Friday, November 03, 2023

Neurodiversity - chunking is a simple hack: great for academic skill acquisition - with Dora Roimata Lngsbury - Ara / Te Pūkenga

 Notes from a lunchtime session with Dora Roimata Langsbury, Kaiako Ako - academic learning support. She presented this paper at the recent Neuroability symposium conference in Dunedin. 

Focused on supporting written assessments in this iteration of her presentation. Began by sharing her background - where she was diagnosed with dyslexia when she first started at Teachers College to train as a primary school teacher. Introduced the 8 steps for writing an assessment and then went through each one with strategies at each to support neurodiversity.

Summarised some of the concepts from the book 'Studying with Dyslexia' by Janet Goodwin - 2012. Then shared student perspectives to support these concepts.

Then went through the importance of time management for all students. Need to be clear so students create a doable timetable that includes sufficient study time. Working backwards from assessment targets is also helpful.

Ensure students understand the question, Sometimes learners need help to deconstruct the instructions and to understand the connections between the assessment and the marking rubric. All a lot of text and helping learners break down the larger task into smaller chunks helps learners focus and not be overwhelmed.

Then help students create a writing plan. Help them keep one main idea per paragraph with the structure of topic sentence, supporting ideas, example and then a linking sentence to the next paragraph. 

The next step is to help them bring about a research plan to help them gather the literature and select which parts are relevant.

Then introduced the need to help students attain notetaking/ paraphrasing skills. Students need to understand the role of each sentence, use words from questions to create sentence starters and use keywords from sources to complete the first draft of sentences. This helps build paragraphs and the whole assignment, one sentence at a time.

Reference/cite as you go or APA as you go by using an APA reference guide. There is a need to scaffold learners towards understanding how to use the guide as a way to ensure APA referencing is accurate.

Editing can be undertaken in 3 steps - sentence level, paragraph level and then proofreading and formatting. At sentence level, separate each with white space so that it is easier to 'switch and trim'. Paragraph editing is to check flow and linking and to map these to the marking guide. The proof 'clean' read makes easier to see the small errors. 

Shared the impact on students of using the above framework and also how the 'tuakana teina' or 'older brother/sister with younger brother/sister' peer learning which is framed with attaining the 8 steps have improved engagement, learning and outcomes for learners. 

Q & A followed from an interested audience.


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