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Doable Differentiation Understanding how the brain works and how differentiating instruction helps students learn

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Doable Differentiation. Understanding how the brain works and how differentiating instruction helps students learn. GAME Plan. Goals Activities Measurement Evaluation. Goals. Participants will: Gain a better understanding of differentiating instruction - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Doable Differentiation

Doable Differentiation

Understanding how the brain works and how differentiating instruction helps students learn

Page 2: Doable Differentiation

GAME Plan

GoalsActivitiesMeasurementEvaluation

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Goals

Participants will: Gain a better understanding of differentiating

instruction Participate in several strategies for whole-

class differentiation. Learn how the brain works and how this

supports the philosophy of differentiating instruction.

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Activities

Appointment Clock Think, Pair, Share Hands-on Sort Baggage Claim 10+2 Memory Song ABA Numbered Heads Together

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Measurement

Participation in Activities Response Card Activity Mind Map

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Evaluation

Plus/Delta on post-its at the conclusion of the workshop

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•14 years sp ed resource room teacher•3 years intervention specialist, inclusion•12 years teacher trainer for co-teaching, inclusion strategies•21 years high school math teacher•23 years district administrator•2 years as educational consultant

Nearly 75 years!

Bonny Buffington

Page 9: Doable Differentiation

Robert HutchinsThe Conflict in Education in a Democratic Society

“Perhaps the greatest idea that America has given the world is education for all. The world is entitled to know whether this idea means that everybody can be educated or simply that everyone must go to school.”

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Appointment Clock Activity

Think of one personal comment that comes to your mind when you read the Hutchins quote.

Go around the room and share your comment with others as you make “appointments” to fill in your appointment clock.

You may revise your comment as you listen to others’ opinions.

Page 11: Doable Differentiation

Robert HutchinsThe Conflict in Education in a Democratic Society

“Perhaps the greatest idea that America has given the world is education for all. The world is entitled to know whether this idea means that everybody can be educated or simply that everyone must go to school.”

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Differentiated Instruction Awareness

Differentiated Instruction:

What it is, What it’s not

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When a teacher tries to teach something to the entire class at the same time, “chances are, one-third of the kids already know it; one-third will get it; and the remaining third won’t. So two-thirds of the children are wasting their time.”

Lilian Katz, director of ERIC Clearinghouse on Elementary and Early Childhood Education

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DI: What it is; What it’s not

Traditional Classroom Differentiated Classroom

1. Assessment at the end of a unit of study

1. Assessment is ongoing, diagnostics and influences instruction

2. Dominance of whole class instruction

2. Variety of instructional strategies used within a classroom

3. Adapted textbooks are the main instructional resource

3. Multiple types of materials are utilized as resources

4. The teacher is the main problem solver

4. Students are actually engaged in solving problems

5. Quantitative focus to assignments

5. Qualitative focus to assignments

(Based on C Tomlinson, 2000)

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As a student, what kind of classroom did you experience?

As a teacher, what kind of classroom did you practice?

Think of an experience you had with an excellent teacher. What kind of classroom did he/she maintain?

Discuss your responses with your 6:00 appointment

Reflect on DI: What it is; What it’s not

Think, Pair, Share Activity

Page 16: Doable Differentiation

DI: What it is; What it’s not

Traditional Classroom Differentiated Classroom

1. Assessment at the end of a unit of study

1. Assessment is ongoing, diagnostics and influences instruction

2. Dominance of whole class instruction

2. Variety of instructional strategies used within a classroom

3. Adapted textbooks are the main instructional resource

3. Multiple types of materials are utilized as resources

4. The teacher is the main problem solver

4. Students are actually engaged in solving problems

5. Quantitative focus to assignments

5. Qualitative focus to assignments

(Based on C Tomlinson, 2000)

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Differentiated Instruction Awareness

DefiningDifferentiated

Instruction

Page 18: Doable Differentiation

Differentiated Instruction

Defined

“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 19: Doable Differentiation

Key Principles of Differentiation

High quality curriculum Ongoing assessment Respectful tasks Varied learning styles Flexible grouping Teacher/student collaboration Student choice

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Differentiation is:

responsive teaching rather than one-size-fits-all teaching.

