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Co-teaching/Inclusion best practices. Current Knowledge level of Co-Teaching/Modified Inclusion. Whose students are they? Who gives the grade? How do we grade? Whose classroom management rules are used? What do we tell the students? What do we tell the parents
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Current Knowledge level of Co-Teaching/Modified Inclusion • Whose students are they? • Who gives the grade? • How do we grade? • Whose classroom management rules are used? • What do we tell the students? • What do we tell the parents • When is there time to co-plan?
Rationale: Why Co-Teaching • Benefits Students: • Develops respect for differences • Creates a sense of belonging • Improved self-esteem • Increased attention • Provides peer-models • Enables development of friendships • Benefits Teachers: • Enhances instructional knowledge base • Collaborative problem solving skills • Shared responsibility • More grouping options • Teamwork • Increased creativity • Awareness for individualized instruction
Rationale: Why Co-Teaching • Promotes a rigorous curriculum to all students • Appreciation for diversity • Positive academic and social benefits • Promotes civil rights for all students • Builds supportiveness within school building • Increases frequency to make AYP • Bedford Area and Everett School Districts
Jigsaw • You will be given a portion of a chapter from Marilyn Friend’s book “Co-Teach!: A Handbook for Creating and Sustaining Effective Classroom Partnerships in Inclusive Schools” • Your group will be assigned a co-teaching approach to read about. You may highlight, take notes, etc. • Your group will “teach” the rest of us about that approach.
Co-teaching Models Best practices for the five most effective
Team Teaching • Both teachers share instruction • One leads, one demonstrates • Blends two teaching styles from both teachers
Parallel Teaching Model • Class is divided in half • Teachers plan jointly and teach same subject matter to heterogeneous groupings at the same time • Lower student to teacher ratio • Increased interaction between student and teacher
Station Teaching • Material is divided into segments around the classroom • Both teachers share responsibility in presenting a lesson • Students can work independently at a third station • Grouped according to skill level
Alternative Teaching • One teacher works with larger group, one teacher works with smaller group • Smaller group provides enrichment or support • Teacher roles are shared • All students benefit from small group instruction
Wiki-Page • https://inclusion-strategies101.wikispaces.com/ • Resource for teacher to acquire information for successful implementation • Site used to collect feedback on inclusion practices • Collaborative environment for regular and special educators to respond confidentially
Ticket out the Door: • 3 Things You learned about Co-Teaching • 1. • 2. • 3. • 2 Questions you still have about Co-Teaching • 1. • 2. • 1 Model you would be open to trying in your classroom • 1.
Sources • "C0-Teaching." http://wik.ed.uiuc.edu/index.php/Co-Teaching. 30/12/2010. CTER, Web. 10 Feb 2010. <index2.php?reqstyleid=0&start=#>. • "Benefits of Co-Teaching."http://www.lucysmassanow.com/co%20teaching/BENEFITSOFCOteaching.pdf. 30/12/2004. Smassanow, Web. 10 Feb 2010. <index2.php?reqstyleid=0&start=#>. • "Team Teaching PowerPoint."https://www.dvusd.org/docs/StuSupportSvcs/Shared_Teaching.pdf. Web. 10 Feb 2010. <index2.php?reqstyleid=0&start=#>. • "Co-Teaching in the classroom."http://www.magonline.org/CoTeachingInTheClassroomREVMAGPresentation.pdf. Prince Georges County Public Schools, Maryland, Web. 10 Feb 2010. <index2.php?reqstyleid=0&start=#>. • Friend, Marilyn. Co-Teach: A Handbook for Creating and Sustaining Classroom Partnerships in Inclusive Schools. 1st. 211. Print.