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Differentiated Instruction

Differentiated Instruction. WhY ?. What is differentiation?. Differentiation is classroom practice that looks eyeball to eyeball with the reality that kids differ, and the most effective teachers do whatever it takes to hook the whole range of kids on learning. Tomlinson 2001.

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Differentiated Instruction

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  1. Differentiated Instruction

  2. WhY ?

  3. What is differentiation? Differentiation is classroom practice that looks eyeball to eyeball with the reality that kids differ, and the most effective teachers do whatever it takes to hook the whole range of kids onlearning. Tomlinson 2001 Differentiated Instruction Awareness

  4. People learn differently – learning styles, strengths, abilities, and interests. We also learn alike in that we need to find meaning and make sense of what we study. We learn best from work that demands we stretch ourselves, but does not intimidate us.

  5. Activity When a teacher tries to teach something to the entire class at the same time, “chances are, 1/3 of the kids already know it; 1/3 will get it; and the remaining 1/3 won’t….So 2/3’s of the children are wasting their time.”- Lilian Katz • As a student, I was in the 1/3 who… • As a teacher, I was in the 1/3 who... • As a parent, my child is in the 1/3 who… Reflect on this quote by completing these phrases:

  6. Teachers Role…

  7. Differentiated Instruction is Proactive • Begin with assumption: different learners/different needs • Variety of ways to “get at” and express learning. • Organized/Purposeful and not chaotic.

  8. Expect BETTER work, not MORE work!!! • Adjusts the nature of the assignment to meet student needs. • Level of complexity, steps in a task, and levels of questioning

  9. Begin With Assessment Readiness based on: • standardized test results • pre-testing • Conversations • interest surveys • preferred learning styles • multiple intelligences

  10. Several Routes to Content, Process, and Product • Content—what students learn • Process—how students go about making sense of ideas and information • Product—how students demonstrate what they have learned

  11. Differentiated Learning is Student-Centered • Increasing responsibility for their own growth. • Teaching students to share responsibility allows a teacher to work with different groups or individuals for parts of the class time………….and it better prepares students for life.

  12. Differentiation Blends Several Types of Instruction • Whole-class instruction • Individual instruction • Flexible grouping • Cooperative/collaborative learning

  13. Differentiation is Fluid • Teachers participate in ongoing collaboration with students • Lessons and assignments are adjusted as needed • There is no one “right” way to differentiate as long as the basic principles of differentiated learning are followed.

  14. Basic Principals…

  15. Some Principles • Students are pre-assessed to determine learning needs. • The teacher plans proactively to provide several learning options. • Students work alone, in pairs, and in small groups. • Students sometimes receive whole-class instruction. • The teacher gives clear directions and shares responsibility with students. • The teacher provides organization to the degree that learning is purposeful and not chaotic. • The teacher provides support as needed. • The student takes responsibility for his/her own learning and demonstrates understanding through a student-designed product.

  16. Exampels of Differentiation

  17. For First Grade Reading • Create a flexible reading program. • Post a weekly reading schedule and allow students to find their names on it. • Allow students to move to appointed parts of the room at times designated on the chart. • Sometimes the whole class will meet to listen to a story and talk about it or to volunteer to read it. • Sometimes a small group meets with the teacher to work on decoding, comprehension strategies, or to share ideas. • Sometimes students will meet with peers to read on a topic of mutual interest, regardless of their reading readiness (different level books on same topic). • Students read alone (from books in discovery boxes based on various topics or from boxes designated by colors to match levels of reading readiness). • Students may meet with a reading partner to take turns reading or, at the direction of the teacher, to “choral read” so stronger readers can provide leadership for a peer who doesn’t read as well. From Tomlinson

  18. Third Grade Reading • Design a variety of centers based on student learning profiles • Assign students to centers based on formal or informal assessments • At centers related to people the students are studying, students can choose to work alone, in pairs, or within a small group • Some possible centers include: • Students select a person they’ve studied and make an annotated time line of the person’s early life, noting events that shaped the person. The student chooses whether to write a paper, draw a storyboard, or act out the events. • Students select a biography and a fictional work each has read. Then they write about real-life events they and some of their friends have had. Students then look in all three works for common themes about growing up and decide to present their work as a matrix or through conversations between or among the subject of the biography, the fictional work, and a 3rd grader. From Tomlinson

  19. Seventh Grade Science • As part of an exploration of life science, students chose a living creature and develop questions of interest to them individually. • Students figure out how to find answers to their questions. • Each student determines ways to share their findings with their peers. (Questions can vary in complexity.)

  20. High School Algebra II • Students can pre-test and “compact out” of a unit at any time during the first three days of instruction • Students who opt out do an independent investigation of math in the real world, given guidelines by the teacher, who works with them to tighten or focus plans, as needed • Students who did not “compact out” receive whole group instruction, and then—based on understanding—divide into cooperative groups for practice, or meet in a small group with the teacher for further instruction • When the class has finished the chapter, everyone participates in two days of mandatory review and the entire class takes the test. From Tomlinson

  21. High School U.S. History Students read biographies of their choice from a suggested reading list. Each student chooses to do one of the following: • Write a two-page summary of the person’s life. • Note transforming dates in the subject’s life and make a timeline. • Choose three events that most impacted the subject’s life and make a poster explaining each. Students read names from a posted list and go to pre-assigned groups, which include: • Students meet in small groups and “tell the story” in first person of the subject of each biography • Students make a chart listing similarities and differences in their characters’ personalities, lives, and accomplishments • Students brainstorm qualities of “greatness” and create a matrix they will use to rank all of their subjects • Students choose one or a few topics making news in their lifetimes and conduct a time-travel/round-table discussion in character as their subjects. Students complete an assignment from the following product list: • A PowerPoint presentation • A scripted presentation to the class • An argumentative or comparative essay.

