Assignment 2 Case Study
Assignment 2 Case Study
Assignment 2 Case Study
Before meeting the case study student, the supervising teacher provided the
following observations about him; that (1) he, like the rest of the class, had
difficulties with comprehension of both texts and activity instruction which
frequently caused disengagement and demotivation (Vaughn et al, 2015); that
(2) he exhibited obsessive or intensely focused behaviours such as being unable
to transition effectively between different topics within a days lesson and; that
(3) he had trouble collaborating with other students, the supervisor commenting
that he often sat alone in class. Within the first few lessons, these observations
were further evidenced by this authors own observations but also that the
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students particular issue with collaboration seemed to stem from not prefacing
his statements to others, opening conversations without defining the pronouns
he was discussing (such as it or they) and confusing his peers, which appeared to
have negatively affected his social confidence and expressiveness (Fuentes,
2013). Further, during lessons, the students strength in close analysis of logic
and inference understanding was highlighted by his student work, narrowing his
comprehension difficulties to broad understanding and drawing connections
between texts (Carretti et al, 2014). Likewise, once he clarified the topic he was
discussing, he was particularly skilled at debates and discussing his personal
interest in animal hunting habits. As such, the areas of focus for student needs
(both of this student and the class) are broad reading and writing
comprehension, introducing topics in peer-to-peer interactions, social
confidence, and transitioning effectively between activities.
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task asks students to reflect closely on why they chose their designed metaphor
and its respective visual (representation) as well as explicitly identify its
meaning. In addition to this, during the broad analysis task, students are
required to submit a short statement on the effect of the poems structure and
title on its overall meaning for teacher feedback before posing their answers to
the class in open discussion. This task offers an opportunity for students to
express their ideas in written and oral forms but also presents an opportunity
for the teacher to assess student broad comprehension (Swaffield, 2011), and
also for the teacher to give feedback on the strengths of their answer and
suggestions for how to improve. This ensures that feedback is not passively
received (Baas et al, 2015, p. 440) but rather useful for students to engage with
and regulate their strategies of approaching comprehension (2015). Finally,
students can also self-assess or reflect on their own work by referring to the
explicit quality criteria integrated across the lesson, assessing how they should
approach the question to meet the activity and its criteria (Swaffield, 2011), a
skill particularly significant to the case study student whom was identified as
struggling with comprehending activities and disengaging because of it.
However, such self-regulation is not achievable in this lesson alone (Baas et al,
2015) but rather through this reflection and feedback remaining as a consistent
part of lessons overtime, with Vaughn et al (2015) claiming that comprehension
interventions for secondary students indeed requires long-term practice.
Gradual release of responsibility models are simply described as the reduction
of scaffolds as students develop independence or fluency in a skill (Meyer, Rose
& Gordon, 2016) and, in terms of the lesson below, the primary scaffold for
information integration is collaborative learning (Morcom & MacCallum, 2012).
Specifically, students collaboratively develop their comprehension of metaphor
and the lessons text (Litany) by taking a focused, sentence-by-sentence, group
look at metaphorical meaning and gradually expand that meaning outwards
whilst transitioning into smaller and smaller groups until they individually
developing a whole text comprehension (Morcom & MacCallum, 2012; Bishop &
Isbester, 2016) (a particular area of need for the case study student). By
gradually removing the collaborative scaffold, students responsibility of
meaning making and analysis gradually develops independence, resulting in
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The secondary areas of need focused on within the lesson are peer-to-peer
communication and social confidence. The case study student was observed
throughout the early sessions of the practicum as struggling with introducing his
topic of conversation and whilst this caused little issue with student-teacher
communication, it appeared to result in self-isolation and lowed social
confidence in peer-to-peer communication. To address this rather specific need,
subtle communication prompts have been scattered throughout much of the
collaborative learning activities encompassing the first half of the lesson. These
take the specific form of either outlining how to enter into the class discussion
(for speakers of small group task) in a regulated way or training students to use
clear, complete sentences in their answers (opening mind-map task after they
write their answer). In doing so, students are offered a teacher-modelled
strategy and adaptive modelled strategy for opening conversations respectively
(Ledbetter-Cho et al, 2015). This benefits the student specifically as a clear
model for effective peer-to-peer communication (Ledbetter-Cho et al, 2015) but
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also other students by furthering the explicit nature of the quality criteria,
allowing students to start their entry into discussions with confidence built from
clear frameworks (Fuentes, 2013). This confidence is also built through simple
practice (Fuentes, 2013) and the gradual release of responsibility model (Bishop
& Isbester, 2016) mentioned earlier in this case study. That is, by gradually
reducing the number of persons involved in conversations from whole class to
intimate pairs, the onus of carrying peer-to-peer communication is gradually
released to each student. Like comprehension training though, social skills
training is best learnt through long-term interventions across multiple lessons
(Fuentes, 2013) and in order to retain the dignity of the case study student by
having this intervention fit subtly into lessons through UDL, students require
multiple means of expressing themselves in a variety of social situations
(Fuentes, 2013), building a collaborative community of learners overtime
(Morcom & MacCallum, 2012). As such, multiple means and opportunities of
expression is the main goal of the interventions improving communication.
