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Chapter 10 Differentiation and Diversity

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Title: Chapter 10 Differentiation and Diversity


1
Chapter 10Differentiation and Diversity
  • Rebecca Wendt and Jennifer Fields

2
Section 10.1Differentiated Instruction
  • Definition instruction that is designed to flex
    to meet the varying needs of students within a
    class

3
Principles that guide differentiated classrooms
  • The teacher focuses on the essentials
  • The teacher attends to student differences
  • Assessment and instruction are inseparable
  • The teacher modifies content, process, and
    products

4
More Principles..
  • All students participate in respectful work
  • The teacher and students collaborate in learning
  • The teacher balances group and individual norms
  • The teacher and students work together flexibly

5
Helpful things to facilitate differentiation
  • Centers can be a natural setting for activities
    at varied levels
  • Stations - set out areas of the classroom in
    which students can work on varied tasks
    simultaneously
  • Contracts - can be used for individual
    assignments or as a class activity with two or
    three possible contracts each with challenging
    options appropriate to a particular level
  • Agendas - provide students with an individualized
    list of tasks to be completed in a specified
    amount of time

6
Tiered activities
  • a key strategy when teachers want to ensure that
    students all work on key skills or essential
    ideas, but still address varied learning needs

7
Reading Workshop Program
  • A great approach for dealing with varied reading
    levels.
  • In a reading workshop, skills lessons are
    targeted at either the whole class or small
    groups, depending on need
  • The bulk of reading time is spent on
    self-selected reading and responding

8
Heterogeneous Cooperative Groups
  • One of the key skills for teachers who want to
    differentiate instruction is learning to
    differentiate within heterogeneous cooperative
    groups
  • This can link the advantages of working with many
    types of students to the strengths of assignments
    targeted to specific needs

9
Peer Tutoring Activities
  • Carefully planned peer tutoring activities can
    benefit many students
  • Students learn best from a model they perceive is
    similar to themselves
  • Tutoring should represent only a limited portion
    of the school day

10
  • The key to successful planning for elementary
    classes is to remember that classes never learn
    anythingonly individual children learn, one at a
    time.

11
Prioritize Lessons
  • It is important for teachers to prioritize
    lessons to determine when differentiation is most
    important
  • Consider the content
  • Consider the students themselves, particularly
    those with the most extreme individual needs
  • Consider each students experience over a period
    of a day or week

12
  • All students should spend at least part of every
    day engaging in activities that specifically
    target their needs!

13
Section 10.2 Teaching Students With Educational
Disabilities
  • Disability a condition that results in a
    reduced competency to perform some task or
    behavior, whether the condition is physical,
    emotional, or intellectual
  • Educational disabilities disabilities that
    impede regular educational activities

14
Major Classifications and Impairments
  • The major classifications of disabilities include
    students with these impairments
  • Mental impairments
  • Physical or other health impairments
  • Sensory impairments
  • Speech impairments
  • Emotional impairments
  • Learning disabilities

- All of the listed impairments may occur in a
range from mild, to moderate, to severe, to
profound
15
Disability Categories
  • 91 of the children and youth receiving special
    education services are reported in four
    disability categories
  • Learning disabilities (51.1)
  • Speech and language impairments (20.1)
  • Mental impairments (11.4)
  • Emotional disturbances (8.6)

- Children with disabilities in special education
represent about 10 of the entire school-age
population
16
Handicap vs. Disability
  • Handicap the disadvantage one suffers from the
    effects of a disability
  • The extent to which an individual is handicapped
    is a result of both the severity of the
    disability and the degree of assistance offered
    by society
  • The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
    is helpful in understanding the relationship
    between a disability and a handicap

17
IDEA and its 6 Major Principles
  • Schools must educate all children
  • Schools must use nonbiased and multifactored
    methods of assessing disabilities
  • Education for students with disabilities must be
    provided at public expense, including an
    individualized education program (IEP) designed
    to meet the childs unique needs
  • Students must be educated in the least
    restrictive environment appropriate to their
    needs
  • Schools must provide due process to protect the
    rights of students with disabilities and their
    parents
  • Parents and students should have the opportunity
    to collaborate with schools in the design and
    implementation of specialized services

