Sunday, January 15, 2017

Insights on facilitating Strategies training

Use the myLexia district demo site.  Unfortunately the demo data is not complete in all areas.

Connect users with Core5 resources as well as Strategy resources.

Talk about the how the auto placement works.


I would say that the Strategies Auto Placement starts with short vowels.  If students are successful, it moves to short vowels sounds in nonsense words, which can throw students, even good readers.  Students should be prepped for the placement by telling them it is going to start really low, but just keep answering all the questions you can correctly because the system is trying to determine where to get you started.  If you don't take it seriously, you will place at the very beginning and be expected to completed lots of activities that may be well below where you are capable of working.  I would also warn them about the nonsense words.  If they know their short vowel sounds, this should not be a problem for them, but a warning if fair.

Suzy added.  I think a key to getting buy-in is to spend time on motivational techniques.  They really, really need this. These kids have already experienced tons of failure and know it’s low level stuff they should know. Tough dynamic! 



Below is information related to the development of a new adolescent reading program
1/30/2017

If a current Strategies customer asks about replacement of Strategies, this is the official language from our marketing department to use:

"At Lexia, we are always working to improve our instruction, assessment, and service offerings and reach additional learner populations with targeted literacy solutions. We are currently developing an instructional product for the secondary market but have not announced a release date. Upon release of this new product, we will gradually phase out Strategies. We will share more details as they become available."

If you receive questions from customers who have not purchased Strategies, the statement is abbreviated to:

"At Lexia, we are always working to improve our instruction, assessment, and service offerings and reach additional learner populations with targeted literacy solutions. We are currently developing an instructional product for the secondary market but have not announced a release date. We will share more details as they become available."


Friday, November 18, 2016

Lexia Core5 and PreK students

How  is a pre-K implementation different and what are the unique challenges they may face (technical, motivation, independence, etc)? 
(question posed by Marie Self, Lexia IM)

Amy Mozuch shared this response:
I actually just had a conversation yesterday with a reading specialist. She said some students are struggling to attend and stay on task while on the software.

Since those kiddos have no concept of time (like 10 minutes/session on Core5), I suggested she try having students focus on filling the progress bar. Once they fill the progress bar, they are done for the day. She already emailed me this morning saying what a difference that made.

As for all students, but especially for Pre-K, establishing firm routines and habits for software usage is critical. Examples are having a signal when they need help, easy to access shortcut for logging in, where to retrieve their log-in card..... I could go on and on, but I'm sure you have this part down.


I shared this response:
Below are a few random thoughts....

I worked with a group of PreK teachers recently and one of the things they wanted help with was on how to eliminate the computer tool bar.  The teachers said their PK students were new to using the mouse and often clicked into an Internet browser or something else by mistake and then that took them off task.

This group of teachers was also very interested in the ways for them to interact with the students.

The teachers were also interested in really understanding how all of the PK student activities worked and spent a lot of time in the training exploring the student program. It was important for them to know the scope and sequence so they understood how the Core5 scope and sequenced matched their curriculum. For example, a student might be struggling with a shape activity in Core5 because this was a totally new concept for them.

I recall one early elementary teacher having an ah ha moment when it came to the activity selection screen. After working with a student who was struggling the teacher would say " Now when you login to Core 5 be sure to work on Rhyming."  She realized the student wouldn't know the word for Rhyming and needed instead to say, "click on the apple."


Kathleen End shared these notes from Jill Ries and her experiences

Allowed Kindergarten teachers to take time to get going. Tell them they need to be up and running by the semester but it is okay if they were not at meeting usage during the first semester.

