Teaching Children With Learning
Disabilities
To Use Learning Strategies
NICHCY News Digest Volume 25,
August 1997
Interventions for Students with Learning Disabilities Author: Neil Sturomski Learning is the process of
acquiring-- and retaining-- knowledge so it may be applied in life situations.
Learning is not a passive process. As any teacher can attest, students are not
vessels into which new information is poured and then forever remembered. Rather,
learning new information and being able to recall and apply it appropriately involves
a complex interaction between the learner and the material being learned. Learning
is fostered when the learner has opportunities to practice the new information,
receive feedback from an "expert," such as a teacher, and apply the
knowledge or skill in familiar and unfamiliar situations, with less and less assistance
from others. To each new learning task,
students bring their own ideas, beliefs, opinions, attitudes, motivation, skills,
and prior knowledge; they also bring with them the strategies and techniques
they have learned in order to make their learning more efficient. All these
aspects will contribute directly to the students' ability to learn, and to remember
and use what has been learned. The focus of this article
is on helping students become more efficient and effective learners by teaching
them how to learn. By equipping them with a repertoire of strategies for learning--
ways to organize themselves and new material; techniques to use while reading,
writing, and doing math or other subjects; and systematic steps to follow when
working through a learning task or reflecting upon their own learning-- teachers
can provide students with the tools for a lifetime of successful learning. **The Learning Difficulties
of Students with Learning Disabilities ** It is no secret that many
students find learning a difficult and painful process. Learning may be made
more difficult by any number of factors, including inadequate prior knowledge,
poor study skills, problems with maintaining attention, cultural or language
differences, and-- as is the focus of this News Digest-- the presence of a learning
disability. Students who have learning disabilities are often overwhelmed, disorganized,
and frustrated in learning situations. Learning can become a nightmare when
there are memory problems, difficulties in following directions, trouble with
the visual or auditory perception of information, and an inability to perform
paper-and-pencil tasks (i.e., writing compositions, notetaking, doing written
homework, taking tests). Another aspect of learning
that presents difficulties for students who have learning disabilities is why
they think they succeed or fail at learning. Due to their history of academic
problems, such students may believe that they cannot learn, that school tasks
are just too difficult and not worth the effort, or that, if they succeed at
a task, they must have gotten lucky. They may not readily believe that there
is a connection between what they do, the effort they make, and the likelihood
of academic success. These negative beliefs about their ability to learn, and
the nature of learning itself, can have far-reaching academic consequences.
While a detailed description
of how learning disabilities affect the learning process is beyond the scope
of this document, much information is available on the subject. NICHCY makes
available a publication called Reading and Learning Disabilities: A Resource
Guide, which presents an overview of learning disabilities and a listing of
helpful books and organizations that can provide indepth information and guidance
on this disabilit. An annotated bibliography called Educating Students with
Learning Disabilities is also available. **The Need to Be Strategic
Learners** Notwithstanding the difficulties
that students with learning disabilities often experience with learning, they
have the same need as their peers without disabilities to acquire the knowledge,
skills, and strategies-- both academic and nonacademic-- that are necessary
for functioning independently on a day-to-day basis in our society. Perhaps
one of the most important skills they need to learn is how to learn. Knowing
that certain techniques and strategies can be used to assist learning, knowing
which techniques are useful in which kinds of learning situations, and knowing
how to use the techniques are powerful tools that can enable students to become
strategic, effective, and lifelong learners. Surprisingly, many learners
know little about the learning process, their own strengths and weaknesses in
a learning situation, and what strategies and techniques they naturally tend
to use when learning something new. Yet, we all do use various methods and strategies
to help us learn and remember new information or skills. For example, when encountering
a new word while reading, some of us may try to guess its meaning from the context
of the passage and be satisfied with an approximate idea of what it means, while
others may look the word up in the dictionary or ask someone nearby what it
means. Still others may go a step further and write the new word down or try
to use the word in a sentence before the day is through. Some of these methods
are more effective than others for learning and remembering new information,
and some of us are more conscious of our own learning processes than others.
Because of the nature of
their learning difficulties, students with learning disabilities need to become
strategic learners, not just haphazardly using whatever learning strategies
or techniques they have developed on their own, but becoming consciously aware
of what strategies might be useful in a given learning situation and capable
of using those strategies effectively. Teachers can be enormously helpful in
this regard. They can introduce students to specific strategies and demonstrate
when and how the strategies are used. Students can then see how a person thinks
or what a person does when using the strategies. Teachers can provide opportunities
for students to discuss, reflect upon, and practice the strategies with classroom
materials and authentic tasks. By giving feedback, teachers help students refine
their use of strategies and learn to monitor their own usage. Teachers may then
gradually fade reminders and guidance so that students begin to assume responsibility
for strategic learning. **What, Exactly, Are
Learning Strategies?** Learning strategies are
"techniques, principles, or rules that facilitate the acquisition, manipulation,
integration, storage, and retrieval of information across situations and settings"
(Alley & Deshler, 1979, p. 13). Strategies are efficient, effective, and
organized steps or procedures used when learning, remembering, or performing.
