation April 9, 2008

  20. 4. Solve the problem Solve the math equation and write the complete answer Check to see if the answer makes sense April 9, 2008

  21. Problem solving strategies A. Cross multiplication April 9, 2008

  22. Problem solving strategies B. Equivalent fractions strategy “7 times what is 28? Since the answer is 4 (7 * 4 = 28), we multiply 5 by this same number to get x. So 4 * 5 = 20.” April 9, 2008

  23. Problem solving strategies C. Unit rate strategy “2 multiplied by what is 24? Since the answer is 12 (2 * 12 = 24), you then multiply 3 * 12 to get x. So 3 * 12 = 36.” April 9, 2008

  24. Additional problem types/schemata April 9, 2008

  25. Proportionality is critical … • Challenging topic for students (National Research Council, 2001) • Current curricula typically do not focus on developing deep understanding of the mathematical problem structure and flexible solution strategies (NCES, 2003; NRC, 2001). April 9, 2008

  26. Goal of the study • To investigate the effectiveness of SBI-SM instruction on solving ratio and proportion problems as compared to “business as usual” instruction. • Specifically, what are the outcomes for special education students April 9, 2008

  27. Participants • Participants in the larger study - 148 7th graders from 8 classrooms in one urban public middle school • The total number of special education students was 15 (10%). • Mean chronological age of special education students = 12.83 years (range = SD = .39 years) • 60% Caucasian, 20% Hispanic, 7% African American, and 7% American Indian and Asian • Approximately 20% of students received free or subsidized lunch April 9, 2008

  28. Table 1 Student Demographic Characteristics by Condition Note: SBI-SM = schema-based instruction-self-monitoring April 9, 2008

  29. Study Design Pretest-intervention-posttest-delayed posttest with random assignment to condition by class Four “tracks” - Advanced, High, Average, Low* *Referred to in the school as Honors, Academic, Applied, and Essential April 9, 2008

  30. Professional Development SBI-SM teachers received one full day of PD immediately prior to unit and were also provided with on-going support during the study Understanding ratio and proportion problems Introduction to the SBI-SM approach Detailed examination of lessons Control teachers received 1/2 day PD Implementing standard curriculum on ratio/proportion April 9, 2008

  31. Procedure - Both Conditions • Instruction on same topics • Duration: 40 minutes daily, five days per week across 10 school days • Classroom teachers delivered all instruction • Lessons structured as follows: • Students work individually to complete a review problem and teacher reviews it in a whole class format, • Teacher introduces the key concepts/skills using a series of examples • Teacher assigns homework • Students allowed to use calculators. April 9, 2008

  32. SBI-SM Condition • Our intervention unit on ratio and proportion • Lessons scripted • Instructional paradigm: teacher-mediated instruction - guided learning - independent practice, using schematic diagrams and problem checklists (FOPS) • Teacher and student “think alouds” April 9, 2008

  33. SBI-SM Instructional Sequence April 9, 2008

  34. Control Condition Instructional procedures outlined in the district-adopted mathematics textbook April 9, 2008

  35. Outcome Measure Mathematical problem-solving (PS) 18 items from TIMSS, NAEP, and state assessments Cronbach’s alpha 0.73 for the pretest 0.78 for the posttest 0.83 for the delayed posttest April 9, 2008

  36. Figure 1. Sample PS Test Item If there are 300 calories in 100g of a certain food, how many calories are there in a 30g portion of this food? 90 100 900 1000 9000 April 9, 2008

  37. Results April 9, 2008

  38. Table 3 Student Problem Solving Performance by Time and Condition Note: Scores ranged from 0 to 18 on the problem solving test; SBI-SM = schema-based instruction- self-monitoring. April 9, 2008

