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Differentiation Made Easy and Effective

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Differentiation still covers a lot! Overheard... 'How do you get graded in that class? ... How much can I still 'rock the boat'? Specified Differentiated Assessment ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Differentiation Made Easy and Effective


1
Differentiation Made Easy(and Effective!)
  • Minimum Day
  • Staff In-Service
  • West Covina High School
  • December 7, 2007

2
Definition
  • Differentiation Modifying curriculum and
    instruction according to content, pacing, and/or
    product to meet unique student needs in the
    classroom.

3
Issues of Differentiation
  • What are people really thinking about it?
  • What do they want to know about it?

4
Issues on Parade
  • How do I do it without leaving out needed
    information? And the time constraint is an issue.

5
Issues on Parade
  • Applying it consistently No one wants to be
    known as the slow kid and no one wants to be the
    advanced kid expected to do extra work.

6
Issues on Parade
  • Sometimes we try so hard to present things in a
    different way that we overlook the fact that
    maybe it isnt always necessary.

7
Issues on Parade
  • It is very difficult to adequately cover all
    the standards in our content area its easy to
    accelerate the pace for highly motivated/capable
    students, but what about those who need a slower
    pace?

8
Issues on Parade
  • Recognizing ones level of current
    differentiation should be the first step.

9
Issues on Parade
  • If there are a few small manageable things, I
    would attempt them.

10
Our Teaching Standard as the Objective for the Day
  • I will explain a new strategy for more students
    to master the content standard, and then draw a
    plan to implement it.

11
The objective is NOT To differentiate!
  • Note the distinction

Differentiation
Mastering the content standard
12
Here is OUR Teacher Assessment
What are the ways you differentiate in your
classroom?
Friendly WASC Evaluator
13
Here is what we hear
Do you like green eggs and ham?
Friendly WASC Evaluator
14
Here is how to hear that
How do you get every student to master the
content standards?
Friendly WASC Evaluator
15
1. Nobody cares what you teach.
  • People only care what students learn.

16
Focus on Assessment
  • What do I teach?
  • How do I teach it?
  • How I know they got it?
  • What do I do next?

17
Focus on Assessment
  • Lets admit the system already has in place
    different classes for different levels. That
    helps.
  • Differentiation still covers a lot!

18
Overheard
How do you get graded in that class?
Just participate.
19
Our dream
I will show that I know that specialization of
cells in multi-cellular organisms is usually due
to different patterns of gene expression rather
than to differences of the genes themselves.
How do you get graded in that class?
20
Heres another real-life case
What do you think I want you to do?
Work.
21
2. Fair is not the same as equal.
  • To treat each student equally is to impede their
    freedom to get it.

22
Each and every student can meet the standard
  • in some way!
  • (No matter how unequally God made them!)

23
3. Start with the standard.
  • Never drop below the standard! Start with it,
    and work up from there!

24
This means!...
  • We as teachers dont have to worry about trying
    to do things we cant do!
  • The standard is our friend!

You
The Standard
25
Focus on Assessment
  • You give the instruction.
  • Now you have an assessment.
  • Assessment Comes from Latin for to sit beside.

26
Really Easy Differentiation We All Already Do!
1
  • Put different levels of questions into a single
    assessment.

27
Making Questions
  • Make sure your questions are getting the
    students to get at mastery of the content.

28
Making Questions
  • Which branch makes the laws?
  • executive
  • legislative
  • judicial
  • a. and b.
  • not d. but c.
  • most times a.
  • maybe a. not e.
  • b. and sometimes c.
  • c. f. and h. but only on Tuesdays
  • all of the above
  • none of the above

29
Making Questions
  • Can the standard be to divine the correct
    answer from a convoluted splattering of possible
    choices?

30
Therefore
  • We must always be comparing our assessments with
    the students content standard objectives.

31
Multiple Attempts at Mastery
2
  • The idea that a student may have a repeat
    attempt to master material already presented and
    assessed.
  • Also considered credit recovery.

32
Credit Recovery
  • For They meet the standard at some point, even
    if they didnt the first time. The goal is
    mastery, even if it takes a while.

