Download - FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

Transcript
Page 1: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

Differentiated

Instruction

Presentation based on the course “Differentiated Instruction” available

from the Regional Training Center as a 3 credit graduate course in

face2face locations and online.

Page 2: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

“Teachers begin where students are, not at the

beginning of the curriculum."

Carol Ann Tomlinson

Page 3: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

Would you differentiate for . . .

• Someone who is too short to reach a shelf?

• Someone who is blind?

• Someone who is deaf?

• Someone in a wheelchair?

Page 4: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom
Page 5: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

1. Scaffolding (A Readiness Technique)

• Temporary support or guidance

• Steps – on board, index card, chart paper

• Tasks – “First do this and then . . .”

• Materials – websites, dictionaries, graphic organizers, etc

• Personal support – “Look on page three, column one, paragraph two. . .”

Page 6: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

Scaffolding

• Reduces a task’s complexity by structuring it into manageable pieces.

• The degree of scaffolding changes with the abilities of the learner, the goals of instruction and the complexity of the task.

• Gradual and planned removal of the scaffolding occurs as the learner becomes more successful and independent.

Page 7: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

2. Use Anchor Activities

• Anchor activities are ongoing assignments that students can work on independently throughout a unit, a grading period, or longer.

• Their purpose is to provide meaningful work for

students when they finish an assignment or project, when they first enter the class or when they are “stumped.”

• The tasks are tied to the content area and instruction and free the classroom teacher to work with other groups of students or individuals.

Page 8: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

Guidelines for Anchors

• Used for any subject, whole class assignments, small group or individual assignments, tiered to meet readiness levels, or interdisciplinary for use across content areas.

• Works best when expectations are clear and tasks are taught and practiced prior to use;

• When students are held accountable for on task behavior and/or task completion, AND

• Ground rules are established.

• Tasks must have clear instructions, materials, responsibilities, checkpoints, and expectations (rubric, checklists).

Page 9: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

3. Use Cards (Readiness technique)

Predetermined prompts related to the content of the day’s lesson. They are used to…

• Gather information on student readiness, interests, and/or learning profiles.

• Guide future instruction• Make decisions regarding how to place

students into effective and instructionally relevant flexible groups

Page 10: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

Cards - examples

• Name the two countries that border the United States. • Label the 5 main parts of the microscope. • Find and correct 4 mistakes in this sentence.

John Mom and me are gone two the store.

• Name 3 things you learned today about ___________________________.

• Give two ways________________ is like _______________________.

• What is one question you still have about _______________________?

Page 11: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

Criteria for Differentiation

Teachers should

• Be proactive, not reactive

• Consider that there are different learners in the room with individual needs

• Focus on helping students learn essential concepts

Page 12: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

4. Consider These Five Brain-based

and Learning Centered Principles1. The brain requires

social interaction2. The brain is influenced

by emotions3. The brain seeks

patterns and searches for meaning

4. The brain is a complex organ that can function on many levels and in many ways simultaneously

5. Each brain is unique

Page 13: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

5. Teach to Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences

According to Howard Gardner:

Intelligence is . . . the ability to . . .

• Resolve genuine problems• Create an effective product

• Find or create a problem

Page 14: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences

• Verbal-Linguistic• Math-Logical• Musical-Rhythmic• Visual-Spatial• Bodily-Kinesthetic• Naturalistic• Interpersonal• Intrapersonal

- Howard Gardner’s terms

• Word Smart

• Number Smart

• Music Smart

• Picture Smart

• Body Smart

• Nature Smart

• People Smart

• Self Smart - Thomas Armstrong’s terms

Page 15: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

One m

ore: Use a

Summ

ary Pyramid

Page 16: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

“You are the difference

in the lives of the kids you teach.”

Harry Wong

Page 17: FIVE LOW-TECH Ways to Use Differentiated Instruction in Your Classroom

Thanks for watching

• For more information, contact us at www.theRTC.net or 800.433.4740