Promoting Inclusion
Motivation and Affect
Attention and Memory
Study Skills
Grab Bag!
100
A school group or club that promotes the social acceptance of all students
What is Circle of Friends or Special Friends
100
Participation in an activity purely out of a desire to succeed or desire to contribute
What is intrinsic motivation
100
Examples include using direct appeal, using proximity, breaking up activities, allowing sufficient movement, providing student activities, using classroom peers to promote attention, providing direct consequences for attention, and teaching self-recording strategies
What are strategies for improving attention
100
Examples include using a planner, understanding schedules, using time schedules, and being organized for completing homework assignments.
What are self-management skills
100
Older students serve as tutors for younger, lower-functioning students
What is cross-age tutoring
200
One of the most widely studied and effective intervention strategies in education
What is peer tutoring
200
The degree to which students desire to succeed in school
What is motivation
200
Used to strengthen the connection between a new word and its associated information. Examples include keywords, pegwords, and letter strategies (such as acronyms and acrostics).
What is a mnemonic technique
200
Examples include having a class meeting with the librarian, organizing a scavenger hunt, and providing a library map.
What is teaching library skills
200
Examples include teacher praise, public recognition, and free time activities.
What is an intangible reward
300
A strategy in which students are assigned to small groups and work together to complete group activities
What is collaborative learning
300
Having confidence in one's own abilities
What is self-efficacy
300
A mnemonic strategy used for numbered or ordered information
What is the pegword method
300
Partial outlines for students to complete important details during lessons
What are guided notes
300
Arrange to take notes, write quickly, apply cues, review notes as soon as possible, edit notes
What is the AWARE strategy?
400
A Tier I RTI approach in which all student are divided into pairs who alternate roles of tutor and tutee to master basic skills
What is classwide peer tutoring
400
A student's emotional mood and personal feelings
What is affect
400
Information that is held briefly and then placed in long-term memory or forgotten
What is short-term memory
400
Modeling good homework/study habits and teaching assignment completion strategies
What are things that teachers can do to promote good homework/study habits?
400
Participation in an activity in anticipation of an external reward
What is extrinsic motivation
500
Students in the same grade who are more skilled in a particular area can tutor less-skilled students
What is same-age tutoring
500
Notion that students are less satisfied with their performance and less likely to undertake the same activity when rewards are too freely given
What is the overjustification effect
500
A communication tool that uses visual symbols to express knowledge, concepts, thoughts, or ideas, and the relationships between them. The main purpose is to provide a visual aid to facilitate learning and instruction.
What is a graphic organizer
500
Prepare your forms, record assignments and ask for clarification, organize the assignment, jump into it, engage in the work, check your work, and turn in your work on time
What is the PROJECT strategy?
500
A type of mnemonic strategy in which a word is created from each first letter arranged to make a sentence (e.g., "My Dear Aunt Sally" - Multiply and Divide before Adding and Subtracting)
What is an acrostic
M
e
n
u