33
Credit Recovery
  • Against They know they can be unnecessarily
    negligent the first time. As long as there is
    some later deadline, theyll just wait until then.

34
Credit Recovery
  • Even more extreme, this quote against I suggest
    that the faculty band together and announce that,
    from now on, every student will receive an A on
    every assignment in every class. If your school
    wants to abolish any meaningful system of
    grading, you might as well go all the way.

35
Credit Recovery
  • For Most students will still take our cue and
    make the best use of their time, however it is
    arranged. No one wants to do something twice!
  • The key! That we are making sure they are
    mastering the content standard!

36
Credit Recovery
  • Against How long does repeated attempts have
    to go on! Weve got other things to get to, and
    students have lives (we do too!)

37
Credit Recovery
  • Against It is drudgery if we make them do it the
    same way they didnt get it before!

38
Credit Recovery
  • A question How much, and in what way, should
    we TELL our students about our multiple attempts
    at mastery plan?

39
What do I do with this?...
  • Standard as objective I will explain the
    notion of the inverse to a square matrix and
    apply that concept to solve systems of linear
    equations.
  • Students request Interpretive Dance

40
The three key things to look at
  • What is the standard? Could the student
    demonstrate mastery of it?
  • What reasonable time / capacity do I have?
  • How much can I still rock the boat?

41
Specified Differentiated Assessment
  • May not require you to do a whole lot!
  • Maybe 34 students are great with the essay
  • Would you allow one student to do an
    interpretive dance?

42
Could you ask a student the following question,
and how would you ask it?
  • You didnt master the standard that time
  • what are you willing to do to master it this
    time?

43
Where can I go on the student self-assessment
scale?
  • Green area (Safe) My own regiment of
    assignments and tests.
  • Red area (Danger!) Interpretive Dance.

There is a lot in-between!
44
Technology
  • Would you accept something a student would do
    with technology?

45
What NOT to grade
  • Effort. Get rid of the idea Here are points for
    trying.
  • Only award credit for mastery of the standard.

46
What types of assessments are there?
  • Performance
  • standardized (tests, checklists, observations,
    rating scales)
  • less standardized (work samples, journals,
    anecdotes, activity notes)
  • Authentic
  • Keep students connected
  • to real world
  • to how they themselves learn
  • to their teachers teaching style

47
Three Critical Components of Differentiated
Assessment
  • Portfolios
  • Rubrics
  • Student Self-Assessment

48
Student Self-Assessment
3
  • Use students negativity in their favor!
  • Ask them what they hate about a particular
    lesson / standard.

49
Lesson Menu
  • Lay out a number of different approaches to
    demonstrating mastery of the standard.
  • Can the student decide which ways he/she may be
    assessed?

50
Lesson Menu
  • Put it together like a restaurant menu!
  • They choose which items they want to eat but
    must choose however many will get them to get it.

51
Tiered Assignments
4
  • Ratchet the challenge up or down.
  • (But dont go below the standard!)

52
RAFT
5
  • Offer a number of different ways a student may
    respond based on
  • Role
  • Audience
  • Format
  • Topic

53
The question has still come up
  • If I let them do x, y, or z crazy assessment
    option, they still have to pass the standardized
    tests what about that???

54
My answer
  • While an objective is still Demonstrate how to
    take a standardized test,
  • the entire point of them taking the tests is for
    them to show they got it.

55
Much of this is just moving forward, step by step
  • A key component of that is consultation with
    colleagues.
  • Become familiar with the many questions that
    should be part of the vibrant discourse.

56
  • By Rick Wormeli
  • By Carol Ann Tomlinson

57
Two quotes from Rick and Carol
  • We are not about being perfect teachers, we are
    about pursuing the understanding of important
    things.

58
Two quotes from Rick and Carol
  • What students learn is the greatest testimony
    for us as teachers, as schools, as communities.

59
Acknowledgment
  • Much of the material in this presentation was
    mined from the work of
  • Rick Wormeli
  • Carol Ann Tomlinson
  • Larry Lewin

http//www.winsc.org/diff_assessment.htm
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