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sadielaurenn

Culturally Responsive Teaching: 5 Strategies for Educators - 6 views

  • Using traditional teaching methods, educators may default to teaching literature by widely accepted classic authors: William Shakespeare, J.D. Salinger, and Charles Dickens, for example, adhering to widely accepted interpretations of the text. Culturally responsive teaching, on the other hand, acknowledges that there’s nothing wrong with traditional texts, Childers-McKee says, but strives to include literature from other cultures, parts of the world, and by diverse authors. It also focuses on finding a “hook and anchor” to help draw students into the content using their past experiences.
  • When integrated into classroom instruction, culturally responsive strategies can have important benefits such as: Strengthening students’ sense of identity  Promoting equity and inclusivity in the classroom Engaging students in the course material Supporting critical thinking
  • 1. Activate students’ prior knowledge.
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  • 2. Make learning contextual.
  • 3. Encourage students to leverage their cultural capital.
  • 4. Reconsider your classroom setup.
  • 5. Build relationships.
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    steps to culturally relevant teaching importance culturally relevant pedagogy inclusive pedagogies
Kelly Nuthak

30 Activities, Teaching Strategies, and Resources for Teaching Children with Autism - W... - 0 views

  • autism spectrum disorder,
  • Social Skills Activities for Elementary Students with Autism
  • Sensory Activities for Children with Autism
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  • Calming Activities to Prevent Autism Meltdowns in Class
  • Effective Teaching Strategies for Children with Autism
  • Specific Measurable Agreed-upon Relevant Time-bound
  • Activities for Autism Awareness Month in April
julielyncarlson

Students with Down Syndrome in the Classroom - Classful - 2 views

  • A strong preference for visual learning A natural inclination to technology Strong capacity for social understanding and empathy Stead vocabulary acquisition Strong short-term memory Age-appropriate self-help and daily living skills
    • julielyncarlson
       
      Focus on positive attributes to help children achieve!
  • learning challenges
  • Poor auditory memory Hearing and visual weakness Sequencing difficulties Fine motor skills impairment thanks to low muscle tone Brief attention span and distractibility
    • julielyncarlson
       
      challenges to watch for when working with a Down's student.
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  • they often need additional resources outside of the mainstream classroom.
  • Create inclusivity for students with Down Syndrome
  • Build self-esteem
  • Increase attention span
  • Talk clearly
  • Early intervention in preschool for kids with Down syndrome
  • Teaching strategies for students with Down syndromeThe following strategies can help you teach reading to learners with Down syndrome: Capitalizing on the child’s visual-spatial learning style with the help of multimedia teaching resources Keeping instructions well-structured and predictable Incremental teaching, with each lesson building upon what was learned in the previous lesson Breaking reading tasks into manageable pieces with multiple breaks in between Aiding instructions with game-based plays
    • julielyncarlson
       
      Great strategies for students!
  • Does it come with plenty of visual aids and visually-based instructions? Does it have an option for the keyboard instead of handwriting input? Does it include activities and/or modalities to teach specific reading concepts?
  • not all areas of the child’s development are affected by Down syndrome
jessiwattenhofer

9 Effective Teaching Strategies for Students With Emotional and Behavioral Disorders - 0 views

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    EBD strategies: first day
chlohawk

With Boys in Mind / Teaching to the Minds of Boys - ASCD - 1 views

  • who's perpetually in motion,
  • ho stares into space,
  • w
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  • turns in rushed and sloppy work and receives failing grades.
  • By introducing more boy-friendly teaching strategies in the classroom, the school was able to close the gender gap in just one year.
  • he now understands how relevant this focus on action and heroism is to males, and she sees that letting boys write on these topics has improved their papers.
  • he task-oriented discussion and interaction, the physical movement, and the orientation in space access the boys' neurological strengths, keeping them energized and attentive.
  • Realizing the need for nonverbal planning tools, especially in males, to help bridge the gap between what students are thinking and what they're able to put down on paper, Mrs. Johnston now asks Timothy and his classmates to create storyboards, a series of pictures with or without words that graphically depict a story line. T
  • n her 2nd grade classroom, most of the boys read and write about such topics as NASCAR racing, atomic bombs, and football or about such situations as a parrot biting a dad through the lip. Many of the girls write about best friends, books, mermaids, and unicorns.
  • eachers tended to view the natural assets that boys bring to learning—impulsivity, single-task focus, spatial-kinesthetic learning, and physical aggression—as problems. By altering strategies to accommodate these more typically male assets, Douglass helped its students succeed, as the following vignettes illustrate.
  • One of the primary reasons that some boys getDs and Fs in school is their inattention to homework.
  • parents sign homework assignments.
  • One of the innovations that teachers can use in targeted ways in coeducational classes is single-gender grouping.
    • chlohawk
       