More simply put, learning
strategies are the tools and techniques we use to help ourselves understand
and learn new material or skills; integrate this new information with what we
already know in a way that makes sense; and recall the information or skill
later, even in a different situation or place. When we are trying to learn or
do a task, our strategies include what we think about (the cognitive aspect
of the strategy) and what we physically do (the behavioral or overt action we
take). Strategies can be simple
or complex, unconsciously applied or used with great awareness and deliberation.
Simple learning strategies that many of us have used, particularly in school
settings, include: notetaking, making a chart, asking the teacher questions,
asking ourselves questions, re-reading when something does not make sense, looking
at the reading questions before beginning reading, checking our work, making
an outline before beginning to write, asking a friend to look over our composition,
rehearsing a presentation aloud, making up a goofy rhyme to remember someone's
name, using resource books, drawing a picture that uses every new vocabulary
word we have to learn, or mapping in sequence the events of a story. Complex
strategies tend actually to be a set of several different strategies that are
used in tandem (and recursively) to accomplish a complex learning task such
as writing a composition or reading a passage and answering questions. For example, a complex set
of strategies for writing a composition might involve three recursive stages:
planning, writing, and revising. Each of these stages can involve using many
different strategies. When planning, for instance, we might think hard about
the audience that will be reading what we've written (e.g., what do they need
or want to know, or how can we best capture and hold their attention?), write
an outline, and identify points where we need to gather more information in
order to write effectively. When actually writing, we might focus on stating
our main ideas well, supporting them with appropriate details, and summarizing
our main points in the conclusion. Revising may have several mini-stages: looking
back while writing to make sure we're following our outline (or deciding to
abandon parts of the outline), laying aside the composition for a day, then
re-reading it with a fresh eye. We might also check to make sure we've used
correct punctuation and grammar, consult a dictionary or other resource guide
when we're uncertain, and ask someone else to read what we've written and give
us feedback. We also move back and forth between these three stages-- thinking
and planning, writing for a while, re-reading to see how we're doing, thinking
of how to fix mistakes or add new information, writing again-- and on until
we're finished. The research literature
abounds with descriptions of these strategy sets, often called strategy interventions,
which are intended to make learners highly aware of what they doing, thus making
their approach to completing specific tasks more purposeful, systematic, and,
according to the research findings, more effective. The writing intervention
called DEFENDS is an example of such a strategy set (see the box above). The
name is actually an acronym; each letter stands for one of the steps in the
strategy. Remembering the acronym helps students remember the steps they are
to use when writing. Other interventions are described in this News Digest;
additional ones are listed in the separate Bibliography: Learning Strategies
for Students with Learning Disabilities. Strategies can also be categorized
in many different ways. Distinctions have been made, for instance, between cognitive
and metacognitive strategies. Cognitive strategies help a person process and
manipulate information-- examples include taking notes, asking questions, or
filling out a chart. Cognitive strategies tend to be very task-specific, meaning
that certain cognitive strategies are useful when learning or performing certain
tasks. Metacognitive strategies are more executive in nature. They are the strategies
that a student uses when planning, monitoring, and evaluating learning or strategy
performance. For this reason, they are often referred to as self-regulatory
strategies. The use of metacognitive
strategies indicates that the student is aware of learning as a process and
of what will facilitate learning. Taking the time to plan before writing, for
example, shows that the student knows what is involved in writing a good composition.
Similarly, he or she might monitor comprehension while reading and take action
when something does not make sense-- for example, look back in the text for
clarification or consciously hold the question in mind while continuing to read.
