Learning through Reflection
Finally! We are able to see what our students have learned!
The third and final step in the Preparation, Assistance, and reflection (P.A.R)
framework is reflection, which takes place after the student have been prepared
and assisted with the reading. The
reflection phase helps clarify thinking and focus understanding. In this stage,
students develop new ways to remember the information they have learned. Reflective
thinking is a helpful way for students to retain material because the more time
students spend reflecting on what they have learned, they more they will remember
it and use it in their everyday lives.
Five important categories of reflective learning are: rehearsal,
elaboration, organizational thinking, comprehension monitoring, and affective thinking.
After all, the main goal is for our students to be autonomous learners-self
regulated learners! Some important skills to emphasize in the reflection phase
of reading are the importance of communication skills, critical thinking
skills, and critical literacy. As teachers, we do not just teach our context
area we teach how to think “outside” the box. However, this can be extremely difficult
when teaching students with ASD who have social deficits. Because these
students are very literal and have difficulties communicating effectively,
these skills are often even harder to teach than the actual context.
Reflecting through cooperative learning allows students to
get involved in their learning (if they are willing to). When cooperative learning
takes place it allows students to develop leadership and communication skills,
and improve motivation and achievement. Cooperative learning is different than
group work because cooperative learning requires the use of interpersonal and
social skills in order to achieve a task not just breaking work up into pieces.
PAR relates directly to cooperative learning:
Phase1- individual phase; key
concept-commitment
Phase2-group work; key
concept-consensus
Phase 3- teacher-led discussion;
key concept-arbitration/mediation
Some strategies and activities for reflection in reading
are: Brainstorming, post-graphic organizers, make connections, double-entry
journals, rallytable, numbered heads together, paired reading, three-step
interview, repeated reading and text lookbacks, group summarizations, reelection
guides, think-pair-share, extended anticipation guides, ABOUT/POINT, think-Alouds.
These are all great strategies; However, I feel as if teachers fall into the trap of assessing comprehension the same way-giving a comprehension test. I especially like this chapter because it teaches us that there any many other strategies to use to determine if students has mastered the reading/content.
ReplyDeleteThis was not in the chapter, but I like asking students to create a (fake) Facebook page to allow me to see that they understand what was taught.
I really like the Cooperative Learning strategy because it can be effective if first modeled correctly by the teacher. I definitely agree that our main goal for our students as teachers is for them to be autonomous learners-self regulated learners. Overall there were a lot of great strategies throughout the chapter.
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