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Modifying Instruction to Accommodate the Needs of Diverse Learners

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Modifying Instruction to Accommodate the Needs of Diverse Learners Lisa Smith, Instruction/Behavior Consultant Upper Cumberland Special Education Cooperative – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Modifying Instruction to Accommodate the Needs of Diverse Learners


1
Modifying Instruction to Accommodate the Needs of
Diverse Learners
  • Lisa Smith, Instruction/Behavior Consultant
  • Upper Cumberland Special Education Cooperative
  • Phone 606-337-3555
  • Email lisa1959_at_bellsouth.net

2
Todays Goals
  • To provide participants with an overview of the
    process of modifying instruction to meet the
    needs of diverse learners
  • To provide participants with an overview of the
    frustration, anxiety and tension students with
    learning difficulties experience
  • To engage in activities and conversations for the
    purpose of enhancing the participants knowledge
    of the use and development of techniques for
    modifying instruction

3
Presentation Techniques(Utilizing the Principles
of Adult Learning Theory)
  • Discussion
  • Small and large group activities
  • Cooperative learning strategies (i.e., jigsaw,
    think-pair-share)
  • Self-Reflection
  • Question and answer sessions
  • Active Learning Strategies (i.e., role play,
    scenarios, simulations)
  • others

4
Students come to school with an expanded array of
readiness levels, interests and learning profiles.
  • Their interests may vary from surviving on the
    street to launching rockets.

5
Then we have issues like
  • Gender
  • Culture
  • Learning style
  • Intelligence
  • Ability

All shape the varied ways in which students
approach and respond to learning.
This calls on us to modify, or differentiate,
instruction in response to students varied
readiness levels, interests, and learning
profiles.
6
There is ample evidence that tracking struggling
learners impairs their chances for high quality
learning opportunities.
7
Students on each end of the learning spectrum
have nonstandard learning needs so
differentiated learning opportunities are
advantageous to them.
8
All students within the learning spectrum benefit
from flexible classrooms in which interests,
learning profiles and readiness needs help sculpt
instruction.
9
All learners should work with respectful tasks
  • Offer tasks that encourage them to think at
    higher levels of thinking
  • Opportunities to be active learners
  • Equally interesting and engaging tasks
  • Work with a wide variety of peers over time
  • Be involved with learning that is new to them
  • Pushed a little beyond their individual comfort
    zones in knowledge, insight, thinking, skills,
    and production
  • ESSENTIAL TO DIFFERENTIATION

10
Flexible grouping of students enables all
learners to work in a wide variety of
configurations
  • Peers of similar readiness
  • Similar interests
  • Learning profiles
  • Mixed readiness, interest, and learning profiles
  • Whole group
  • Independently
  • Student choice

11
Goal Equal playing field
  • Balance to ensure support

12
Continuum of Services707 KAR 1350, Section
1(9/2000) Direct/Indirect Instruction
  • The continuum shall include the alternative
    placements of
  • Instruction in Regular Classes
  • Special Classes
  • Special Schools
  • Home Instruction
  • Instruction in hospitals and institutions

13
What is a Modification?
  • A change in the way a teacher
  • presents information
  • tests students
  • has students practice new skills
  • so that every student has a chance to succeed.

14
Making Modifications
  • To meet the diverse needs of students in our
    classrooms, modifications are necessary.
  • Modifying curriculum can be very time consuming
    for teachers and delivering the modified
    instruction for some students may be difficult
    with one teacher and a full classroom.
  • Collaborative teaching makes modified teaching
    more easily accomplished through shared
    responsibility for planning and instruction.

15
Who Is Responsible for the Design and
Implementation of Modifications/Extensions?
  • YOU ARE...The teacher who provides the
    instruction and assessment for the student is
    ultimately responsible for the implementation of
    the modifications/extensions.
  • WE ARE The team of teachers who work together to
    identify specific modifications/extensions that
    students will need for daily instruction.

