Nakawē 10, 20, 30
Sample List of Strategies
Language Learning Strategies
Cognitive
- Listen attentively
- Perform actions to match the words of a song, story or rhyme
- Learn short rhymes or songs, incorporating new vocabulary or sentence patterns
- Imitate sounds and intonation patterns
- Memorize new words by repeating them silently or aloud
- Seek the precise term to express meaning
- Repeat words or phrases in the course of performing a language task
- Make personal dictionaries
- Experiment with various elements of the language
- Use mental images to remember new information
- Group together sets of things—vocabulary, structures—with similar characteristics
- identify similarities and differences between aspects of nēhiyawēwin and the English language
- Look for patterns and relationships
- Use previously acquired knowledge to facilitate a learning task
- Associate new words or expressions with familiar ones, either in nēhiyawēwin or English
- Find information, using reference materials such as dictionaries, textbooks, and grammars
- Use available technological aids to support language learning; (e.g., recorders, computers, CD –ROMs)
- Use word maps, mind maps, diagrams, charts or other graphic organizers to make information easier to understand and remember
- Place new words or expressions in a context to make them easier to remember
- Use induction to generate rules governing language use
- Seek opportunities in and outside of class to practise and observe
- Perceive and note down unknown words and expressions, noting also their context and function
Metacognitive
- Check copied writing for accuracy
- Make choices about how you learn
- Rehearse or role-play language
- Decide in advance to attend to the learning task
- Reflect on learning tasks with the guidance of the teacher
- Make a plan in advance about how to approach a language learning task
- Reflect on listening, speaking, viewing, representing, reading and writing process
- Decide in advance to attend to specific aspects of input
- Listen or read for key words
- Evaluate their own performance or comprehension at the end of a task
- Keep a learning checklist
- Experience various methods of language acquisition and identify one or more they consider particularly useful personally
- Be aware of the potential of learning through direct exposure to the language
- Know how strategies may enable them to cope with texts containing unknown elements
- Identify problems that might hinder successful completion of a task and seek solutions
- Monitor their own speech and writing to check for persistent errors
- Be aware of their own strengths and weaknesses, identify their own needs and goals, and organize their strategies and procedures accordingly
Social/Affective
- Initiate or maintain interaction with others
- Participate in shared reading experiences
- Seek the assistance of a friend to interpret a text
- Understand that making mistakes is a natural part of language learning
- Reread familiar self-chosen texts to enhance understanding and enjoyment
- Work cooperatively with peers in small group
- Experiment with various forms of expression, not their acceptance or non-acceptance by more experienced speakers
- Participate actively in conferencing and brainstorming as a pre and post writing exercise
- Use self talk to make themselves feel competent to do the task
- Be willing to take risks, try unfamiliar tasks and approaches
- Repeat back new worlds and expressions which occur in conversations in which they participate, make use of them soon as appropriate
- Reduce anxiety by using mental techniques, such as positive self-talk or humour
- Work with others to solve problems, get feedback on tasks
- Provide personal motivation by arranging rewards for themselves when successful
Language Use Strategies Interactive
- Use words from own first language to get meaning across, e.g., use a literal translation of a phrase in the first language, use a first language word but pronounce it as in the second language
- Acknowledge being spoken to
- Interpret and use a variety of nonverbal clues to communicate, e.g., mime, pointing, gestures, drawing pictures
- Indicate lack of understanding verbally or nonverbally, e.g., kēkwāy ōma? (What is this?), kēkwāy anima? (What is that?), blank look or shoulder shrug
- Ask for clarification or repetition when you do not understand, e.g., kika-kaskihtān cī-pē-wīcihin cī? (Can you come help me?)
- Use other speakers’ words in subsequent conversations
- Assess feedback from a conversation partner to recognize when a message has not been understood, e.g., raised eyebrows, blank look, shoulder shrug
- Start again, using a different tactic, when communication breaks down use a simple word similar to the concept to convey and invite correction, e.g., nēhiyawē (speak Cree “you” singular), nēhiyawēk (speak Cree “you” plural), nēhiyawētān (Let’s speak Cree “you sg/pl and me”)
- Invite others into the discussion
- Ask for confirmation that a form used is correct
- Use a range of fillers and hesitation devices to sustain conversations
- Use circumlocution to compensate for lack of vocabulary
- Repeat part of what someone has said to confirm mutual understanding
- Summarize the point reached in a discussion to help focus the talk
- Ask follow-up questions to check for understanding, e.g., tānisi? (how?) tānispīhk? (when?) tānēhki? (why?) tāniyikohk? (how much?) tānisi animal kā-ki-isi-itōtaman? What is it you are doing?)