Evaluating one's work, learning, or even strategy use is also highly metacognitive
in nature, because it shows that a learner is aware of and thinking about how
learning takes place. Metacognitive strategies
are at the core of self-regulated learning, which, in turn, is at the core of
successful and lifelong learning. Self-regulation involves such strategies as
goal-setting, self-instruction, self-monitoring, and self-reinforcement (Graham,
Harris, & Reid, 1992). It's easy to see why self-regulated learners tend
to achieve academically. They set goals for learning, talk to themselves in
positive ways about learning and use self-instruction to guide themselves through
a learning problem, keep track of (or monitor) their comprehension or progress,
and reward themselves for success. Just as students can be helped to develop
their use of cognitive, task-specific strategies, so can they be helped to use
self-regulatory, metacognitive ones as well. In fact, the most effective strategy
interventions combine the use of cognitive and metacognitive strategies. Strategies have also been
categorized by their purpose or function for the learner (Lenz, Ellis, &
Scanlon, 1996). Is a strategy being used to help the student initially learn
new information or skills? Such strategies are acquisition strategies. Is a
strategy being used to help the student manipulate or transform information
so that it can be effectively placed in memory? These types of strategies are
storage strategies. Is a strategy being used to help the learner recall or show
what he or she has learned? Such strategies are demonstration and expression
of knowledge strategies. **What Strategies Might
We Help Students Learn? Examples from the Reading Field** Decades of research into
reading has resulted in a substantial knowledge base about how we learn to read,
what effective readers do, what not-so-effective readers do and don't do, and
how good reading skills might be fostered or poor reading skills remediated.
Much of this knowledge base has been put to use in the form of strategy instruction--
helping beginning readers, and those whose skills need remediating, develop
the strategies the good reader uses. Good readers, for example, successfully
construct understanding and meaning through interacting with the text using
learning strategies, including thinking about what they already know on the
topic, being aware when they are not understanding something in the text, and
taking some sort of corrective action to clear up the difficulty (Pressley,
Brown, El-Dinary, & Afflerbach, 1995). They also paraphrase or summarize
as they go along, and they ask questions of themselves or others to maximize
their comprehension. Studies have shown that children with learning disabilities
and other low-achievers can master the learning strategies that improve reading
comprehension skills (e.g., Deshler, Shumaker, Alley, Clark, & Warner, 1981;
Idol, 1987; Palincsar & Brown, 1987; Schunk & Rice, 1989; Wong &
Jones, 1982). Techniques that help students learn to ask questions and to paraphrase
and summarize what they are reading have been shown to help them develop higher
level reading comprehension skills. For students with learning problems, learning
to use questioning strategies is especially important, since these students
do not often spontaneously self-question or monitor their own reading comprehension
(Bos & Filip, 1984). This section looks briefly
at some of the strategies that researchers and teachers have focused their attention
upon, with the purpose of illustrating concretely what strategies might be helpful
to students, particularly those with learning disabilities. Questioning and Paraphrasing.
Several strategic approaches have been designed to foster student interaction
with the text being read. Reciprocal Teaching is one such approach (Brown &
Palincsar, 1988). In Reciprocal Teaching, students interact deeply with the
text through the strategies of questioning, summarizing, clarifying, and predicting.
Organized in the form of a discussion, the approach involves one leader (students
and teacher take turns being the leader) who, after a segment of the text is
read, frames a question to which the group reponds. Participants can then share
their own questions. The leader then summarizes the gist of the text. Participants
comment or elaborate upon that summary. At any point in the discussion, either
the leader or participants may identify aspects of the text or discussion that
need to be clarified, and the group joins together to clarify the confusion.
Finally, the leader indicates it's time to move on when he or she makes or solicits
predictions about what might come up next in the text. Paraphrasing, self-questioning,
and finding the main idea are the strategies used in an approach developed and
researched by Deshler, Schumaker, Alley, Clark, and Warner (1981). Students
divide reading passages into smaller parts such as sections, subsections, or
paragraphs. After reading a segment, students are cued to use a self-questioning
strategy to identify main ideas and details. The strategy requires students
to maintain a high level of attention to reading tasks, because they must alternate
their use of questioning and paraphrasing after reading each section, subsection,
or paragraph. Questioning to Find the
Main Idea. Wong and Jones (1982) developed a self-questioning strategy focused
primarily on identifying and questioning the main idea or summary of a paragraph.
They first taught junior high students with learning disabilities the concept
of a main idea. A self-questioning strategy was then explained. Students then
practiced the self-questioning strategy, with cue card assistance, on individual
paragraphs. Following the practice, students were provided with immediate feedback.
Eventually, following successful comprehension of these short paragraphs, students
were presented with more lengthy passages as the cue card use was removed. Continuing
to give corrective feedback, Wong and Jones (1982) finished each lesson with
a discussion of students' progress and of strategy usefulness. Their results
indicated that students with learning disabilities who were trained in a self-questioning
strategy performed significantly higher (i.e., demonstrated greater comprehension
of what was read) than untrained students. Story-mapping. Idol (1987)
used a story-mapping strategy to help students read a story, generate a map
of its events and ideas, and then answer questions. In order to fill in the
map, students had to identify the setting, characters, time and place of the
story, the problem, the goal, the action that took place, and the outcome. Idol
modeled for students how to fill in the map, then gave them extensive opportunities
to practice the mapping technique for themselves and receive corrective feedback.