Consider a special PD special for PK and kindergarten teachers.  
  • Talked about and problem solved on how they would be able to fit Lexia into what we are doing already?
  • Establish routines for students to help them smoothly login, logout, and learn one password for all the students (55555)
  • Login cards close to the iPads
  • Used iPads not Chromebooks/laptops
  • Use the Core5 educator mode of the student program to teach how to do the activity examples (spacial concepts)

Observations:
  • Newer PK teachers did better than the older teachers
  • It was helpful to have a designated time - Lexia time, Lexia Lessons, conferring with students, flashcards, set up qr codes, do something in google
  • Kindergarten teachers often struggle with finding the time for Lexia Lessons - may be beneficial to have them look at the Teacher’s Manual and Connections to know what students are learning and need to know
  • Consider doing the auto placement with small groups of kindergarten students versus having everyone do them at the same time.
Link to posters:

8/14/2018 Tips from the Field: (8 min)
Katya: Importance of front loading content with Lexia. Pre Teaching prior. Establishes background knowledge. Sometimes whole group, quick introduction, small group, etc ( Example: rhyming is a skill that tends to be difficult at the kinder level). Gives students an opportunity to understand more to avoid getting frustrated and flagged quickly. Remind K teachers that this content is all new to students. Consider teacher whole group lessons ahead of time and when students are struggling.
Mary B: Acknowledge Kinder teachers first. Understanding that implementation will look different compared to other grade levels. Establishing routines and procedures outside of the program ( where are the computers, headphones, general info to start). How do you want Lexia to look in the classroom and then explicitly teach to students.  Model Model Model ( how to log in, buttons, red apple) ! Post it notes shaped like red apples and place the red apple on the screen . Once students are on, start small and observe students logging in and using. Able to be there and monitor in the beginning.
Tonia: What I truly recommend for Kindergarten is to use the Educator Mode to demonstrate the log in procedure, as well as explain the dashboard prior to students using.  I also recommend modeling some of the activities whole group before students use the program showing various buttons (repeat prompt, re-hear directions...) and model strategies to choose the correct response.

Kathy: Make sure you share the repeat button. Enough time for student to repeat the prompt after out loud.
Lana: Ask students to put their name on an apple sticker or object and put it in a basket, then either keep working or move on in the program. The teacher can then look at the apples and know who needs help, open myLexia and organize groups.

LaKeesha: K students work 10 minutes every day. The repetition helped the kinders develop the skills they needed to access Lexia as well as increase their speed. Their goals was yo also try to complete 1 - 2 units. Very purposeful focused goal.

Parent volunteers as well as 5th and 6th graders who have finished Lexia can help kinders.

Use back to school nights to introduce parents to Lexia, share certificate, school to home letter, home activity sheet.

Teacher students to use the repeat button and practice making the sounds out loud.
Tips for kinder students are also relevant for EL students.





Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Skill Builder Annotation Apps

I am looking for examples of annotation apps schools are using with Skill Builders.  I recall the West Allis schools in Wisconsin used Notability.

These are links to 2 documents describing 10 apps for android and 10 apps for iPad devices.
I am asking my colleagues for more examples.
1/2019 from Lexia Customer Support. If the website makes it so that the student can edit the PDF, they may be asked for a password. Support has heard from other schools that when they try to edit the PDF they are asked for a password.

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Can students log onto 2 deices at the same time?

This question was asked during a training event, fall 2016.  This is the response from Customer Support.

Interesting theory! You can tell the teacher that it is not possible for a student to be logged in to two devices at once. If you haven't logged out from one device,  and log in with another, the system forces a logout on the first device.

Thursday, October 13, 2016

Where do the sight words come from

Sight Words
In  Lexia Reading Core5, words in the Sight Word activities are comprised of regular and irregular, high-frequency sight words that are important for reading narrative and informational text for kindergarten through fourth grade.  These lists are arranged in order of difficulty based on various sources, including the Dolch and Fry word lists. In addition to using irregular high-frequency words, the Sight Word activities also include some regular high-frequency words – simply because there are so many more comprehension activities where we need to ensure that any text we present to students is decodable, so we handled this by selecting high-frequencywords for Sight Words that we could use in subsequent comprehension passages to ensure more authentic sentence structure.