      How and when can I implement one of these strategies in the first week of school with my boy learners?
  • Quite often, boys do their best work when teachers establish authentic purpose and meaningful, real-life connections.
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    Creating a boy-friendly classroom, increasing experiential and kinesthetic learning opportunities, supporting literacy through visual-spatial representations and more strategies can support our boy learners.
jkolodji

20 Differentiated Instruction Strategies and Examples [+ Downloadable List] | Prodigy E... - 3 views

  • 20 Differentiated Instruction Strategies and Examples [+ Downloadable List]
    • nikkilh
       
      20 differentiated instruction strategies and examples
  • 2. Use Task Cards
  • 3. Interview Students
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  • 4. Target Different Senses Within Lessons
  • 5. Share Your Own Strengths and Weaknesses
  • 6. Use the Think-Pair-Share Strategy
  • 7. Make Time for Journaling
  • 8. Implement Reflection and Goal-Setting Exercises
  • 9. Run Literature Circles
  • 18. Relate Math to Personal Interests and Everyday Examples
  • 10. Offer Different Types of Free Study Time
  • 12. Give Different Sets of Reading Comprehension Activities
  • 13. Assign Open-Ended Projects
  • 14. Encourage Students to Propose Ideas for Their Projects
  • 15. Analyze Your Differentiated Instruction Strategy on a Regular Basis
  • 16. “Teach Up”
  • 17. Use Math EdTech that Adjusts Itself to Each Student
  • 11. Group Students with Similar Learning Styles
  • 19. Play a Math-Focused Version of Tic-Tac-Toe
  • 20. Create Learning Stations, without Mandatory Rotations
sadielaurenn

Inclusive teaching strategies | Center for Teaching and Learning - 0 views

  • Post information in a clear and accessible way about how students can do well, and if needed, what they can do to improve their performance. Grading rubrics can be an efficient way to inform students about how you assess their work and how to meet expectations for success.
    • sadielaurenn
       
      Rubrics were/are very helpful to me, as a student!
drewevanaho

6 Essential Strategies for Teaching ELLs | Edutopia - 0 views

  • 6 Essential Strategies for Teaching English Language Learners
    • drewevanaho
       
      Strategies for ELL students
Bill Olson

Inclusive Teaching Strategies | Poorvu Center for Teaching and Learning - 0 views

  • Inclusive teaching refers to pedagogy that strives to serve the needs of all students, regardless of background or identity, and support their engagement with subject material. Hearing diverse perspectives can enrich student learning by exposing everyone to stimulating discussion, expanding approaches to traditional and contemporary issues, and situating learning within students’ own contexts while exploring those contexts. Students are more motivated to take control of their learning in classroom climates that recognize them, draw relevant connections to their lives, and respond to their unique concerns (Ambrose et. al, 2010).
  • Examine Implicit Biases - Instructors can consider their own attitudes towards students and strive to minimize negative impacts. This process can involve actively monitoring interactions with different types of students, implementing policies like name-blind grading and inter-rater grading to minimize the impact of bias, and maintaining high expectations for all students.
  • Maintain Awareness of Classroom Diversity - Instructors can develop and maintain their awareness and understanding of various racial and socioeconomic factors in their classes, as a way to test their implicit bias, ensure equal access for all their students, and even enrich classroom discussion.
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  • Add a Diversity Statement to Syllabus - Instructors can address diversity issues head-on during the first class session by inviting students to discuss the syllabus in earnest; explaining the teaching philosophy with regards to other inclusive teaching methods; and outlining classroom ground rules for respectful classroom discussions and an inclusive community.
shaemorsfield