She stated that if comprehension instruction provides a framework for understanding,
conceptualizing, and remembering important story events, students will improve
their comprehension of necessary information. Idol further recognized that comprehension
improves only through direct teacher instruction on the use of the strategy,
high expectation of strategy use, and a move toward students independently using
the strategy. This is just a sampling
of the strategies that can be used by students to improve their reading comprehension
technique. Many other strategies can be used in reading, and there are also
many strategies designed for math, writing, and other academic and non-academic
areas (see NICHCY's Bibliography: Learning Strategies for Students with Learning
Disabilities). **The Research Base for
Learning Strategies** As our knowledge has grown
regarding the learning strategies that help us learn new information and perform
various tasks, so has our knowledge regarding how to teach those strategies
to students. In the last 20 years, a sizeable research base has developed that
demonstrates the usefulness of directly teaching students how to use strategies
to acquire skills and information and how to apply those strategies, skills,
and information in other settings and with other materials (known as generalization).
Unfortunately, a lengthy discussion of the research is beyond the scope of this
News Digest; readers can refer to the stand-alone Bibliography: Learning Strategies
for Students with Learning Disabilities for more information on how the learning
strategy field has evolved. What is presented below is an overview of the conclusions
that many researchers have drawn regarding learning strategy instruction. Researchers at the University
of Kansas have been deeply involved in researching learning strategies since
the 1970s and have done much to define and articulate the benefits of strategy
instruction in general and for individuals with learning disabilities in particular.
Chief among the benefits is the fact that instruction in learning strategies
helps students with learning disabilities approach and complete tasks successfully
and provides them with techniques that promote independence in acquiring and
performing academic skills (Ellis, Deshler, Lenz, Schumaker, & Clark, 1991).
The work at the University
of Kansas has also resulted in one of the most well researched and well articulated
models for teaching students to use learning strategies. This model has been
known for years as the Strategies Intervention Model, or SIM, and was recently
renamed the Strategies Integration Model. The SIM is designed as a series of
steps that a teacher can use to effectively teach students to use any number
of strategies or strategic approaches. (The model is described more fully on
the next pages.) The SIM is not the only model available to guide how teachers
provide students with strategy instruction; not surprisingly, researchers around
the country tend to advocate similar methods, drawing from what is known about
effective teaching methodology and about learning. In a nutshell, teaching
methods need to provide students with the opportunity to observe, engage in,
discuss and reflect upon, practice, and personalize strategies that can be used
with classroom and authentic tasks now and in the future (Rosenshine & Stevens,
1986). In using these teaching methods, teachers promote student independence
in use of the strategies. Research makes it clear, however, that if students
are to use learning strategies and generalize their strategic knowledge to other
academic and nonacademic situations, teachers must understand both the strategies
that provide students with the necessary learning tools and the methods that
can be used to effectively teach those learning strategies to students. Example of a Strategy Intervention
DEFENDS is the acronym for
a strategic approach that helps secondary students write a composition in which
they must take a position and defend it (Ellis, 1994). Each letter stands for
a strategic step, as follows: D ecide on audience, goals,
and position
E stimate main ideas and details
F igure best order of main ideas and details E xpress the position
in the opening
N ote each main idea and supporting points
D rive home the message in the last sentence
S earch for errors and correct
**Effective Teaching Methods **
Just as there are effective
approaches to learning, there are effective approaches to teaching. A great
deal of research has been conducted into the nature of effective teaching, and
much has been learned. Educational researchers (e.g., Englert, 1984; Nowacek,
McKinney & Hallahan, 1990; Rosenshine & Stevens, 1986; Sindelar, Espin,
Smith, and Harriman, 1990) have concluded, for example, that a systematic approach
to providing instruction greatly improves student achievement. These researchers
also state that teachers can learn the specific components of an effective,
systematic approach to providing instruction and can modify and thereby enhance
their teaching behavior. Using such a systematic approach with whatever is being
taught can only help to further improve educational opportunities for all students,
especially those who have learning disabilities. Rosenshine and Stevens (1986)
have identified common teaching practices of successful teachers, such as teaching
in small steps, practicing after each step, guiding students during initial
practice, and providing all students with opportunities for success. Englert
(1984) pointed out that successful teachers use lesson strategies to provide
students with both direct instruction and the opportunity for practice. Lesson
strategies include: communicating the rules and expectations of the lesson,
stating instructional objectives and linking them to previous lessons, providing
numerous examples, prompting student responses, and providing drill and further
practice immediately following incorrect responses. Sindelar, Espin, Smith,
and Harriman (1990) add that the more time an actively engaged educator spends
in the instructional process, the more positive student behavior and achievement
will be. Sindelar et al. (1990) suggest that effective teachers limit seatwork
activities, provide ample opportunities for student overlearning through teacher
questioning, and allow time to socially interact with students. They conclude
that encouraging higher levels of student participation, providing effective
classroom transitions (i.e., concluding one activity and moving on to another),
