Strengthening Curriculum Connections Through Diverse Learners' Narrative Skills in Chapter 9

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Enhance the narrative skills of diverse learners with DLD to improve their connection to the curriculum. Explore skills required for constructing narratives, cultural storytelling styles, school expectations, and more in this insightful chapter.

  • Narrative Skills
  • Curriculum Connections
  • Diverse Learners
  • Learning Disabilities
  • Educational Development

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  1. BUILDING NARRATIVE SKILLS OF DIVERSE LEARNERS WITH DLD TO STRENGTHEN CONNECTION TO THE CURRICULUM Chapter 9

  2. I. INTRODUCTION

  3. II. SKILLS REQUIRED FOR CONSTRUCTING NARRATIVESKNOWLEDGE OF:

  4. III. DIFFERENCES IN CULTURAL STORYTELLING STYLES

  5. IV. SCHOOL EXPECTATIONS

  6. Common Core Expectations (not on examp. 339)** Kindergarten: Use a combination of drawing, dictating, and writing to narrate a single even or several loosely linked events in the order in which the events occurred and provide a reaction to what happened. Third grade: Write narratives to develop real or imagined events using effective technique, descriptive details, and clear event sequences. Introduce a situation and a character. Use dialogue, actions, thoughts, and feelings to show character response, along with temporal words and closure.

  7. Children with DLD

  8. V. STORY GRAMMAR ANALYSIS A. Foundations

  9. B. Young children show pre-episodic organization:** Collection of utterances loosely linked by a theme or temporal order Earliest type of pre-episodic organization is a descriptive sequence; there is no real order or temporal relationship Action sequence: series of actions that show temporal relations (first A happened, next B happened, and finally C happened) with a beginning, middle, and end

  10. C. Episodic Organization

  11. For example:** (not on exam) The boy s family moved to a new state because his mom changed jobs. He was lonely because he didn t know anyone. He talked to his parents, and they told him to ask kids on the playground if he could play with them. He did this, and made some fun new friends at school.

  12. VI. INTERVENTION A. Foundational Concepts

  13. B. Make Stories Enjoyable!

  14. C. Use Pictography (see p. 356, 358, 359 of text)

  15. With pictography:

  16. VI. ADDITIONAL THERAPY STRATEGIES

  17. Cloze response** Leave out a word, child has to finish sentence Brown Bear Brown Bear What do You See is great for this Very Hungry Caterpillar

  18. Use props** Puppets Flannel graph Velcro pictures

  19. Remember Simons Cat videos

  20. Roll the dice (story cubes) and create a story!

  21. Cohen-Minran et al. An activity-based language Early Childhood Education Journal, 44, 69-78. ** This retrospective study examined the effect of small- group intervention with 220 Hebrew-speaking children ages 3-5 years They were Israeli and low-income and had low language skills, especially vocabulary. Narrative skills were compromised also. The question: did children in the preschool program show greater increases than controls who didn t enroll in the program?

  22. Cohen-Minran et. al.:** (dont worry about numbers for the exam ) SLPs saw children in their classrooms in small groups once a week for 7 months Each classroom had 30-35 children, and they were divided into groups of 5-6 to work with the SLP 6 sessions per book (total of 3-5 books during the 7 months)

  23. Cohen-Minran et al.:

  24. Cohen-Minran et al. in sessions 3-6:

  25. Cohen-Minran et al.in each session, SLPs:

  26. Cohen-Minran et al. --In comparison to control group who did not enroll in the program, the experimental group:** Scored significantly higher on vocabulary measures and sentence imitation tasks

  27. Cohen-Minran et al.what worked?

  28. VII. IMPROVE VOCABULARY** The more words students understand and can retrieve, the better their narrative skills will be

  29. Levin et al. (2022). Evaluating the effect of rich vocabulary instruction and retrieval practice on the classroom vocabulary skills of children with DLD. Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 53, 542-560.** (review) In this study, they taught new vocabulary to 11 Swedish- speaking students with DLD (average age=14 years old). This was done in the students classrooms as part of their scheduled lessons in Swedish. They presented 20 Tier 2 words under 2 conditions

  30. Levlin et al. 2022 found that rich practice (RP) was most effective; RP is characterized by:** 1. Teacher summarized the gist of the story orally while presenting pictures supporting the main content. 2. Teacher read the story out loud while the text remained visible on the interactive board. 3. Teacher provided a detailed, student-friendly definition of the target word showing on the board. 4. Students had to answer multiple choice ?s

  31. Levlin et al. 2022 continuedRP:

  32. Work on inferencing:

  33. Class activitySynonyms--Verbs This activity helps us learn in more depth how to help students use rich practice and cloze activities to comprehend words in a story

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