social emotional foundations for early learning (sefel) training tips and resources

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Social Emotional Foundations for Early Learning (SEFEL) Training Tips and Resources. Summer Institute June 28, 2013. Welcome and Introductions. Objectives. Review a comprehensive model of professional development Learn presentation basics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Social Emotional Foundations for Early Learning (SEFEL)

Training Tips and Resources

Summer InstituteJune 28, 2013

Welcome and Introductions

Objectives

• Review a comprehensive model of professional development

• Learn presentation basics• Explore training materials for the content you

will use to train others • Explore different strategies to help you

organize your training program

Quality Professional Development is…

• Of considerable duration• Specific in content, not general theory• Participatory• Coherent• Relevant

Comprehensive Professional Development Model

Different Levels of PD Approaches and Impact on Adult Learning

Planning YOUR SEFEL Training

SEFEL Content Areas

Stakeholders’ Input

Training Options:1. Train all Pre K Staff on TIER 1 & 2

(Relationships, Environments, & Targeted Supports)

2. Train-Coach-Train(With targeted classrooms)

3. Train-Coach-Train(with all staff in a Professional Learning Community)

Train All Pre K Staff on TIER 1 & 2

• Process agenda for Days 1-2• PPT and handouts posted on our

website• But don’t stop there!– Explore resources on TACSEI, CSEFEL, and

Iowa websites

CSEFEL Resourceshttp://csefel.vanderbilt.edu/http://csefel.vanderbilt.edu/resources/training_preschool.html

TACSEI Resourceshttp://www.challengingbehavior.org/

Iowa Resourceshttps://iastate.box.com/s/9rg5sxh5mfh43da7e05k

Iowa Train-Coach-Train

• With targeted classrooms as part of coaching• With all staff in a Professional

Learning Community

• Train-Coach-Trainhttps://iastate.box.com/s/9rg5sxh5mfh43da7e05k

• Coaching Resourceshttps://iastate.box.com/s/xo5xr17eblvwscu0dxq2

• Trainer Resourceshttps://iastate.box.com/s/05r1pkiszxq4k87hw8gj

Facebook

• https://www.edmodo.com• Join Edmodo• Create a profile• Join the CEFEL Group

Group Code: ebwmgm

TO JOIN: You will need to return an e-mail with the subject line, SEFEL Listserv, To: Dave Sanel at david.sanel@unc.edu Include the following in the body of the e-mail:NameTitleOrganizationE-MailWork Phone

SEFEL ListServ

Guiding Questionsfor Planning SEFEL Training

• Who is your audience• How many training sessions• Who are the presenters • What resources are available• Where will training occur• Time frame• Technical supports• Anticipated challenges and solutions

Break

Three Key Components of a Presentation

Presentation

Speaker

Audience

Content

Exceptional Presenters

Are they born that way?

What percentage of people say their #1 fear is death?

19%

What percentage of people say their #1 fear is public speaking?

41%

Small Group Activity

• If you a beach vacation person:– Think of a presenter you recently heard that you

enjoyed• If you a mountain vacation person:– Think of a presenter you recently heard that you did

NOT enjoy • Take a minute to write a few characteristics of

the presenter that you are thinking about• Compare notes at your table

Speaker

Everyone is looking at me

Combating Nerves

• Be prepared• Use adrenaline to help

focus• Pause• Collect your thoughts• Breathe!

Non-Verbal Communication

• Gestures• Posture• Facial expression• Voice

93% of communication is based on non-verbals!

First Impressions

• 7% based on what is said• 38% based on style of speech• 55% based on body language

Mehrabian, A. (1968). Communication without words. Psychology Today, 2 (9), 52-55.

Eye Contact

To Sit or Stand?

Standing is 43% more persuasive

Communicate Passion!

Verbal Communication:Paint a Picture

Good Storytelling

• Under 2 minutes• Less is better • Related to your topic• Focus on a few

points

…Ok? …right?…see?

Sort of

maybe I think

Kind ofum

You know?

Like

Verbal Graffiti

Cover Up Graffiti

• Be aware• Recognize patterns• Anticipate• Pause

Try humor… carefully

Using notes?

Activity• Watch TED Talk video• Look for:–Non-verbal Communication– Eye Contact–Passion– Telling A Story–Use of Humor

Lunch

Three Key Components of a Presentation

Presentation

Speaker

Audience

Content

Is your audience engaged?

Activity

• Think of a presentation/meeting you recently conducted

• How did you know if your audience was– Engaged?–Not engaged

• At your table, compare notes

Handle your Audience

• Typical adult attention span (retention) is about 20 minutes

• 90/20/8 –Duration less than 90 minutes–Change pace at least every 20 minutes–Audience participates every 8 minutes

Audience Questions

• Can be clarifying, information seeking• Can be challenging

General Questions

• Answer group versus individual• Keep to your objectives• Move forward, maintain eye contact• Active listening• Correct inaccuracies• If you don’t know… find out

Handling Challenging Questions• Pause• Indicate topic will be addressed later• Open the question to the group• Ask a question• Clarify the question• Take a break

Technology Break

How To Handle Technology

Three Key Components of a Presentation

Presentation

Speaker

Audience

Content

“Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.”

Leonardo da Vinci

Presentation Zen

Reduce text on slides to absolute minimum – Minimum 24 point font– Maximum 2 different fonts– Use upper and lower case– 6 words, on 6 lines

http://www.garrreynolds.com/Presentation/pdf/presentation_tips.pdf

One Main Idea Per Slide

If it’s complicated…

• break it up • into 2-3 different slides• assuming no side-by-side comparison is

needed

Activity

Critique the next slide:1. How many slides should it be?2. How’s the font?3. How many words should it be?4. How should you re-design it?

Practical Implications for Better PowerPoint Presentations

• Presentations must be both verbal & visual• Too much slide information overloads people’s

cognitive systems• Can your visuals be understood in 3 seconds?

If not, redesign them to support your talk• Slide design & delivery must help people

organize, integrate information

Break

People Learn Better When…

How We Process Information

1. Through dual channels

2. With limited capacity

3. Actively!

Dual Channels

We have separate information processing channels– For visual material – For verbal material

Limited Capacity

People pay attention to • a few pieces of information • in each channel • at a time

Active Processing

People understand when they• pay attention to relevant material• organize it into a coherent mental

structure• integrate it with prior knowledge

Rich Mayer, in an interview with Sociable Media, Inc.

People Learn Better When…

Effects of Multimedia on Learning

• Modality Principle

• Redundancy Principle

• Coherence Principle

Modality Principle

People learn better when…• words are presented as narration • NOT text!

Redundancy Principle

People learn better from…• Narration and graphics• NOT narration, graphics, and text

Coherence Principle

People learn better when…• Extraneous material is excluded

Activity

How does the next slide and narration meet the• Modality principle?• Redundancy principle?• Coherence principle?

Multimedia Effect

Wrap Up Activity

• Training Options• Resources• Three Components of a Presentation• How Adults Process Information• Effects of Multimedia on Learning

Questions & Comments

Your Turn……

Go forth

and train

on SEFEL

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