Saturday, September 10, 2016

Sight Word Strategies for SPED students

Jenny Tschetter shared this question on 9/9/2016

 When a teacher is working with a SPED student that CANNOT spell a few of his sight words (for example- and they have been doing Lessons and using the Skill Builders, but to no avail), what would you recommend for how many/what types of cues to give that student so that they can get past that specific unit? Student is red-faced and teary-eyed etc. The teacher wants to stay faithful to Lexia implementation, but also recognizes that this student may NEVER spell the word "does" correctly! 

Ideas? 

Response from Bonnie Coleman
The sight words lessons can be very difficult if students have not had prior instructions or exposure to the words that will be presented to them in the lessons in Core5. I've seen quite a bit of student frustration over these lessons when teachers just let students go, without preparing them for the sight words lessons coming up in Core5. The words themselves are not exactly the sight words that might be in their language program (depending on what teachers use to teach reading).  So, it's beneficial - VERY beneficial, especially for SPED students, to have several days of non-Core5 experience with these words prior to working in the Core5 lessons that present those sight words. 

Teachers can use the Teacher Manual to see which levels and which lessons have Sight Word work, plus, they can also work through the lessons themselves on the Demo access. 

I would suggest a variety of activities - word match is a good one. I've seen one called "Feed the Puppy" that works great, and there's a Bingo sort of activity that I actually made copies of and laminated, to show as an example of a great sight-word game, it's very nice, and gives the student a lot of non-stress related exposure to the words that are labeled as "sight words" even if they can still be sounded out. 

The more teachers allow this sort of work, the more confident students will be when doing the Core5 activities.  Spelling the words is not critical at this point - students are not required to spell words (since that is a different skill), but only to recognize the words.  Many teachers have little tricks to help students remember certain words.  One that works well (surprisingly) is to associate the word "the" with films and things kids often watch on TV or devices, at the end of an episode, or even stories.  Just showing the phrase "The End" over and over again, and pointing out the word, helps kids associate it and become able to recognize it in other contexts. 

Teachers that use gimmicks like this to get students to remember sight words often see that their students move on faster, score higher, and read quicker, simply because the gimmick helps them not only to remember, but to do it quickly.

So, to reiterate... encourage teachers to look ahead to what students will be presented in the program, and prepare their students ahead of time. SPED students in particular need this. Teachers can Demo a lesson in small groups or for the whole class, but they can also provide non-tech based activities to familiarize students with content they will soon be presented. 

Not sure if this helps or not.  Bonnie

Response from Kathleen End
I don't think there is a right or wrong...the teacher just has to trust their gut.  One thing you can recommend is to use the new Sight Word Flashcards in the resource materials.  There is also a really good connection for sight words that has a number of good ideas for how students can practice sight words offline.

and also look at the child's ISP or bring this up during the student's re-eval.

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

The First 5 Minutes of Class

I was reading this article yesterday morning, "Small Changes in Teaching: The First 5 Minutes of Class" and decided to try one of the ideas in my webinars.  I used this slide.



The idea is to activate what students already know about the subject matter. Prior knowledge is the foundation on which new knowledge is built. Information below is from the article.
Asking students to tell you what they already know (or think they know) has two important benefits. First, it lights up the parts of their brains that connect to your course material, so when they encounter new material, they will process it in a richer knowledge context. Second, it lets you know what preconceptions students have about your course material. That way, your lecture, discussion, or whatever you plan for class that day can specifically deal with and improve upon the knowledge actually in the room, rather than the knowledge you imagine to be in the room.
Seemed to work pretty well. I was able to use what was shared to shape what I did next. I shares this  Short video and link to the article with the webinar team.  I'm sure they all do cool things as well to start a webinar. Small Changes in Teaching: The First 5 Minutes of Class JANUARY 11, 2016 The Chronicile of higher education