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EXPLICIT TEACHING
FRAMEWORK
DR. PORTIA P. PADILLA
Professor, University of the Philippines
Dep-Ed consultant of the K to 12 Basic Education Program

from the files of Nemah Hermosa, Dina Ocampo, Portia


Padilla, and various sources
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Objectives
After this session, you will be able to:
•Identify the different components or steps in
explicit teaching
•Express appreciation for activities that help
develop grammar and oral language
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Priming Activity: (5-8 minutes)
Direction:
1. Work in 4 groups/by Division.
Brainstorm among yourselves on
some words that come into your
mind when you hear the phrase
“Explicit Instruction.”
2. Write these words in meta strips
then post it/paste in the manila
paper .
3. Post your group output.
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ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION


PRESENTATION OF OUTPUT:(10-15 MINUTES)
Present Selected Group Outputs.
Note Similarities And Differences in the Group Outputs.

Similarities Differences
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Please note down the activities that the teacher had


for each part of the lesson.

PARTS ACTIVITIES
OBSERVED
1. Introduction
2. Modeling
3. Guided Practice
4. Group Practice
5. Independent Practice
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LECTURE-DEMO
IN

EXPLICIT TEACHING
VIDEO
TAHASANG PAGTUTURO SA GRAMATIKA
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Please note down the activities that the teacher had


for each part of the lesson

PARTS ACTIVITIES
OBSERVED
1. Introduction
2. Modeling
3. Guided Practice
4. Group Practice
5. Independent Practice
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QUESTIONS:
1. How did the teacher introduce the lesson?
2. How did the teacher model the target skills for his
students?
3. What was the first activity which allowed his students to
practice the skill?
4. How did he provide guidance and feedback?
5. Did the drawing and writing activity enable the teacher
to assess her students’ learning?
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VIDEO
PRESENTATION PORTIA P. PADILLA
Professor, University of the Philippines
Dep-Ed consultant of the K to 12 Basic Education Program
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In her lecture, she will present to us :

1. What is explicit instruction?


2. Why do we teach explicitly?
3. How do we teach explicit instruction?

Please take note of the important


considerations for each component of the
lesson

VIDEO PRESEN
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POST VIDEO DISCUSSION:

1. Do you agree or disagree with the statement.


“Explicit Instruction is best for teaching
beginning reader only” Why or Why not?
2. What is scaffolding? and Why is it important
in Explicit Teaching?
3. Based on what you have watched and heard,
How do you plan to modify your instruction or
Teaching Practice when you go back to your
classroom?
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Input/ Presentation of slides

What do you know about…


EXPLICIT
INSTRUCTION?
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Explicit Instruction

•explicit teaching
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Explicit Instruction
teaching focused on producing specific learning
outcomes through a sequence of supports
provided to students, until they can do things
independently and successfully done by
consciously directing student
attention toward the focus and the
purpose of the lesson, and how it
begins, progresses, and concludes.
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Rationale for Explicit Instruction in


Literacy Development

•Excellent reading teachers influence students’


learning.

–These teachers do explicit instruction.


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What does Excellent


Reading Teachers Do?
•Tell students what will be learned.
•Provide information about the nature of the
skill or strategy to be learned.
•Demonstrate or model the desired skill or
strategy.
•Actively monitor and give feedback to students
during practice work.
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What Excellent Reading


Teachers Do
•Provide ways for students to assess their own
performance so they learn to self-monitor.

•Provide meaningful practice using a skill or


strategy until a student can use it
independently.
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Rationale for Explicit


Instruction in Literacy
Development
•Young learners need it.
–They have to be ably supported by the teacher
in their search for meaning as they learn,
especially when they are learning to read in a
language not their own.
–They need more direct instruction in skills and
strategies.
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In explicit instruction, you provide explicit


instructional talk that enables students to know
what is actually going on
in the lesson.
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You don’t make the students guess what the


lesson is, why, and how they should learn
it.

You let them in on the BIG


SECRET.
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Guide Questions
•Do I plan tasks and activities for clear and
well-defined learning objectives?

•How do I introduce the objectives to the


students?

•Is the new learning made explicit to them?


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•Do I share the specific nature of the task, the


reason for learning it, and its value to their
overall learning?

•Do I make them aware of what they are


expected to do?

•Do I explicitly demonstrate and model the


new skill or strategy?
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•Do I provide sufficient opportunity for


practice?

•Do I give them the chance to apply what


they have learned outside class?
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Steps in Explicit Instruction


1.Introduction (sometimes,
“Presentation”)

Directly tell the students


•What they are expected to learn
•How it connects to what they already
know
•How it relates to their previous lesson
•What the purpose is
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–Remember yesterday when we read/ talked


about...Today we will learn...
–Today we are going to study…This is
connected to…It is important to learn this
because…
–By the time we have finished, you will be
good/better at…Then you will be able to…
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2. Teaching/Modeling
•Explain to the students how they are going to
learn the skill
•Show or demonstrate how the process goes

Note: Adopt a positive approach in teaching.


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Explaining the Task to Students


•Divide the task into a few basic steps.
•Directly tell them how many steps are
involved.
•Present the steps both orally and visually to
provide reinforcement.
•State the steps as clearly as possible.
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Demonstrating the Task to


Students
•Tell the students that listening and observation
are significant to their success in the task.
•Perform whatever is involved in the learning
task in a manner you expect your students to do
it.
•Follow the steps you have previously
explained. Think aloud as you do each.
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3. Guided Practice
•Provide students with multiple opportunities
for the practice of the newly learned skill or
strategy until independence is attained.
•Use variety, but give adequate support

(yourself or with the aid of each other).


•By groups, pairs, or individually
•Games, dramatic play, and other interesting
activities
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4. Independent Practice

• Give the students more responsibility to try


out the new skill or strategy on their own.

• Some lessons may stop here because this


part could have an application-like feature.
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5. Application / Evaluation

•Make the students use the new skill or


strategy in new tasks, in and outside your
class.
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Important Reminder!!!
• The core of explicit instruction is
the teaching/modeling of a skill
or strategy by the teacher.
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• Teachers’ responsibility for the


learning gradually decreases
as students become better and
more independent in the use
of the new skill or strategy.
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• Each of the steps may have to be


repeated until students have a
thorough understanding of the
new skill or strategy.
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6. Now, go over the lesson plan to find out if


your notes are right.
7. What are your thoughts? questions?
comments?
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WORKSHOP/APPLICATION (60 MINUTES)

Working in Groups of 4, Have each Group write


A Lesson Plan showing how The Explicit
Teaching Framework can be Applied in a
Grammar or Oral Language Lesson.
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Lesson Plan Template
Grade Level______ No. of Students in class______
Subject: ___________ Students L1 _______________

I. Objective/s
II. Selection/ Materials:
III. Procedure:
A. Introduction
B. Teaching /Modeling
C. Guided Practice
D. Group Practice
E. Independent Practice
“Success doesn’t necessarily come
from breakthrough innovation, But
from flawless execution. A Great
strategy alone won’t win a game or a
battle; The win comes from basic
blocking and tackling”.

Naveen Jean
N K
H A
T O U
Y And
GOD
BLESS

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