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ADAPTING FOR INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

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Title: ADAPTING FOR INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES


1
ADAPTING FOR INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES
  • Chapter 5

2
Individual Differences
  • What are the types and sources of individual
    differences among children?

3
Effective Teachers
  • Understand typical and atypical child development
  • Understand the importance of knowing each child
    as an individual
  • Use this knowledge to plan and adapt curriculum
  • To help each child meet important learning goals
    (NAEYC, 2009)

4
Individual Differences
  • NATURE
  • NURTURE
  • The hereditary or genetic contributions to human
    development
  • Biological and neurological drivers of
    development
  • Range of variation in timing, not sequence
  • Environmental factors and experiences that
    influence human development and behavior
  • Environmental influences quality of child care
    setting, family economic resources, safety,
    siblings, etc.

5
Transactional Theory of Development
  • Development is the result of both biology and
    experience and how they influence each other
  • Biology and experience play critical,
    interrelated roles in childrens development
  • Accumulation of certain kinds of experiences can
    enhance development or place children at risk

6
Categories of Student Variance Contributors to the Category
Biology Gender Physical, Cognitive, Social Abilities Disabilities Cognitive, Emotional/Social, Physical Neurological wiring for learning Development
Degree of Privilege Economic status Race Culture Support system Language Experience
Positioning for learning Adult models Trust Self-concept Motivation Temperament Interpersonal skills
Preference/ Learning Styles Interests Learning preferences Preferences for individuals
  • Categories of Student Variance with Contributors
    that have some Implications for Learning
  • Know the Child, Family, Culture

7
ACCOMODATING DIFFERENCES
  • What do teachers need to know about individual
    variation among children and how to accommodate
    individual differences?

8
MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES
  • What is Gardners Theory of Multiple
    Intelligences and what are its implications
    for practice?

9
Multiple Intelligence - MI
  • Howard Gardner MI Theory 1980s
  • Splitter
  • Eight Intelligences - Ability to
  • Linguistic use language effectively
  • Musical- compose, comprehend and appreciate music
  • Logical-Mathematical reason logically,
    especially in math and science
  • Spatial notice details of what one sees,
    imagine and manipulate visual objects in ones
    mind
  • Kinesthetic use ones body skillfully
  • Naturalistic recognize patterns in nature and
    differences among natural objects and life-forms
  • Interpersonal awareness of ones won feelings,
    motives, and desires
  • Intrapersonal recognize patterns in nature and
    differences among natural objects and life forms

10
Key Points MI Theory
  • An intelligence is the ability to solve problems,
    or to create products, that are valued within one
    or more cultural settings
  • Each person possesses all eight intelligences --
    a theory of cognitive functioning and all seven
    function together in ways unique to each person
  •  
  • Most people can develop each intelligence to an
    adequate level of competency --if given
    appropriate encouragement enrichment and
    instruction
  •  
  • Intelligences usually work together in complex
    ways -- intelligences are always interacting with
    each other and must be thought of in their
    specific culturally valued contexts
  • There are many ways to be intelligent within each
    category -- emphasizes the rich diversity of ways
    in which people show their gifts within
    intelligences as well as between intelligences
  •  

11
Development of MI
  • FACTORS
  • Biological endowment, including hereditary or
    genetic factors and insult or injuries to the
    brain before, during and after birth.
  •  
  • Personal life history, including experiences with
    parents, teachers, peers, friends, and others who
    either awaken intelligences or keep them from
    developing
  • Cultural and historical background, including the
    time and place in which you were born and raised
    and the nature and state of cultural or
    historical developments in different domains.

