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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260720T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260721T150000
DTSTAMP:20260407T065118
CREATED:20260326T133422Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260326T161742Z
UID:10000544-1784538000-1784646000@thewindwardinstitute.org
SUMMARY:The Science of Deep Reading: Morphology\, Syntax\, and Meaning-Making - Virtual Morning
DESCRIPTION:This two-day institute equips educators with the linguistic tools that go beyond phonics — giving students the vocabulary knowledge\, morphological awareness\, and decoding strategies they need to recognize multisyllabic words accurately\, read fluently\, and unlock meaning independently. \nPresenters: Alison Leveque PhD\, Dana Carr-Ford\, MA\, MsEd\, Kinjal Nicholls\, MA\nDate: July 20-21\, 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. (morning) ET\nLocation: Virtual\nAudience: 3-8\nCredits: NYCTLE credits – 3 hours per full-day workshop \nDay 1: Vocabulary\, Morphology\, and Multisyllable Word Reading  \nOn Day 1\, you’ll build a strong word-level foundation by exploring how vocabulary knowledge and morphological awareness — including the systematic study of prefixes\, suffixes\, and roots — help students decode multisyllabic words with confidence and unlock meaning across content areas. Leave with a toolkit of program agnostic frameworks and templates for vocabulary instruction in any content area. In the afternoon\, put learning into action by using those tools to plan a lesson that builds vocabulary routines\, supports comprehension\, and creates targeted opportunities for students to read and spell multisyllabic words fluently. \nKey Learning Objectives: \n\nexplain the role of vocabulary knowledge and morphological awareness in supporting accurate word recognition and deepening reading comprehension\nanalyze words using prefixes\, suffixes\, and roots to determine meaning and support decoding of multisyllabic words\napply instruction strategies to teach word parts\, including modeling\, guided practice\, and structured routines for word analysis\ndesign opportunities for students to read and spell multisyllabic words fluently\, integrating morphology-based decoding strategies\ndevelop a lesson plan that incorporates vocabulary instruction\, morphology routines\, and targeted fluency practices to strengthen both decoding and meaning-making\n\nDay 2: Bridging Word Level Skills to Text Comprehension \nBuilding directly on Day 1’s word-level foundation\, Day 2 connects vocabulary and morphology instruction to the comprehension processes students need to construct meaning from complex texts — including making inferences\, monitoring understanding\, and synthesizing information. You’ll leave with a clear framework for integrating decoding\, language\, and comprehension into a unified structured literacy approach\, along with comprehension scaffolds and strategies ready for immediate classroom use. In the afternoon\, develop a fully planned\, ready-to-implement lesson that includes specific teacher actions\, a student practice plan\, and exemplar student work to inform your feedback — so every student leaves your classroom a more strategic\, independent reader. \n Key Learning Objectives: \n\nexplain key comprehension processes\, including making inferences\, monitoring understanding\, and synthesizing information\, and their role in constructing meaning from complex text\napply explicit\, systematic instructional routines that support comprehension development\nintegrate word-level skills (vocabulary\, morphology\, multisyllabic decoding) into text-based instruction to strengthen overall comprehension\ndesign structured opportunities for student practice and discourse that promote active meaning-making and strategic thinking during reading\ndevelop and refine a comprehensive lesson plan that includes modeling of comprehension strategies\, aligned student tasks\, and exemplar student responses to guide feedback and assessment
URL:https://thewindwardinstitute.org/event/the-science-of-deep-reading-morphology-syntax-and-meaning-making-virtual-morning/
LOCATION:Westchester Lower School Campus\, 1275 Mamaroneck Avenue\, White Plains\, NY\, 10605\, United States
CATEGORIES:Summer Institutes,Workshops
ORGANIZER;CN="The Windward Institute":MAILTO:wi@thewindwardschool.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260720T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260721T150000
DTSTAMP:20260407T065118
CREATED:20260326T133455Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260326T161532Z
UID:10000542-1784538000-1784646000@thewindwardinstitute.org
SUMMARY:The Science of Deep Reading: Morphology\, Syntax\, and Meaning-Making - In-Person Full Day
