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July 18, 2023

Learning Reinforcement: The Best Way to Fight Learning Loss

Are your students forgetful, and their forgetfulness is driving you cRaZy?

If yes--read my previous post about The Forgetting Curve.  It will probably answer some questions you have.....

Obviously students forgetting taught information is NOT great for educators, BUT....there is a way to combat the forgetting curve.  Read about the FIVE ways to soften forgetfullness by reading The Forgetting Curve: Why Students Keep Forgetting and What Teachers Can Do About It!

Perhaps one of the biggest findings in Herman Ebbinghaus's original forgetting experiment was that re-engaging with material again and again, at spaced intervals leads to a dramatic reduction in forgetting.



So, as teachers, we need to design lessons where students are asked to re-retrieve information at spaced intervals.  Hello.....opportunities to respond (OTRs)! OTRs are an excellent way to help cement learning to memory.

Opportunities to respond is a teaching strategy that elicits students responses by posing questions or comments that provide students multiple occasions to answer (Cuticelli, Collier-Meek, & Coyne, 2016)

When you provide students with OTRs it makes learning:
  • Micro.  You are chunking and chewing content that has been delievered.  Students get time to digest and process taught information.
  • Interactive.  Students are involved in their learning
  • Reinforced.  Students are asked to answer, comment or complete an activity about what they are learning. 
Research tells us that teachers should provide 3-5 OTRs per minute for simple responses (verbal or gestural) and 1 OTR per minute when the OTR is more complex (think solving a multi-step math problem). For very complex tasks, like answering a prompt in writing, 1 OTR per 20 to 30 minutes is sufficient. (MacSuga-Gage & Simonsen, 2015).

Now, although an increase in OTRs is good....the goal should be quality OTRs over quantity. 




So, what might be some ways to get quality OTRs in your classroom?

Students should be: 

We will take a deep dive into the three types of OTRs in the preceeding blog posts!  So, stay tuned.  


In the meantime, take a look at this resource from Tennessee Behavior Supports Project at Vanderbuilt University  Or, this resource from the Institute of Education Sciences which is funded by the US Department of Education. 




References

MacSuga-Gage, A. & Simonsen, B. (2015). Examining the effects of teacherdirected opportunities to respond on student outcomes: A systematic review of the literature. Education and Treatment of Children, 38, 211-240.

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