James Deegan: Saucon Valley SD Supervisor of Assessment and Instruction
1. Misunderstanding: Differentiation is a set of instructional strategies.
Reality: Differentiation is a philosophy - a way of thinking about teaching and learning. It is, in fact, a set of principles.
2. Misunderstaning: It's adequate for a district or school leader to tell, or even show, teachers how to differentiate instruction effectively.
Reality: Learning to differentiate instruction well requires rethinking one's classroom practice and results from an ongoing process of trial, refelction, and adjustment in the classroom itself.
3. Misunderstanding: Differentiation is something a teacher does or doesn't do (as in "I already do that," or "I tell our teachers they already do this")
Reality: Most teachers who remain in the classroom for longer than a day do pay attention to student variation and respond to it in some way- especially with students wh can threaten order in the classroom. However, very few teachers proactively plan instruction consistently address student differences in readiness, interest, and learning profile.
4. Misundertanding: Differentiation is just about instruction.
Reality: Although differentiation is an instructional approach, effectivedifferentiated instruction is inseparable from a positive learning environment, high-quality curriculum, assessment to inform teacher decision making, and flexible classroom management. To the degree taht any one of those elements is weak, the others are also diminished.
(Tomlinson & Imbeau, 2010)
A DI Classroom.pdf
A DI Plan-Lesson.pdf
DI in Use-Scenario.pdf
DI in Use-Scenario2A.pdf
DI in Use-Scenario2B.pdf
Options for DI.pdf
Planning for DI.pdf
Ways to DI.pdf
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