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Differentiated Instruction Awareness

Differentiated Instruction:

How?

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Differentiation of Instruction

Is a teacher’s response to learner’s needs

guided by general principles of differentiation

Respectful tasks Flexible grouping Ongoing assessment

Teachers Can Differentiate Through:

Content Process Product

According to Students’

Readiness Interest Learning Profile

Page 23: Doable Differentiation

Get with your 3:00 appointment. Match the given activity cards with the

correct space on the differentiated grid.

Hands-On Sort Activity

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Differentiated Instruction Awareness

Differentiated Instruction: Why?

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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.

Tomlinson 2001

Why differentiation?

Page 26: Doable Differentiation

Research Support for Differentiation

Research for differentiating by readiness: Vygotsky (1978), Fisher (1980)

Research for differentiating by interest: LeDoux (1996), Abrantes, Seabra, and Lages (2008)

Research for student choice: Renate and Caine (1994), Glasser (1999)

Research for using multiple learning styles: Torrance and Ball (1978), Edelman (1992), Restak (1994)

Page 27: Doable Differentiation

Differentiated Instruction Awareness

How Brain Research supports Differentiated Instruction

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Baggage Claim Activity

On an index card, LEGIBLY write your response to these questions:

What do students need in order to learn? What can teachers do to facilitate student

learning?

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When I say “GO,” find a partner to share what you have written.

Explain your responses to your partner, and then give your index card to that person.

He/she will explain his/her responses to you and then give his/her index card to you.

Repeat after 60 seconds when I say “GO” again

Rules for Baggage Claim

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Differentiated Instruction Awareness

The Brain Stem

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The Brain Stem

Involuntary actions – blinking, breathing, heartbeat

Also called “reptilian brain” Collects and delivers

sensory information

to higher brain

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Differentiated Instruction Awareness

The Limbic System

Cerrebellum

Hippocampus

Amygdala

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Amygdala

Gatekeeper Three levels of attention The need to BELONG The need to be SAFE

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The Hippocampus

Transferring memories Making new memories Inhibition Smell Location

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The Cerebellum

Movement Balance

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“It's like a math co-processor. It's not essential for any activity ... but it makes any activity better. Anything we can think of as higher thought, mathematics, music, philosophy, decision-making, social skill, draws upon the cerebellum....” Dr. Jay Giedd, National Institute of Mental Health

The Cerebellum

Page 37: Doable Differentiation

10 + 2 Activity

On a piece of paper, write down as much as you remember about the 2 parts of the brain that we have discussed. Try not to peek!

Share what you remembered with your 12:00 appointment

Look at your notes and add whatever you forgot to include

Page 38: Doable Differentiation

Differentiated Instruction Awareness

Frontallobe

Temporallobe

Parietal lobe

Occipitallobe

Cerebellum

The Cerebrum

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The Frontal Lobe

• How we interact with our surroundings. • Our judgments on daily routines. • Our expressive language. • Assigns meaning to words we choose. • Involves word association. • Memory for habits and motor activities

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The Parietal Lobe

• Location for visual attention. • Location for touch perception. • Goal directed voluntary movements. • Manipulation of objects. • Integration of different senses that allows for

understanding a single concept.

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The Occipital Lobe

Vision

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The Temporal Lobe

• Hearing • Memory • Visual perceptions. • Categorizing of objects. T

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Memory Song ActivitySung to the tune of “10 Little Indians”

Touch the appropriate area of your brain as you sing:

Temporal, Occipital, ParietalTemporal, Occipital, ParietalTemporal, Occipital, ParietalFrontal, Cerebellum

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Response Cards Activity

Which lobe(s) would students mainly use when: Sorting colors into primary, secondary, tertiary Playing spelling Twister Typing vocabulary words Copying notes from the board Listening to teacher lecture Role playing an event from history Completing a word find Discussing the pros and cons of a proposal

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Differentiated Instruction Awareness

A NEURON

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Higher Level Thinking

Can actually generate NEW neurons (neurogenesis)

Adds dendrites Increases the thickness of the myelin sheath

Using the Gray Matter!

