differentiated instruction extended teacher induction december 2009

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Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

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Page 1: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Differentiated Instruction

Extended Teacher InductionDecember 2009

Page 2: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

What is Differentiated Instruction?

Please don’t forget to place your dot on the Differentiated

Instruction Chart

Page 3: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Agenda

Discuss the concept of DI Look at techniques to differentiate

the classroom Consider a rationale for on-going

assessment in the classroom to guide instruction

Page 4: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

4

What It Is/What It’s Not

Differentiated Instruction IS:

Differentiated Instruction IS NOT:

Page 5: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

What is Differentiation?

A teacher’s response to learner’s needs

The recognition of students’ varying background knowledge and preferences

Instruction that appeals to students’ differences

Page 6: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

The rationale for DI

Examples of learner diversity: Cognitive abilities (Bloom) Learning styles (Gardner) Socioeconomic and family factors Readiness Learning pace Motivation Gender Cultural and ethnic influences

Page 7: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

7

One Size Doesn’t Fit All

Page 8: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Essential Characteristics of DI

There is no recipe for DI It is a way of thinking Teacher acts as facilitator for learning DI challenges the notion that the

curriculum is just coverage of facts.

Page 9: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Readiness Differentiation

Where is THIS child at THIS time with THIS particular

skill or idea?

Page 10: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

What Information Do You Need? To know your students

The process of differentiating curriculum, instruction and assessment begins by knowing your students.

To understand your students Strengths, interests, learning styles, preferences and

intelligences

To know student needs This information can be utilized to make your

curricula more meaningful to students because you can tailor your delivery and expectations to meet their needs.

Page 11: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

How will I get this information? Record review Family-centered and culturally responsive fact

gathering Interest inventories Learning preferences information Multiple intelligences Data-based observations

Functional behavior assessment Monitoring cooperative group learning

Page 12: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

The Differentiated

Instruction Decision Making

Process Students

How can I differentiate instruction and align lesson

outcomes and tasks to learning goals?

Adapted from Oaksford, L. and Jones, L. 2001

Product• Assessment of the

content

Review the Data Link To Next Concept, Lesson or

Unit

Curriculum• PA Standards/

Assessment Anchors

Pre-assessment• Readiness/Ability• Interest/Talents • Prior Knowledge

Content•What the teacher plans to teach

Process•How the teacher plans instruction•Management of flexible groups

Page 13: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

WHAT CAN BE DIFFERENTATED?

Page 14: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Classroom Elements

Content Process Product Affect Learning Environment

Page 15: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Differentiating Content

Sources of content: 1. 2. 3.

Teacher determines/clarifies essential knowledge, understanding and skills of a unit or topic.

Pre-test to determine readiness. Differentiate content to ensure all students

have equal access to the essential knowledge.

Page 16: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

16

DO NOT ASSESS

BIG IDEASALL WILL LEARN

DO TEACH INTENSIVELY

DO ASSESS

DO TEACH

DO

NO

T

ASS

ESS

INTERESTING BUT NOT ESSENTIAL

SOME WILL LEARN ANYWAY

SPECIALIZED KNOWLEDGE – TRIVIA

FEW WILL LEARN

DO NOT

TEACH DO NOT

ASSESS

Edwin Ellis, 2002

Differentiating the Curriculum

Page 17: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Ways to differentiate curriculum

Reading partners/reading buddies Read/summarize Adjust questions Graphic organizers Varied texts Highlighted texts With a partner, discuss some other ways

you can help all students have equal access?

Page 18: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Differentiating Process

Learning and using higher order thinking skills Creative thinking Critical thinking Problem solving

Integration of basic skills and abstract thinking skills

Process = “activities”

Page 19: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Ways to Differentiate Process

Games RAFTs Cubing, Think Dots Choices Tiered Lessons Anchor Activities Online Activities

Page 20: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Games

Use games to capture a student’s interest, reinforce ideas and for review.

Frequent practice is also necessary for children to build and maintain strong academic skills.

Have varying levels according to ability.

Page 21: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Friendship Cinquain

A cinquain is a five-line poem that follows a certain pattern.

Interview a partner and use what you learn to write a cinquain about that person.

Questions are on the next slide.

Page 22: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Friendship Cinquain

What is your name? Adjectives that describe you Activities you enjoy What makes you a good friend? Nickname?