- Use suitable phrases to intervene in a discussion
- Self-correct if errors lead to misunderstandings
Interpretive
- Use gestures, intonation and visual supports to aid comprehension
- Make connections between texts on the one hand, and prior knowledge and personal experience on the other
- Use illustrations to aid reading comprehension
- Determine the purpose of listening
- Listen or look for key words
- Listen selectively based on purpose
- Make predictions about what you expect to hear or read based on prior knowledge and own experience
- Use knowledge of the sound – symbol system to aid reading comprehension
- Infer probable meanings of unknown words or expressions from contextual clues
- Prepare questions or a guide to note down information found in the text
- Use key content words or discourse features to follow an extended text
- Reread several times to understand complex ideas
- Summarize information gathered
- Assess own information needs before listening, viewing or reading
- Use skimming and scanning to locate key information in texts
Productive
- Mimic what the teacher says
- Use nonverbal means to communicate
- Copy what others say or write
- Use words that are visible in the immediate environment
- Use resources to increase vocabulary
- Use familiar repetitive patterns from stories, songs or rhymes
- Use illustrations to provide detail when producing own texts
- Use various techniques to explore ideas at the planning stage, such as brainstorming or keeping notebooks or logs of ideas
- Use knowledge of sentence patterns to form new sentences
- Be aware of and use steps of the writing process: prewriting (gathering ideas, planning the text, researching, organizing the text), writing revision (rereading, moving pieces of text, rewriting pieces of text), correction (grammar, spelling, punctuation), publication (reprinting, adding illustrations, binding)
- Use a variety of resources to correct texts, e.g., personal and commercial dictionaries, checklists, grammars
- Take notes when reading or listening to assist in producing own text
- Revise and correct final version of text
- Use circumlocution and definition to compensate for gaps in vocabulary
- Apply grammar rules to improve accuracy at the correction stage
- Compensate for avoiding difficult structures by rephrasing
General Learning Strategies Cognitive
- Classify objects and ideas according to their attributes, e.g., objects by colour, meat or plant eating animal
- Use models
- Connect what is already known with what is being learned
- Experiment with and concentrate on one thing at a time
- Focus on and complete learning tasks
- Write down key words and concepts in abbreviated form – verbal, graphic or numerical – to assist in the performance of learning tasks
- Use mental images to remember new information
- Distinguish between fact and opinion when using a variety of sources of information
- Formulate key questions to guide inquiry
- Make inferences, and identify and justify the evidence on which these inferences are based
- Use word maps, mind maps, diagrams, charts or other graphic representations to make information easier to understand and remember
- Seek information through a network of sources including libraries, the World Wide Web individuals and agencies
- use previously acquired knowledge or skills to assist with new learning tasks
Metacognitive
- Reflect on learning tasks with the guidance of the teacher
- Choose from among learning options
- Discover how own efforts can affect learning
- Reflect upon own thinking processes and how you learn
- Decide in advance to attend to learning tasks
- Divide an overall learning task into a number of subtasks
- Make a plan in advance about how to approach a task
- Identify own needs and interests
- Manage own physical working environment
- Keep learning journals, such as diaries or logs
- Develop criteria for evaluating own work
- Work with others to monitor own learning
- Take responsibility for planning, monitoring and evaluating learning experiences
Social/Affective
- Watch others’ actions and copy them
- Seek help from others
- Follow own natural curiosity and intrinsic motivation to learn
- Participate in cooperative group learning tasks
- Choose learning activities that enhance understanding and enjoyment
- Be encouraged to try, even though mistakes might be made
- Take part in group decision-making processes
- Use support strategies to help peers persevere at learning tasks, e.g., offer encouragement, praise, and ideas
- Take part in group problem-solving processes
- Use self-talk to feel competent to do tasks
- Be willing to take risks and try unfamiliar tasks and approaches
- Monitor own level of anxiety about learning tasks and take measures to lower it if necessary, e.g., deep breathing laughter
- Use social interaction skills to enhance group learning activities