DESCRIPTION:This two-day institute equips educators with the linguistic tools that go beyond phonics — giving students the vocabulary knowledge\, morphological awareness\, and decoding strategies they need to recognize multisyllabic words accurately\, read fluently\, and unlock meaning independently. \nPresenters: Alison Leveque PhD\, Dana Carr-Ford\, MA\, MsEd\, Kinjal Nicholls\, MA\nDate: July 20-21\, 9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. (afternoon) ET\nLocation: In-Person\nAudience: 3-8\nCredits: NYCTLE credits – 5 hours per full-day workshop \nDay 1: Vocabulary\, Morphology\, and Multisyllable Word Reading  \nOn Day 1\, you’ll build a strong word-level foundation by exploring how vocabulary knowledge and morphological awareness — including the systematic study of prefixes\, suffixes\, and roots — help students decode multisyllabic words with confidence and unlock meaning across content areas. Leave with a toolkit of program agnostic frameworks and templates for vocabulary instruction in any content area. In the afternoon\, put learning into action by using those tools to plan a lesson that builds vocabulary routines\, supports comprehension\, and creates targeted opportunities for students to read and spell multisyllabic words fluently. \nKey Learning Objectives: \n\nexplain the role of vocabulary knowledge and morphological awareness in supporting accurate word recognition and deepening reading comprehension\nanalyze words using prefixes\, suffixes\, and roots to determine meaning and support decoding of multisyllabic words\napply instruction strategies to teach word parts\, including modeling\, guided practice\, and structured routines for word analysis\ndesign opportunities for students to read and spell multisyllabic words fluently\, integrating morphology-based decoding strategies\ndevelop a lesson plan that incorporates vocabulary instruction\, morphology routines\, and targeted fluency practices to strengthen both decoding and meaning-making\n\nDay 2: Bridging Word Level Skills to Text Comprehension \nBuilding directly on Day 1’s word-level foundation\, Day 2 connects vocabulary and morphology instruction to the comprehension processes students need to construct meaning from complex texts — including making inferences\, monitoring understanding\, and synthesizing information. You’ll leave with a clear framework for integrating decoding\, language\, and comprehension into a unified structured literacy approach\, along with comprehension scaffolds and strategies ready for immediate classroom use. In the afternoon\, develop a fully planned\, ready-to-implement lesson that includes specific teacher actions\, a student practice plan\, and exemplar student work to inform your feedback — so every student leaves your classroom a more strategic\, independent reader. \n Key Learning Objectives: \n\nexplain key comprehension processes\, including making inferences\, monitoring understanding\, and synthesizing information\, and their role in constructing meaning from complex text\napply explicit\, systematic instructional routines that support comprehension development\nintegrate word-level skills (vocabulary\, morphology\, multisyllabic decoding) into text-based instruction to strengthen overall comprehension\ndesign structured opportunities for student practice and discourse that promote active meaning-making and strategic thinking during reading\ndevelop and refine a comprehensive lesson plan that includes modeling of comprehension strategies\, aligned student tasks\, and exemplar student responses to guide feedback and assessment
URL:https://thewindwardinstitute.org/event/the-science-of-deep-reading-morphology-syntax-and-meaning-making-in-person-full-day/
LOCATION:Westchester Lower School Campus\, 1275 Mamaroneck Avenue\, White Plains\, NY\, 10605\, United States
CATEGORIES:Summer Institutes,Workshops
ORGANIZER;CN="The Windward Institute":MAILTO:wi@thewindwardschool.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260720T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260723T150000
DTSTAMP:20260407T065118
CREATED:20260326T133224Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260406T150752Z
UID:10000545-1784538000-1784818800@thewindwardinstitute.org
SUMMARY:Math Institute: Building Structure\, Fluency\, and Mathematical Reasoning
DESCRIPTION:Adaptable to your schedule!  \nJoin us for this four-day institute with leading researchers in math instruction. Create a personalized learning experience by attending a single session or the full institute. \nDates: July 20-23\, 9:00 am- 12:00 pm EST\nLocation: Virtual\nCredits: NYCTLE credits – 3 hours per workshop \n  \nDay 1: Mathematics Vocabulary: What do words have to do with it? \nPresenter: Elizabeth Stevens\, PhD \nDescription:\nMathematics vocabulary can be challenging for students\, especially those with mathematics difficulty\, because so many terms carry multiple meanings both across subjects and within math itself. Yet research consistently shows that strong math vocabulary is tightly linked to stronger math performance\, making it essential for helping students communicate their thinking\, make sense of word problems\, and engage confidently with new content. This session invites teachers to dig into the complexity of math language\, explore different types of vocabulary\, and understand why using precise terms (like numerator instead of “top number”) truly matters. Educators will learn how to identify high‑impact words using a database of critical math terms\, and learn five practical instructional routines designed to make vocabulary instruction more powerful and engaging. Through hands‑on practice\, collaborative planning\, and ready‑to‑use digital resources\, teachers will leave equipped to strengthen students’ mathematical language and elevate classroom discourse. \nKey Learning Objectives: \n\nExplain why mathematics vocabulary knowledge supports understanding of mathematics concepts\nExplain how to prioritize terms for instruction\nIdentify and learn practices for teaching and reviewing mathematics vocabulary\nPlan ways to implement and apply content learned in your instructional setting (e.g.