Page 23: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Friendship Cinquain

NameAdjective, adjective

Action word, action word, action word

Four word phrase about friendshipNickname or noun

Page 24: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Friendship Cinquain

JordanMusical, athletic

Singing, dancing, tacklingEveryone can be considerate

JJ

Page 25: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Friendship Cinquain

This can be used for any topic if you change the questions.

Examples:Plants

Columbus’ journeyCharacter in a story

Page 26: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

RAFT

Writing to learn activities to enhance understanding of informational text ROLE AUDIENCE FORMAT TOPIC

The RAFT strategy forces students to process information rather than merely write answers to questions.

Page 27: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Role of the Writer

What is the writer’s role: reporter, observer, eyewitness, object, number, etc.

Page 28: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Audience

Who will be reading the writing?

Teacher Other students A parent Editor People in the community, etc.

Page 29: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Format

What is the best way to present the writing? Letter Article Report Contract Poem Advertisement E-mail

Page 30: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Topic

Who or what is the subject of this writing?

A famous scientist A prehistoric cave dweller A character from literature A chemical element or physical object

Page 31: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Plant RAFT

ROLE AUDIENCE FORMAT TOPIC

Plant parts Plant needs Picture We’re made for each other

Roots Stem, leaf, flower, seeds

Letter You’d be lost without me

Flower Stem, leaf, seeds, roots

Ad I’m more than just a pretty face

Page 32: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Immigration RAFT

ROLE AUDIENCE FORMAT TOPIC

Boy of 12 who came from Europe

Best friend in Germany

Letter Crossing the ocean on a ship

Ship captain Emigrants waiting to come to America

Booklet How to prepare for your trip

Artist arriving from France

Graphic design firm in NYC

Postcard Wish you were here

Page 33: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Activity

With a partner develop several scenarios where you could use the raft in your classroom.

Page 34: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Cubing

Students consider a concept from a variety of different perspectives.

The cubes are six-sided figures that have a different activity on each side of the cube.

A student rolls the cube and does the activity that comes up.

Page 35: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Think Dots

Each student is given a set of activity cards on a ring, a die and an activity sheet.

Student rolls the die and completes the activity on the card that corresponds to the dots thrown on the die.

Student then completes the activity on the activity sheet.

Page 36: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Think Dots Suggestions

Use colored paper and/or colored dots to indicate different readiness levels, interests or learning styles.

Have students work in pairs. Let students choose which activities – for

example: Roll the die and choose any three. Create

complex activities and have students choose just one to work on over a number of days.

Page 37: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Choices

Use Gardener’s Multiple Intelligences

Human beings are capable of "many different and discrete facets of cognition."

Humans display different types of intelligences which can be measured, fostered and evaluated as isolated faculties of the mind.

Page 38: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Multiple Intelligences The MI Theory assumes

that all students possess an array of at least eight intelligences.

Identifying students’ strength intelligences allows educators to use the strengths to capture a students’ attention and assist the student in learning new information.

Source: Google Images

Page 39: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Bodily-Kinesthetic Intelligence

The ability to manipulate ones own body and control muscle movements with utmost precision (surgeons, pianists)

Page 40: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Musical Intelligence

The ability to understand and perform music

Page 41: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Logical-Mathematical Intelligence

This also includes scientific ability.

Page 42: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Linguistic Intelligence

Knowledge and ability to manipulate language

Page 43: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Spatial Intelligence

The ability to form a mental model of a spatial world (i.e. sculptors, engineers, surgeons)

Page 44: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Interpersonal Intelligence

The ability to understand others

Page 45: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Intrapersonal Intelligence

The ability to understand oneself

Page 46: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Nature Intelligence

The ability to understand nature

Page 47: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Gardner’s MI

http://www.op97.k12.il.us/lincoln/mi.html

Page 48: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Tiered Lessons

Strategy that addresses a particular standard, key concept and generalization

Allows several pathways for students to arrive at an understanding of these components

Based on the students’ interests, readiness or learning profiles

Page 49: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

49

Developing a Tiered Assignment

Identify unit/lesson.

Identify essential questions or objectives. Student outcomes Student skill levels Student output

Develop/review lesson activity. Determine level of learner(s). Adjust COMPLEXITY for each level of

learners.