and bringing lessons to a close by providing assignments for further practice
are consistent with teacher-directed learning. Nowacek, McKinney, and Hallahan
(1990) indicate that teacher-directed, rather than student-directed, activities
provide for an effective educational experience that is more likely to improve
student achievement. Higher levels of student achievement occur because teachers,
using a systematic approach, are more organized, have clearer expectations,
maintain student attention, and provide immediate, corrective, and constructive
feedback. Because their instruction is highly structured, these teachers provide
a positive environment in which to learn. Using a systematic approach
to teaching does not suggest that teacher and student creativity is not a vital
part of the process. It merely lays out an organizational framework that provides
a means for enhanced, successful, and efficient learning. **Teaching Students to
Use Learning Strategies** As with the basic tenets
of effective teaching, much has been learned through research regarding effective
learning strategy instruction. As mentioned earlier, a well articulated strategies
instructional approach known as the Strategies Integration Model (SIM) has emerged
from the research conducted at the University of Kansas. Based on cognitive
behavior modification, the SIM is one of the field's most comprehensive models
for providing strategy instruction. It can be used to teach virtually any strategic
intervention to students. First, of course, the teacher
must select a strategy -- most likely, a set of strategies -- to teach to students.
The decision of what strategy to teach, however, should not be arbitrary. Rather,
the strategy should be clearly linked to (i.e., useful in completing) the tasks
that students need to perform and where they need to perform them. When the
strategy instruction is matched to student need, students tend to be more motivated
to learn and use the strategy. (See NICHCY's Bibliography for articles that
describe the wide range of strategy approaches being taught. See also the section
entitled "What Strategies Might We Help Students Learn?", where several
overviews of strategy approaches used in reading are given.) Once the teacher has decided
upon what strategy or approach to teach, he or she may find the steps of the
SIM particularly useful for guiding how the actual instruction should proceed.
A fairly detailed description of suggested steps is given below. 1. Pretest Students and
Get Them Interested in Learning the Strategy Although the teacher may not wish
to call this step "testing," it is nonetheless important to know how
much the students already know about using the strategy and to secure their
commitment to learning the strategy from top to bottom. As Lenz, Ellis, and
Scanlon (1996) remark, "Short of standing over students with a gun, you
cannot force them to be strategic against their will" (p. 85). Letting students know that
gains in learning can occur when the strategy is used effectively is one of
the keys to motivating them. Studies have shown that it is important to tell
students directly that they are going to learn a strategy that can help them
in their reading, writing, or whatever skill is being addressed through the
strategy. They also need to know that their effort and persistence in learning
and in using the strategy can bring them many learning benefits. In a study
by Shunk and Rice (1989), for example, students were put into three groups and
taught the strategy of finding the main idea of a reading passage. The groups,
however, were given different goals for their work. One group was told that
the goal of the activity was to learn the strategy, which would help them answer
several reading questions. Another group was told that the goal was to answer
several reading questions; the third group was simply told to "do their
best." Results indicated that students whose learning goal was to learn
the strategy performed the best when posttested. Understanding, knowing, and
applying a strategy that assisted comprehension, Shunk and Rice (1989) reported,
gave students a sense of control over their learning outcomes and, therefore,
encouraged students to use the strategy. Use of the strategy also fostered a
sense of task involvement among students. These results indicate the importance
of overtly teaching students both the strategy and the power of the strategy--
i.e., making sure they understand that the strategy can help them learn, and
how it can help. The pretest can be instrumental
in helping students see the need to learn the strategy. To this end, it is critical
that the teacher pretest students using materials and tasks that are similar
to the materials and tasks that the students actually encounter in their classes.
The strategy should also be useful when working with those materials and tasks--
in other words, students will find it easier to work with those materials or
perform those tasks if they apply the strategy. The pretest should be primarily
focused on completing the task (e.g., reading a passage and answering questions).
Following the pretest, the class should discuss results. How did students do?
Were they able to perform the task successfully? What types of errors did they
make? What did they do, or think about, to help themselves while taking the
pretest? What difficulties did they have, and how did they address those difficulties?
If students did not perform particularly well, the teacher then indicates that
he or she knows of a strategy or technique that will help students perform that
task more successfully in the future. Obtaining a commitment from
students to learn the strategy, according to the SIM model, can involve any
number of approaches, including discussing the value of the strategy, the likelihood
that success will not be immediate upon learning the strategy but will come
if the student is willing to persevere and practice the strategy, and the teacher's
own commitment to helping the students learn the strategy (Lenz, Ellis, &
Scanlon, 1996). (With elementary school students, student-teacher collaboration
in use of the strategy is especially important; teachers need to discuss and
practice strategies with these young students frequently.) Commitments can be
verbal or in writing, but the idea here is to get the students involved and
to make them aware that their participation in learning and using the strategy
is vital to their eventual success. 2. Describe the Strategy.