  22. Differentiate by Readiness…

  23. The Equalizer: A Tool for Planning Differentiated Lessons • Foundational…………….Transformational • Concrete………………….Abstract • Simple…………………… Complex • Single Facet………………Multiple Facets • Small Leap………………..Great Leap • More Structured…………..More Open • Less Independence………More Independence • Slow………………………..Quick

  24. Tiering Instruction • Change the nature of the task, not the workload • Change the sophistication of the prompt and/or the student’s response to it • Remember to keep all students “above water” by adjusting challenge levels so all students can make sense of their learning

  25. Tiering Formats • Learning Contracts • Learning Menus • Cubing • Summarization Pyramid • Change the Verb

  26. Learning Contracts Students enter into independent study with an agreed-upon set of tasks supporting adjusted goals.

  27. Learning Menus Students are given choices of tasks in a unit or for an assessment. They most do one “entrée task”, may select from two “side dish” tasks, and may choose to do one of the “dessert” tasks for extra enrichment.

  28. Cubing Students receive foam or poster board cubes with a different task written on each face; each task has a different complexity level than the others. Given a topic, students: Describe it, Compare it, Associate it, Analyze it, Apply it, Argue for it or against it.

  29. Summarization Pyramid Create a pyramid of horizontal lines, then ask students at different readiness levels to respond to tiered prompts as they interact with the topic. SOME GREAT PROMPTS Synonym Analogy Question Three attributes Alternative title Causes Effects Reasons Arguments Ingredients Opinion Formula/sequence Insight Larger category Tools Sample People Future of the topic

  30. Change the Verb Raise or lower the challenge level by changing the verb in your prompt: CONSIDER USING: Analyze Revise Decide between Why did Defend Devise Identify Classify Define Compose Interpret Expand Imagine Suppose Construct Recommend Predict Argue for (or against) Contrast Critique

  31. Some Tips • All students need coherent lessons that are relevant, powerful, and meaningful. • Good curriculum pushes students a bit beyond what is easy or comfortable. • Encourage students to “work up” and complete tasks that stretch them.

  32. Differentiate by Interest…

  33. Sidebar Studies • Interest Centers • Specialty Teams • Real-Life Applications of Ideas and Skills • New Forms of Expression

  34. Strategies That Support Interest-Based Studies • Studying concepts and principles through the lens of interest • Student choice of tasks • Independent Study • I-Searches • Orbitals • Mentorships • Group Investigations • Interest Groups • Jigsaw • Literature Circles • WebQuests • Student-selected audiences

  35. Differentiate by Learning Profile…

  36. Four Factors • Learning Style Preferences • Intelligence Preferences • Culture-Influenced Preferences • Gender-Based Preferences

  37. Strategies for Learning Profile Preferences • Vary teacher presentation (auditory, visual, kinesthetic) • Vary student mode of expression (Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences) • Working choice arrangements • Multiple modes of assessment • Varied approaches to organizing ideas and information

  38. Differentiate by Content…

  39. Strategies for Differentiating Content • Curriculum Compacting • Learning Contracts • Mini-lessons

  40. Ways to Support Students • Reading partners or audio/video recorders • Note-taking organizers • Highlighted print materials • Digests of key ideas • Peer and adult mentors

  41. Differentiate by Process…

  42. Processing: Making Sense of the Content • Present activities that are interesting to the student • Provide opportunities for students to think at a higher level • Cause students to use key skills to understand key ideas

  43. Strategies for Differentiated Processing • Cubing • Learning logs or journals • Graphic organizers • Centers or interest groups • Role playing • Choice boards • Jigsaw • Think-pair-share • PMI • Model-making • Labs • Tiered activities

  44. Differentiate by Product…

  45. Creating Product Assignments • Big IDEAS • Format of the project. • Expectations for quality (content, process, product). • Scaffolding (brainstorming, rubrics, time lines, planning/goal setting, storyboarding, critiquing, revising/grading). • Differentiate based on readiness, student interest, student learning profile.

  46. you must: • Find exactly where students are before you know how to take them someplace new • Organize your resources • Adjust for varying degrees of depth • Support those who can’t keep their heads above water • Modify your strategy as you go • Recognize there are different ways to reach the same destination

  47. The content of this presentation is based on the work of Carol Ann Tomlinson of the University of Virginia and on her book, How to Differentiate Instruction in Mixed-Ability Classrooms.

  48. Supplementary Resources • Glossary of terms • Learning Style inventory • Sample lessons • List of additional resources

  49. Resources • pathubert.wikispaces.com • Templates • Resources • Videos

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