Page 50: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

50

Implementing a Tiered Assignment

Assignments should be… Accompanied by directions Respectful. Adjusted for varying levels Designed to meet the lesson objective

Determine product. Traditional versus alternate

Teacher in role of facilitator

Page 51: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Anchor Activities

Specified ongoing activities on which students work independently

Ongoing assignments that students can work on throughout a unit

Page 52: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Why Use Anchor Activities? provide a strategy for teachers to deal with

“ragged time” when students complete work at different times

allow the teacher to work with individual students or groups

provides ongoing activities that relate to the content of the unit

allow the teacher to develop independent group work strategies in order to incorporate a mini lab of computers in classroom

Page 53: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Examples of Anchor Activities

A worksheet with open- or closed-end questions

Learning centers Journal writing Creating games or books Playing games that reinforce

concepts/skills

Page 54: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

With a partner, develop a few examples of anchor activities you can use in your classroom.

Don’t forget online options!

Page 55: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Differentiating Product

Varying the ways students demonstrate what you asked them to learn.

Use frequent assessment as checks for understanding and feedback – not just for grades.

Replace some tests with rich product assignments. You can also give students a choice

between tests and assignments.

Page 56: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Ways to Differentiate Product

Choices based on interest, readiness and learning profile

Clear expectations Timelines Agreements Product guides Rubrics

Page 57: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Differentiating Affect

Students need to feel they belong to a group and are important to it.

Teacher should be continually attuned to student feelings.

Readiness levels should be value challenged & supported in the classroom.

Differentiate proactively and reactively. Affect is the “weather” of the classroom.

Page 58: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Differentiating Learning Environment

Use fluid, flexible grouping that reflects real-life situations.

Use space, time and materials flexibly. Encourage expression of new ideas,

accept diversity and exploration. Experiences reflect learner interests and

ideas. Honor the dignity of all learners.

Page 59: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Differentiating Student Characteristics

Readiness Interest Learning Profile

Page 60: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Differentiating Readiness

Make work a little more difficult for students at a given point in their growth. Provide support to succeed at new level

of challenge. Pre-assessment is key. Teachers need to adapt teaching in ways

that make curriculum appropriately challenging for a range of learners.

Page 61: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Differentiating Interest

Help students connect with new information by revealing connections with things they already find appealing and worthwhile.

Interest surveys will give clues to teachers.

Page 62: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Differentiating Learning Profile

Influenced by learning style, intelligence preference, gender and culture

The goal is to help students learn in the way they learn best and to extend ways in which they can learn effectively.

Page 63: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

63

In a differentiated classroom, the teacher plans and carries out varied

approaches to content, process, and

product in anticipation of and response

to student differences in readiness and/or interest.

Page 64: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

On-going Assessment

“Assessment is today’s means of understanding how to modify tomorrow’s instruction.”

Carol Tomlinson

Page 65: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Some Thoughts on Assessment

Assessment should happen on a daily basis in the classroom.

It provides ways to use instruction to inform the next steps.

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66

As you begin….

Examine your philosophy about individual needs.

Start small. Grow slowly – but grow! Envision how an activity will look. Step back and reflect.

Page 67: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Exploring DI Sites

Use the following wiki to access two DI word documents related to DI.

http://wassel.wikispaces.com/Induction_DI_Dec09

Explore the wiki to complete the Ticket Out The Door activity.

Page 68: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

Let’s review…

Differentiated Instruction is…

Differentiated Instruction is not…

Page 69: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

69

Differentiated Instruction IS:

Using assessment data to plan instruction and group students

Teaching targeted small groups

Using flexible grouping (changing group membership based on student progress, interests and needs)

Matching instructional materials to student ability

Tailoring instruction to address student needs

Differentiated Instruction

Is NOT: Using only whole class

instruction Using small groups that

never change Using the same reading

text with all students Using the same

independent seatwork assignments for the entire class

Vaughn Gross Center for Reading and Language Arts, 2005

Page 70: Differentiated Instruction Extended Teacher Induction December 2009

For more information

www.iu29.org Teacher Resources Differentiated Instruction Resources

http://wassel.wikispaces.com/Differentiated+Instruction

http://wassel.wikispaces.com/DI+Webpages