In this stage, teachers "present the strategy, give examples, and have
students discuss various ways the strategy can be used" (Day & Elksnin,
1994, p. 265). A clear definition of the strategy must be given, as well as
some of the benefits to learning the strategy. The teacher should also identify
real assignments in specific classes where students can apply the strategy and
ask students if they can think of other work where the strategy might be useful.
Students should also be told the various stages involved in learning the strategy,
so they know what to expect. Once this type of overview
is provided and the teacher feels that students are ready to delve more deeply
into hearing about and using the strategy, instruction must become more specific.
Each separate step of the strategy must be described in detail. It is important
that the strategy is presented in such a way that students can easily remember
its steps. Many strategies have been given an acronym to help students remember
the various steps involved. (An example is listed in the box below; another,
DEFENDS, was given earlier in this News Digest) Students may also benefit from
having a poster or chart about the strategy and its steps displayed in plain
view. During the description stage,
the class may also discuss how this new approach to a specific task differs
from what students are currently using. The stage should conclude with a review
of what has been said. An Example of an Acronym
Designed to Help Students Remember the Steps in Using a Strategy COPS is the acronym for
a strategic approach that helps students detect and correct common writing errors.
Each letter stands for an aspect of writing that students need to check for
accuracy (Shannon & Polloway, 1993). C Capitalization
of appropriate letters O Overall appearance of paper P Punctuation used correctly S Spelling accuracy
3. Model the Strategy. Modeling the strategy for students is an essential component
of strategy instruction. In this stage, teachers overtly use the strategy to
help them perform a relevant classroom or authentic task, talking aloud as they
work so that students can observe how a person thinks and what a person does
while using the strategy, including: deciding which strategy to use to perform
the task at hand, working through the task using that strategy, monitoring performance
(i.e., is the strategy being applied correctly, and is it helping the learner
complete the work well?), revising one's strategic approach, and making positive
self-statements. An example of such a think aloud is provided in the box at
the right.
The self-talk that the teacher
provides as a model can become a powerful guide for students as responsibility
for using the strategy transfers to them. In fact, Lenz, Ellis, and Scanlon
(1996) suggest that teachers model the strategy intervention more than once
and involve students in these subsequent modelings by asking questions such
as "What do I do in this step?" Teachers can prompt this type of student
involvement by asking "Now what's next? How do we do that step? What questions
should you be asking yourself?" (p. 109). Student responses will help the
teacher determine how well the students understand when and where they might
use the strategy intervention, as well as the steps involved in the intervention.
4. Practice the Strategy.
Repeated opportunities to practice the strategy are important as well. The more
students and teachers collaborate to use the strategy, the more internalized
the strategy will become in students' strategic repertoire. Initial practice
may be largely teacher-directed, with teachers continuing to model appropriate
ways of thinking about the task at hand and deciding (with increasing student
direction) which strategy or action is needed to work through whatever problems
arise in completing the task. Students may also be called upon to "think
aloud" as they work through the practice tasks, explaining the problems
they are having, decisions they are making, or physical actions they are taking,
and what types of thoughts are occurring to them as they attempt to solve the
problems, make the decisions, or take the physical actions. These student think
alouds should increasingly show the strategy being used to help them complete
the task successfully. While these think alouds may initially be part of teacher-directed
instruction, students may benefit greatly from practicing as well in small groups,
where they listen to each other's think alouds and help each other understand
the task, why the strategy might be useful in completing the task, and how to
apply the strategy to the task. Practice opportunities should eventually become
self-mediated, where students work independently to complete tasks while using
the strategy. In the beginning, students should practice using the strategy
with materials that are at or slightly below their comfort level, so they do
not become frustrated by overly difficult content. Using materials that are
well matched to the strategy is also important, because then students can readily
see the strategy's usefulness. As time goes by and students become more proficient
in using the strategy, materials that are more difficult should be used. 5. Provide Feedback. The
feedback that teachers give students on their strategy use is a critical component
in helping students learn how to use a strategy effectively and how to change
what they are doing when a particular approach is not working. Much of the feedback
can be offered as students become involved in thinking aloud about the task
and about strategy use, in the modelling and practice steps described above.
