Instruction Differentiation Piaget vs Vygotsky

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Instruction Differentiation Piaget vs Vygotsky af Mind Map: Instruction Differentiation         Piaget vs Vygotsky

1. How to teach to Vygotsky's ZPD

1.1. Teacher models the behavior for the student

1.2. Student imitates the adult's behavior

1.3. Teacher phases out direct instruction

1.4. Teacher offers feedback on student's performance

2. Reading Development

2.1. Provide children with a rich literacy environment

2.2. Encourage reading

2.3. Surround children with books and other printed materials

2.4. Read to children

2.5. Model reading

2.6. Build phonemic awareness

3. Vygotsky

3.1. Theory into pracitce

3.1.1. Practical implications of Vygotsky's Theory in the classroom:

3.1.2. Zone of Proximal Development-instruction that is planned within the student's zpd to help guide them through

3.1.3. Scaffolding-is providing hints and prompts until the learner is able to it independently

3.1.4. Cooperative Learning-are activities that can be planned within groups of children at different levels who can help each other learn

4. Piaget

4.1. Theory into practice

4.1.1. Practical implications of Piaget's Theory in the classroom: Developmentally appropriate education: Providing students with the individual instruction needed in order to meet their academic goals as well as their social emotional needs

4.1.2. Focus on the process of children's thinking

4.1.3. Recognition of the crucial role children's self-initiated, active involvement in learning activites

4.1.4. A deemphasis of practices aimed at making children adultlike in their thinking

4.1.5. Acceptance of individual differences in developmental progress

4.1.6. Believed that development precedes learning

5. Vygotsky

5.1. Placed more emphasis on culture affecting/shaping cognitive development

5.1.1. Historical and Cultural Contexts

5.2. Development depends on the sign systems that individuals grow up with: the symbols that cultures create to help people think, communicate, and solve problems.

5.2.1. Sign Systems

5.3. Believed that learning precedes development. Development occurs as the child internalizes the signs and is able to think and solve problems:

5.3.1. Self-Regulation

5.4. Children incorporate the speech of others and then uses that speech to help themselves solve problems

5.4.1. Private Speech

5.5. Learning takes place when children are working within their Zone of proximal development . The zpd refers to where a student cannot accomplish certain learning goals without the assistance of more competent individual.

5.5.1. Zone of proximal development

5.6. Providing a child with a great deal of support during the early stages of learning and then gradual taking the support away as the child is able to increase their own learning responsibiity

5.6.1. Scaffolding

5.7. Children work together to help one another learn.

5.7.1. Cooperative Learning

6. Piaget

6.1. Stages

6.1.1. Sensorimotor: Birth-2 years

6.1.1.1. Babies and young children explore their world through their senses

6.1.1.2. Learn to use reflexes

6.1.1.3. Understand objects exists even if out sight

6.1.1.4. Move from trail and error approach to a problem solving approach

6.1.2. Preoperational: 2-7 years

6.1.2.1. Greater ability to think about things

6.1.2.2. Use symbols to mentally represent objects

6.1.2.3. Lack an understanding of conservation

6.1.3. Concrete Operational: 7-11 years

6.1.3.1. Children at this stage can form concepts, see relationships, and solve problems, but only as long as they involve objects and situations that are familiar

6.1.3.2. Seriation

6.1.3.3. Transitivity: Some first graders would be able to perform this skill

6.1.4. Formal Operational: 11-Adulthood

6.1.4.1. Hypothetical Situations

6.1.4.2. Systematic Reasoning

6.1.4.3. Monitored Reasoning

6.1.4.4. Symbolic Thinking

6.2. How Development Occurs

6.2.1. Schemes

6.2.1.1. Children began to demonstrate patterns of behavior

6.2.2. Adaptation

6.2.2.1. Is the process of adjusting to schemes in response to the environment

6.2.3. Assimilation

6.2.3.1. Is the process of understanding a new object in terms of an existing scheme

6.2.4. Accommodation

6.2.4.1. Modifying existing schemes to fit new situations

6.2.5. Equilibration

6.2.6. Constructivism

7. Promoting Literacy Development

7.1. Language and vocabulary represent the very foundation of learning to read and write. Children who do not develop strong oral language skills and vocabulary in their early years will find it difficult to keep up with their peers and will have difficulties from year to year.

