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Flexible Grouping Practices

Flexible Grouping Practices

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Flexible Grouping Practices. Grouping and the Gifted Student. The gifted student ranges in his/her strengths and weaknesses just as do all students Students are different from each other and challenged when provided programming at the appropriate level of instruction - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Flexible Grouping Practices

Flexible Grouping Practices

Page 2: Flexible Grouping Practices

Grouping and the Gifted Student

• The gifted student ranges in his/her strengths and weaknesses just as do all students

• Students are different from each other and challenged when provided programming at the appropriate level of instruction

• Teachers must look at each student individually

• MCPS content curriculum contain adaptations that are suitable for the gifted student in the cluster grouped classroom

• Flexible Grouping for the delivery of instruction is the cornerstone of appropriate differentiation for the gifted student

Page 3: Flexible Grouping Practices

When does grouping facilitate instruction?When it:

• allows both for quick mastery of information and ideas

• allows for additional exploration by students needing more time for mastery

• allows for both collaborative and independent work

• gives students and teachers a voice in work arrangements

• allows students to work with a wide variety of peers

• encourages teachers to “try out” students in a variety of work settings

• keeps students from being “pegged” as advanced or struggling

Page 4: Flexible Grouping Practices

Which activities lend themselves to group work?

Page 5: Flexible Grouping Practices

Activities for Heterogeneous Grouping

• Open ended activities with use of strategies such as critical thinking,, development of concepts and generalizations

• Multidisciplinary themes

• When presenting new content

• Examples: Hands on Science experiments, and current events activities

Page 6: Flexible Grouping Practices

Group Work - Old and New

• Task is usually a project

• Some students do more work and take most responsibility

• Some students are ignored by others in group

• Some students feel success, others feel frustration

• Each student cares most about what he/she learns and what grade he/she receives

• Task may be a project, brainstorming, problem solving

• Shared work and responsibility

• Participation of all students is encouraged

• Each student’s ideas and work are valued

• Students care about group learning

Page 7: Flexible Grouping Practices

Flexible Grouping

Occurs when there is a whole group assessment or instruction initially; and then the students are

divided by their need for either review,

re-teaching, practice, or enrichment. Such grouping could be a single lesson or objective,

a set of skills, a unit of study, or a major concept or theme. Flexible grouping creates

temporary groups for an hour, a day, a week, or a month or so. It does not create permanent

groups.

Page 8: Flexible Grouping Practices

Schools will utilize flexible and varied grouping practices that

enhance the opportunity to receive expanded, intensive, enriched and

accelerated curricula at all instructional levels.

Source: Policy on Gifted and Talented Education

Page 9: Flexible Grouping Practices

Planning for Grouping:Questions to Consider

• When does grouping benefit students?• When does grouping facilitate

instruction?• Which activities lend themselves to

group work?• How do you determine group

membership?

Page 10: Flexible Grouping Practices

When does grouping benefit students?

• When the task requires input from different types of learning styles and perspectives.

• When the subject matter is new for all students.

• When it allows gifted students to be engaged in real learning.

Page 11: Flexible Grouping Practices

Appropriate Activities for Appropriate Activities for Heterogeneous Grouping:Heterogeneous Grouping:

• Critical Thinking

• Concept and Generalization

• Whole Language Experiences

• Multi-disciplinary Units

• Open ended discussions

• Examples: Hands-on science experiments and Current event discussions

Page 12: Flexible Grouping Practices

Appropriate Activities for Homogeneous Grouping:

• Drill and Practice• Math computation• Studying for recall

type test• Answering

comprehension questions about a novel

Page 13: Flexible Grouping Practices

Group Membership

Can be determined by:

Readiness

Interest

Reading Level

Skill Level

Background Knowledge

Social Skills

Page 14: Flexible Grouping Practices

Grouping Method

• Teacher Assigned

• Student Selected

• Random

Page 15: Flexible Grouping Practices

PRE-ASSESSMENT

The purpose of pre-assessment is to determine what students know about

a topic before it is taught. Pre-assessment will help the teacher

determine flexible grouping patterns and should be used regularly.

Page 16: Flexible Grouping Practices

Pre-assessment Strategies

• Teacher prepared pre-test• KWL Charts /Graphic

Organizers• Writing Prompts/Samples• Guess Box• Student demonstrations

and discussions

• Student products and work samples

• Show of hands/EPR Every Pupil Response

• Standardized Tests/ISM Data

• Teacher observation/Checklist

Page 17: Flexible Grouping Practices

Management of Groups

• Goal of the Activity– Total number of Pupils in Class– Number of Groups– Number of Students in a Group – Roles within the Group– Teacher Role

Page 18: Flexible Grouping Practices

Assessment

A successful end product and/or the fulfilling the pre-stated objective.

Page 19: Flexible Grouping Practices

Processing

• Individual and Group accountability activities which reflect the success of:– The student– The group– The objective for the teacher planned

activity

Page 20: Flexible Grouping Practices

Flexible Grouping for the delivery of instruction is the cornerstone of appropriate differentiation for the gifted student as well

as all students. The use of Flexible Grouping assures Success for Every

Student.

Page 21: Flexible Grouping Practices

This program was developed by:

Elaine McArdle

And

Gina Woodward

EII Coordinators Ridgeview Middle School