12
MI Activators and Deactivators of Intelligences
  • Crystallizing experiences -- turning points in
    the development of a person's talents and
    abilities usually in early childhood -- Albert
    Einstein 4 years old his father showed him a
    magnetic compass filled him with a desire to
    ferret out the mysteries of the universe
  •  
  • Paralyzing experiences -- experiences which shut
    down intelligences often filled with shame,
    guilt, fear, anger and other negative emotions
    that prevent our intelligences from growing and
    thriving
  •  

13
MI Environmental Influences
  • Promote or retard the development of
    intelligences
  • Access to resources or mentors -- lack of
    resources
  •  
  • Historical-cultural factors -- the times
  •  
  • Geographic factors -- where you live
  •  
  • Familial factors -- parental wishes
  •  
  • Situational factors -- unable to develop due to
    situation

14
Learning Cycle of Differentiated Instruction
  • The creation of multiple paths so that children
    of different abilities, interests, and learning
    needs experience equally appropriate ways to
    achieve important learning goals
  • Plan the Environment
  • Differentiate Content
  • Teaching Process
  • Assess Learning

15
RtI RtII RR
  • What the Response to Intervention, Response to
    Intervention and Instruction, and Recognition and
    Response models and how do they address
    individual differences in young childrens
    learning?

16
Responsive Education
  • Response to Intervention (RtI)
  • Prevent school failure, reading and math
  • Bridge general and special education
  • Tier 1 high quality instruction for ALL,
    comprehensive, evidence-based curriculum and
    intentional teaching
  • Tier 2 DAP group interventions for children who
    need more focused learning experiences
  • Tier 3 Intensive, individualized interventions
  • Recognition and Response (RR)
  • Recognition monitor learning progress
  • Response Core curriculum intentional teaching
    for ALL children targeted interventions for SOME
    children
  • Collaborative Problem solving A team makes
    informed decisions based on assessment results to
    plan and evaluate instruction and interventions
    at all tiers

17
Pennsylvania Response to Intervention and
Instruction
  • RtII in PA
  • PA State Aligned System (SAS)
  • The use of a standards-aligned, comprehensive
    school improvement and/or multi-tiered system of
    support for implementing PAs SAS.
  • RtII rests on using a continuum of student
    performance data to continuously inform, monitor
    and improve student access and response to
    high-quality core and supplemental
    instruction/intervention.
  • A road map for facilitating systems change within
    the context of data-based decision-making and
    instructional matching.
  • The intent of RtII is to improve learning as
    efficiently, effectively and equitably as
    possible for ALL students, including students
    with disabilities.

18
Its the LAW
  • What practices are required by law for children
    with disabilities and special needs?

19
The Language of Special Education
  • LANGUAGE MATTERS
  • Children with special needs broad term
  • Children with disabilities specific
    identification
  • First person language CHILD first, then
    identifier

20
What do we need to KNOW?
  • Children with disabilities are diverse and
    distinct from one another
  • Various disorders do not necessarily occur in
    isolation
  • A diagnosis rarely results in precise education
    interventions
  • Types of Exceptionality
  • Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
  • Autism spectrum disorders (ASD)
  • Down syndrome (DS)
  • Cerebral palsy (CP)
  • Deafness and hearing impairment
  • Visually impaired or blind
  • Mental retardation
  • Developmental delay
  • Gifted

21
Legal Requirements
  • IDEA
  • Individualized Education Program (IEP)
  • IEP Team
  • Early Intervention
  • IFSPs vs IEPs

22
INTENTIONAL EFFECTIVE
  • What practices for teaching children with special
    needs are effective teaching all children?

23
Effective Practices
  • Inclusive Classrooms
  • Natural Learning Environments
  • Benefits
  • Fostering Friendships Modeling, Play activities,
    Prompting, Rehearsal/practice
  • Team mentality
  • Assessments
  • Curriculum-based
  • Routines-based

24
Plan Individualized Instructional Strategies
  • Goals
  • Generative skills can be used across setting,
    people, events, and objects
  • PA Early Learning Standards
  • Learning Opportunities during daily routines
  • Use Helping Strategies Prompts
  • Reinforce Childrens Learning
  • Naturally occurring reinforcers
  • Monitor Progress
  • Observation, Checklist, Rating Scale
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