1 / 15

Reciprocal Teaching

Reciprocal Teaching. Reciprocal teaching refers to an instructional activity that takes place in the form of a dialogue between teachers and students regarding segments of text. (Palinscar, 1986). (Palinscar, 1986). The dialogue is structured using four strategies: Summarization

lani-norton
Télécharger la présentation

Reciprocal Teaching

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reciprocal Teaching Reciprocal teaching refers to an instructional activity that takes place in the form of a dialogue between teachers and students regarding segments of text. (Palinscar, 1986)

  2. (Palinscar, 1986) The dialogue is structured using four strategies: Summarization Question Generation Clarification Prediction Teacher and students take turns assuming the role of teacher in directing this dialogue.

  3. A primary purpose of reciprocal teachingis to teach students to actively use these strategies themselves on a regular basis (Graves & Graves, 1994)

  4. Meant to Bring Meaning to Text -Many struggling readers decode slowly and do not read fluently, prohibiting text comprehension -They also have difficulty with the metacognitive strategies of reading, including: Planning Revising Picking Strategies

  5. Initially, the Teacher models the strategies, gradually releasing responsibility: - First goal is for students to be able to do all the roles within a small group - Final goal is for students to use all the strategies while reading independently Each of these steps requires active involvement by the student

  6. -Summarizing -Questioning -Clarifying -Predicting Strategies

  7. -Summarizing occurs after questions are answered and information is clarified -Helps students identify the most important components of the text -Can be used across sentences, paragraphs or the whole passage -Encourages note taking strategies (selective underlining, use of sticky notes, etc.) -The summarizer puts the information in his/her own words Summarizing

  8. -Identify the important concepts that would be worthy of questioning -Information posed in question form and then answered by self and others -Questions can also include : unclear parts, puzzling information or information that connects to things already read Question Generating

  9. -Especially important for students who have comprehension -Identify what the issue in is: new vocabulary, unfamiliar or difficult concepts -Identify a way to make it clear: reread, ask for help - Active engagement is necessary to identify where the problem is Clarifying

  10. -using known information a hypothesis is made about what will happen next-has students link known and unknown -Requires clear understanding of the portion of the text read -Provides a purpose for reading- to either support or not support the prediction -Students use to learn text structure like headings and subheadings to help predict Predicting

  11. -Palincsar and Brown (1985) conducted a series of studies to determine the effectiveness of reciprocal teaching. -Studies were conducted by adult tutors working with middle school students in pairs . -Students were fair decoders but poor comprehenders -Typically performing at least two years below grade level on standardized measures of comprehension. - Instruction took place for 20 consecutive school days. Research Base for Middle and High School

  12. -It was evaluated by having the students read passages about 450 to 500 words in length and answer 10 comprehension questions from recall. -Performance on assessment passages found that all students but one reached 70 % proficiency. -These results were in contrast to the group of control students, none of whom achieved criterion performance.

  13. -The same instructional procedure was implemented in larger classes - 71 % of the students using RR achieved criterion performance -19 %of the control students who were involved in individualized skill instruction -”Teachers observed fewer behavior problems in their reciprocal teaching groups than in their control groups." (pp. 19-20)

  14. Numerous evaluation studies have shown that reciprocal teaching is effective in improving reading comprehension. (Lysynchuk, Pressley, & Vye, 1990; Taylor & Frye, 1992).

  15. “Reciprocal teaching is most compatible with classrooms that are "social, interactive, and wholistic [sic] in nature“. Palincsar and Klenk (1992),p. 213

More Related