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TRUMBULL COUNTY EDUCATIONAL SERVICE CENTER

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Title: TRUMBULL COUNTY EDUCATIONAL SERVICE CENTER


1
TRUMBULL COUNTY EDUCATIONAL SERVICE CENTER
  • LEADING FOR EDUCATIONAL EXCELLENCE

2
Differentiated InstructionMines Elementary
October 18, 2007
  • Dale Lennon
  • Director of Pupil Services
  • Trumbull County Educational Service Center
  • Niles, Ohio

3
2006-07 Building Report Card
  • Designation Excellent
  • Indicators Met 10/10
  • Performance Index 102.1
  • AYP Met
  • School Improvement Status OK

4
2006-07 District Report Card
  • Designation Excellent
  • Indicators Met 29/30
  • Performance Index 99.9
  • AYP Not Met
  • District Improvement Status At Risk

5
AYP Summary
6
District Consequences
7
District Consequences
8
District Consequences
9
Building Subgroup Status (Reading)
10
Building Subgroup Status (Math)
11
2007-08 AYP Targets
12
AYP The Perfect Storm
  • AYP target for students with disabilities not
    met.
  • Higher annual targets.
  • Increasingly severe consequences each year a
    district or building remains in school
    improvement.
  • Lack of information about how to increase
    achievement of students with disabilities.

13
Options
  • Hope the law changes and do nothing .
  • Advocate for changes in the law.
  • Improve the performance of all students.
  • Develop a strategic plan for improving the
    performance of students with disabilities.
  • Implement effective, evidence-based instructional
    practices for all students, with emphasis on
    students in subgroup(s) that do not meet AYP.

14
Evidence-based Practice Differentiated
Instruction
  • Supported by empirical evidence.
  • Applicable across all grades and content areas.
  • Designed to promote the achievement of all
    students and all subgroups.
  • Does not require specialized training or
    materials.
  • May be implemented incrementally.

15
Differentiated Instruction
Differentiation is a teaching concept in which
the classroom teacher plans for the diverse needs
of students. The teacher must consider such
differences as the students
  • Learning styles, skill levels, and rates.
  • Learning difficulties.
  • Language proficiency.
  • Background experiences and knowledge.
  • Interests.
  • Motivation.

16
What Is Differentiation?
  • A teachers response to learner needs.
  • The recognition of students varying background
    knowledge and preferences.
  • Instruction that appeals to students
    differences.

17
Differentiated Instruction Is Based on the
Following Beliefs
  • Students differ in their learning profiles.
  • Classrooms in which students are active learners,
    decision makers and problem solvers are more
    natural and effective than those in which
    students are served a one-size-fits-all
    curriculum and treated as passive recipients of
    information.
  • Covering information takes a backseat to making
    meaning out of important ideas.

18
What It Isnt
  • The same as individualization.
  • Just another way to group kids.
  • Expecting less of struggling learners than of
    typical learners.
  • A substitute for specialized services.
  • A separate lesson plan for each student.
  • New.

19
Comparing Classrooms
  • Traditional Differentiated
  • Single definition of Excellence defined by
  • excellence. individual growth.
  • Whole class instruction Many instructional
  • dominates. arrangements used.
  • Student differences masked/ Student differences
    used
  • acted on when problematic. as a basis for
    planning.
  • Teacher directs student Teacher guides students
    to
  • behavior. be self-reliant learners.

20
Comparing Classrooms
  • Traditional Differentiated
  • A single text prevails. Multiple materials
    provided.
  • A single assessment form Students assessed
    multiple
  • used. ways.
  • Coverage of curriculum Student readiness,
    interest,
  • guides texts shapes learning profile shape
  • instruction. instruction.
  • Assessment at end of Assessment is ongoing and
    learning to see who diagnostic to understand how
  • got it. to make instruction better.

21
Teachers Can Differentiate
Content
Process
Product
According to Students
Interest
Learning Profile
Readiness
Adapted from The Differentiated Classroom
Responding to the Needs of All Learners
(Tomlinson, 1999)
22
Why Differentiate?
  • Required by Ohio Operating Standards.
  • All kids are different.
  • One size does not fit all.
  • Differentiation provides all students with access
    to all curriculum.

