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DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand

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Page 1: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION

Dr. Dan Bertrand

Page 2: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

What we know

Classrooms have always included students who: Learn at different rates Have varying ability and knowledge Have different experiences and abilities

Over the past 20 years the range of students abilities and experiences has increased

Page 3: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

What is differentiation?(Pick a column, write or think silently, be ready to share.)Write a definition of differentiation you feel clarifies its key intent, elements and principles.

Explain to a new teacher what differentiation is in terms of what a teacher would be doing in the classroom- and why. You definition should create an image of differentiation in action in a real setting.

Develop a metaphor, analogy or visual symbol that you think represents and clarifies what’s important to understand about differentiation.

Page 4: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Sternberg’s Three Intelligences Analytical

PracticalCreative

Page 5: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Question

How do you differentiate in your classroom?

Page 6: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

At is most basic level, differentiating instruction means “shaking up” what

does on in the classroom so that students have multiple options for

taking in information, making sense of ideas, and expressing what they

learn.

Page 7: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

What is differentiation?

Differentiation is classroom practice that looks eyeball to eyeball with the reality that kids differ, and the most effective teachers do whatever it takes to hook the whole range of kids on learning.

Page 8: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Differentiation is responsive teaching rather than one size

fits all teaching.

Page 9: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Before differentiation

In the box

Page 10: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

After differentiation

In the box

On the box

To the side of the box

Under the box

Page 11: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

What we know

A significant number of students will fail to learn the necessary knowledge and skills unless focused attentive is given to the instructional needs of these students.

Students learn at different rates, need different degrees of difficulty, have different interests, learn in different ways and need different support systems.

Page 12: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Differentiated Instruction

Assumes students with varying abilities, needs and interests CAN be successful. If the classroom offers multi-faceted and multi-

leveled curricular and instructional approaches. It varies the levels of teacher support , task pacing

and complexity based upon each students interests, readiness and learning profiles.

Page 13: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

What is differentiated instruction? It is a way of thinking of thinking about the

classroom with the goals of honoring each students learning needs and maximizing each students learning capacity.

It is based upon the beliefs that students differ in their learning profiles and should be active learners, decision makers and problem solvers.

The overall goal is for students to understand the material and not for the teacher to cover the curriculum.

Page 14: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Summary

Teachers are committed to personalizing the instruction for their students.

4 Principles Pro-student philosophy No simple best method to reach all students. Principle of least change High expectations and standards for all students.

Page 15: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Differentiation is NOT a set of strategies…

It is a way of thinking about teaching and

learning.

Page 16: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Differentiated instruction is a complex mixture of beliefs & instructional approaches Students are

appreciated. Learning options (CPP) All students engage in

valued learning activities. Use of open ended

questions. Homework extends

learning

Flexible grouping and pacing.

Assessment is varied and balanced.

Students have choice of topics or assessments

Information presented in varied modalities.

Page 17: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Differentiated Instruction is..

A repeated rhythm of whole class preparation, review and sharing followed by individual or small group exploration, extension and production.

Ex) Class works on a topic, students use different materials, share what was learned and identify additional questions, students focused tasks, students share ideas, students work in small groups on teacher generated problems, students present problems/solutions,

Page 18: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

A Continuum of Differentiated InstructionNo Differentiation

Class works as a whole on most activities.

Group pacing.

Group grading standards.

All students need the same teaching.

Micro Differentiation

Adjust questions in discussion and grading to effort.

Encourage students to take an assignment further.

Students pick own work groups.

Occasional exceptions to standard pacing. May not to need to show work, do all math problems.

Macro differentiation

Philosophy of student differences.

Variable pacing is given.

Planned variation of content.

Planned variation of product.

Consistent use of flexible grouping.

Individual goals setting and grading.

Grading based on growth.

Page 19: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

How to differentiate instruction? What is the teacher differentiating?

Pre-assess knowledge and skills and differentiate the CONTENT based upon it.

PROCESS activities through which students learn and make sense of knowledge and skills.

PRODUCT- how the student demonstrates knowledge and skills.

LEARNING ENVIRONMENT-classroom conditions teaching and learning occurs in.

Page 20: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

How is the teacher differentiating? Specific ways in which teacher attempts to

meet the students needs, learning styles or levels of readiness.

Ex.) Some students work in groups while others work independently.

Page 21: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Why is the teacher differentiating? The teachers motive for modifying the

instruction. The motives for differentiating relate to the

learners needs, learning styles and level of readiness.

The teachers challenge is to accommodate individual learner differences within the context of the whole class.

Page 22: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Selecting Instructional Strategies Utilize Concept Based teaching

Don’t teach facts teach concepts Ex) dinosaur facts vs. classification

Focus instruction on understanding key concepts. Focus one important concept Ensure student understanding Define the purpose of the activity Help students link concepts to previous ones. Encourage students to use key skills while working

Page 23: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Effective Specific Strategies

Tiered assignments Learning contracts Curriculum compacting Adjusting questions

Learning centers Flexible groupings Independent study

Page 24: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Quality Differentiation

Begins with a growth mindset, moves to student-teacher connections and evolves to community.

PAVING THE WAY

TO LEARNINGConnections

Community

Mindset

Page 25: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

The Predictive Power of MINDSET FIXED

Success comes from being smart

Genetics, environment determine what we can do.

Some kids are smart and some aren’t.Teacher can’t override students profiles

GROWTH Success comes from

effort. With hard work, most

students can do most things.

Teachers can override students profiles.

Teacher sets high goals, provides support, ensures students focus to find things that makes school works for a student.

Page 26: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Teacher MINDSET

WHO

WHAT

HOW

WHERE

MINDSET

Shapes Student Self-

Perception

Builds or erodes group trust

I teach what I believe you can learn

Coverage vs. whatever it takes

How does teacher mindset impact who, where, what and how we teach?

What are the implications of mindset for differentiation.

Page 27: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Connecting with Kids

Talk at the door Early interest

assessments Small group instruction Dialogue journals Open room days Seek input on class Share your own stories

Listen Share own interests,

questions, plans Start class with kid talk Go to student events Attend extracurricular

events Take notes during class

Page 28: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Building Community

Establishes the framework for a responsive classroom. Student’s need for a next step Responsibility for own growth Competition against self Each student gets what he/she needs to succeed

Student belief in one another Supports the belief that we will win or lose together. Ensures security and safety Enables students to work as a team

Page 29: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Quality Differentiation is rooted in meaningful curriculum Clarity about what students should

Know- facts, vocabulary, definitions Understand

Principles/generalizations Big ideas

Be able to do Processes Skills

Page 30: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

In a Differentiated Classroom…The teacher may vary the KNOWS and Dos

with caution and based on evidence that student needs to learn backwards as well as forwards to catch up- or that a student needs to move ahead in order to keep learning.

The UNDERSTANDS are the constant on which effective differentiation pivots for all students.

Page 31: DIFFERENTIATION OF INSTRUCTION Dr. Dan Bertrand. What we know Classrooms have always included students who:  Learn at different rates  Have varying

Next…Differentiating

Assessments