differentiation and the brian: how neuroscience supports the learner-friendly classroom sandra...

28
Differentiat ion and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD 114

Upload: gabriel-atkinson

Post on 12-Jan-2016

226 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports

the Learner-Friendly Classroom

Sandra Gessner-CrabtreeDirector of Teaching and LearningOESD 114

Page 2: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Differentiation“Differentiated instruction is a teaching philosophy

based on the premise that teachers should adapt instruction to student differences. Rather than marching students through the curriculum lockstep, teachers should modify their instruction to meet students’ varying readiness levels, learning preferences, and interests. Therefore, the teacher proactively plans a variety of ways to ‘get at’ and express learning.”

Carol Ann Tomlinson

Page 3: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Activator• Discuss Tomlinson’s quote with an elbow

partner or two elbow partners reflecting on what you already do in your classroom that fits this definition.

• Consider how your instructional framework addresses differentiation.

• Jot down three ways differentiation is already present in your instructional practice.

• Be prepared to share.

Page 4: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Key Principles of a Differentiated

Classroom• The teacher is clear about what matters in subject matter.

• The teacher understands, appreciates, and builds upon student differences.

• Assessment and instruction are inseparable.

• The teacher adjusts content, process, and product in response to student readiness, interests, and learning profile.

• All students participate in respectful work.

• Students and teachers are collaborators in learning.

• Goals of a differentiated classroom are maximum growth and individual success.

• Flexibility is the hallmark of a differentiated classroom.

Page 5: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Learning Targets• Gain insight into the neuro science that supports

Differentiated Instruction• Understand the essential elements of

Differentiated Instruction

Page 6: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Success Criteria• Articulate: If the brain science says this

___________, then I need to add this ______________ into my instructional practice.

• Discuss with a colleague or significant other two or three key findings from brain research that impact the learning process

• Discuss with a colleague or significant other two or three ways differentiated instruction could improve learning outcomes for students

Page 7: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

How Does Research Support DI?

• Differentiated Instruction is the result of a synthesis of a number of educational theories and practices.

• Brain research indicates that learning occurs when the learner experiences moderate challenge and relaxed alertness –readiness

• Psychological research reveals that when interest is tapped, learners are more likely to find learning rewarding and become more autonomous as a learner.

Page 8: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Brain Research• Each brain is uniquely organized• The brain is a lean pattern-making machine• The brain’s frontal lobe is often referred to as the

“executive center” directing much of the brain’s activity

• Emotions are processed in the limbic system and play an important role in pattern making

• Learning is as much a social process as it is a cognitive one

• If content is meaningful, it is likely to be transferred from working to long-term memory

• Learning for retention requires focus and extended attention.

Page 9: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Diving In Together• Protocol• 3 Types of text

o Visually based with text bulletso Research articleo Text from book

• Individual processing timeo During reading

• Check for “got it” √• Exclamation point for “love this” or “totally agree” !• Question mark for “I need to know more about this” ?

• Together In Triads to discuss

Page 10: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Take Aways• Group Discussion• Reflection

o Write down three “Take Aways” from the brain research that you feel is relevant to your instructional practice.

Page 11: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Break

Page 12: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

A Model for Effective Differentiation

Page 13: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

What DI Is and Is NotDifferentiation Is Differentiation Is Not

• …A philosophy rooted in effective teaching and learning

• …Regularly Examining evidence of student learning and making thoughtful instructional decisions accordingly

• …Tailoring instruction in response to patterns in student needs

• … A bag of tricks or set of strategies that can be plunked into low-quality curriculum.

• …Either an everyday necessity or a once-in-a-blue-moon “event.”

• Writing individualized plans for every student.

Page 14: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

What DI Is and Is Not, cont.

Differentiation Is Differentiation Is Not• …Designing respectful

tasks and using flexible grouping.

• …A way up to standards and learning goals.

• …Critical to improving instruction for all students.

• ... Sorting or pigeonholing students into static groups or levels.

• …A way out of standards and learning goals.

• …More important for certain groups of students (e.g., students with IEPS or English Language Learners)

Page 15: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Five Key Principles of the Model

• Work in a differentiated classroom is respectful of each student. Every student’s work is equally engaging.

• Curriculum, or what students are asked to learn, is rooted in the critical ideas of a topic or a discipline. It is designed to promote understanding, rather than just recall.

• Teachers regularly use flexible grouping. Just as they plan the sequence of ideas necessary for learning, they plan a variety of grouping configurations for each stage of the learning process. Based on:o Readinesso Interesto Learning preferences

Page 16: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Principles, cont. • Teachers use ongoing assessment to inform their

instruction. Being clear at each stage of the learning process about what students should know, understand, and be able to do.

