Individual Student Profile. Capstone

(Early childhood education is the name of the course.)

Personal Philosophy of Learning

After the introduction, your personal philosophy would follow, describing aspects of your own learning, and if you are an educator, how you see learning as an aspect of teaching. What critical components are essential for the learning process to be successful? At this point, the instructions call for a thesis statement.

This portion of the profile is unique to your thinking, addressing basic tenets of your belief. Learning, by its nature, involves change. How does this aspect factor into your philosophy? Asking yourself questions or making statements is one approach to creating a philosophy. Even though you may have done this numerous times, defining what you think today is important to measure how you might think tomorrow.

Goal Statement One

The directions ask for three to five goal statements. These can be simple or complex but either approach should welcome the ability to measure accomplishment. If fluency in another language is a goal, we measure fluency by an action. Considering how you might measure growth towards your goal is one way of helping to define the goal itself.

Goal Statement Two

Various reasons exist for wanting to pursue a graduate degree. Be honest. Be thoughtful. Each goal statement should be reflective of what you actually want to achieve. These define what you are willing to accomplish to reach graduation, much like stepping stones help to cross a stream to reach the other side.

Goal statement 3,4, 5.

Conclusion

What is the central task in the lesson and how do they relate to the content and language objectives?

For this module, you are assigned Ch 8: lesson delivery. For Chapter 8, I have incorporated a video in which a professor discuss you about the big concepts of lesson delivery.

In addition, there are three video clips that I would like you to watch and consider the following questions:

What is the central task in the lesson and how do they relate to the content and language objectives?

What opportunities to practice the concepts and language occur during the lesson?

What possibilities do you think would be available in this lesson to differentiate for learning styles or language proficiency levels?

How does the teacher use manipulatives, hand-on experiences, or resources to engage students?

After watching the videos and answering the questions I would like you to continue to work on the lessons you will develop for the final project. ‘

Discussion Board # 5 prompt:

Reflect on the ideas presented in this chapter (Ch 9), as well as all the other activities you have used to assess student learning of specific lesson objectives (Please describe which assessment activity you are currently using or planning to use to assess your students learning ) . How much time do you think you should allocate for review and assessment during each lesson? What if you discover (as it often the case) that some students are ready to move on, while others need more review and/or reteaching?

https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/culture-of-learning

Methods of lesson delivery

Strength of content and language objectives

Extent of student engagement

Pace matched to student ability

 

 

Goals of Lesson Delivery

 

 

 

Content Objectives Clearly Supported by Lesson Delivery

Objectives must be stated orally

Written, student-friendly objectives must support the focus of lesson

“Simplicity, clarity, priority”

Short instructional segments

Multiple cycles of guided practice and formative assessment

 

Language Objectives Clearly Supported by Lesson Delivery

 

NEED TO ADDRESS EXPLICITLY DURING INSTRUCTION!!!!!

 

 

SIOP Feature 23 & 24

 

 

 

Observable – Learning goals should be noticed by observer in terms of activities students are asked to accomplish and questions and comprehension checks teacher asks

Measurable – Assess whether students met objectives or made progress toward meeting them

Assessed – Objectives reviewed at end of lesson and class determines if they are met

 

Content & Language Objectives

 

 

 

Students Engaged Approximately 90% to 100% of the Period

Involves paying attention and being on-task

Being engaged 50% of the time is UNACCEPTABLE

Engagement, motivation, identity

 

SIOP Feature 25

 

 

 

Engagement Involves:

 

Allocated time: decisions teachers make regarding amount of time to spend studying a topic

Engaged time: students actively participate in instruction during time allocated

Academic learning time: student time-on-task when task is related to content and language objectives being tested on

 

SIOP Feature 25 (Cont.)

 

 

 

Pacing of Lesson Appropriate to Students’ Ability Levels

Rate at which information is presented during a lesson

Depends on content and student background knowledge

Elementary students have shorter attention spans and teachers should adjust

Middle school and high school classes are pressed for time and teachers need to adjust

Pacing requires effort and experience to support Native English speakers and English learners

 

SIOP Feature 26

 

 

 

Think-Pair-Share

Chunk and Chew

Roam and Review

Podcasts

TV Talk Show

Writing Headlines

E-Journals and Wiki Entries

 

Teaching Methods

Assignment: Expert In The Field: Addressing Gaps In Practice

For this Assignment, you will select a gap identified in Module 2 with RtI, PBIS, or MTSS. Referencing the Learning Resources and research conducted on each state, support your rationale as to why addressing this gap will improve services for diverse learners and enhance professional practice.

To prepare

· Review the module Learning Resources. Pay attention to any gaps identified within the field of special education as it relates to improving services for students with diverse needs.

· Select a gap identified in the research from Module 2 relating to RtI, PBIS, or MTSS.

· Listen to Dr. Research discuss gaps between research and practice in relation to school-wide interventions. Reflect on all you have learned through this course and compare the research to your current cite. What types of school-wide interventions are being implemented with fidelity? What did you find in research that you don’t see being implemented in the field?

A 3- to 5-page draft addressing a gap that you identified in the research that interests you. Include the following sections:

Section 1: Problem Statement

Provide a 1- to 2-paragraph statement that is the result of a review of current literature and practice that contains the following information:

· A logical argument for the need to address an identified gap between research and special education practice. Make sure to clarify why you believe that this is a problem of practice in special education.

Preliminary evidence that provides justification that this problem is meaningful. Evidence should include a minimum of three to five key citations that support the relevance and currency of the problem. Note: These references need not all be from peer-reviewed journals but should be from reputable sources, such as national agency databases or scholarly books, and they should ideally be current, i.e., from the past 5 years.