  39. Figure 2 Mathematics Problem-Solving Performance of Students in the SBI-SM Condition

  40. Figure 3 Mathematics Problem-Solving Performance by Students in the Control Condition

  41. Summary and Discussion SBI-SM led to significant gains in problem-solving skills. • A large effect size (1.46) at Time 1 and a low moderate effect (0.37) at Time 2 in favor of the treatment group. Developing deep understanding of the mathematical problem structure and fostering flexible solution strategies helped students in the SBI-SM group improve their problem solving performance April 9, 2008

  42. Discussion • Two issues undermined the potential impact of SBI-SM • One intervention teacher experienced classroom management difficulties. • Variation in treatment implementation fidelity • Intervention was time-based (10 days) rather than criterion-based (mastery of content) April 9, 2008

  43. Thanks! Asha K. Jitendra (jiten001@umn.edu) Jon R. Star (jon_star@harvard.edu) April 9, 2008

  44. SBI References from our Research Team BOOKS AND CURRICULAR MATERIALS • Jitendra, A. K. (2007). Solving math word problems: Teaching students with learning disabilities using schema-based instruction. Austin, TX: Pro-Ed. • Montague, M., & Jitendra, A. K. (Eds.) (2006). Teaching mathematics to middle school students with learning difficulties. New York: The Guilford Press. April 9, 2008

  45. SBI References from our Research Team CHAPTERS Chard, D. J., Ketterlin-Geller, L. R., & Jitendra, A. K. (in press). Systems of instruction and assessment to improve mathematics achievement for students with disabilities: The potential and promise of RTI. In E. L. Grigorenko (Ed.), Educating individuals with disabilities: IDEIA 2004 and beyond. New York, N.Y.: Springer. Xin, Y. P., & Jitendra, A. K. (2006). Teaching problem solving skills to middle school students with mathematics difficulties: Schema-based strategy instruction. In M. Montague & A. K. Jitendra (Eds.), Teaching mathematics to middle school students with learning difficulties (pp. 51-71). New York: Guilford Press. April 9, 2008

  46. SBI References from our Research Team Journal Articles • Griffin, C. C. & Jitendra, A. K. (in press). Word problem solving instruction in inclusive third grade mathematics classrooms. Journal of Educational Research. • Jitendra, A. K., Griffin, C., Deatline-Buchman, A., & Sczesniak, E. (2007). Mathematical word problem solving in third grade classrooms. Journal of Educational Research, 100(5), 283-302. • Jitendra, A. K., Griffin, C., Haria, P., Leh, J., Adams, A., & Kaduvetoor, A. (2007). A comparison of single and multiple strategy instruction on third grade students’ mathematical problem solving. Journal of Educational Psychology, 99, 115-127. • Xin, Y. P., Jitendra, A. K., & Deatline-Buchman, A. (2005). Effects of mathematical word problem solving instruction on students with learning problems. Journal of Special Education, 39(3), 181-192. April 9, 2008

  47. SBI References from our Research Team Journal Articles • Jitendra, A. K. (2005). How design experiments can inform teaching and learning: Teacher-researchers as collaborators in educational research. Learning Disabilities Research & Practice, 20(4), 213-217. • Jitendra, A. K., DiPipi, C. M., & Perron-Jones, N. (2002). An exploratory study of word problem-solving instruction for middle school students with learning disabilities: An emphasis on conceptual and procedural understanding. Journal of Special Education, 36(1), 23-38. • Jitendra, A. K., Hoff, K., & Beck, M. (1999). Teaching middle school students with learning disabilities to solve multistep word problems using a schema-based approach. Remedial and Special Education, 20(1), 50-64. • Jitendra, A. K., Griffin, C., McGoey, K., Gardill, C, Bhat, P., & Riley, T. (1998). Effects of mathematical word problem solving by students at risk or with mild disabilities. Journal of Educational Research, 91(6), 345-356. • Jitendra, A. K., & Hoff, K. (1996). The effects of schema-based instruction on mathematical word problem solving performance of students with learning disabilities. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 29(4), 422-431. April 9, 2008

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