\, classroom\, small group\, coaching)\n\n  \n Day 2: A Structured Approach to Solve Addition Math Word Problems \nPresenter: Elizabeth Hughes\, PhD \nDescription:\nThis session introduces participants to the principles of schema-based instruction\, an approach that helps students make sense of word problems by recognizing underlying mathematical structures rather than relying on superficial keywords. We will explore the major additive problem types\, including join\, separate\, part–part–whole\, and compare\, and discuss how to guide students in identifying these structures across varied contexts. Participants will learn how to use visual models to represent thinking\, support problem comprehension\, and strengthen conceptual understanding. The session will also include a brief introduction to worked examples as an effective tool for building clarity and reducing cognitive load as students internalize problem schemas. \nKey Learning Objectives: \n\nunderstand what schema-based instruction is and why it supports deeper mathematical comprehension\nidentify and explore the four major additive problem types\ngain strategies for helping students recognize problem structure rather than relying on keywords\ngain practical ways to use visual models to represent thinking and support problem-solving\nexplore how worked examples can build conceptual clarity and reduce cognitive load for learners\n\n  \nDay 3: The Power of Structure: Understanding Multiplicative Thinking \nPresenter: Jonté Meyers\, PhD \nDescription:\nThis session will deepen participants’ understanding of multiplicative reasoning and how it differs fundamentally from additive reasoning. We will explore key multiplicative structures\, including equal groups\, comparison situations using “times as many\,” arrays and fundamental differences\, rate problems\, to build a solid conceptual foundation. Participants will examine how students form composite units and why this shift in thinking is essential for fluent multiplication and division. The session will highlight a range of representations that make multiplicative structure visible\, supporting stronger reasoning and problem solving. Finally\, we will look at worked examples that clearly connect visual models to procedures\, helping learners internalize the logic behind efficient strategies. \nKey Learning Objectives: \n\nunderstanding how multiplicative reasoning fundamentally differs from additive reasoning\, and why this shift matters for students’ mathematical development\nfamiliarity with major multiplicative structures\, including equal groups\, “times as many” comparison problems\, arrays/area models\, and rate situations\ninsight into how learners build composite units and how to support this critical cognitive move\nstrategies for using representations that reveal multiplicative structure\, helping students see and make sense of relationships\nexplore worked examples that connect visual models to formal procedures\, building conceptual and procedural fluency\n\n  \nDay 4: The Science of Math: Turning Research into High-Impact Classroom Practices \nPresenter: Paul Riccomini\, PhD \nDescription:\nThis workshop covers spaced learning\, varied practice types\, and information recall\, three evidence-based methods to enhance student learning. Educators will receive frameworks and develop a clear understanding of the scientific principles underlying these approaches. Participants will examine cognitive processes that support long-term retention and acquire techniques to deepen students’ understanding and application of math knowledge. Through interactive activities and collaborative planning\, educators will learn to incorporate these strategies into mathematics instruction. \nKey Learning  \n\nexplain key cognitive processes related to memory and retention within math concepts\nidentify and understand the research supported techniques of Spaced learning\, Interleaved Practice\, and Practice Test Retrieval\nanalyze how retention strategies can vertically align with K–12 mathematics instruction\napply evidence-based techniques to authentic classroom scenarios by designing lesson components\, tasks\, and review routines\ngain a toolkit of instructional scaffolds that integrate into math lessons
URL:https://thewindwardinstitute.org/event/math-institute-building-structure-fluency-and-mathematical-reasoning/
CATEGORIES:Summer Institutes,Workshops
ORGANIZER;CN="The Windward Institute":MAILTO:wi@thewindwardschool.org
LOCATION:https://thewindwardschool-org.zoom.us/j/94228067578
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