8. Vocabulary Development

8.1. Motivate students

8.2. Encourage a variety of materials

8.3. Give students the opportunity to use new vocabulary words

8.4. Teach words that are frequently used

8.5. Cooperative learn techniques in which students have regular opportunities to student together and use new vocabulary

9. Writing Development

9.1. Allow children to scribble

9.2. Allow children to express ideas and stories

9.3. Encourage children to write daily

9.4. Allow children to use invented spelling

9.5. Model writing to children

10. Atypical Reading Development

10.1. Poor phonological skills

10.2. Chronic ear infections during preschool years or hearing impairment

10.3. Trouble distinguishing similar consonant sounds

10.4. Poor visual processing

10.5. Poor comprehension skills

10.6. Students with reading disabilities

10.7. Slow reading rate

11. Reading Development at all Stages:

11.1. Emergent: Birth-2 years-

11.1.1. Produce one word utteracnes

11.1.2. Combine words into two-word sentences

11.1.3. Vocabulary increases

11.1.4. Enjoys experiences with books

11.2. Early Childhood: 2-8 years-

11.2.1. Uses pictures to confirm predictions

11.2.2. Can use several reading strategies

11.2.3. Can read for meaning

11.2.4. Readers are approaching independence in understanding comprehension

11.3. Elementary: 8-11 years-

11.3.1. Reading is becoming more automatic

11.3.2. Readers are beginning to move from learning to read to reading to learn

11.3.3. Begins to read more silentally

11.3.4. Self-corrects when reading

11.4. Middle School: 11-14 years-

11.4.1. Reading novels

11.4.2. Getting inside the story world

11.4.3. Reading with absorption

11.5. High School: 15-18 years-

11.5.1. Critical Thinking

11.5.2. Thinking abstractly

11.5.3. Realizing bias

12. Atypical Writing Development

12.1. Difficulty with sentence structure

12.2. Frequent spelling errors, inconsistent spelling, letter reversals

12.3. Difficulty copying from board or overhead

12.4. Poorly formed letters, difficulty with spacing, capitals and punctuation. (dysgraphia)

12.5. Poor organizational skills

13. Vocabulary Development at all Stages:

13.1. Emergent writing: Birth -2 years-

13.1.1. Vocalizes

13.1.2. Responds to name

13.1.3. Uses one or more words with meaning

13.1.4. Has vocabulary of approx. 5-20 words at 18 months

13.1.5. Can name a number of objects common to his surroundings

13.1.6. At 24 months has a vocabulary of 150-300 words

13.2. Early Childhood: 2-8 years-

13.2.1. Can use two pronouns correctly

13.2.2. Responds to cues

13.2.3. About 90% of what child says should be intelligible

13.2.4. By 48 months can name common objects

13.2.5. Understands concepts

13.2.6. At 5 years can use descpriptive words with both adjectives and adverbs

13.2.7. Between the ages of 5-7 the child has a vocabulary of 5000 words

13.2.8. By 8 the child can utilize complex and compound sentences easily

13.3. Elementary: 8-11 years-

13.3.1. School introduces new words not encountered in conversation

13.3.2. Word definitions include synonyms and categories

13.3.3. Some words are understood to have multiple meanings

13.4. Middle School: 11-14 years-

13.4.1. Schools introduce new words not encountered in conversation

13.4.2. Word definitions include synonyms and categories

13.4.3. Some words are understood to have multiple meanings

13.4.4. Can explain relationships between meanings and mulitple-meaning words

13.4.5. Vocabulary in school text is more abstract

13.5. High School: 14-18 years-

13.5.1. Abstract dictionary definitions given for words

13.5.2. Can explain meaning of proverbs in context

13.5.3. Average vocabulary size of a high school graduate is 10,000 words

14. Reading Strategies

14.1. Onset-Rime and Word Families

14.1.1. Teaching onset-rime, words are segmented and blended at the onset-rime level rather than at the phoneme level, and words are taught in related groups that are often referred to as word families: at-cat, sat fat, rat

14.2. Fernald (VAKT) Method

14.2.1. This method uses a multisensory or visual-auditory-kinesthetic-tactile(VAKT) approach to teach students to read and write words. It is designed for students who have severe difficulties learning and remembering words

14.3. Sight Word Bingo

14.3.1. This game provides students practice in recognizing words in a fun way.

14.4. Peer-Supported Reading

14.4.1. This process involves matching higher readers with less able readers to practice rereading text and asking/answering questions about the text meaning

14.5. Choral Repeated Reading

14.5.1. Is designed to for students who can comprehend material that is read to them but, because of difficulties in word identification and reading rate

