Organize Learn Make Progress. Read and Write to Think and Learn

Organize Learn √ Make Progress Read and Write to Think and Learn Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu ©

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LEARNING STYLES AND THINKING STYLES OF UNIVERSITY STUDENTS. LEARNING TO LEARN AND LEARNING TO THINK
ARBOR Ciencia, Pensamiento y Cultura Vol. 187 - Extra 3 - diciembre (2011) 261-266 ISSN: 0210-1963 doi: 10.3989/arbor.2011.Extra-3n3155 ESTILOS DE AP

Think Do Learn Arts & Crafts: Scope and Sequence and L.O.M.C.E. Compliance
Think Do Learn Arts & Crafts: Scope and Sequence and L.O.M.C.E. Compliance Arts & Crafts 1 content MODULE 1 L.O.M.C.E. content UNIT 1: MY BODY Drawi

teaching languages, English, Metaverse, Primary, Learn To Learn
Este trabajo se ha llevado a cabo gracias a la implicación de muchas personas y por ello me gustaría mostrarles mi gratitud en las siguientes líneas.

Story Transcript

Organize

Learn



Make Progress

Read and Write to Think and Learn

Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu

© 2010

Organize

Learn



Make Progress

Independent Reading/Writing Activities Connect reading and writing with active projects that students can do individually or with a learning partner. Read a story. Draw pictures of the people in the story. Turn them into puppets and act out a part of the story.

Illustrate a paragraph or a page. Use drawings to show what the text means.

Create challenging multiple choice questions about topic. Then exchange the questions.

What will people in the next century want to know about Chicago today? Make a time-capsule of things they should know about us today.

Play Knowledge bingo. Put facts on different squares of a bingo card. Then put the same facts on small pieces of paper. Mix them up and play bingo. Then write what you learned from the game.

Write a story as a team. Each student writes one sentence, then gives the story to the next student to continue

Make a diagram showing how two things are alike and different. This kind of diagram is called a Venn.

Make a sports writing game. Write verbs, nouns, and adjectives on pieces of paper. Then use your words to write sports stories.

Invent a better way to do something. Draw a picture of your invention. Explain how and why people will use it.

Read about a topic. Then list your “top ten” important facts about that topic.

Write and draw about yourself ten years from today.

Make a weather graph. Then write a weather report for Chicago birds.

Make a crossword puzzle about a topic you like.

Make a timeline showing what happens in a story. Use words or draw pictures.

Make a Chicago sports map. Tell where a team is playing. Make a key to show what’s important about each place. Then write a news report about where the team is and how they are doing. Write a description of a place. Give your description to another student. Ask that student to draw the picture of that place.

Make a time-line of how you get there.

Make a Chicago alphabet book.

Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu

© 2010

Choose the five most important words on a page. Write clues to help someone else find them on that page--your clues should be challenging.

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Thinking Questions and Activities to Guide Good Reading When you read a story… Think as you read: Who is in the story? What are they like? What is happening? Why? What do you think happens next? Why do you think so?

After you read a story… Think More What did you like about it? Why? What happened first? What happened next? Was there a problem? What was it? How did people solve it? How did the story end? Why did it end that way? Do More: Draw pictures to show the people in the story. Draw cartoons to tell what happened. Tell the next part—what do you think would be the next part?

Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu

© 2010

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Take Show and Tell into Representing Reading ILS 1B I can picture meaning.

You can draw the meaning of a sentence, or a paragraph or page. And if you show it with pictures, you see what you are learning as you read. Choose one sentence (or paragraph or page). Draw a picture that shows what it says.

Then show your picture to another student. Ask that student to find the part you pictured. Ask them to write what they see your picture says.

I see _______________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________

Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu

© 2010

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Utiliza el Demuestra y Cuenta para Representar la Lectura ILS 1B I can picture meaning.

Puedes dibujar el significado de la oración, o un párrafo o una página. Y si lo demuestras con dibujos, verás lo que aprendes conforme vas leyendo Escoge una oración (o párrafo o página). Haz un dibujo que demuestre lo que dice.

Después enséñale tu dibujo a otro estudiante. Pídele a ese estudiante que encuentre la parte que dibujaste. Pídeles que escriban lo que ven que dice tu dibujo.

