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Join Sara Fridley & Kathleen West for a workshop on differentiation strategies focusing on time, movement, and product adaptation. Explore resources, lesson planning, and peer review activities to improve teaching techniques. Create R.A.F.T.S. activities to engage students and enhance learning outcomes.
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Differentiated Instruction:Adapting the Product Workshop 3 Facilitated By Sara Fridley & Kathleen West Region 3 Education Service Agency sara.fridley@k12.sd.us kathleen.a.west@k12.sd.us
Workshop Outcomes • Add to our personal professional library of resources on differentiation • Increased understanding of the importance of time & movement to learning • Increased understanding of how to differentiate the “process” & the “product” • Share and reflect on lesson planning
Building Blocks for Learning • Movement • Minds in Motion • http://www.state.sd.us/deca/cscf/schoolhealth/minds_in_motion/index.htm • Boost Up • http://www.actg.org/programs/boost-up/boostup_main.htm • Time Management
The Body, Movement, and the Brain • Essential Question – How can movement help the brain reach its potential? • The Brain-Compatible Classroom • Chapter 3 (pg 41) • What can you take from this resource back to your own classroom?
Time, Time, and More Time • Essential Question – What role does TIME play in the classroom? • The Brain-Compatible Classroom • Chapter 5 (pg 75) • What can you take from this resource back to your own classroom?
Share & Reflect on Lessons • Peer Review of Lessons • Indicators of teaching for understanding • Rubric
Time For Lunch Return at 1:00
Key #3 – Adapt Product • Students have choices of product • Students use key skills to create product • Bloom’s Taxonomy • Multiple Intelligence Theories • Common focus • Vary student activities • Vary complexity
Role Activity – What Hat Are You Wearing? • Work in small groups • Follow instructions on your card • 10 minutes to complete task • Report out
R.A.F.T.S. • Writing strategy (used in 6 + 1) • Puts students into authentic roles to prove content understanding • Helps them focus • Adaptable to all grade levels & content areas
R.A.F.T.S • R – role of the writer • A – audience for the piece of writing • F – format of the piece of writing • T – topic of the piece of writing • S – strong verbs to direct purpose
Designing R.A.F.T.S. • Role • helps writer decide point of view and voice (6 + 1) • Audience • reminds writer to communicate ideas to someone else • Helps writer determine content and style • Format • helps writer organize ideas • Determines conventions of format (letter, story, lab report, etc.)
Designing R.A.F.T.S. - more • Topic • Helps writer focus on main idea • Helps writer organize or select appropriate supporting details • Strong Verbs • Directs the writer’s purpose (persuade, compare, defend, etc.)
Homework for April • Email final version of first lesson to Sara to post on ESA web page • Create 1 R.A.F.T.S. activity for your classroom to share with the group