15. Writing Development at all Stages:

15.1. Emergent Stage: Birth-2 years-

15.1.1. Scribbles

15.1.2. Patterns may be repeated over and over

15.1.3. Shows increased muscular control

15.2. Early Childhood Stage: 2-8 years-

15.2.1. Picture labeling

15.2.2. Invented spelling

15.2.3. Children write for a purpose

15.2.4. These age of writers shows an awareness that aletters match sound

15.2.5. Uses one or two letters to represent a word

15.3. Elementary Stage: 8-11 years

15.3.1. Students begin to demonstrate that words and sentences convey meaning

15.3.2. Begin to add detail and corporate conventions of wtiting

15.3.3. They may attempt to organize writing in a specific fromat

15.4. Middle School Stage: 11-14 years

15.4.1. Demonstrates and understanding of transitions, description, organization, and conventions

15.4.2. Their writing includes a focus

15.4.3. Students will use a specific language for a specific writing purpose

15.5. High School Stage: 15-18 years

15.5.1. These students will use language in complex ways to convey meaning

15.5.2. They have mastered different modes of writing

15.5.3. They will use different writing styles with specific language as appropriate to different subjects and audiences

16. Writing Strategies

16.1. Writing Warm-Up

16.1.1. Writing exercise that helps build reluctant writers self esteem in writing

16.2. Peer Editing

16.2.1. Provides students the opportunities to edit a revised draft as one part of the editing process

16.3. Using computers to facilitate writing

16.3.1. Provides assistance for students whose writing or motor skills interfere with their ability to develop independent writing skills.

16.4. Step-by-step cartoon writing

16.4.1. Helps provide beginning or reluctant writers experience sequencing steps, using transition words, and writing a paragraph

16.5. Graphic Organizers

16.5.1. Help students organize their ideas when writing first drafts

17. Atypical Vocabulary Development

17.1. Moderate hearing loss associated with otitis

17.2. Family history of language and learning problems

17.3. A smaller than average vocabulary

17.4. A language comprehension delay of 6 months or a comprehension deficit with a large comprehension producation gap

17.5. Phonological problems, including limited vocalizations and restricted babbling

17.6. Few spontaneous vocal imitations and reliance on direct modeling in imitation tasks

17.7. Few communicative or symbolic gestures (pointing, waving)

17.8. Behavioral prloblems

17.9. Difficulty interacting with peers as compared with adults

18. Vocabulary Strategies

18.1. Semantic Maps

18.1.1. Helps students to generate a list of related vocabulary from their background knowledge

18.2. Morphemic Analysis

18.2.1. Morphemic analysis in vocabulary instruction involves breaking a word into morphemes, the smallest linguistic units that have meaning, and using their meanings to figure out the meaning of the whole word

18.3. Contextual Analysis

18.3.1. Involves using the context or text that surrounds an unknown word to find clues to reveal a word's meaning

18.4. Preteaching Before Reading

18.4.1. Pre-teaching vocabulary before reading is an effective strategy to enhance students' knowledge of word meanings

18.5. Dictionaries and Other Reference Aids

18.5.1. Help to broaden and deepen student word knowldege

19. First Grade Rading Development

19.1. Fluently reads 60 words per minute by the end of the year

19.2. Understands that letters represent sounds and meanings

19.3. Begin to read for meaning

19.4. Read and retell stories

19.5. Begins to read with expression

19.6. Introduced to other types of reading genres

20. First Grade Vocabulary Development:

20.1. Building sight words

20.2. Understanding phonics concepts

20.3. Can use context clues to help figure out unknown words

20.4. Able to decode words

20.5. Has expressive vocabulary of about 5,000 words

20.6. Able to apply strategies taught when it comes to unknown words

21. First Grade Writing Development

21.1. Focus on the writing process to help students become independent writers

21.2. Students learn to write for different purposes and audiences

21.3. Develop a plan for their writing: (draw or make webs to help convey idea)

21.4. Keep a journal

21.5. Begin to understand sentence structure and apply it to their writing

22. Piaget

22.1. When to teach

22.1.1. When child is ready and has reached the appropriate stage

22.2. How to teach

22.2.1. Child centered approach.

22.2.2. Learning must be active

22.3. Role of teacher

22.3.1. Adapt lessons to suit the needs of the learner

22.3.2. Be aware of the child's stage of development

22.3.3. Provide stimulation through a variety of tasks

22.3.4. Provide resourses