Section 2: Significance

Provide one or two paragraphs informed by the topic outlined in the problem statement that explains the following:

· How this study will contribute to filling the gap in special education practice identified in the problem statement.

· What original contribution will this study make to the field of Special Education?

How this research will support professional practice or allow practical application, i.e., answer the “So what?” question.

Section 3: Questions

List the questions or a series of related questions that are informed by the purpose, which will lead to the development of what needs to be done to research the identified gap in practice. A research question informs the research design by providing a foundation for:

· Generation of hypotheses in quantitative studies,

· Questions necessary to build the design structure for qualitative studies, and

· A process by which different methods will work together in mixed-method studies.

 

Section 4: Nature of the Study

Using one of the following terms as a subheading, provide a concise paragraph that discusses the approach that will be used to address the research questions(s) and how this approach aligns with the problem statement. The subheadings and examples of study designs are as follows:

· Quantitative – for experimental, quasi-experimental, or non-experimental designs, treatment-control, repeated measures, causal-comparative, single-subject, predictive studies, or other quantitative approaches;

· Qualitative – for ethnography, case study, grounded theory, narrative inquiry, phenomenological research, policy analysis, or other qualitative traditions;

· Mixed methods, primarily qualitative – for sequential, concurrent or transformative studies, with the main focus on qualitative methods, and single subject.

Section 5: Social Change

Consider the relationship between the identified problem of practice and social change. In 2 or 3 paragraphs describe:

·

How the claim aligns with the problem statement to reflect the potential relevance in this study to society: How might the potential findings lead to positive social change for students with exceptionalities?

Then, give your perspective. Craft a Research Promise to Students with Exceptionalities. Take the researcher’s perspective as you craft this “promise.”

Example: As I move through my program, I promise to seek the highest and deepest levels of scholarship in order to bring about meaningful social change for students with exceptionalities. As a part of this promise, I will: list two to three ways in which you will pursue and fulfill this promise.

Section 6: References

On a separate page, cite the text, articles, and other current peer-reviewed research in support of your position. Be specific and provide examples.

Remember to use APA format in completing this Assignment.

For this Assignment and all others in this course and throughout the program, you will be expected to use APA style (7th ed.). Use the Walden Writing Center as a resource for completing Assignments.

Learning Resources

Brown-Chidsey, R. & Bickford, R. (2016). Practical handbook of multi-tiered systems of support: Building academic and behavioral success in schools. New York, NY: Guildford Press.

  • Chapter 6, “The Essential      Role of Teams in Supporting All Students” (pp. 51–60)
  • Chapter 7, “The Logistics of      Setting Up and Running Effective School Teams” (61–70)
  • Chapter 17, “Treatment Integrity” (pp.      169–175)

McIntosh, K. & Goodman, S. (2016a). Conclusion. In Integrated multi-tiered systems of support: Blending RTI and PBIS (pp. 325-332). New York, NY: Guilford Press.

Nelson, J. R., Oliver, R. M., Hebert, M. A., & Bohaty, J. (2015). Use of Self-Monitoring to Maintain Program Fidelity of Multi-Tiered Interventions. Remedial and Special Education, 36(1), 14-19.

Moolenaar, N.M., Daly, A. J., & Sleegers, P. J. (2010). Occupying the principal position: Examining relationships between transformational leadership, social network position, and schools’ innovation climate. Educational Administration Quarterly, 46(5), 623-670.

O’Connor, P., & Witter Freeman, E. (2012). District-level considerations in supporting and sustaining RtI implementation. Psychology in the Schools, 49(3), 297-310.

Whitelock, S. (2010). It’s not your grandmother’s school: Leadership decisions in RtI. Communique38(5), 26-27.

The Center for Comprehensive School Reform and Improvement. (2008). Response to intervention: Possibilities for service delivery at the secondary school level. The Center for Comprehensive School Reform and Improvement Newsletter. Retrieved from http://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED502906.pdf

Colorado Department of Education Implementation Rubrics

Colorado Department of Education. (n.d.-b). RtI implementation rubric: District level. Retrieved July 5, 2016, from http://www.cde.state.co.us/sites/default/files/documents/rti/downloads/pdf/rubrics_district.pdf

RtI Implementation Rubric: District level. Reprinted by permission of Colorado Department of Education.

Colorado Department of Education. (n.d.-c). RtI Implementation rubric: School level. Retrieved July 10, 2016, from https://www.cde.state.co.us/sites/default/files/documents/rti/downloads/pdf/rubrics_school.pdf

Fidelity of Implementation Tools: School-Level Rubric. Reprinted by permission of Colorado Department of Education.

Required Media

Laureate Education (Producer). (2012b). RtI meeting: High school [Video file]. Baltimore, MD: Author

Note: The approximate length of this media piece is 13 minutes.

Accessible player  –Downloads– Download Video w/CC Download Audio Download Transcript

Daily Menu

Daily Menu

Prompt:  Choose one of the options below:

You are a wealthy person and can afford to buy the brain building foods that kids need for physical and mental growth.  Paragraph 1 – Make a menu for a day including breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks. Paragraph 2 – Explain how your meal for the day is beneficial.

You are a parent who is living paycheck to paycheck.  You must buy what you can afford.  Paragraph 1 – Make a menu for a day that includes breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks.  Paragraph 2 – Explain how you think your daily menu will affect them.

Reply Prompt: In your replies, share stories of people you may know that represent the people in A or B.  What are your personal feelings on this subject and what can be done?  Include support from the class textbook, the Bible, and/or other scholarly resources.