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Marcy Fierstein. Differentiating and Adapting Material s. This is the reality. How do we close the gap?. Learning Differences. Speed of information processing. Memory: encoding, storage, retrieval. Automatization of rote facts. Organization. Listening Skills. Attention.
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Marcy Fierstein Differentiating and Adapting Materials
This is the reality How do we close the gap?
Learning Differences • Speed of information processing. • Memory: encoding, storage, retrieval. • Automatization of rote facts. • Organization. • Listening Skills. • Attention. • Forethought and Planning. • Etc.
Cognitive/Conceptual Skill Differences • Processing speed. • Conceptualization. • Understanding of Elapsed Time. • Inferential Thinking. • Conservation, Multiple Variable reasoning.
Reading/Writing/Math Skill Deficits • Reading Decoding vs. Understanding. • Math Fact Recall vs. Math Concepts. • Math procedures vs. Math reasoning • Writing Mechanics vs. Written Content.
It can be learned! Good Teaching is Good Teaching
Specially Designed Instruction • Accommodations the IEP team has deemed appropriate. • Help level the playing field. • Not meant to give any students an unfair advantage. • Provide necessary supports for students to make progress in the general ed. Curriculum.
Accommodations • Modifications Do not fundamentally alter or lower expectations or standards in instructional level, content or performance criteria. Do fundamentally alter or lower expectations or standards in instructional level, content or performance criteria. Changes are made in order to provide equal access to learning and equal opportunity to demonstrate what is known. Changes are made to provide student meaningful & productive learning experiences based on individual needs & abilities. Grading is same. Grading is different. Adaptations
Different Terms Same Thing • Differentiated Instruction • Terminology from general education. • Accommodations • Terminology from special education. • Are all students entitled to accommodations? • Ponder this.
What works…. • Identify similarites and differences (1.61) • Summarizing and note taking (1.00) • Reinforcing and providing recognition (.80) • Homework and practice (.77) • Nonlinguistic representation (.75) • Cooperative learning (.73) • Setting goals and providing feedback (.61) • Question, cues, and advance organizers. (.59) • Marzano
10 Simple Adaptations and Modifications for Tests • Shorten the test—Choose the most important concepts that a student needs to know. • Read aloud • Break the test into sections. Even a long section of matching can be broken into smaller sections. (Also gives more white space and may prevent a student from being overwhelmed.) • Word banks • Thinking maps for essays questions. • Bigger font • More white space • Multiple choice—strike one choice • Open book/Use notes • One note card • Visual cues, pictures, charts, graphs
Reading Level • Accuracy: words read correctly divided by total words read. (one minute) • Independent (98-100% accuracy) • Instructional (93-97% accuracy) • Frustration (92% accuracy and below)
Brief “At a glance” assessment of a child’s reading. • What kinds of information does the child use? • Meaning of message Does it make sense? Makes sense even if inaccurate • Structure of sentence Uses appropriate sentence structure Grammar Reading words only • Visual Cues from text First and last letter Substitutes similar words Looks to layout of print for cues Pictures
Lesson Presentation • Preview strategies • Pre read • Predict • Pre teach vocabulary • Visual aids • Graphic organizers • Thinking maps • Pair visual with auditory (multimodality approach) • Repetition • Reteach • Clarify • Testing accommodations • Paraphrasing/summarizing • Pacing of instruction • Guided and independent practice • Feedback • Clear high expectations • Skeletal outlines, maps, webs for notes
Scaffolding: Varying levels of support • Highlight important words in text • Teach structure in text books • Flag or post-it notes in margins where answers can be found • Page numbers listed in left hand margins of questions to guide students to the answer
Assignments/ work sessions • Extra time • Simplify complex tasks • Chunking • Breaks/ shortened work sessions. • Assignments written in consistent place • Limit items per page • Remind students to recheck work • Reduce length of homework/ class work • Formatting of work • Tiered assignments • Larger print • Study guide • Note-taking strategies • Computer games • Use of calculator • Limit amount of writing
Organization • Folders for each subject • Older grades: binder with a section for each subject • Homework folders • Consistent routines • Homework assignments posted • Check in and check out • Visual schedules • Incentives for work completed/turned in • Color coding/highlighting
There are no paras after high school! Gaining Independence
Daily, YOU deal with…. • Students: • Learned helplessness • Motivation • Initiative • Struggle/frustration • Teachers: • Inclusion • Collaboration • Appreciation
War and Peace Homework
The problem with homework • Doesn’t get done • Gets lost • Can’t do it • Homework for the sake of homework • Busy work • Relevance or lack of • Failing classes due to not completing homework. • Contributing factor to dropouts?
Can’t Won’t • Too hard-Don’t know how to do it. • No adaptations • No communication • No help • No time • Too hard-frustrated • Other things to do • Don’t care • Not seen as important • Time consuming Age old dilemma as to why homework is not completed
Adapting Homework • Preteach; clarifiy • Monitor--CICO • Alternate response formats • Adjust length • Small group instruction • Assistive tech • Organization skills • Effective use of time • Fewer assignments • Chunking • Coordinate the amount of homework • Relevance
Thank you! Have a great year!!