It is also important to provide opportunities for students to reflect upon their
approach to and completion of the task. What aspects of the task did they complete
well? What aspects were hard? Did any problems arise, and what did they do to
solve the problems? What might they do differently the next time they have to
complete a similar task? How Teachers Might Model
a Strategy by Thinking Aloud One strategy that is vital
when reading, particularly for students with learning disabilities, is comprehension
monitoring. Comprehension monitoring "is the active awareness of whether
one is understanding or remembering text being processed" (Pressley, Brown,
El-Dinary, & Afflerbach, 1995, p. 218). After explaining to students
that good readers constantly monitor how well they are understanding what they
read, the teacher might "show" students an example of how we think
when we monitor. She puts up a sample text entitled "Grizzly Bears,"
reads it aloud, and thinks aloud as she's reading. Note that the think aloud
below illustrates some of the corrective actions (e.g., asking questions, looking
back in the text, thinking about what we already know, reading on) good readers
might take to clear up any confusions. The text the teacher reads:
"Grizzly bears are found in western Canada and in Alaska, living in forests
on mountain sides. They have shaggy fur, humped shoulders, sharp teeth and long,
sharp claws...Grizzlies usually live alone. Each bear has its own area of land,
called a "home range." It leaves scents on the bark of trees all the
way around its home range to let other bears know where it lives." [Wood,
J. (1989). My first book of animals (p. 34). Boston, MA: Little, Brown.] The teacher's think aloud
might be as follows: Let's see. This is about
grizzly bears, I can tell that from the title. I know a little bit about grizzly
bears -- they're big and have sharp claws and teeth, and sometimes they come
into people's campsites and try to get the food. I guess they're not all Gentle
Ben... okay, "...found in western Canada and in Alaska," places it's
cold, yeah, that makes sense because they hibernate in winter, I remember that
now..."living in forests on mountain sides. They have shaggy fur..."
I guess that's good, cos they live where it's cold. "...humped shoulders..."
Humped shoulders? What do they mean by that? Oh, maybe when they're down on
all fours, yeah, their backs are kind of like a hump then, okay, I get it "...and
have sharp claws and teeth..." see! I knew that! "Grizzlies usually
live alone..." I wonder why that is. Don't they like one another? Maybe
they don't want to share the food they find, or maybe they fight over territory...Let
me look back and see if I missed something...[re-reads] no, I still don't have
a clue. Maybe they'll tell me in a bit why bears don't live together in little
groups, let's see. "Each bear has its
own area of land...[reads to end], no, no answer, at least not real clear. I
can see they probably do defend their territory, though, if they mark the trees
with their scent. They must be like dogs then, dogs do that, mark things with
their scent, to warn other dogs off. Sort of like a fence around your yard!
I wonder how they leave the scent, though -- maybe they go on the tree or rub
up against it, against the bark. I also wonder how big an area a bear gets.
As big as he wants, I guess, with all those claws and teeth! 6. Promote Generalization.
It is important for students to be able to apply the strategy in novel situations
and with novel tasks. Surprisingly, many students will not recognize that the
strategy they have been learning and practicing may be ideal for helping them
to complete a learning task in a different classroom or learning situation;
this is particularly true of students with learning disabilities (Borkowski,
Estrada, Milstead & Hale, 1989). Thus, mere exposure to strategy training
appears insufficient for both strategy learning and strategy utilization (Wood,
Rosenburg,& Carran, 1993). Consistent, guided practice at generalizing strategies
to various settings and tasks is, therefore, vital for students with learning
disabilities (Pressley, Symons, Snyder & Cariglia-Bull, 1989), as are repeated
reminders that strategies can be used in new situations (Borkowski, Estrada,
Milstead & Hale, 1989). Therefore, teachers need
to discuss with students what generalization is and how and when students might
use the strategy in other settings. An important part of this discussion will
be looking at the actual work that students have in other classes and discussing
with students how the strategy might be useful in completing that work. Being
specific-- actually going through the steps of the strategy with that work--
is highly beneficial. Students can also be called upon to generate their own
lists of instances where they might apply the strategy in other classes. (An
example of a student-generated list of opportunities to use the strategy COPS
is given in the box on the next page.) Additionally, teachers may wish to coordinate
between themselves to promote student use of strategies across settings, so
that the strategies being taught in one classroom are mentioned and supported
by other teachers as well. All of these approaches will promote student generalization
of the strategy. The Importance of Positive
Self-Statements Teachers may find that it's
important to address the negative feelings that many students with learning
disabilities have about learning and about themselves. Often, these students
believe that they cannot learn, that the work is simply too difficult, or that
any success they might achieve is due to luck. They may not readily believe
they can achieve success in learning through their own effort and strategic
activities and thoughts, and so they may not persist in using strategies. Just as teachers can help
students develop strategic approaches to learning, teachers can help students
learn to attribute success in learning to their own effort and use of strategies.
