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Differentiated Instruction & Technology-Day 1. Tuesday, February 26, 2013 Tippett Centre. Personal Action Planning. What specific learning goals do you have for this session? What specific areas would you like to focus on regarding DI & Technology ?
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Differentiated Instruction & Technology-Day 1 Tuesday, February 26, 2013 Tippett Centre
PersonalActionPlanning • What specific learning goals do you have for this session? • What specific areas would you like to focus on regarding DI & Technology? • What do you anticipate potentially learning from your colleagues in this session? • How do you think participating in today’s session will impact your teaching practice and the learning of your students?
Today’s Agenda • Personal Action Planning • Minds-On: Deck of Questions • CLC Overview • DI Overview • Vincent & Brandon • Consolidation: Revisit Personal Action Plans
Minds-On: Deck of Questions • Take a letter size paper and fold in half. • Fold in quarters. • Fold again to create eight equal sections. • Tear along folded region, to create 8 pieces. • On each piece, record a question you would not mind someone asking you. • Combine your deck of questions with a partner. Shuffle the deck and take turns asking each other questions. Remove questions once used.
CLCs 2012-13 • Using Technology to Deliver DI in the Secondary Science Classroom (Vincent & Brandon) • Cooperative Learning (Leila & Agnes) • Supporting Pathways-Chemistry (SCH4C) (Samina & Abdul) • 4) Digital Technology in Action (Roslyn Farmer & Ashlyn Young)
CLC Overview Professional Learning Cycle Day 1: Feb. 26 Day 2: March 27 (Tippett Centre) Day 3: April 18 (Exploration Classroom, CedarbraeC.I.) Day 4: May 7 (Peckham Centre) Act Plan Reflect Observe
The Professional Learning Cycle Act Plan Reflect Observe
Plan, Act, Observe, Reflect • Cycle is not static (active) • Learning happens when we are involved in activity • Strategies for continuous improvement • Improve student achievement & engagement
Plan, Act, Observe, Reflect An Example: • Plan-lesson plan (examine data/evidence) • Act- Execution of lesson to class • Observe-Observe students & collect information; moderated marking • Reflect-resolve differences, new approach?, offer possible solutions
Key Features of a DI Classroom Choice Respectful tasks based on curriculum Flexible grouping Shared Responsibility for Learning 11
TDSB Framework for Differentiation: The Teacher’s response to LEARNER NEEDS Guided by these DI principles: Respectful Tasks Quality Curriculum Flexible Groupings Continual Assessment Building Community According to a student’s: Readiness Interests Learning Profile Teachers can differentiate: Content Process Product Learning Environment 12 Adapted by the TDSB from The Differentiated Classroom : Responding to the Needs of All Learnersby C.A. Tomlinson, 1999
An instructional strategy is used intentionally by the teacher, sometimes with all students, to achieve a specific purpose. For example: the Exit Card – purpose is to find out students’ still-burning questions after the lesson. The Admit Slip - purpose is to determine students’ READINESS for the learning experience 14
A DI structureused in teaching formalizesCHOICEfor students based on their: 15
6 DI Structures that give choice in the products students create • Cubing • RAFT (GRASP) • Choice Board • Learning Centres • Tiered Instruction • Learning Contracts 16
Cubing • Use six-sided figure (cube): each face has a different task, question or image • Students roll the cube and complete the task on the “face” they’ve rolled • Excellent for tasks that involve different perspectives or aspects of a topic • A great way to give students different types and levels of questions to prompt thinking 17
RAFT • An acronym for Role, Audience, Format, Topic • Variations: GRASP (Science), DRAFT (History) • Students choose an option by reading across the grid to assume a role, audience to address, format in which to work, and the topic they will explore • Great for students’ interests (especially Topic and Role) and learning preferences (Format) • Readiness can be met by altering the difficulty of the topic or complexity of the format 18
What does it look like? In Science…
The RAFT • If we’re differentiating some aspect of students’ learning, then something must be the same for all so that we can evaluate students fairly, e.g.: • DIFFERENT • SAME • DIFFERENT 20
GRASP or GRASPS (Science) • GOAL • The goal of the person in the role (Overall Expectation) • ROLE • The role that the student undertakes • AUDIENCE • Who is the role person addressing? • SCENARIO • The situation that the person in the role finds themselves in • PRODUCT • What does the role person have to do/produce? • STANDARDS FOR SUCCESS
Choice Boards • Provides students with a choice of tasks. • Students select one or more tasks to complete • All choices address the same learning goal or expectation • Clear assessment criteria are established • Choices may be based on: • Learning preference/intelligence • interest 22
Learning Centres Are different instructional tasks that take place in various places in the classroom Can be designed for individuals, pairs or groups of students Tasks at each centre are varied according to student readiness, interest, or learning preference All tasks address the same learning goal or expectation
Learning Centres – Examples Example 1: BLM 9.16 - “Drawing Bohr-Rutherford Diagrams of first 20 elements” Example 2: Grade 9 Biology class studying the cell cycle – Delta Secondary School, HWDSB http://www.edugains.ca/newsite/di/divideoclips.htm Debrief
Helpful Resources • Program DI Web site for resources specific to science • GAINS Web site: www.edugains.ca 26
Resource Binder • Cubing • RAFT (science: GRASP) • Choice Board • Learning Centres • Learning Contracts
Personal Action Planning Card 3-2-1 Exit Card 3 Things I Learned… 2 Questions I still have… 1 Strategy I will use to remember… Personal Action Plan At the end of the day, using a different colour writing utensil, comment on your earlier notes. Share this page with the facilitator and your peers.