18
Disability Characteristics and Challenges
  • Some students need special equipment, materials,
    and support personnel
  • Some students qualify for government support
    because they are also economically disadvantaged
    others do not
  • Some disabilities are hard to identify,
    particularly in students with multiple
    disabilities or students for whom English is not
    the primary language

19
Least Restrictive Environment
  • To provide all students with the least
    restrictive environment possible, a variety of
    services has evolved
  • Full-time regular classroom
  • Regular classroom for a majority of the school
    program
  • Self-contained classroom for a majority of the
    school program
  • Self-contained classroom for the instructional
    program but within the regular school building
  • Separate school

20
Did you know
  • It is likely that teachers will have one or more
    students with disabilities in the classroom?

21
I.E.P (Individualized Education Plan)
  • Each student will require an IEP, which must
    include the following
  • A statement of the childs present levels of
    educational performance
  • A statement of annual goals, including short-term
    objectives
  • A statement of the specific educational services
    to be provided and the extent to which the child
    will be able to participate in regular programs
  • The projected date for initiation and anticipated
    duration of such services
  • Appropriate objective criteria and evaluation
    procedures and schedules for determining whether
    instructional objectives are being met
  • The IEP must also be developed by the students
    teacher and the students parents or guardians,
    and approved by the school administrator

22
Inclusion
  • Inclusion when students with disabilities spend
    all or part of the day in regular classrooms

23
Inclusion
  • In an inclusion classroom, the test is whether
    the severely disabled students benefits from
    participation in the regular classroom work and
    not whether the student is able to maintain a
    work performance level similar to that of other
    students

24
Inclusion
  • Where inclusion is common, the student does not
    follow assistance personnel and services rather,
    the personnel and services follow the child
  • These personnel may include resource teachers,
    paraprofessionals, translators, therapists,
    readers, and many others

25
Successful Inclusive Education
  • A school that successfully implements inclusive
    education has been characterized as a place where
    the following occur on a daily basis
  • Heterogeneous grouping
  • A sense of belonging to a group
  • Shared activities with individualized outcomes
  • Use of environments frequented by people without
    disabilities
  • A balanced educational experience

26
It is not that simple!
  • Simply placing students with disabilities in
    general education does not constitute inclusion
    and will not guarantee that children with
    disabilities will learn or that they will be
    accepted by other students
  • It is important that teachers educate
    non-disabled students about their classmates
  • The levels of support provided, type and severity
    of disabilities, and number of inclusion students
    in a particular classroom all contribute to the
    success or failure of the effort

27
Strategies for Successful Inclusion
  • Allow peers to facilitate learning
  • Structure class activities to make peer support
    available
  • Prepare students to be successful
  • Give students valued roles
  • Use existing expertise
  • Use independent prompts
  • Vary the amount of work required
  • Adjust delivery of information
  • Allow students to express information in varied
    ways
  • Present alternative activities

28
Strategies for teaching students with
disabilities
  • Learn as much as you can about the needs of
    students in your class
  • Avoid calling special attention to the students
    disability
  • Do not make assumptions based on the disability
  • Establish a classroom environment in which it is
    common for students of different background and
    capabilities to learn from each other
  • Be enthusiastic and give positive reinforcement
  • Be sure to have a systematic framework to
    organize your classroom activities
  • Consider using a criterion-referenced evaluation
    approach in judging the performance of a student
    with a disability
  • Become an advocate for the student with a
    disability

29
Advantages of Inclusion
  • The integration of students with disabilities
    into regular classrooms has been a consistent
    element of local, state, and federal education
    policy since the 1970s
  • There are a number of advantages to inclusion
  • The opportunity for cooperative learning
  • The lessening of isolation experienced by special
    students
  • The democratic values that are strengthened
  • The reduction in stereotypes, prejudice,
    misconceptions, and superstition concerning
    individuals with disabilities
  • The promise it holds for the continuation of such
    values into the adult world

