Title: Helping Diverse Learners Succeed in Todays Classrooms
1Helping Diverse Learners Succeed in Todays
Classrooms
ED 1010 January 27-29, 2008
2Dimensions of Diversity
- Culture
- Language
- Gender
- Ability differences
- Exceptionalities
Add a Word Activity
3- Culture
- The knowledge, attitudes, values, customs, and
behavior patterns that characterize a social
group. - Cultural Diversity
- The different cultures that youll encounter in
classrooms and how these cultural differences
influence learning.
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5Urban Schools and Diversity
- Cultural minorities
- Are majorities in 48 of 100 largest U.S. cities
- Are majorities in 6 states
- Comprise 90 of students in
- Chicago
- Detroit
- Houston
- Los Angeles
- District of Columbia
- Percentage of minority students predicted to
increase in the future
6Cultural Attitudes, Values, Interaction Patterns
- Learned at home and in neighborhood
- Influence school success, both positively and
negatively - Require both teacher sensitivity and adaptability
Cultural Synchronization
7Educational Responses to Cultural Diversity
- Multicultural education a variety of strategies
schools use to accommodate cultural differences
in teaching and learning - salad bowl or mosaic versus melting pot
- Culturally responsive teaching Instruction that
acknowledges and accommodates cultural diversity - Accepting and valuing cultural differences
- Accommodating different cultural interaction
patterns - Building on students cultural backgrounds
8Language Diversity
- Maintenance language programs use and sustain
the first language - Immersion programs emphasize rapid transition to
English - English as a Second Language (ESL) programs
focus on English in academic subjects - Transition programs maintain first language
while students learn English
9Bilingual Education
- Controversial because critics fear the loss of
English as U.S. language - 26 states have official English language
legislation - De-emphasized by No Child Left Behind
- Proponents claim it is effective, humane, and
practical. - Critics claim it is divisive, ineffective, and
inefficient.
What do you think?
10ESL Programs
- English as a Second Language
- ESL endorsement
- Alternative Language Services (ASL)
- English Language Learners (ELL)
- Limited English Proficiency (LEP)
11Gender
- Gender influences career choices.
- Gender-role identity creates differences in
expectations and beliefs about appropriate roles
and behaviors. - Stereotypes create rigid and simplistic
caricatures of groups of people. - Single-gender classrooms and schools separate
male and female students.
Brainstorm Gender Stereotypes
12Ability Differences
Scenario p. 91
Average 68
Above Average 13.5
Below Average 13.5
Intellectually Disabled 2
Gifted 2
13Multiple Intelligences
- Gardners theory
- Suggests that intelligence is not unitary but
multidimensional - Suggests that classrooms should attempt to
develop different kinds of intelligence - While accepted by teachers, is controversial
because of a lack of a firm research base
14Gardners Multiple Intelligence
- Linguistic intelligence a sensitivity to the
meaning and order of words. - Logical-mathematical intelligence ability in
mathematics and other complex logical systems. - Musical intelligence the ability to understand
and create music. Musicians, composers and
dancers show a heightened musical intelligence. - Spatial intelligence the ability to "think in
pictures," to perceive the visual world
accurately, and recreate (or alter) it in the
mind or on paper. Spatial intelligence is highly
developed in artists, architects, designers and
sculptors.
15Multiple Intelligences continued
- Bodily-kinesthetic intelligence the ability to
use one's body in a skilled way, for
self-expression or toward a goal. Mimes, dancers,
basketball players, and actors are among those
who display bodily-kinesthetic intelligence. - Interpersonal intelligence an ability to
perceive and understand other individuals --
their moods, desires, and motivations. Political
and religious leaders, skilled parents and
teachers, and therapists use this intelligence. - Intrapersonal intelligence an understanding of
one's own emotions. Some novelists and or
counselors use their own experience to guide
others. - Naturalist intelligence an ability to recognize
similarities and differences in the natural world
16Responses to Differences in Ability
- Ability Grouping
- Places students of similar aptitude and
achievement together for instruction - Between-class ability grouping divides students
for all subjects. - Within-class ability grouping divides students
only in certain subjects, such as math and
reading. - Tracking
- At the secondary level, divides students across
the curriculum.
What do you think? What does the research say?
17Learning Styles
- Describes students personal approaches to
learning - Popular with educators, viewed skeptically by
researchers, and difficult to implement - Suggests we should develop metacognition
students awareness of how they learn most
effectively
18Students with Exceptionalities
- Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
(IDEA) - Passed in 1975
- Guarantees a free, appropriate, public education
(FAPE) for all students with exceptionalities - Mainstreaming moves students from segregated
settings into the regular classroom
19Students with Exceptionalities (continued)
- Inclusion more recent and more comprehensive
approach, advocates a total, systematic, and
coordinated school-wide system of services - Least restrictive environment (LRE) places
students in as normal an education setting as
possible - Individualized Education Program (IEP)
individually prescribed instructional plan
created and implemented by multiple stakeholders
20Categories of Disabilities under IDEA
- Specific learning disability
- Communication disorder
- Intellectual disability
- Emotional (behavioral) disturbance
- Other health impaired
- Autism
- Multiple disabilities
- Hearing impairment
- Orthopedic impairment
- Developmental delay
- Visual impairment
- Traumatic brain injury
- Deaf-blindness
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22Students who are Gifted and Talented
- Students who are at the upper end of the ability
continuum who need special services to reach
their full potential. - Controversy about Gifted and Talented programs in
the era of NCLB
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24Exceptionalities Implications for Teachers
- Collaboration working with other educational
professionals to create an optimal learning
environment for students with exceptionalities - Your role
- Aid in identification process
- Collaborate on IEPs
- Adapt instruction
- Maintain communication