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Your questions...
I chose this inservice in the hopes of gaining some insight into how to integrate special needs students working at various grade levels within an inclusive classroom.
I would like ideas for integrating ELA 20 & ELA 30, ELA 9 & ELA 10, CHG 7 & 8 with common tasks / diff't themes. Basically ways to integrate some of the outcomes so it is not always teaching one group at a time.
I am a first year teacher, and I have only had student-teaching experience in multi-level classrooms. So, anything we cover will be helpful and appreciated.
I guess I would really like some help managing my 1/2 split. My grade ones need so much attention with learning letter sound and making words and some curriculums do not cross any content. Some of my grade two can not work independently and demand all of my time. How do I teach them independently when there is only one of me? I would like help planning units together that can be used for both
I teach ELA, math, health, arts Ed 3/4. Just looking for ideas to match the curriculums up, anything really. Perhaps some time to plan on my own.
Keys to Success in a Multi-Graded Classroom
Curricular comfort Assessment Planning Instruction Inquiry Classroom Management
Think about how to structure your day – together, separate, together. How can you plan so your combined grades are together more than they are separate? What can “together” mean?
Thinks that make you go hmmm...
Is it possible that learning can be “together” and assessment can be separate?
Are there parts of assessment that can be “together”?
Can students be separate but working “together” on big ideas or essential questions?
Like a “regular” class, how can we increase independence so you can step back more often?
Assessment guides planning When both you and your students know the
destination (criteria), everyone becomes empowered to be responsible for the learning journey.
You no longer have to “hold all the cards” for successful learning. It becomes a shared responsibility. Your role is to consistently reinforce and expect the required understanding.
Remember, the premise of UbD is that all planning emerges from the criteria. It provides clarity for everyone.
Examine criteria Focus on the commonalities first Determine the “why” of the outcomes
(step back) Determine the differences Social Studies example Physical Education example
Grade Four Grade Five
Dynamic Relations
Criteria (DR 4.2 and 5.2)
Explain relationship of FNM people with land Relate to worldview Relate to lifestyle Look at a historical perspective Saskatchewan focus
Assess the impact of environment on lives of people in Canada
Details about climate, resources and worldview Historical perspective Canadian focus
Commonalities
Vocabulary – worldview, traditional, First Nations, Aboriginal, Métis, displacement, migration, settlement patterns, historic, sustainability, impact, relationship
Big Question – How does where we live impact (affect) how we live and the choices we make? How does our worldview impact (affect) our relationship with the land?
Essential Questions – What does climate have to do with the environment/ land? How do people make choices about where they will live? How does worldview impact how we use our resources? How has worldview changed over time? How were FNM people connected to the environment?
Concepts – worldview, environment, climate patterns, white privilege, Treaties Domain Literacies – map reading, population demographics, climate models, research skills, new media literacies
Learning Experience Ideas
Flipped learning model – last 10 minutes of class will be an intro to the following day’s work – everyday we end with an essential question
I-pads Explore maps, draw conclusions about settlement patterns, geography, population distribution, climate –
essential questions to guide daily work Inquiry-based, group exploration Group process norms and processes (templates, Google Apps) Google Doc set up – mom and dad or grandparents discussions/ interviews and type in answers, burning
question, grade fives can mentor the grade fours
Areas for differentiation between grades
Grade four dominant society/ minority Canadian historical FNM info – Grade 5, Saskatchewan FNM info – Grade 4 Grade 4 – Railway perspective, historical loss of land, Grade 5 – Climate exploration (deeper than grade 4) Differentiated assessment event
Provide access to multiple resources.
Design classroom areas for stimulation, contemplation and idea generation.
Develop a culture of wonder in your classroom.
Create situations in which wonder and questions can grow.
More Ideas… Use a variety of texts to cultivate curiosity. Connect to personal artifacts and experiences. Take students beyond their “four walls.” Offer language frames such as I wonder…, I
think…, This is what I see…, This is what it tells me…
Encourage personal responses and personal connections.
Consider before, during and after strategies in every subject.
Curriculum Corner
Grade level supports Multi-graded supports Inquiry supports Instructional tools Websites (incl. FNMI)
http://curriculum.nesd.ca/
Conversations with students Who are you as learners? (Similarities? Differences?) Given the differences, how should I teach you? If our classroom is going to work for all of us, what will it
be like? (How will it need to function? What roles will each of us play?)
How can I learn more about your starting points, interests and strengths as learners?
If we have a responsive classroom, can it be fair? (What will fair mean to us in this room?)
What will success in this classroom look like? (How will both you and I know you are succeeding?)
Adapted from Leading and Managing a Differentiated Classroom by Carol Ann Tomlinson
Use anchor activities.
Engage your students in talking about classroom procedures and group processes.
Teach students to rearrange furniture, determine roles and use flexible grouping through standing groups (clock, etc).
Classroom Procedures and Routines
Determine them Clarify the rationale for them Develop them Teach them Apply them Automatize them Reflect on, revise, and review them
Multi-grade Opportunities The teacher has the opportunity
to get to know the students extremely well. The teacher, therefore, is in a position to plan for and monitor each student's learning and development in a continuous and more responsive fashion over a two or three year period.
Students have the opportunity to experience and participate in a much wider range of educational experiences. Opportunities are there for students to encounter academic challenges that stretch their abilities and to review and revisit work that may not have been mastered.
All students have the opportunity to experience a variety of roles and responsibilities as they progress from being the newest members of the class to being the more senior. Among the most important of these roles is assisting other students learn and modeling desirable attitudes and values.
The class operates, in the first instance, not as separate grade groups but as a unified community of learners.