Title: Differentiated Instruction Overview
1Differentiated InstructionOverview
2- The biggest mistake of the past centuries in
teaching has been to treat all children as if
they were variants of the same individual and
thus to feel justified in teaching them all the
same subjects in the same way. -Howard Gardner
3Summer Vacation Survey
- On a scale of 1-4, hold up the number of fingers
that most closely identifies you.
For vacation this summer, I traveled 4
abroad 3 to another state 2 somewhere in
LA 1 I left the house at least once.
4My summer reading
- 4 20 books
- 3 5-20 books
- 2 1-4 books
- 1 People, Southern Living, or other magazines
5Physical Fitness
- 4 I learned a new sport, completed a triathlon,
or jogged daily. - 3 I was on a tennis or volleyball team and
played. - 2 I played A round of golf or another game.
- 1 Are you kidding? I floated in a pool!
6- Differentiated instruction is teaching with
student variance in mind. It means starting where
the kids are rather than adopting a standardized
approach to teaching that seems to presume that
all learners of a given age or grade are
essentially alike. Thus differentiated
instruction is responsive teaching rather than
one-size-fits-all teaching.
7Want it simpler?
- DI is fitting the lesson to the student and not
the student to the lesson!
8Carol Ann Tomlinson
- How were alike makes us human
- How were different makes us unique
- Goals for all
- Challenge
- Growth
9Think back. Remember the one room school
house?
10Children who learn differently need to be taught
differently.
11DI is not.
- DI is NOT chaotic, individualized instruction
with fragmented lessons - DI is NOT giving students more work
- DI does NOT assume a separate entry level for
each student - DI is NOT only for the stronger or weaker
learners
12Differentiated Instruction IS
- Proactive
- Qualitative
- Student centered
- A blend of varying sizes of learning groups
- Multiple options
- For taking in information
- For making sense of ideas
- For expressing what we learn
13HALLMARKS of a DI CLASS
- All students have the opportunity to explore and
apply the key concepts and principles through a
variety of avenues and approaches. - On-going assessment of student readiness and
growth - Flexible grouping consistently used
4. Guide on the Side rather than Sage on the
Stage
14What is the theoretical/research background for
this instructional method?
- Classrooms are becoming more academically diverse
-
- Psychologists tell us that a student learns only
when a task is a little too hard for that
student. (zone of proximal development) - Considering the diverse classroom, it is unlikely
that a teacher will be consistently able to
develop one-size-fits-all learning experiences
that are in the zones of proximal development of
all students in a particular class.
15- It is likely that male and female learning
patterns and preferences vary. - Culture has an important bearing on how
individuals learn. - Student motivation and task persistence increase
when students can work with topics that are of
personal interest. -
- Attention to a student's preferred mode of
learning or thinking promotes improved
achievement.
16WHY?
- Brain-based learning
- Changing demographics
emotion
attention
memory
Sensory input
processing
17Differentiation
- Content - subject matter students need to
master and materials used in learning based on
readiness and interest - Process sense making activities based on
learning profile - Product - student created tangible outcomes
to demonstrate mastery based on interest and
learning profile - Environment operation and tone of classroom,
mood and respect
18How Does DI Work?
19RHYTHM of DI CLASSROOM
- Rhythm of class starts large moves to smaller
back - Exploration of topic
- Study by readiness and learning styles
- Share information and pose questions
- Assigned tasks
- Review of key ideas and concepts through sharing
- Small group apply key principles
- Introduce a skill
- Self-selected interest areas
- Whole class listens
Whole class
Whole class
Individual/group.
Small group
20ASSESSMENT GUIDES INSTRUCTION
- Teachers ( students) accept respect uniqueness
of each - On-going diagnostic activities
- Learning tasks planned adjusted based on
assessment data
ASSESSMENT
DI PLANNING
INSTRUCTION
21CURRICULUM DIFFERENTIATION
- is a process that improves the match between the
learners unique characteristics - Prior knowledge
- Cognitive level
- Learning style
- Motivation and affect
- Strength or interest
22DI PREASSESSMENT TECHNIQUES
- K-W-L Charts
- Journals
- Lists, Surveys
- Products
- Misconception checks
- Performances
- Conferences
- Concept Maps
- Learning Style Inventories
23JOURNALS
- Ask students to describe processes, examples and
reflections related to a curricular objective - Tell me what you know about
- What is the purpose of?
- Gives the teacher an opportunity for a One-On-One
interchange with each student
24LISTS AND SURVEYS
- Tell me all the words that
- come to mind when I say
- List the attributes of
- Name several types of
- Give examples of
25PRODUCTS
- Create a bar graph using data from
- Show me your latest report
26MISCONCEPTION CHECK
- Provide sample problems with errors in solutions
- Students determine why solution incorrect
- Teacher deduce degree of understanding or area
for instruction
27CONCEPT MAP
Word Bank heat, sun, hot gas, space, night,
constellation, day
day
Star
space
sun
heat
constellation
night
hot gas
28Performances or Conferences
- Explain how you found the answer
- Import a graphic for
- Use a graphing calculator to plot an equation
- Read to me
- Complete a pretest (post-test)
29Classroom Ideas- Role-Playing, Skits and, Mock
Debates
- Differentiate roles so all can participate. Make
sure that there are different kinds of roles
(speaking and non-speaking) and activities with
different levels of complexity (creating the
"set," making on-the-spot costumes, holding up
cue cards). - For some activities, some students may need
worksheets to organize their thoughts before
"performing." - Roles may be broken up so they can be performed
by more than one student. For example students
can debate issues in pairs or teams. - If students have problems
remembering lines or - reading from a script, allow them to
improvise.