Modeling positive self-statements, and encouraging students to use such self-talk,
are essential. Examples of positive self-statements
that attribute success to effort and not to luck include: "I can probably
do this problem because I've done similar ones successfully." "I'm
usually successful when I work carefully and use the learning strategy correctly."
"If I make a mistake, I can probably find it and correct it." (Corral
& Antia, 1997, p. 43) Changing students' perceptions about themselves and
about the connection between effort and success can be a vital element in their
willingness to keep trying in the face of challenge, using learning strategies
as a valuable tool. **Other Approaches to
Strategy Instruction** The steps given above have
been drawn primarily from research conducted at the University of Kansas and
represent one strong approach to teaching the wide range of strategies that
learners can use to tackle challenging learning situations. Other approaches
to strategy instruction exist as well (see NICHCY's Bibliography: Learning Strategies
for Students with Learning Disabilities), with most recommending many of the
steps articulated in the SIM. Much effort has gone into defining, testing, and
refining their components, and in validating their effectiveness in promoting
student achievement. While the SIM and other
strategy instruction models present educators with an overall structure for
teaching students about learning and about learning strategies and techniques,
the research literature also abounds with descriptions of specific strategies
that students can use to enhance their reading, writing, and math skills. There
are also many descriptions of strategies designed for use in specific academic
(e.g., science) and non-academic (e.g., social skills) areas. Some strategy
interventions are designed for use at the elementary level, while others are
appropriate for secondary students. (Many of these are listed in the stand-alone
bibliography that is the companion to this News Digest.) While much is known
about strategy instruction, new instruction and instructional methodology continues
to unfold, as does our understanding of both strategies and strategy instruction.
Therefore, strategy techniques and instruction should not be looked upon as
a cure-all when working with students who have learning disabilities but as
another possible approach to meeting learners' needs. Student-Generated List of
Opportunities to Use COPS Love letters
Homework assignments
Spelling practice
Job applications
English papers
Written math problems
Health questions
History exam questions
Friendly letters
Written instructions (Shannon & Polloway,
1993, p. 161) **Conclusion** Learning strategy instruction
appears to hold great educational potential, especially for students who have
learning disabilities. This is because strategy training emphasizes helping
students learn how to learn and how to use strategies found to be effective
in promoting successful performance of academic, social, or job-related tasks.
Students need these skills not only to cope with immediate academic demands
but also to address similar tasks in different settings under different conditions
throughout life. Strategies are, thus, skills that empower. They are resources
for an individual to use, especially when faced with new learning situations.
Good strategy instruction
makes students aware of the purposes of strategies, how they work, why they
work, when they work, and where they can be used. To accomplish this, teachers
need to talk about strategies explicitly, describe and name them, model how
they are used by thinking aloud while performing tasks relevant to students,
provide students with multiple opportunities to use the strategies with a variety
of materials, and provide feedback and guidance to help students refine and
internalize strategy use. Ultimately, responsibility for strategy use needs
to shift from teacher to students, so that students can become independent learners
with the cognitive flexibility necessary to address the many learning challenges
they will encounter in their lives. Of course, no single technique
or intervention can be expected to address the complex nature of learning or
the varied needs of all learners. When working with students with learning disabilities,
teachers will find it highly beneficial to have a variety of interventions and
techniques with which to foster student success. Strategies are one such technique--
and a powerful one at that! When students are given extensive and ongoing practice
in using learning strategies within the context of day-to-day school instruction,
they become better equipped to face current and future tasks. Learning how to
learn provides them with the ability to be independent lifelong learners, which
is one of the ultimate goals of education. When students learn, they grow and
change intellectually. They acquire more than knowledge. They enhance their
sense of competence and their ability to achieve.
About the Author... Neil Sturomski has worked
for over 20 years in the learning disabilities field. He has taught both children
and adults with learning disabilities, first as a teacher in grades K-12 and
then as the Director of the Night School program of the Lab School of Washington.
Most recently, Mr. Sturomski has served as the Director of the National Adult
Literacy and Learning Disabilities Center, in Washington, DC. Mr. Sturomski
is currently President and CEO of Sturomski and Associates and is deeply involved
in training teachers to help individuals with learning disabilities learn how
to use learning strategies. NICHCY would like to express its deep appreciation
to Neil for this article-- and for his incredible patience!
National Information Center for
Children and Youth with Disabilities
P.O. Box 1492
Washington, DC 20013
1-800-695-0285 (Voice/TT)
E-mail: nichcy@aed.org
Web site: http://www.nichcy.org/This information is copyright
free. Readers are encouraged to copy and share it, but please credit the National
Information Center for Children and Youth with Disabilities (NICHCY). |