16
What is Fair?
  • Fair does not mean that everyone receives the
    same thing,
  • but that everyone receives what they need to be
    successful.
  • Richard LaVoie
  • F.A.T. City

17
What SOME students will learn
Schumm, Vaughn, and Harris, 1997
What MOST students will learn
What ALL students will learn
18
Types of Modifications
  • There are at least 6 types of modifications
  • Size
  • Time
  • Level of Support
  • Instruction
  • Difficulty
  • Output

19
Types of Modifications
  • Size
  • Modify the number of items that some learners are
    expected to learn
  • Time
  • Modify the time allotted and allowed for
    learning, task completions or testing.

20
Types of Modifications
  • Level of support
  • Increase the amount of help by the special
    teacher or other sources of support such as
  • Teaching assistants
  • Adult volunteers
  • Peer tutors or
  • Cross age tutors.

21
Types of Modifications
  • Instruction
  • Modify the instruction to be delivered to some
    learners
  • More visuals
  • Hands-on leaning
  • Models
  • Taped books or stories
  • Outline notes or
  • Cooperative learning groups

22
Types of Modifications
  • Difficulty
  • Modify the
  • Skill level
  • Problem type
  • Rules
  • For how some learners may approach the work

23
Types of Modifications
  • Output
  • Modify how some learners can respond to
    instruction such as
  • Answering questions orally instead of writing
  • Showing knowledge with hands-on materials

24
Video.
  • How Difficult Can This Be?
  • The F.A.T. City Workshop

25
To Reduce FEAR and ANXIETY.
  • Never force the student to read out loud in class
  • Never have the student write on the board
  • Dont allow students to grade papers or tests
  • Never call on the student unless they volunteer
  • Make sure your classroom is a safe place to make
    mistakes

26
Class Work and Assignments.
  • Break assignments into small steps
  • Give simple, oral directions and provide a
    written copy of these directions when possible.
  • Limit the amount of copying to be done whenever
    possible.
  • Give the student a desk copy of what the class is
    to copy from the board.

27
Techniques for Testing
  • Quiz often with brief tests instead of fewer,
    long tests.
  • Avoid negative questions. (example Which one is
    not the same?)
  • The process of testing can be less stressful if
    the modality is varied.
  • Use your creative abilities to devise alternate
    ways to assess knowledge rather than always
    relying on traditional tests.
  • Evaluate the students knowledge in less formal
    situations to reduce stress and accentuate the
    level of learning.

28
Social and Emotional Needs.
  • Encourage, encourage, encourage!
  • No buts about it!
  • Find activities to do in which the child is
    successful and takes pleasure!
  • Make sure the student knows that you understand
    that he is working hard when he is!

29
Activity
  • Examine the types of modifications listed and
    identify which type of modification is indicated
    by the activities listed

30
Choose from these types of modifications and
descriptions
  • -Assessment -Level of Support
  • -Delivery -Organization
  • -Difficulty -Participation
  • -Environment -Size
  • -Time
  • Adapt the way instruction is delivered to the
    learner.
  • Adapt the time allotted and allowed for learning,
    task completion, or testing.
  • Increase the amount of personal assistance with a
    specific learner.
  • Adapt the skill level, problem type, or the rules
    on how the learner may approach the work.
  • Provide structure for completing tasks.
  • Adapt the number of items that the learner is
    expected to learn or complete.
  • Adapt the extent to which a learner is actively
    involved in a task.
  • Adapt physical setting.
  • Adapt how the student can respond to instruction.

31
13 Extensions
  • Purpose and Appropriateness
  • Complexity of Task
  • Size of Task
  • Time
  • Pace
  • Environment of Learning
  • Participation
  • Motivation
  • Order of Learning
  • Procedures and Routines
  • Application and Demonstration of Knowledge
  • Level of Support and Independence
  • Resources and materials

32
Wrap-Up
  • Questions????
  • Follow-Up
  • Evaluations

33
Contacting Todays Presenter.
  • Lisa Smith,
  • Instruction/Behavior Consultant
  • Upper Cumberland Special Education Cooperative
  • Phone 606-337-3555
  • Email lisa1959_at_bellsouth.net
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