Finally, the last observed case study student area need was identified as a
form of highly focused behaviour, whereby he often had difficulty transitioning
between activities due to remaining concentrated on a prior activity long after its
completion. As this was only observed to last a lesson at a time however, one
cannot accurately call this obsessive behaviour in a clinical sense (Barton &
Hayman, 2013) and thus this author focused on building transition skills within
the lesson. Tullis, Cannella-Malone and Payne (2015), through a meta-analysis of
numerous transition interventions, argue that students who receive explicit
introductions and summative conclusions (where able) between lesson topics
more easily acknowledge the breakdown of the lesson and cognitively
differentiate topics (Tullis, Cannella-Malone & Payne, 2015), a benefit for both
the class and case study student. As such, these introductory and concluding
statements were inserted wherever the lessons focus changed, that being, the
admired persons mind-map transitions to a literary analysis of Litany and then
into a metaphor exit card. Notably, Tullis, Cannella-Malone and Payne (2015)
state that ensuring students focus on a single topic within a lesson avoids the
antecedent and thus the need for transitional skills (p. 96), but this ignores the
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students area of need. Instead, the lesson is based around a central topic
(metaphor) but shifts its focus in clear, easily followed structures (introduction,
body, conclusion), allowing for a greater variety of representations of a topic
(such as mind-maps, poems and visuals) whilst scaffolding the development of
transitional skills rather than ignoring them.
In so, the exemplary lesson was purpose built towards addressing the case
study students areas of need subtlety within a standard classroom, whilst
benefiting all students through a UDL framework. In improving student written
comprehension, multiple means of engagement became the primary focus
through explicit quality criteria, meta-cognitive training and a gradual release of
responsibility in meaning making. In addressing the students need for peer-to-
peer communication skills and social confidence, expression became central in
modelling effective communication and providing collaborative opportunities in
varying contexts and degrees of difficulty. Finally, in refining students cognitive
transitional skills as a means of addressing the students highly focused
behaviour, representation was championed by clearly structuring activities and
the lesson as a whole around an introduction-body-conclusion structure and
centring lesson around a single topic but still allowing for shifting focuses on
different examples/representations of that topic.
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References
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Morcom, V., & MacCallum, J. (2012). Getting personal about values: Scaffolding
student participation towards an inclusive classroom community.
International Journal of Inclusive Education, 16(12), 1323-1334.
Seixas, L., Gomes, A. & Filho, I. (2016). Effectiveness of gamification in the
engagement of students. Computers in Human Behaviour, 58, pp. 48-63.
Swaffield, S. (2011). Getting to the heart of authentic assessment for learning.
Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice, 18(4), 433-449. doi:
10.1080/0969594X.2011.582838
Tullis, C., Cannella-Malone, H. & Payne, D. (2015). Literature review of
interventions for between-task transitioning for individuals with
intellectual and developmental disabilities including autism spectrum
disorders. Review Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2, pp.
91-102.
Vaughn, S., et al. (2015). Improving reading comprehension for high school
students with disabilities: Effects for comprehension and school
retention. Exceptional Children, 82(1), pp. 117-131.
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Perform a quick introduction about people we admire and why we At least 2 white board
Have a short discussion with students about the ways we can express on board
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Have the following steps projected on the board and quickly talk by Billy Collins (roughly split
through them before having students conduct the activity: by stanza into 5 sections)
Hand out the full poem to each student and tell them that youll Collins
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2. Fill out T-Chart in pairs, taking metaphors from the full poem not
used in the group task
3. Fill out a 2-4 sentence statement on a loose sheet of paper
answering the following question in full sentences: If Litany is a
poem style that repeats the same phrase, what effect does this
and the poems metaphors have on overall meaning of the text?
Students then offer their answers for a class discussion and then hand
in their statement
70/ Making a Metaphor (Exit Card) Image sheets (images were
If the students have been well behaved and completed work during Tic-tacs (three flavours)
class (exit card particularly), conduct this task. Ask students to throw
out a load of good characteristics to form a quick list on the board then
bad characteristics for another. Once the lists are made, tell them that
youll call out a characteristic and if they have a metaphor for that
characteristic, put up their hand. Youll pick the hand you feel came first
or from someone new and they can speak their metaphor and be
rewarded with a lolly (tic-tac). Repeat the task, randomly selecting
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characteristics and rubbing them out after use until the list is exhausted
or 1min till bell.
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