30
Disadvantages of Inclusion
  • The increased costs of enhances support needed
    for educating these students in multiple
    environments
  • The instructional demands on the regular
    classroom teacher
  • The additional paperwork burden on school
    districts

31
Section 10.3 Teaching Gifted and Talented
Students
  • There is no consensus on what constitutes a
    gifted student
  • Traditionally, giftedness has been identified by
    a high score on an IQ test however, that is not
    a particularly good predictor of adult giftedness
  • There is no doubt that students prior knowledge,
    cultural background, and previous school
    experiences have a significant impact on test
    scores
  • IQ scores cannot assess an individuals total
    intellectual or academic potential or identify
    giftedness

32
U.S. Dept. of Education Definition
  • In 1993, the U.S. Dept. of Education proposed a
    definition that limited use of the word gifted
    to adults and focused on developing talent in
    children
  • It defined young people with outstanding talent
    as those who
  • Show the potential for performing at remarkably
    high levels of accomplishment when compared with
    others of their age, experience, or
    environmentin intellectual, creative, and/or
    artistic areasleadership capacityor specific
    academic fields
  • This definition marks an important shift from an
    emphasis on giftedness as a trait to a
    characteristic that is developed over time and
    affected by experience

33
Creative Producers
  • Creative producers producers of information and
    art rather than simply consumers
  • Those who were responsible for a major invention,
    made a scientific discovery, or created a work of
    art or literature

34
Schoolhouse Giftedness and Creative Productivity
  • Schoolhouse giftedness the ability to consume,
    analyze, and reproduce information
  • Creative productivity the ability to generate
    new information

35
Three-ring Conception of Giftedness
  • designed specifically to reflect research on
    creative producers, in the hopes that, it we
    identified the ways in which giftedness works
    in adults, we might be able to identify or
    encourage it in young people
  • Consists of three interlocking circles
    above-average ability, creativity, and task
    commitment

36
Characteristics Often Associated with Giftedness
  • Good memory
  • Persistence
  • Sensitivity to feeling of self or others
  • Highly developed verbal skills
  • Enjoyment of abstract ideas
  • Large knowledge base

37
Features may also be hidden
  • Cultural differences and various types of
    disabilities may obscure teachers understanding
    of students abilities

38
Role of the School
  • Some school districts allow gifted or talented
    students to spend part or all of the day in
    classes designed to provide challenging
    experiences
  • Other schools offer advanced independent study
    options or seminars that allow students to
    investigate a variety of interests or strengths
  • However, most gifted students spend the majority
    of their time in regular classrooms, under the
    direction of a classroom teacher

39
The role of the Teacher
  • It is the obligation of every teacher to make
    sure that each student in the classroom has the
    opportunity to learn
  • It is the teachers responsibility to set new
    goals for the students to reach
  • The importance of examining curriculum goals for
    prior mastery is not limited to the top few
    students in a class
  • Assessing students regular curriculum is
    important for all students, and it is
    particularly vital for able learners

40
Curriculum Compacting
  • Curriculum compacting involves diagnosing which
    of the skills in a particular unit of study some
    students have already mastered
  • This assessment is focused on identifying areas
    of the curriculum that may be unnecessary or
    repetitious for some students

41
Contract
  • Contract generally identifies activities that
    must be completed to help a student master the
    regular content, as well as related enrichment
    activities
  • Periodic individual conferences can be helpful in
    assessing students progress, as well as finding
    areas of difficulty and planning further
    activities

42
Acceleration
  • Acceleration the pursuit of the regular
    curriculum at a faster pace.
  • It may encompass advancement in a single subject,
    grade skipping, or early entrance to college

