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Explore the benefits and strategies of co-teaching in enhancing content reading for diverse student needs. Learn about co-teaching models, station teaching, and successful collaboration practices. Develop a shared vision and enhance instructional knowledge base.
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Impacting Content Reading With Co-Teaching Theresa Thompson – 5thGrade Teacher Eastside Elementary – January 2010 tthompso@rps.k12.ar.us Doris Plitt – ESOL Facilator Eastside Elementary – January 2010 dplitt@rps.k12.ar.us
Objectives: • At the conclusion of this workshop participants will be able to: • define co-teaching • recognize the importance of co-teachers having common instructional beliefs and a shared vision • identify incentives for teachers and students related to co-teaching implementation • identify the student benefits of using station teaching
Co-teaching is… …where two or more teachers share teaching responsibilities within a general education classroom. …when both teachers interact with all the students at different times. …using various arrangements of students and group sizes, so each student’s educational potential is recognized. …when co-teachers are jointly committed to “our” students, not “yours” or “mine”.
Benefits of Co-Teaching • For teachers: • Develops an appreciation for diversity • Creates an awareness of the importance of direct individualized instruction and provides an opportunity for it to occur. • Enhances instructional knowledge base • Stimulates collaborative problem-solving skills • Develops teamwork skills while increasing professional dialogue • Increases ways of creatively addressing challenges • Resources are shared • More fun teaching with someone!
Benefits of Co-Teaching • For students: • develop respect for differences • create a sense of belonging • enable development of friendships • develop empathetic skills • provide peer models • motivate students to become active learners through frequent interaction and feedback • reduces teacher-pupil ratio
Co-teaching Models • One Teach, Support One • Alternative Teaching • Parallel Teaching • Station Teaching • Team Teaching
Station Teaching • Teachers divide instructional content into several segments and present the content in separate stations around the classroom. • Students are divided into four groups: two independent stations and two teacher-led stations.
Conditions for Success • Collaborate daily • - develop and maintain trust • - believe in the benefits • - use each other’s strengths • Group students effectively • Protect co-planning time and respect the schedule • Communicate successes, areas needing work, and vision • Reflect on strengths and weaknesses of lesson
Planning for Stations What is the grade level content objective? What challenges do we face? How many stations? Are ESL and SPED requirements being met? Individual needs? Scheduling? What will each teacher be responsible for teaching? Procedures for movement and noise? Grouping strategies?
Reading Nonfiction Teacher instructs on nonfiction features using Weekly Reader. Independent Group 2 Writing Response Teacher instructs on geography and history. Independent Group 1 Math lesson
TLI Practice – Nonfiction Text Teacher instructs how to write to open response Independent Group: BrainPop: Tecumseh biography video, graphic organizer, and quiz. Teacher instructs how to answer MC questions with QAR Independent Group: Timeline of biography with questions.
Reflections: “Were the big ideas identified accurately?” “Were the areas of difficulty predicted accurately?” “Were the objectives met at each station?” “Was station teaching the right choice for instruction?” “What would we do differently next time?” “What is the student response at each station?”
“Children who learn together, learn to live together.” “They can because they think they can”-Virgil, Roman epic poet (70 BC -19 BC) “Teach them well and let them lead.”
Objectives: • At the conclusion of this workshop participants will be able to: • define co-teaching • recognize the importance of co-teachers having common instructional beliefs and a shared vision • identify incentives for teachers and students related to co-teaching implementation • identify the student benefits of using station teaching
Resources: http://www.arkansased.org Rosario, B., Coles, C., Redmon, P., Strawbridge, J. (2003). Co-teaching in the classroom. Prince George’s County Schools. Hawbaker, B., Kohler, F., Miller, K., Co-teaching. (2000). Price Laboratory School at the University of Northern Iowa. Echevarria, J., Short, D., Vogt, M., (2008). Making Content Comprehensible for English Learners The SIOP Model. Pearson, Allen and Bacon.