23
Hallmarks Of Differentiated Classrooms
  • Teachers begin instruction where students are,
    not at the beginning of the textbook or
    designated curriculum starting point.
  • Teachers ensure that students compete against
    themselves rather than each other.
  • Teachers use time flexibly, employ a variety of
    instructional strategies, hold all students to
    high standards (relative to their individual
    starting points).

24
Assessment In Differentiated Classrooms
  • Underlying Beliefs
  • Everything a student says and does is a potential
    source of assessment data.
  • Assessment should be an ongoing process should
    maximize the opportunities for each student.

25
Dimensions Of Differentiation
  • Differentiating Content
  • Content refers to the concepts, principles, and
    skills that teachers want students to learn.
  • Teachers should address the same content with all
    students but adjust the degree of complexity.
  • Teachers may direct advanced students who think
    abstractly to more complex texts and web sites
    while providing less accomplished students with
    reading buddies, videos, demonstrations, etc.

26
Differentiating Content
  • Examples of differentiating content
  • using reading material at varying readability
    levels.
  • using multiple spelling or vocabulary lists.
  • meeting with small groups of students to extend
    or reteach curriculum.

27
Dimensions Of Differentiation
  • Differentiating Process
  • Process refers to the activities that help
    students make sense of the ideas skills being
    taught.
  • Teachers can provide some students with more
    complexity, others with scaffolding (step-by-step
    directions, reteaching, additional models)
    depending on the students level of readiness
    relative to the topic.
  • Process can be varied by student interest and
    learning preferences.

28
Differentiating Process
  • Examples of differentiating process
  • hands-on support such as math manipulatives.
  • interest centers.
  • tiered activities.
  • using personal agenda (task lists based on
    individual goals).

29
Dimensions Of Differentiation
  • Differentiating Product
  • Products refer to culminating projects that allow
    students to demonstrate and extend what they have
    learned.
  • Products reveal whether students can apply
    learning beyond the classroom to solve problems
    and take action.
  • Different products can be assigned based on
    readiness levels, interests, learning
    preferences, etc.

30
Differentiating Product
  • Examples of differentiating product
  • options to demonstrate learning (write a letter,
    create a diorama).
  • rubrics that match differing readiness levels.
  • individual versus group products.

31
Dimensions Of Differentiation
  • Differentiating the learning environment
  • Learning environment is the way the classroom
    works and feels.
  • Examples of differentiating learning environment
  • making sure there are places in the classroom to
    work quietly, without distraction and places that
    invite student collaboration.
  • providing materials that reflect a variety of
    cultures and home settings.

32
Example 4th Grade Reading
  • Establishing a Point of View in Narratives
  • Benchmark D Differentiate between the points of
    view in narrative text.
  • Indicator 4 Identify the speaker and recognize
    the difference between the first and third-
    person narration
  • Sample differentiations
  • Use a variety of selections that reflect the
    reading levels and interests of students in pre
    and post assessments.
  • Read story aloud, allow oral responses.

33
Example 5th Grade Reading
  • Plot Connections
  • Benchmark C Identify the elements of plot and
    establish a connection between an element and a
    future event.
  • Indicator 3Identify the main incidents of a plot
    sequence and explain how they influence future
    action.
  • Sample differentiation
  • Have students describe cause/effect relationships
    from everyday life.
  • Have students identify similar connections in
    other works like movies, television shows or
    video games.

34
Example 3rd Grade Science
  • Properties of Soil
  • Benchmark C Describe Earths resources including
    rocks, soil, water, air, animals and plants and
    the ways in which they can be conserved.
  • Indicator 5 Investigate the properties of soil
    (e.g., color, texture, capacity to retain water,
    ability to support plant growth).
  • Sample differentiation
  • Make extra copies of completed webs or graphic
    organizers to assist students who have difficulty
    organizing information.
  • Provide a partner or scribe for students who have
    difficulty writing observations.

35
Example 4th Grade Math
  • Data Analysis and Probability
  • Benchmark C Construct charts, tables and graphs
    to represent data, including picture graphs, bar
    graphs, line graphs, line plots and Venn
    diagrams.
  • Indicator 2 Represent and interpret data using
    tables, bar graphs, line plots and line graphs.
  • Sample differentiation
  • Provide pre-made forms to create the graphs.
    These would have blank lines for axis labels and
    for the title, and preset intervals.
  • If students are having difficulty creating
    questions, provide example interpretation
    questions for them to use when creating the ones
    for their own graphs.
  • s.