Culturally Responsive Teaching: 4 Misconceptions | Cult of Pedagogy - 1 views

    • shaemorsfield
       
      After reviewing the misconceptions of CRT, what steps would you take to implement this practice in your classroom?
  • Misconception 1: Culturally responsive teaching is the same as multicultural or social justice education.
  • Misconception 2: Culturally responsive teaching must start with addressing implicit bias.
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  • Misconception 4: Culturally responsive teaching is about choosing the right strategies.
  • Misconception 3: Culturally responsive teaching is all about building relationships and self-esteem.
mrssparker

Episode 78: Four Misconceptions About Culturally Responsive Teaching | Cult of Pedagogy - 3 views

    • mrssparker
       
      After reviewing the misconceptions of CRT, what steps would you take to implement it in your own classroom?
  • Misconception 1: Culturally responsive teaching is the same as multicultural or social justice education.
  • Misconception 2: Culturally responsive teaching must start with addressing implicit bias.
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  • Misconception 3: Culturally responsive teaching is about raising the self-esteem of our students.
  • Misconception 4: Culturally responsive teaching is about choosing the right strategies.
julielyncarlson

Effective Teaching Practices for Students in Inclusive Classrooms | W&M School of Educa... - 1 views

  • Collaborate with special education teachers, related service providers, and paraprofessionals on a regular basis
  • at least once a week
  • Teachers alternate roles of presenting, reviewing, and monitoring instruction.
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  • Be aware of student needs and provide the accommodations
  • Students are divided into mixed-ability groups
  • One person teaches, reteaches, or enriches a concept for a small group, while the other monitors or teaches the remaining students.
  • Tips for Classroom Management
    • julielyncarlson
       
      How do I incorporate accommodations into the classroom rules? What do I need to think about here?
  • Differentiate instruction
  • Think "universal design" when planning instruction. "
  • Provide opportunities for students to work in small groups and in pairs.
  • graphic organizers
  • "I do" (teacher model), "We do" (group practice), and "You do"
  • think, pair, share"
  • Teach learning strategies along with content material.
sadielaurenn

5 Effective Strategies for the Inclusive Classroom | KQED Education - 0 views

  • One of the most common accommodations for students with special needs is preferential seating. This doesn’t always mean in the front row of the classroom right next to the teacher’s desk
  • Many general education mainstream students cannot perform the following simple tasks: telling time from an analog clock writing a simple letter signing their name in cursive note taking and study skills
  • Collaborative teaching looks differently depending on what school, level, and setting you are working. I am fortunate enough to work in a school where collaborative teaching is encouraged and celebrated. Teachers have common planning times, and professional development time is often set aside for teachers to plan together.
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  • Posting daily schedules Displaying classroom rules and expectations Encouraging peer to peer instruction and leadership Using signals to quiet down, start working, and putting away materials. Giving students folders, labels and containers to organize supplies. Checking in with students while they work Utilizing proactive rather than reactive interventions as needed Speaking to students privately about any concerns Employing specific, targeted positive reinforcement when a student meets a behavioral or academic goal.
Siri Anderson

Paradigms Restrained: Implications of New and Emerging Technologies for Learning and Co... - 1 views

