Transcript Document

Differentiated Instruction
South O’Brien
January 14, 2008
So, how did it go?
Small Group Sharing
In your small groups . . .
Share one lesson that you
remodeled and then implemented
in the classroom.
Make sure to share the learning
goal(s) of the lesson and how it was
differentiated.
How did the students respond?
What were your perceptions of the
lesson?
Use the concept map to help with
your explanation.
Differentiation
Is a teacher’s response to learner’s needs
Guided by general principles of differentiation
Quality
Curriculum
Respectful
Tasks
Assessment
for
Instruction
Flexible
Grouping
Building
Community
Teachers can differentiate through
Content
Process
Product
Affect/
Environment
According to students’
Readiness
Interest
Learning Profile
Through a variety of instructional strategies such as:
Graphic Organizers . . . Physical Models . . . Mental Pictures . . . Pictures/Pictographs . . .
Kinesthetic Activity . . . RAFT . . . Curriculum Compacting . . . Learning Contracts . . . Tiered
Instruction . . . Learning/Interest Centers . . . Web Quests . . . Assignment Menus . . . Etc.
Readiness Levels
Pre-assessment of content
Pre-requisite skills or
knowledge
Reading level
Assessing Student
Readiness Activity
Remediate the skill
Work with the current skill
level
Work around the current skill
level
Break
Please watch the time on the
screen so that we may
reconvene in 15 minutes.
A Differentiated Lesson on
“Life Cycles”
 Read pages 6-16 of your selected animal book.
As you read, complete the top row of the “Share
Learning” grid.
 Meet with others who have read about the same
animal as you (your expert group). Add to your
notes as needed.
 Meet with your base team (4 members, with
each animal represented). In turn, present your
notes to each other, so that all team members
can complete the grid.
 As a team, answer the questions on the back of
the grid.
A major goal of this
lesson was to focus all
students on the same
essential knowledge,
while providing
readings on different
topics (content).
This lesson was “tiered.”
Tiered assignments are
differentiated tasks and
projects that you
develop based on your
diagnosis of students’
needs.
By keeping the focus of the
activity the same, but
providing routes of learning,
the teacher maximizes the
likelihood that:
1) each student comes away with
the same essential skills &
understandings, and
2) each student is appropriately
challenged at their level.
Creating Multiple Paths For
Learning
Key Concept
or
Understanding
Limited
readiness
level
Reaching Back
Expected
readiness
level
READINESS LEVELS
Advanced
readiness
level
Reaching Ahead
So what made it “tiered?”
Describe what you would consider the
essential understandings of this lesson.
Would all students have opportunity to
learn these concepts?
How many versions of today’s task were
made available? Which version would be
the “standard” version?
In a classroom setting, what would
provide the basis for assigning students to
each group?
Describe how students could be fairly
assessed relative to this lesson.
Making tiering “invisible”
 Make flexible grouping the “norm” in your
classroom.
 Introduce all tiered activities in an equally
enthusiastic manner and alternate which activity
is introduced first.
 Strive for different work, not simply more or less
work.
 Strive for tasks that are equally active, equally
interesting and engaging.
 Strive for tasks that are fair in terms of work load.
Developing workcards
for a “tiered” lesson
 Begin with a classroom task that you
have used in the classroom. Select a
task that most students have found to
be engaging and appropriately
challenging. Record this task on a
work card.
 Develop enough versions of the
original task to challenge the range of
learners. You may need to create one,
two, or three additional versions.
 Consider how you will make this tiering
“invisible” to your students.
Lunch
Please watch the time on the
screen so that we may
reconvene in 40 minutes.
Gatekeeper Skills
Gatekeeper Skill #1: Become a
student of your students.
Gatekeeper Skill #2: Developing
clarity about your student learning
goals…
Gatekeeper Skill #3: Develop a
repertoire of instructional strategies
Gatekeeper Skill #4: Manage for
flexibility
Introducing a DI
lesson planning
template…
…that integrates all four gatekeeper skills:
Being very clear about a unit’s learning
goals
Becoming a student of your students
Selecting appropriate differentiated
strategies, deciding whether to
differentiate content, process, or
product.
Keeping flexible classroom
management in mind
Plan n ing a Differe n ti ated Le sson
Subject:
Grade:
T eacher:
Date:
W h y? W h
at do the stu de n ts n e eto
d le arn ? Clarify the learning goals.
Purpose : What is the purpose of the u nit? (short description)
S tan dard(s): What standard(s) does this u n it teach or reinforce?
KUD: (What do I want students t o know, underst and, and be able to do?)
Know (facts, dates, definitions, rules, people, places):
Understand (big ideas, principles, generalizations, rules, the Ņpoint Ó of the discipline or t opic):
I want students t o understand that . . .
Be Able t o Do (literacy, numeracy, communication, thinking, planning and production skills, etc. Start
with a verb such as describe, explain, sho
w, com pare, synthesize, analyze,apply, construct,or solve):
Assessme n t Evi de n ce : How will I know that they know?
W h o? Becoming a student of your students.
Who are the students in the class? What specific t raits or needs do they have that require
differentiation? In what ways do they vary most (reading level, interest in subject, need for structure,
etc.)? How do I know? How will I find out? If I pre-assess the students, what will my pre-assessment
look like?
W h at?What will I differentiate?
 P rocess
 P roduct
 Content
How? How will I differentiate?
In response t o student;
 Readiness
 Interest
 Learning Profile
Planner - Part 1
Establish a very clear curriculum
Start with Good Curriculum:
Planning a focused
curriculum means clarity
about what students should
KNOW, UNDERSTAND and BE
ABLE TO DO
Planner- Part 2
Studying Your Students
Consider student interests as they
relate to the unit topic. (see
separate planning guide)
Consider student readiness as it
relates to this unit. (see separate
planning guide)
Consider student learning
profiles, and how they can be
addressed in this unit (see
separate planning guide)
Planner - Part 3
One lesson that has the
potential for remodeling
Description of original format
What would I typically do?
Planner - Part 4
Develop a repertoire of
instructional strategies
What options do I have when
sharing new information with
students?
In what ways can I honor students’
varied preferences for learning?
What instructional approaches best
serve the goals of this particular
unit?
What choices for learning might I
offer students?
What options can I provide students
for demonstrating their learning?
Planner- Part 5
Managing for flexibility
How will I give directions?
What will I do if students finish
early?
Will the differentiation be by
student choice or teacher
choice?
How am I encouraging student
responsibility?
If the work is “tiered,” how can I
make it as “invisible” as
possible?
Do rubrics need to be
developed?
Differentiated Instruction
and UbD
Standard(s):
Understandings
Should not be
differentiated
s
t
a
g
e
1
Evidence of learning
may be differentiated,
but not key
assessment criteria
Essential Questions
What are the big
ideas?
Assessment Evidence
Performance Task(s):
s
t
a
g
e
2
Other Evidence:
What’s the evidence?
LearningActivities
Should be
differentiated
s
t
a
g
e
3
How will we get there?
Using UbD to Plan Tiered Assignments
•Clarify your essential learnings, and
how they will be assessed.
•Create the on-level task first. Then
adjust up and down as needed.
Below-Level
Task
On-Level
Task
“Adjusting the
Task”
Above-Level
Task
Work Time
Wrap-up of the day . . .
See you next time!
February 15
Bring one Tiered lesson. Be
prepared to share your
classroom experience with this
lesson.