43
Enrichment
  • Enrichment the incorporation of activities
    outside the regular curriculum
  • One type of enrichment can be developed by
    adapting assignments or techniques in the
    curriculum to provide additional challenge
  • A second category of enrichment is
    interdisciplinary teaching, which is particularly
    suited to students whose excellent abstract
    reasoning abilities allow them to make ties among
    ideas in various disciplines
  • The third type of enrichment often recommended
    for bright students is independent investigations
    that culminate in some type of product
  • Independent investigations is referred to as
    Type III enrichment individuals or small
    groups pursuing real problems

44
Enrichment Triad Model Type I
  • The first consists of general exploratory
    activities designed to help students identify
    their interests and encourage them to investigate
    these interests further (guest speakers, movies)
  • The most important objectives of Type I
    enrichment are to
  • Expose students to as many varied topics as
    possible
  • Encourage them to identify areas of interest and
    learn more

45
Enrichment Triad Model Type II and Type III
  • Type II enrichment is composed of group training
    activities that can provide students with the
    tools they need to become independent
    investigators (using internet, problem solving)
  • Planning both Type I and II enrichment for many
    students can help you identify students with the
    interest and motivation to pursue an individual
    Type III project
  • Type III enrichment consists of individual and
    small group investigations of real problems

46
Affective and Cognitive Needs
  • Like all young people, highly able students have
    affective as well as cognitive needs Most are
    well liked and socially adept
  • However, there are some characteristics of bright
    students that can impact their emotional needs

47
Differences that can impact emotional needs
  • One of the factors is the differences in their
    levels of physical, intellectual, and emotional
    maturity
  • It is important that gifted students have many
    types of peers and interaction with others
    working on the same instructional level

48
Perfectionism
  • Teachers of bright young people must be wary of
    the dangers of perfectionism
  • Sometimes students develop an image of themselves
    that demands that everything they do be done
    perfectly anything less is seen as a failure
  • This can be disabling and potentially dangerous
    to healthy emotional development

49
  • If many of the strategies recommended for bright
    students are used for all students, some teachers
    may be led to believe that gifted students needs
    are automatically being met within the regular
    curriculum and teachers need to have no further
    concerns about them.
  • THIS IS NOT TRUE!

50
However
  • The challenge is to help all children learn
  • Educators must still be open to recognizing
    special needs and advanced abilities that demand
    more challenge than even the best curriculum can
    offer
  • Providing needed adaptations can help all
    students find school to be a place of learning,
    challenge, and opportunity

51
Section 10.4 Teaching Culturally Diverse and
Bilingual Students
  • Home and family backgrounds are important in
    determining the experiences, attitudes,
    interests, and beliefs that students bring to
    school

52
Cultural Pluralism
  • Cultural pluralism where ethnic groups retained
    their cultural heritage, traditions, and values
    while still adopting aspects of the Anglo-Western
    culture
  • Unfortunately, this concept of cultural pluralism
    has not been completely accepted in our society

53
Did you know
  • Students of color are 2.3 times more likely to be
    labeled as mentally impaired than a white child?
  • It is crucial that the evaluation of students
    abilities be based on their performance on
    appropriate tasks, not on racial or cultural
    stereotypes!

54
Conditions of Cultural Pluralism
  • Three main conditions support cultural pluralism
    in schools
  • Positive teacher expectations
  • A learning environment that encourages positive
    inter-group contact
  • A pluralistic (multicultural) curriculum
  • Research has indicated that in classes where
    teachers held higher expectations for all
    students, higher general student performance
    resulted

55
Student Behavior
  • Students tend to behave as teachers expect them
    to behave
  • The view of a students expected performance is
    communicated to the student by verbal and
    nonverbal behaviors

56
How teachers view low achievers
  • Provide general, often insincere praise
  • Provide them with less feedback
  • Demand less effort from them
  • Interrupt them more often
  • Paid less attention to them
  • Criticized them more often

57
Students who are perceived as high achievers.
  • Were given more opportunities for response
  • Received more praise and detailed feedback
  • Were given prompts or probes if they seemed to be
    having difficulty
  • Were allowed more time to respond to questions
  • Were provided supportive communications
    (compliments, physical closeness, active
    listening)

