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MENTOR C
OLLABORAT
ION
CURRICULU
M REVIE
W
MEETING
AP
RI L
30
, 2
01
3
WELCOME AND INTRODUCTIONS
• Welcome
• In-house roundtable introductions
• Distance option introductions
MENTOR COLLABORATION
Differentiated Instruction Techniques
Presenter:
Amy Kaufmann
Orange County Department of Education
& UCSD
Differentiated Instruction
What is it and what does it look like in a CTE classroom?
San Diego CountyDesignated Subjects Credential Consortium
Definition:
Differentiated instruction is: • An instructional theory • Takes diverse student factors into account
when planning and delivering instruction. • Based on this theory, teachers can structure
learning environments that address the variety of learning styles, interests, and abilities found within a classroom.
How does it work?:
Differentiated instruction is based upon the belief that:• Students learn best when they make
connections between the curriculum and their diverse interests and experiences.
• The greatest learning occurs when students are pushed slightly beyond the point where they can work without assistance.
What does it mean for teachers?:
Teachers DO • Provide several learning options, or different paths to learning,
which help students take in information and make sense of concepts and skills.
• Provide appropriate levels of challenge for all students, including those who lag behind, those who are advanced, and those right in the middle.
Teachers DON'T • Develop a separate lesson plan for each student in a
classroom.• “Water down" the curriculum for some students.
What is Program Standard Fifteen?
Standard 15 Teaching English Learners• Candidates know and apply specially designed
academic instruction in English (SDAIE) to make curriculum content comprehensible to English learners.
Is SDAIE the same as Differentiated Instruction?:Yes! For example:
From California Standards for the Teaching Profession (CSTP)• Standard 1: Engaging and Supporting All
Students in Learning• Specifically 1.4:
Using a variety of instructional strategies, resources, and technologies to meet students’ diverse learning needs
No, really, is it?Yes, again !
From the Teacher Performance Expectations (TPE’s)
TPE 4 –Making Content Accessible • Incorporating specific strategies that motivate
students to learn (meeting student academic learning needs in a variety of ways.)
TPE 7 - Teaching English Learners (in part)• Designs lesson to make learning strategies explicit
Learning Inventories• Understanding how the students in the
classroom learn and what kind of learners they are is important to know.
• One learning style inventory is VARK. The VARK inventory lets the students learn how they learn best by answering a series of questions.
Learning Inventories• Teachers can conduct a learning style interest
inventory by completing the inventory in the computer lab, allow the students to use their mobile devices, or use Poll Everywhere as a guided classroom activity or assign it as homework.
• VARK Learning Style Inventory
The Basics
Content
Content (what students learn)• Includes curriculum topics, concepts, or themes.• Reflects state or national standards.• Presents essential facts and skills.• Differentiates by pre-assessing student skills and
understandings, then matching learners with appropriate activities.
• Provides students with choices in order to add depth to learning.
• Provides students with additional resources that match their levels of understanding.
ProcessProcess (how students learn)• Refers to how students make sense or understand
the information, ideas, and skills being studied.• Reflects student learning styles and preferences.• Varies the learning process depending upon how
students learn.
Product
Product (the end result of student learning)• Tends to be tangible: reports, tests, brochures,
speeches, skits.• Reflects student understanding.• Differentiates by providing challenge, variety,
and choice.
Differentiated Instruction in the CTE Classroom
Preparing Lesson Plans:• CTE courses are by their very nature, lend
themselves hands-on, project-based learning.• One way to approach differentiation is the
KUD Method (Know, Understand, Do)
Example:KUD Samples from High School Teachers
Patrick Johner, Todd County High School
Land and Water of North Africa and Southwest and Central Asia, 9th grade unit
• K: Students will know the land and water features of the region.• U: Students will understand how the region’s major rivers are
important to the region and why• much of the world is economically dependent upon the region.• D: Students will build a layered-look book on the land and water
of the region.
Strategies
Menus• A menu offers students a way to make
decisions about what they will do in order to meet class requirements. A menu could be for a single lesson, a week-long lesson, or even a month-long period of study. Once the teacher has decided on what the essential understanding and/or skills are, she/he can begin to create a menu.
Strategies
Tic-Tac-Toe• Tic-Tac-Toe choice boards give students the
opportunity to participate in multiple tasks that allow them to practice skills they’ve learned in class or to demonstrate and extend their understanding of concepts. From the board, students either choose or are assigned three adjacent or diagonal tasks to complete
Websites To Explore
• A Different Place• http://www.adifferentplace.org/• 4teachers.org• http://www.4teachers.org/• Odds ‘n Ends: More Ways to Differentiate• http://www.gp.k12.mi.us/ci/diff/diff/oddsends.htm• Layered Curriculum®• http://help4teachers.com• ASCD: Education Topics/Differentiation Instruction• http://www.ascd.org/• Differentiated Instruction Resources• http://www.sde.com/Conferences/Differentiated-Instruction/
DIResources.htm
References
• Teaching Today Differentiated Instruction Retrieved March 4, 2013 from http://www.glencoe.com/sec/teachingtoday/subject/di_meeting.phtml
• Benjamin, Amy. Differentiated Instruction: A Guide for Middle and High School Teachers. Larchmont, NY: Eye on Education, 2002.
• Tomlinson, Carol Ann, and Caroline Cunningham Eidson. Differentiation in Practice: A Resource Guide for Differentiating Curriculum, Grades 5-9. Alexandria, VA: ASCD, 2003.
CURRICULU
M REVIE
W
DISCUSSIO
N
REPORTS FROM INSTRUCTORS
• Courses Taught
• Student Enrollments
• Flow of Coursework
• Suggestions for Improvements
REPORTS FROM MENTORS
• Coaching Progress• What’s working• What’s not working• Can the program provide anything additional?
• Feedback Logs• New PDF Fillable Logs now available and are posted
on our website• Lots of late logs – please submit on time• Next batch due the end of June • If your school finishes earlier than June, submit then
REPORTS FROM PROGRAM STAFF
Program Information•Ms. Miller has resigned and taken a new position elsewhere•Mentor Program•Need logs turned in on time; avoid additional work of follow-up emails, telephone calls and eventually out-of-compliance issues
• Credential Process•Applications
UCSD
Candidate Surveys
• Overview of candidate surveys
• Explanation of surveys•Why we need them•How they are used
PROGRAM IMPROVEMENT DISCUSSION TOPICS• Program Structure•Modified forms (fillable PDF mentor logs)•Added Adult Education to all program forms•Clarified the completed Portfolio course needs to be submitted to the Program electronically from all candidates
• Newsletters•Next one coming your way mid May
EMPLOYER SURVEYS
Going out in May
• Questions include :• “Are candidates who have completed the program coursework successful in their classrooms?”
•Are there coursework areas that need to be taught at a deeper level? e.g., classroom management, working with students with special needs or English Language Learners
THANK YOU
FOR BEING PART OF
OUR PROGRAM!
ROUND
TABLE DIS
CUSSION