On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
ST101: Direct Instruction
1. Classroom Instruction
...Name and define the specific events of
instruction that would be included in
your model of direct instruction and give
an example of a teacher behavior and a
student behavior for each event.
Developed by W. Huitt (1998)
2. Direct Instruction
In the U. S. the most often used measures of
student learning are scores on standardized
tests of basic skills.
Using this criteria as the desired student
outcome, one set of models, labeled direct or
explicit instruction (Rosenshine, 1995), has
developed overwhelming research support in
the past 25 years.
Rosenshine, B. (1995). Advances in research on instruction. The Journal of
Educational Research, 88(5), 262-268.
3. Direct Instruction
Rosenshine’s model of direct instruction includes
seven events (specific teacher or student activities):
1. Provide overview.
2. Review, checking previous day's work.
3. Present new content & skills.
4. Initial student practice, checking for
understanding, feedback & correctives.
5. Independent practice.
6. Frequent tests.
7. Homework; weekly and monthly reviews.
4. Direct Instruction
These are very similar to the events suggested
by Slavin (1994):
Slavin, R. (1994). Educational psychology (5th ed.). Boston: Allyn &
Bacon.
1. State learning objective and orient students.
2. Review prerequisites.
3. Present new material.
4. Conduct learning probes.
5. Provide independent practice.
6. Assess performance and provide feedback.
7. Provide distributed practice and review.
5. Direct Instruction
It should be noted that both Rosenshine and
Slavin, as well as other researchers such as
Gagne and Briggs (1979), Good and Grouws
(1979), and Hunter (1982) have looked at the
same research literature and generated
comparable, but different, models of direct
instruction.
Gagne, R., & Briggs, L. (1979). Principles of instructional design (2nd
ed.). New York: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston.
Good, T., & Grouws, D. (1979). The Missouri Mathematics
Effectiveness Project: An experimental study in fourth-grade classrooms.
Journal of Educational Psychology, 71, 355-362.
Hunter, M. (1982). Mastery teaching. El Sequndo, CA: TIP
Publications.
6. Direct Instruction
However, all of these models have a common
viewpoint that the teacher should be the focus
of the process of instruction.
The Transactional Model of Direct instruction,
an adaptation of a model developed by
Caldwell, Huitt & French (1981), focuses
additionally on the interactions of teachers and
students at each event of instruction.
Caldwell, J., Huitt, W., & French, V. (1981). Research-based classroom
modifications for improving student engaged time. In D. Helms, A.
Graeber, J. Caldwell, & W. Huitt (Eds.). Leader's guide for student
engaged time. Philadelphia: Research for Better Schools, Inc.
7. A Transactional Model of Direct Instruction
The transactional model includes four major
categories of instructional events:
• Presentation
• Practice
• Assessment & Evaluation
• Monitoring & Feedback
8. A Transactional Model of Direct Instruction
Each category includes specific events of
instruction that incorporates both a teacher
behavior and a student behavior for that event.
9. A Transactional Model of Direct Instruction
Presentation includes five events, three of which
are considered together in a subcategory labeled
“Overview.”
* Overview
• Explanation
• Demonstration
• Review
• What
• Why
10. Direct Instruction: Presentation
Provides an opportunity for
students to recall &/or examine
what they have already learned
in preparation for current
lesson
Focus on prerequisite skills and
concepts; check homework; link
the lesson to previous ones;
review the previous lesson
Overview: Review
Student
Teacher
11. Direct Instruction: Presentation
Presents the specific
concept(s) and skill(s) to be
learned
Read a stated objective for
the lesson; hear what the topic
of the lesson is; see what they
will be able to do at the end of
a lesson
Overview: What
Teacher
Student
12. Direct Instruction: Presentation
States a reason or a need for
learning the skill(s) or
concept(s)
See how the lesson is related to
the real world; relate the
lesson to their own interests;
discuss how the skill
or concept can be applied to
other
Overview: Why
Teacher
Student
13. Direct Instruction: Presentation
Develops or explains the
concepts and skills to be
learned
Hear an explanation; use
manipulative materials; have
class discussions; watch
videos; read explanations in
textbooks; interact with
computer
Explanation
Teacher
Student
14. Direct Instruction: Presentation
Probes students as to their
initial understanding of
concepts and skills
Answer teacher questions;
verbalize understandings;
model demonstrated
processes; generate examples
and non-examples of a concept
Demonstration
Teacher
Student
16. Direct Instruction: Practice
Closely supervises the students
as they begin to develop
increased proficiency by
completing one or two short
tasks at a time
Read a paragraph aloud;
complete one or two math
problems; complete an activity
on the board, while others do
the same activity at their seats
Guided Practice
Teacher
Student
17. Direct Instruction: Practice
Allows students to work with
little or no teacher
interaction
Complete seatwork
assignments; complete
homework assignments; play
games related to specific skills
or concepts
Independent Practice
Teacher
Student
18. Direct Instruction: Practice
Provides students opportunity
to have distributed practice on
previously covered content
and skills
Demonstrate retention of
previously learned concepts
and skills
Periodic Review
Teacher
Student
20. Direct Instruction: Assessment & Evaluation
Checks students work each
day and offers corrective
instruction as necessary
Complete independent
work at or above a given
level of proficiency
Daily Success
Teacher
Student
21. Checks students work at the
end of each unit of
instruction
Demonstrate knowledge and
application of concepts and
skills at or above a given level
of proficiency
Mastery
Teacher
Student
Direct Instruction: Assessment & Evaluation
22. Direct Instruction: Monitoring & Feedback
Monitoring and feedback also includes two
events:
• Cues and prompts
• Corrective feedback
23. Provides students with
signals and reminders
designed to sustain the
learning activity and to hold
students accountable
Attend to signals and/or
reminders continue working
on assigned activity
Cues & Prompts
Teacher
Student
Direct Instruction: Monitoring & Feedback
24. Tells students whether their
answers are correct or
incorrect and why
Read correct answers aloud;
write correct solutions to math
problems on board; support
answers to reading
comprehension questions by
reading aloud from the text
Corrective Feedback
Teacher
Student
Direct Instruction: Monitoring & Feedback
25. Direct Instruction
In general, all direct instruction models have the
following common principles:
• More teacher-directed instruction (>
50%) and less seatwork (< 50%)
• Active presentation of information (could
be by teacher, computer, another student)
•Clear organization of presentation
• Step-by-step progression from subtopic to
subtopic (based on task analysis)
26. Direct Instruction
In general, all direct instruction models have the
following common principles:
• Use many examples, visual prompts, and
demonstrations.
• Constant assessment of student understanding
(before, during and after the lesson).
• Alter pace of instruction based on assessment
of student understanding
• Effective use of time and maintaining
students' attention