Yo veo______________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________

Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu

© 2010

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Story/History Reader ILS 1B: I can identify important elements in a story or history. Grades 2-8

Draw three persons who are in it.

Map the place.

Sequence the Events.

Write what those persons might have said about one of those events.

Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu

© 2010

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Lector de Historia y Cuentos ILS 1B: I can identify important elements in a story or history

Dibuja a tres personas que tomen parte.

Haz un mapa del lugar.

Como se desarrollan los Eventos.

Escribe lo que esas personas pudieron haber dicho acerca de alguno de esos eventos.

Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu

© 2010

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Story Writer ILS3C I can write a story that teaches a lesson. Grades 3-8

Write a story that teaches a lesson. For example, the story “The Little Engine that Could” teaches that if you believe in yourself and try hard you can do great things. Decide what lesson you want people to learn from your story. Then plan it. The Lesson My Story Will Teach: __________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ Who will be in your story? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ What will happen? First: _________________________________________________________________ Then: _________________________________________________________________ Then: _________________________________________________________________ Then: _________________________________________________________________ How will your story end? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ Write your story.  Tell about the place.  Tell what the characters say.  Tell what they do.

Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu

© 2010

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Escritor de Cuento ILS3C I can write a story that teaches a lesson. Escribe un cuento que enseñe una lección. Por ejemplo, el cuento “La Pequeña Locomotora que si Pudo (The Little Engine that Could)” enseña que si crees en ti mismo y te esfuerzas puedes lograr grandes cosas. Decide que lección quieres que las personas aprendan de tu cuento. Después planéala. La Lección Que Mi Cuento Enseñará: _______________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ ¿Quién estará en tu cuento? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ¿Qué sucederá? Primero: ______________________________________________________________ Después: ______________________________________________________________ Después: ______________________________________________________________ Después: ______________________________________________________________ ¿Cómo terminará tu cuento? ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ Escribe tu cuento. Cuenta sobre el lugar. Cuenta lo que dicen los personajes. Cuenta lo que hacen.

Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu

© 2010

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Poem Builder ILS1B, 2B, 3C: I can communicate about a topic in a poem.

Choose a topic. _______________________________________  List words that are part of explaining the topic.  Draw a picture or diagram of what you think about this topic.  Write a poem about it. Use your words.

Words

Picture/Diagram/Idea

POEM

Poets think fluently.

Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu

© 2010

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Creador de Poemas ILS1B, 2B, 3C: I can communicate about a topic in a poem.

Escoge el Tema: _______________________________________   

Haz una lista de palabras que sean parte de la explicación del tema. Haz un dibujo o diagrama de lo que piensas acerca de este tema. Escribe un poema acerca del tema. Utiliza tus palabras.

Palabra

Dibujo/Diagrama

POEMA

Los poetas piensan con fluidez.

Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu

© 2010

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MAKE TV A LEARNING RESOURCE Reading Skills for all grades TV Characters Have students draw characters from favorite cartoons and try to list adjectives describing them. Personajes de TV Hacer que los estudiantes dibujen personajes de sus caricaturas favoritas y que listen adjetivos que los describan. Why While watching a program, students, ideally with parents, discuss what happened, what will happen next and why. At the end, they discuss why the characters may have acted as they did. Por que mientras observan un programa, los estudiantes, de ser posible con padres, hablen acerca de lo que sucedió, lo que sucederá después y porqué. Al final, comentan porqué los personajes pueden haber actuado como lo hicieron. Niños mayores pueden crear un esquema. Retelling TV skills: sequencing, critical thinking Students retell the plot of a program and then decide on a new ending. Students write or dictate a new ending. Narrando la TV habilidades: ordenando, pensamiento crítico Los estudiantes narran el tema central de un programa y deciden un nuevo final. Después escriben o dictan un nuevo final como una clase o individualmente. TV Outline skills: outlining, organization and finding main points After watching their favorite half-hour program, have students write an outline of the show's most important points. Esquema de TV Después de ver su programa de media hora favorito, los estudiantes deben escribir un esquema del tema(s) más importantes.

Polk Bros. Foundation Center for Chicago Education http://teacher.depaul.edu

© 2010

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