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Stimulating Environment Affects Learning

A child's ability to learn can increase or decrease by 25 percent or more, depending on whether he or she grows up in a stimulating environment.

www.brainconnection.com

Page 48: Doable Differentiation

Two times of ENORMOUS brain growth and pruning:

During the first month of life, the number of connections or synapses increases from 50 trillion to 1 quadrillion.

If an infant's body grew at a comparable rate, his weight would increase from 8.5 pounds at birth to 170 pounds at one month old.

Overproduction ends, pruning begins until about age 3

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Second cycle of growth and pruning

Dendritic growth spurt at age 11 in girls, 12 in boys

Pruning phase during adolescence Age 13 – 18 lose 1% of gray matter per year If you don’t use it, you lose it!

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The Teacher Effect

Quality of classroom instruction is most significant factor in students’ brain development.

Didactic instruction – teacher directed Interactive instruction – student actively

engaged

Which type do you think grows dendrites?

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Sad Fact:

Failing to engage students actively can actually make students dumber.

Use it or lose it: If dendrites are not being used, they will be pruned.

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ABA activity

Stand up for REVIEW! Grab a partner Decide who will be A and who will be B A speaks for 60 seconds, nonstop B speaks for 90 seconds, nonstop A speaks for 30 seconds, nonstop

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Firing those neurons: Memory

Encoding: Establish meaning Storage: Attach to other memories Retrieval: Stimulate relationship

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Memorize the following:

Page 55: Doable Differentiation

Write the phrase on your paper.

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Memorize the following:

Bog je ljubav

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Write the phrase on your paper.

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Memorize the following:

God is love.

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To encode:

The brain must be able to make meaning out of the stimulus.

A student’s brain cannot make meaning if the content is beyond his skill level.

Differentiating by student readiness increases the likelihood of encoding occurring.

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To store:

Information is “stored” in the brain according to the modality used to encode.

We want to stimulate as many neurons as possible to form relationships.

Differentiating by student learning style increases the number of places the information is stored in the brain.

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To retrieve:

If information is encoded and stored in many places in the brain with many related networks of neurons firing, the likelihood of retrieval is increased.

Differentiating instruction by student interest stimulates previously established networks and improves retrieval.

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Numbered Heads Together Activity

In groups of 4, number each person 1, 2, 3, and 4

Come to consensus on a response for the question. I will draw a number and call on the person with that number to give the group’s response.

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Match the following items to the correct percentage.

What we hear 95%

What we see 80%

What we see and hear 70%

What we read 50%

What we discuss 30%

What we teach others 20%

What we personally experience 10%

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10% of what we read 20% of what we hear 30% of what we see 50% of what we see and hear 70% of what we discuss with others 80% of what we personally experience 95% or what we teach others

- Edgar Dale

Correct answers:

Page 65: Doable Differentiation

Automaticity: Key to Higher Levels

As pattern of neural stimulation develops by use, less electrochemical activity is needed in order to accomplish a task.

More electrochemical activity is devoted to frontal cortex in a more efficient way.

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Differentiated Instruction Awareness

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Newborns Distinguish Speech

Children as young as four days old can distinguish the vowel sounds of the language in their natural environment from those of a foreign language.

www.brainconnection.com

Page 68: Doable Differentiation

Pretty Weird

Aoccdrnig to rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn”t mttaer in what oredr the ltteers in a wrd are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng is that the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit pclae. The rset can be a tatol mses and you can still raed it wouthit porbelm. This is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the word as a wlohe. Amzanig huh?

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How do we gain automaticity?

Active engagement increases automaticity. Students become actively engaged when we

differentiate instruction.

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Mind Map Activity

Get with your 9:00 appointment. Review what you have learned about

differentiating instruction. Create a mind map to summarize the most

important points you have learned.

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Using the Strategy Ring:

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Bonny Buffingtonwww.bonnybuffington.wikispaces.comKnox County [email protected]

Q and A