30Ideas- Reading
- Complex material can be read in pairs or small
groups. - Have students read small pieces, assign small
groups one paragraph to read and paraphrase for
class. - Enlarge text for vision impaired.
- Students can pair-up to read materials out loud.
- Have students "turn and talk" after reading each
paragraph. Have them share their interpretations
of the material. - Let students highlight historical
documents and - other materials.
31Ideas- Group Discussions
- Before breaking into small groups, the teacher
can identify central points of the
lesson/reading. Discussion prompts can be given. - Prior to small group discussions, the teacher can
model different discussion strategies (e.g.
questioning, active listening). - Encourage roles within small groups (e.g.
recorder, discussion leader). - Give groups a short list of questions to discuss
during their discussion. - If some students do not speak or have
limited speech, the group can conduct some of the
discussion non-verbally. Students can draw some
of their thoughts on butcher paper, for instance.
Or students can record their responses on paper
and the individual needing communication support
can point to the ideas they find most
interesting.
32Ideas- Writing
- Cooperative writing assignments everyone adds
one sentence to a paragraph. - Give students options allow them to use
pencil/paper, computer, or even a typewriter.
Some students may need a scribe. - Teachers might give students a template or model
to follow. - Students can be paired to complete in-class
writing assignments. - Give pencil grips or markers to students who
cannot hold a pencil easily. - Allow students to draw pictures or use magazine
photos instead of written words. - Have students tell instead of show- let them
verbalize thoughts instead of writing them. - Give students more time to
work share the writing assignment - with them ahead of time or give a
head start by writing the first - few sentences for them.
33Ideas- General
- Allow students to design task/grading criteria
sometimes. - Develop learning contracts with students who may
want to do more complex or slightly different
work on a given topic. - For Internet exercises, some students might need
exact directions for searching the web (e.g., web
addresses or search engines). - For extra credit web searches interview
community experts or examine literature and
reference material - Give choices during lessons (e.g., work alone,
with a partner, sit in your desk or on the floor,
read the document or listen to it on tape). - Give students many ways to understand the content
of the documents--paraphrase, act it out, or
interview each other to learn how different
people interpret the words.
34Testing (both teachers and other support
personnel)
- Modifying testing should not interfere with the
integrity of the assessment. - Modifications
- Tests read
- Verbal tests
- Shortened tests
- Literal levels of questioning
- More frequent tests
- Extended time for test completion
- Scribe for written responses
- Quiet place for testing
- IEP goal achievement as a basis of testing
- Course project rather than a written test
- Development of an instructional packet with a
variety of activities to demonstrate knowledge
35ActivityCarousel Review
- Each group moves to one chart
- Group records items learned on chart
- At signal, group moves clockwise to next chart
with pen and records comments - Continue still all groups at all charts
- Take 5 to wander among charts
36PROCESS (Teaching) DIFFERENTIATION
37Plan for Multiple Intelligences
KINESTHETIC
VISUAL/SPATIAL
LINGUISTIC
NATURALIST
LOGICAL/MATH
MUSICAL
INTERPERSONAL
INTRAPERSONAL
38STRATEGIES
- LOW PREP
- Flexible seating
- Four corners
- Homework options
- Informal flexible grouping
- Jigsaw
- Multi-level materials
- Numbered heads together
- Student choice
- Think/pair/share
- Varied graphic organizers
- Varied journal prompts
- HIGH PREP
- Anchor activities
- Complex instruction
- Cooperative learning
- Cubing
- Curriculum compacting
- Extension menus
- Formal flexible grouping
- Independent learning contracts
- Lit circles
- Orbital studies
- Stations/centers
- Tiered assignments
39FLEXIBLE GROUPING
- Group students to best facilitate instruction
- Match task to student readiness, interest,
learning profile - Assess ability of students to read text and other
materials - Random or purposeful assignment to groups by
teacher, student, or chance
40Flexible grouping (cont.)
- Rationale for use
- Allows for varying time needs of students
- Allows for collaborative and independent work
- Gives students a voice
- Allows for wide range of interactions
- Keeps students from being pegged as advanced or
struggling - Keeps students from always being a helper or
being helped
- Guidelines for use
- Ensure that students can work with like and
unlike peers - Teacher assigns by readiness based on
pre-assessment - Teacher assigns when desirable for maximum peer
interaction - Students select by interest
- Teach reinforce how to work in groups
41ANCHOR ACTIVITIESAKA Spare Time
- Purpose To provide meaningful work for students
when they finish an assignment or project, when
they first enter the class or when they are
having difficulty with a task and are awaiting
help from the teacher - Anchor Activities Can be used in any content
area and/or across content areas can be whole
class assignments or individual assignments can
be tiered to meet needs of different readiness
levels of the student - Prerequisites for using anchor activities
Expectations are clear to the students students
are held accountable for on-task behavior and/or
task completion - http//www.mcps.k12.md.us/schools/hooverms/technol
ogy/anchor.htm
42Anchor Activity Bingo Elementary task card
43Anchor Activities Secondary
- Task cards with written guidelines
- Clarify behavioral expectations
- Give due dates
- Options
- reading,
- journaling,
- skill practice,
- portfolio,
- web exploration,
- Independent investigations,
44TIERED LESSONS AND CURRICULUM LADDERS
- Students explore ideas that value their readiness
level by building on prior knowledge - Students use varied approaches to explore
essential ideas - Rubrics are used to assess tiered
lessons/curriculum ladders that are created - http//ideanet.doe.state.in.us/exceptional/gt/tier
ed_curriculum/welcome.html
45Dont Be Afraid to Borrow!
- Dont forget that the internet is an excellent
source for DI activities, anchor activities,
extension exercises, etc.
46There is always a way to do better Find
it! Thomas Edison