Back in October, I read an article in the Marshall Memo about
differentiate instruction. I recently came across it again and thought that I
would share it.
In
this article in Teaching Children
Mathematics, instructional coach Jacque Ensign describes math
differentiation strategies used in two Seattle elementary classrooms. These
teachers’ approaches have been widely emulated in other Seattle schools, all of
which have been using the Everyday Mathematics curriculum since 2007:
• Upper
elementary – The teacher begins her 75-minute math workshop with a
15-minute mini-lesson introducing the math concept and vocabulary of the day.
Students write the objective in their notebooks (for example, “I can measure
and draw acute angles”) and do a few initial guided-practice problems on their
whiteboards. Students then move through three stations, each lasting15-20
minutes. In the first segment, the teacher works with the readiness group
(determined by a pre-unit assessment), guiding them through the day’s math
concept and having them explain it to a partner. Half of the remaining students
work in mixed-achievement pairs on an Everyday Mathematics math game practicing
the day’s concept; the remaining students work on practice pages, consulting
with their partner and following a class protocol of asking leading questions
rather than giving the answer.
In the next two segments, the teacher works with the at-level group,
then the enrichment group, covering the same concept but at a brisker pace and
getting into more challenging extension problems, while other students move
through the game and practice pages station in their assigned mixed-achievement
pairs. When all students have had their group time with the teacher and done
the other two activities, students return to stand behind their desks. The
teacher calls on a few students to report to the class on their own performance
and compliment a partner. Students then sit down and the teacher projects an
exit problem on the screen with a document camera. “Do this in your notebook.
Show me what you know so I know which students got this and who I need to teach
again,” she says. When students finish the problem, they write one of the
following self-evaluation questions in their notebooks:
-
I could teach this!
-
I can do this on my own.
-
I can do this with help.
-
I don’t get this at all!
followed
by completing the phrase, because I am
able to… This allows the teacher to see who has mastered the day’s lesson
and who needs more support the next day.
• Kindergarten
– This teacher begins her one-hour math block by convening students on the rug,
doing several math finger plays and chants, and then introducing the math
concept of the day. She moves students through a brief guided practice and demonstrates
how students can develop the concept during work time. She then sends students
a few at a time to choose hands-on math activities on cafeteria-size trays.
Students work on these individually or with a partner, bringing each tray up
when they finish and choosing another. The teacher moves around the room
working with individual students and small groups and assessing at least five
students a day.
“Teacher-Initiated Differentiation: Two Classrooms Become
Models for Their Large, Urban District” by Jacque Ensign in Teaching Children Mathematics, October
2012 (Vol. 19, #3, p. 158-163), http://www.nctm.org;
Ensign can be reached at jaensign@seattleschools.org.
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