• The learning environment supports students in taking the risk of learning. A positive environment attends to students’ affective needs for acceptance, respect, affiliation, contribution, challenge and support.

Page 17: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Key Vocabulary

• Learning Environment• Curriculum Quality• Assessment• GroupingsoReadinessoInterestoLearning Preferences/Profiles

• Classroom Management

Page 18: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Learning Environment

Positive Environment Leads to

Negative Environment Leads to

• Endorphins in bloodstream, whicho Generate feeling of euphoriao Raise pain thresholdo Stimulate the frontal lobe so

that the situation and the learning objectives are remembered.

• Cortisol in bloodstream, which, o Raises anxiety levelo Shuts down processing of low-

priority information( for example, the lesson objective)

o Focuses frontal lobe on the cause of the stress so that the situation is remembered, but not the learning objective

Page 19: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Curriculum: Course of StudyQuality Curriculum

Organized around

essential content goals

Aligned with content goals,

assessments, and learning

experiences

Focused on student

understanding

Engaging for

students

Authentic

The nature of what we teach (curriculum), sharply affects the impact of how we teach ( differentiation)

Page 20: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Classroom Assessment• Effective classroom assessment addresses

academic diversity: o Formative assessment is the prelude to effective differentiation. o Effective assessment practices ( pre-assessment, formative,

summative) is integral to ensuring that students and teachers alike work from a growth mindset ( effort is the key determiner of success.)

o Effective use of pre-assessment strengthens teacher-student connections because information from the assessments helps teachers learn about their students and support their growth

o Pre-assessment and formative provides instructionally relevant information about student readiness, interest, and learning profiles.

o Providing feedback rather than grades in the formative process ensures that students who struggle with the content have adequate practice time before their work is judged

o Using assessment for learning increases student ownership, performance and efficacy.

Page 21: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

DI in Response to Student Readiness

• Readiness ≠ ability• Vygotsky’s Zone of Proximal Development• Content, Process and Product

o Small groups for students with similar needso Use complex or more straightforward task directions for some studentso Differentiated homeworko Use multiple materials at different reading levelso Learning contractso Tieringo Providing supportso Frontloading key academic vocabularyo Assigning varied work at skill centers

Page 22: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

DI in Response to Student Interest

• Interest refers to a feeling or emotion that causes an individual to focus on or attend to something because it matters to that individual.

• Content, Process, Producto Provide instructional resources that can help students relate

essential content to their areas of interest. o Show examples of skill applications in areas students are in

and how the skills apply in real-world settingso Provide opportunities for students to apply skills in relevant

areas of interesto Provide models of student or expert work in relevant areas o Authentic product assignments- student choose context in

which to demonstrate their understanding of learning essentials

o Students set personal goals for their interest-focused products

Page 23: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

DI in Response to Student Learning

Profile• Learning profile relates to how people “come at”

learning: learning styles, intelligence preferences, culture and gender

• Content, Process, and Producto Students examine their own preferred styles of learningo Expand modes of presentations: visual, auditory,

demonstration, creative questioningo Use graphic organizerso Teach part to whole as well as whole to parto Choice of working conditionso Call on students equitablyo Include collaborative and competitive taskso Have students play roles that require them to examine other

perspectiveso Develop tasks with a more concrete focus and tasks with more

abstract

Page 24: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Activity• Protocol• Two Articles: preference based on interest and

relevance

Page 25: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Differentiation in a Nutshell

• “Effective differentiation does not call on a teacher to be all things to every student at all times of the day. Rather, it calls on teachers to be constantly mindful of three things: 1) how their content is structured for meaning and authenticity, 2) who their students are as individuals, and 3) which elements in their classrooms give them degrees of freedom in connecting content and learners.”

o Tomlinson and Sousa, Differentiation and the Brain, pl. 15

Page 26: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Resources

Page 27: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

How Did We Do? • Learning Targets:

o Gain insight into the neuro science that supports Differentiated Instruction

o Understand the essential elements of Differentiated Instruction

• Success Criteria: o Articulate: If the brain science says this ___________, then I

need to add this ______________ into my instructional practice. o Discuss with a colleague or significant other two or three key

findings from brain research that impact the learning processo Discuss with a colleague or significant other two or three

ways differentiated instruction could improve learning outcomes for students

Page 28: Differentiation and the Brian: How Neuroscience Supports the Learner-Friendly Classroom Sandra Gessner-Crabtree Director of Teaching and Learning OESD

Thank YouSandra Gessner-Crabtree

Director of Teaching and

Learning

OESD 114

[email protected]