58
Lesson Prejudice in the Classroom
  • Four basic conditions are necessary if social
    contact between groups is to lessen prejudice and
    lead to friendly attitudes and behaviors
  • Contact should be sufficiently intimate to
    produce reciprocal knowledge and understanding
    between groups
  • Members of various groups mush share equal status
  • The contact situation should lead people to do
    things together and should require inter-group
    cooperation to achieve a common goal
  • There should be institutional support an
    authority and/or social climate that encourages
    group contact

59
Teaching in Diverse Situations..
  • Teaching students from culturally diverse
    backgrounds requires a restructuring of teaching
    attitudes, approaches, and strategies

60
Effective teachers in culturally diverse
situations
  • Have a clear sense of their own ethnic and
    cultural identities
  • Look at cultural differences among students as
    cultural assets
  • Communicate high expectations for the success of
    all students and a belief that all students can
    succeed
  • Are personally committed to achieving equality
    for all students and believe they are capable of
    making a difference in their students learning
  • Develop a bond with their students and cease
    seeing their students as the other

61
Effective Teachers Con.t
  • Provide an academically challenging curriculum
    that includes attention to the development of
    higher level cognitive skills
  • Add meaning to instruction in an interactive and
    collaborative environment
  • Include contributions and perspectives of the
    various ethno-cultural groups that compose our
    society, by using a multicultural curriculum
  • Encourage community members and parents to become
    involved in students education and give them a
    significant voice in making important school
    decisions related to school programs
  • Use culturally congruent teaching methods

62
Multiculturalism
  • A multicultural curriculum is designed to promote
    and value the diversity of all cultures in our
    country, while helping students to see the
    commonalities among all groups

63
In a positive multicultural environment
  • Teachers expect all students to achieve,
    regardless of race, sex, class, or ethnicity
  • The learning environment encourages positive
    contact between all students
  • Instructional materials are reviewed for bias
  • The curriculum includes the historical
    experiences of all cultures

64
Positive Multicultural Environment cont
  • Efforts are made to develop an understanding of,
    and appreciation and respect for, all cultures
  • Goals and strategies reflect cultural learning
    styles of all students
  • Time is spent dispelling misconceptions,
    stereotypes, and prejudices
  • Bulletin boards and classroom exhibits display
    people of many backgrounds

65
Goals for multicultural education should provide
for
  • The development of historical perspectives and
    cultural consciousness
  • The development of intercultural competence
  • The reduction of racism and ethnic prejudice and
    discrimination
  • The development of social action skills

66
Increasing Student Self-Esteem
  • Because culturally diverse students and students
    from lower socioeconomic levels often feel less
    valued, it is important to find ways to increase
    their self esteem
  • Check your perception of students
  • Encourage students to take a more challenging
    educational path
  • Watch the language you use
  • Learn about the culture of your students
  • Let students know that effort is valued
  • Provide opportunities for students to discuss
    their concerns regarding prejudice,
    discrimination, and other kinds of social
    injustices
  • Look to the community and family for students
    role models and mentors

67
Culturally Relevant Teaching
  • Culturally relevant teaching refers to methods of
    teaching that empower students to grow
    intellectually, socially, and emotionally by
    using cultural referents in teaching knowledge
    and skills

68
Stimulating Classroom and Flexible Learners
  • The following strategies can help to make the
    classroom more stimulating and students more
    flexible learners
  • Take cultural characteristics into consideration
    when beginning instruction and selecting
    instructional strategies
  • Check students prior knowledge
  • Relate content to students lives
  • Provide kinesthetic activities (physical games)
    visual images (photos) auditory experiences
    (music) and interactive (group discussion) and
    haptic strategies (painting, drawing)
  • Provide field trips and other background-enriching
    activities

