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Activating Prior Knowledge

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Activating Prior Knowledge
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Page 1: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Activating Prior Knowledge

Page 2: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Lifelong Literacy Strategies

“Explicitly teaching strategies that proficient readers use when trying to make sense out of text, helps to deepen understanding and create independent readers” (

http://www.teachervision.fen.com/skill-buldier/reading-comprehension/48540.html).

Page 3: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Lifelong Literacy Strategies

“Activating prior knowledge is one of the strategies that is essential for reading comprehension success”

(http://www.teachervision.fen.com/skill-buldier/reading-comprehension/48540.html).

Page 4: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Lifelong Literacy Strategies• Activating Prior

Knowledge

• Making Connections

• Asking Questions

• Visualizing

• Predicting

• Synthesizing

• Summarizing

• Determining what is Important

• Making Inferences

Page 5: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Lifelong Literacy Strategies“These strategies, identified

through research, based on what good readers do when they are reading, help students become metacognitive (an awareness and understanding of how one thinks and uses strategies during reading). Students learn to THINK about their thinking as they are reading” (http://www.teachervision.fen.com/skill-buldier/reading-comprehension/48540.html).

Page 6: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Lifelong Literacy Strategies“Readers need to think when the read. If

readers swallow everything they read or hear whole, we’ve got a problem. In schools across the country, kids brim with curiosity, questions, and opinions. Schools need to be havens for thinking; classrooms, incubators for deep thought. Thinking thrives when readers connect to books and to each other” (Harvey and Goudvis, 2007).

Page 7: Activating  Prior Knowledge

What is activating prior knowledge?

Video – Suzanne Clewell http://www.thinkport.org/career/strategies/reading/activate.tp

“Prior knowledge acts as a lens through which we view and absorb new information. It is a composite of who we are, based on what we have learned from both our academic and everyday experiences” (Kujawa and Huske, 1995).

Page 8: Activating  Prior Knowledge

What is activating prior knowledge?

“Prior knowledge is the content knowledge and personal experiences the reader brings to the learning task” (http://rusd.marin/k12.ca.us/belaire/BALearningCenter/carewwe...).

Page 9: Activating  Prior Knowledge

What is activating prior knowledge?

Prior Knowledge Definition

A student’s memories, experiences, and facts. The information a reader has in their head. Prior knowledge is more than a student’s memory, it

is a storehouse of knowledge that provides the reader with an assortment of information.

How can we explain prior knowledge to students?

Example

Page 10: Activating  Prior Knowledge

What is activating prior knowledge?

I Read It, But I Don’t Get It: Comprehension Strategies for Adolescent Readers – Cris Tovani Read pgs. 63 – 68

Write down something you thought was important. Write down something that surprised you. Use your own prior knowledge and think about how

you might already do this in your classroom. Write down an example.

Share and Discuss

Page 11: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Why should we teach students to activate their prior knowledge?

What does the research say?

“Students learn and remember new information best when it is linked to relevant prior knowledge” (Beyer, 1991).

Page 12: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Why should we teach students to activate their prior knowledge? What

does the research say?According to Vacca and Vacca (1993) “the

single most important variable in learning with texts is a readers prior knowledge.”

“The more a reader brings to a text the more he/she will learn and remember what he/she reads” (

http://rusd.marin.k12.ca.us/belaire/BALearningCenter/carewwe....).

Page 13: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Why should we teach students to activate their prior knowledge? What

does the research say?

Christen and Murphy (1991) “claim that in order for learning to happen, new information must be woven with what is already known.”

“The best predictor of what students will learn is what they already know. Prior knowledge is the foundation upon which new meaning is built” (http://rusd.marin.k12.ca.us/belaire/BALearningCenter/carewwe...).

Page 14: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Why should we teach students to activate their prior knowledge?

What does the research say?

“Teachers can also use prior knowledge to make instruction more meaningful. Many researchers emphasize the importance of incorporating parallels between a students cultural background and the curriculums design” (Peshkin, Protheroe, Barsdate, and Lee, 1992).

Page 15: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Why should we teach students to activate their prior knowledge?

What does the research say?

“The background knowledge we bring to our reading colors every aspect of our learning and understanding. If readers have nothing to hook new information to, it’s pretty hard to construct meaning. When we have a lot of background knowledge in a topic, we are much more likely to understand the text” (Harvey and Goudvis, 2007).

Page 16: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Why should we teach students to activate their prior knowledge?

What does the research say?

“Activating prior knowledge gives students the opportunity to bring forth in their minds information that is relevant to the text they are about to read. Doing so will help students make connections while reading” (Connor, 2006).

Page 17: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Why should we teach students to activate their prior knowledge?

What does the research say?

“Activating prior knowledge gives students the opportunity to learn from one another. When students hear what other students know about a topic, they are often reminded of ideas and experiences of their own that relate to the topic of the text. Additionally, they will learn new information to add to their own schema, which will aide in the comprehension of the text” (Connor, 2006).

Page 18: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Why should we teach students to activate their prior knowledge?

What does the research say?

“Activating prior knowledge gives the teacher the opportunity to identify serious background knowledge gaps or misconceptions that might actually get in the way of a student’s comprehension” (Connor, 2006).

Page 19: Activating  Prior Knowledge

When should activating prior knowledge be taught?

Activating prior knowledge “should be taught on an on-going basis, so that students learn independently to use it as they are reading. It should be taught explicitly and systematically over an extended period of time, moving from modeling the thinking process out loud by the teacher, to students using the strategy as a natural part of their comprehension process” (http://www.teachervision.fen.com/skill-builder/reading-comprehension/48540.html).

Page 20: Activating  Prior Knowledge

When should a teacher activate a student’s prior knowledge in the classroom?

“Prior knowledge should be discussed before reading the text, to help set the stage for what is coming”

(http://www.teachervision.fen.com/skill-builder/reading-comprehension/48540.html).

Page 21: Activating  Prior Knowledge

What does activating prior knowledge look like in the classroom?

Video Middle School Math Example

http://teachingtoday.glencoe.com/vidoes/view/activating-prior-knowldge

Example Lessons The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs

by: Jon Scieszka Making Middle Schools Work

www.albany.edu/aire/kids

Page 22: Activating  Prior Knowledge

How do I begin to help my students activate their prior knowledge?

Begin by asking the students to think about the topic you are studying or reading about.

You may want to ask them some probing questions…What do you already know about _______?Have any of you experienced ________?What have you read before about ________?Looking at this picture, what does it remind

you of?What is your opinion about ________?

Page 23: Activating  Prior Knowledge

How do I begin to help my students activate their prior knowledge?

Have the students share their thoughts and feelings about the topic. This helps students who know very little or

nothing about the topic build their background knowledge or understand what they will be learning about.

Page 24: Activating  Prior Knowledge

What tools or graphic organizers can we use in the classroom to assist us in

activating a students prior knowledge?

Venn Diagram T-Chart KWL Asking Questions

What do I already know about ___________? Have any of you ever experienced ________? What have you read before about _________?

SQ3R Brainstorming Web

Page 25: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Setting a Purpose for Reading

The House Example Circle what in the article is important.

Page 26: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Setting a Purpose for Reading

I Read It, But I Don’t Get It: Comprehension Strategies For Adolescent Readers Read pgs. 23-25

Write down something that stands out (AHHHH HAAA MOMENT)!

Share and Discuss

Page 27: Activating  Prior Knowledge

Lesson Planning

Lesson Plan FormatWork on Lesson Plans

Activating Prior Knowledge Setting a Purpose


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