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Know WHAT We Teach. Know WHO We Teach. “Our best understanding of how people learn is that they begin with past knowledge, understanding, and skill and extend those to new levels of complexity or sophistication . . Image from: creative commons (public domain).
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“Our best understanding of how people learn is that they begin with past knowledge, understanding, and skill and extend those to new levels of complexity or sophistication. Image from: creative commons (public domain)
Further, we learn best when the work we do is a little too hard for us. Image from: Creative Commons
What that means is that we have a sense of what the task calls for and the gaps in our capacity to do what it asks of us. Image from: Creative Commons
When these gaps are not present (in other words, when we can do a task effortlessly) we do not learn because we do not stretch what we already know. Image from: www.flickr.com/photos/medilldc/5489375111/
Similarly, when the gaps are too great, we cannot span them and do not learn. Image From: www.flickr.com/photos/cayusa/
Learning takes place when we have to stretch a manageable amount and do so. photo by LinaMenazzi on Flickr
Readiness-based differentiation attempts to design student work at varied levels of challenge so that each student has to stretch a manageable amount and is supported in doing so.” Image from: www.flickr.com/photos/wfryer/1142207245/ From: Differentiation in Practice: A Resource Gide for Differentiating Curriculum by Carol Ann Tomlinson and Carolyn Cunningham Eidson
Compacting Condensing learning into a shorter time period.
Compacting Four Steps to Successful Compacting • Identify the learning objectives that all students must learn. • Offer a pretest opportunity if appropriate for subject. • Plan and offer curriculum extensions. • Eliminate all drill, practice, and review for students who show mastery.
Independent Study • Students choose their topic and product from a list. • Contract is signed by student, parent, and teacher. • Students are responsible for completing a work log. • All work is done during class time.
Flexible Grouping • A third grade math example Obj: develop concept of area Materials: TM 192-197; Math Masters 36 (10 copies) Procedure: 1. Mental Math; Math Message 2. MAD Minute 3. review concept of area (SRB 136) 4. estimate area of classroom 5. group work • Anchor activities (choice board)
Tiered Assignments • An example • Don’t try to reinvent the wheel • Get together and pool your thoughts and ideas • Talk to teachers above and below your grade level • NOT EVERYTHING needs to be tiered!
Most Difficult First • Choose the five most difficult problems. • Students may choose to work only those problems. • If they are able to complete them without missing more than one, they are done. • If they miss more than one, they need to complete the entire assignment.
Bloom’s Taxonomy Why find it and dust it off?
Think Dots • Steps: • Create six learning tasks for the numbers on the die. • List the tasks in a 2x3 cell table which include dots relating to the sides of a die. • Students roll the die and complete the learning task from the corresponding dot • If the first roll is something the student doesn’t want to do, s/he can roll a second time. Sources: Cubing/ThinkDOTS boe.ming.k12.wv.us/teachers/di/di_docs/strategies_cubing_think_dots/CubingThinkdotpp.ppt Defining US: Lewis & Clark Expedition http://chnm.gmu.edu/fairfaxtah/b80.html
Things to consider essential content respectful, challenging work give the opportunity to self-select tasks
For more information… • Debra_Sowers@swsd.k12.pa.usMelissa_Wilson@swsd.k12.pa.us • Pennsylvania Association for Gifted Education (PAGE)—www.giftedpage.org • www.hoagiesgifted.org • (just google) daretodifferentiate