69
Stimulating Classroom and Flexible Learners Con.t
  • Engage students in meaningful real-world tasks
  • Use cooperative learning strategies
  • Be flexible in grouping students
  • Teach students test-taking skills
  • Assess students through multiple measures

70
Reducing Bias
  • Bias must be removed from materials used in
    teaching
  • Materials that are biased ignore the existence
    and often demean the personal characteristics of
    some students

71
Five Approaches for Restructuring Curriculum
  • There are five approaches for restructuring
    curriculum to incorporate both cultural diversity
    and a focus on caring relationships
  • Include themes in your curriculum that focus on
    language, culture, power, and compassion
  • Use a comparative orientation of study presenting
    diverse perspectives on the issue, theme, event,
    or concept
  • Employ an issues-centered orientation
  • Restructure existing units by using a
    culture/caring/justice filter
  • Teach by example

72
Culturally Diverse Students
  • Some culturally diverse students whose family
    traditions and customs are quite different from
    those associated with the majority culture may
    also be impacted by limited proficiency in
    English
  • Bilingual students will benefit from good
    teaching and planning, as well as from many of
    the activities suggested for culturally diverse
    students

73
Helpful Ideas for Teachers
  • Review students files extensively
  • Make and maintain contact with parents
  • Learn as much as you can about the cultures of
    students in your class
  • Consider a buddy system or cross-grade tutoring
  • Be cautious about cooperative learning in the
    beginning, particularly structures in which
    groups compete with one another
  • Present as much material visually as possible
  • Whenever possible, share information and positive
    role models from diverse cultures, with emphasis
    on those cultures represented in your room
  • Be patient

74
  • Reflection Activity

75
Section 10.5 Teaching Students in Urban Schools
and Other Settings
  • It is in urban schools that the racial, cultural,
    and social contradictions between the teachers
    and students often create barriers that
    significantly endanger learning

76
Teachers in Urban Schools
  • Teachers employed in the future are likely to be
    teaching children of color, from African American
    and Latino cultures, but also children from
    families who recently emigrated from one of the
    many Asian or Middle Eastern countries
  • It is a good bet that the urban school districts
    will be large, under-funded, and bureaucratic
  • Too many students in urban classrooms come from
    families facing unemployment, financial problems,
    and health emergencies

77
Effective Teachers in Inner-City Schools
  • In a recent study looking at high-achieving
    culturally diverse inner-city students and
    teachers, students were able to identify what
    they believed were characteristics of effective
    teachers
  • Culturally competent
  • Hold high expectations of all students
  • Use differentiation
  • Use role models and mentors
  • Provide a disciplined environment
  • Involve family and community

78
PREMIER
  • In a recent study, researchers developed a model
    for teaching success in urban schools represented
    by the mnemonic PREMIER
  • are Purposeful
  • are Respectful of Diversity
  • employ Experience-Based Methods and Activities
  • Manage the Urban Classroom Effectively
  • Individualize Instruction
  • are Excellent Communicators
  • are Reflective in Thought

79
Parental Involvement
  • Research studies over a 30-year period have
    demonstrated the positive results on school
    performance from school/home partnerships
  • When parents are involved with a school, their
    children perform better in that school

80
Home/School Involvement
  • The National PTA describes 6 types of home/school
    involvement, which include
  • Frequent and predictable two-way communication
    between home and school
  • Enhancing parenting skills and capabilities
  • Assisting and enhancing student learning
  • Encouraging parents to engage in volunteering
    activities in school
  • Participating in school decision-making and
    advocacy
  • Enabling parents and schools to create additional
    partnerships for collaborating with the community

81
Home and School Partnerships
  • In addition to a solid academic program and a
    partnership between home and school, an
    integrated services school provides basic health
    and counseling services for students, referrals
    for families, and a new calendar and clock, with
    after-school and summer enrichment programs for
    learning and creative play
  • In some areas, schools educational personnel
    have systematic communication with a variety of
    agencies, allowing for quick and convenient
    referrals and consultation
  • In full-service schools, the school itself become
    the hub for services.

82
  • The End!
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