36
Example 5th Grade Social Studies
  • Our Heritage.
  • Benchmark B Describe the cultural patterns that
    are evident in North America today as a result of
    exploration, colonization and conflict.
  • Indicator 4 Describe the lasting effects of
    Spanish, French and English colonization in North
    America including cultural patterns evident today
    such as language, food, traditions and
    architecture.
  • Sample differentiation
  • Pair or group students to collaborate on the
    collection, organization and presentation of
    information about their topics of interest.
  • Pre-select resources for students who may have
    difficulty locating information.
  • s.

37
How To Differentiate And Keep Students On The
Same Page?
  • The teacher must be clear about what he/she wants
    the students to learn as a result of this segment
    of learning.
  • The teacher should focus on a key concept or big
    idea as well as a key skill that helps the
    students work with that concept.

38
How To Keep Students on the Same Page
  • Designs activities that aid all students in
    understanding this same big idea.
  • Use the same basic skill at different levels of
    simplicity vs. complexity or concreteness vs.
    abstractness.
  • All students have the opportunity to make sense
    of the essential understandings at a level that
    provides the appropriate degree of challenge.

39
Instructional Strategies
40
Instructional Strategies
41
Downside Experiences of Some Teachers
  • Modifications were improvised or reactive.
  • Too much to cover made modifications ineffective.
  • Modifying materials, changing instructional
    strategies, making long range plans, and adapting
    assessment/grading criteria too overwhelming.
  • Unable to address ways culture and race impact
    student interest and learning preferences.

42
Current Status Of Differentiation In Classrooms
  • Without a pre-assessment process many teachers
    operate under the assumption that all students
    need the same instruction.
  • Most instructional variations that are made use
    tailoring (keeping content, activities, products
    the same for all learners making small
    adjustments) but not differentiation.

43
What Do We Know?
  • That instruction that is responsive to student
    readiness, interest, and learning profiles
    promotes the achievement of AYP.
  • That many teachers need to reconstruct their
    understanding of how students learn, how learning
    varies and how students should be taught to
    promote student achievement.
  • That consistent, reflective, proactive teacher
    attention to differentiation makes a difference.

44
Differentiating Instruction How To Begin
  • Start small try a differentiated task for a
    small block of time.
  • Take notes take notes so you know what works and
    what doesnt for various learners.
  • Assess before you teach a new topic and use
    results to guide the differentiation.

45
Starting
  • Envision how an activity will take place write
    out procedures,think about what might go wrong,
    plan alternative options.
  • Reflect were all students engaged in learning?
    Did grouping (size, arrangements) work? Note what
    to keep as well as what requires modification.

46
Begin Slowly Just Begin!
47
Resources
  • National Center on Accessing the General
    Curriculum
  • http//www.cast.org/ncac/
  • Access Center
  • http// www.k8accesscenter.org

48
References/resources
  • Differentiation
  • http//www.ericdigests.org/2001-2/elementary.html
  • Carol Tomlinson on Differentiation
  • http//www.education.pitt.edu/leaders/FAQ/differen
    tiatedinstruc.htm
  • Differentiation site with helpful links to
    components of Differentiation
  • Assessment
  • Curriculum-based measurement
  • http//www.studentprogress.org
  • Ohio Instructional Management System (IMS)
  • https//ims.ode.state.oh.us/ode/ims/rrt/research/
    Content/grouping_what_this_means.asp

49
Differentiated Instruction
  • For additional information, please contact
  • Dale Lennon
  • Director of Pupil Services
  • Trumbull County Educational Service Center
  • Niles, Ohio
  • (330) 505-2800, Ex. 133
  • Dale.Lennon_at_neomin.Org
  • PowerPoint Presentation available from
  • http//www.trumbull.k12.oh.us/departments/sped/web
    res.htm

50
TRUMBULL COUNTY EDUCATIONAL SERVICE CENTER
  • LEADING FOR EDUCATIONAL EXCELLENCE
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