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Showing posts from June, 2011

Get Solutions for Emotionally Troubled and Behaviorally Disordered Students: Using Self-Management Techniques with Social Problem-Solving

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Teachers can use self-instruction techniques to teach children an organized approach to solve social problems like settling arguments and fighting; also to cope effectively with angry feelings and with feelings of frustration. To solve the problem, we can train the child to ask, “What am I supposed to do?” and then, the child follows these steps: Look at all the possibilities or look at all the different answers so you can find the best possible solution. Focus in. Concentrate or think hard about just the problem you are working on right now. Do not look or think about anything else. After you study all the different choices, pick an answer. Check out your answer. If you got it right, tell yourself you did a good job. If you did not get it right, you do not have to put yourself down. Just remind yourself to be more careful or to go more slowly on the next try. (Kendall and Braswell, 1985) Teach students to use self-questioning . Questions help in organizing the steps needed t

Help for Struggling Readers: Comprehending Text

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This is an excerpt from my popular book Keys to Meaning: What Teachers and Tutors Can Do to Improve Reading Comprehension Skills. To preview this book, click on the link at the bottom of this post.   When students understand a reading passage or a literary piece, they know what the information in the reading material means . To show understanding or meaning, children need to be able to recall or remember, to explain, to tell how something works, to restate the important ideas and details and/or to summarize. At the highest levels of meaning, students need to be able to apply or use the information (i.e. solving a problem), analyze or break the information down into parts (i.e. comparing, contrasting, sequencing), synthesize or use the information to create something new, and evaluate or telling the value of the information and giving opinions. There are two main types of literature: fiction or literature that is made-up, and nonfiction or literature about real people, places,