  • Instructional technology seeks to disprove the idea that "great teachers are born, not made."
  • "Students today can't prepare bark to calculate their problems. They depend on slates, which are more expensive. What will they do when the slate is dropped and it breaks? They will be unable to write." From a Teachers Conference, 1703. "Students today depend on paper too much. They don't know how to write on a slate without getting chalk dust all over themselves. They can't clean a slate properly. What will they do when they run out of paper?" From a principal's publication, 1815. "Students today depend too much on ink. They don't know how to use a pen knife to sharpen a pencil. Pen and ink will never replace the pencil." From the National Association of Teachers Journal, 1907. "Students today depend on store-bought ink. They don't know how to make their own. When they run out of ink they will be unable to write words or cipher until their next trip to the settlement. This is a sad commentary on modern education." From The Rural American Teacher, 1928. "Students depend on these expensive fountain pens. They can no longer write with a straight pen and nib. We parents must not allow them to wallow in such luxury to the detriment of how to cope in the business world, which is not so extravagant." From the Parent Teachers Association Gazette, 1941. "Ballpoint pens will be the ruin of education in our country. Students use these devices and then throw them away. The American values of thrift and frugality are being discarded. Business and banks will never allow such expensive luxuries." From Federal Teachers, 1950.
  • What this suggests is that all technologies, be they things that plug in or advances in thought, have various affordances that make them at times useful and at times not useful. The trick is to figure out what makes them useful in what situations in order to leverage their strengths and avoid their weaknesses.
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  • Organizational instructional strategies are those decisions the instructional designer makes when designing learning activities. The most important of these decisions is how the designer will assist learners to process new information and to process at a deeper level, producing meaningful learning, whether or not a teacher is presen
  • The choice of strategy is based on the designer's belief in the independent existence of knowledge: does it exist without the learner? Which epistemological approach to learning a designer espouses will have great impact on the organizational instructional strategy selected for use.
  • The goal of learning from the objectivist perspective is to communicate or transfer complete and correct understanding to the learner in the most efficient and effective way possible
  • In simple terms, objectivism holds that learners are the passive receivers of knowledge.
  • Cognitivism requires that learners devise methods for learning content.
  • Cognitivism recognizes that most people must develop a method of processing information to integrate it into their own mental models. The most recognizable mechanism in cognitive theory may be the definition of short term and long-term memory, and the need then to devise learner-appropriate methods of moving information from short-term memory to long-term memory. Learners must develop methods to learn how to learn. Consequently, interest in critical thinking skills has become fashionable in education. In terms of what this means for learning, it may be said that the truths are absolute in terms of what people are supposed to learn, but that we provide them latitude in how they arrive at those truths.
  • nchored instruction is simply the idea that learning should be centered on problems.
  • he major differences between objectivism and constructivism involve beliefs about the nature of knowledge and how one acquires it. Objectivists view knowledge as an absolute truth; constructivists are open to different interpretations depending on who is interpreting. Objectivists believe learning involves gaining the answer; constructivists believe that because there are many perspectives, a correct answer is a limiting factor in learning. Constructivists say learning should focus on understanding and it may involve seeing multiple perspectives.
  • Transfer of inert knowledge from one context to another unfamiliar context (i.e. the real world) is difficult and unlikely.
  • Constructivism, described by von Glaserfeld (1977) as an alternate theory of knowing, is the belief that knowledge is personally constructed from internal representations by individuals who use their experiences as a foundation (
  • Cognitive-flexibility theory is centered on "the ability to spontaneously restructure one's knowledge, in many ways, in adaptive response to radically changing situational demands . . .
  • The idea is to allow students to criss-cross the landscape of a content area so that they might have a rich mental model of the domain. The trick is to determine how much complexity a given group of learners is capable of handling without becoming lost or discouraged. A series of scenarios escalating in complexity can usually accommodate most learners.
  • Kurzweil (1999) says there is exponential growth in the rate of exponential growth; examining the speed and density of computation beginning with the first mechanical computers and not just the transistors that Moore used, he concluded that this doubling now occurs every year. He notes that "if the automobile industry had made as much progress [as the computing industry] in the past fifty years, a car today would cost a hundredth of a cent and go faster than the speed of light" (Kurzweil 1999, 25).
  • Already today it is becoming archaic and superfluous to teach facts. Instead, education needs to focus on ways of thinking. In particular, students will need to be able to recognize a problem, determine what information might be needed to solve a problem, find the information required, evaluate the information found, synthesize that information into a solution for the problem, apply the solution to the problem, and evaluate the results of that application
  • By the year 2099 there will no longer be any clear distinction between humans and computers.
  •  
    This artcle really struck me in terms of the descriptions of instructional design and the way they influence the type of learning that happens. Much social studies instruction, it seems to me, produces "inert knowledge" which is why most of us can't remember it later. Consider the descriptions I've highlighted of anchored instruction for an alternative approach.
julielyncarlson

11 Strategies To Promote Inclusion In The Clasroom - 0 views

  • Inclusion is better for kids with special needs because they can see other ‘typical’ kids and emulate them. They get an opportunity to learn acceptable social behaviors and to learn from their peers.
  • Kids social and emotional needs also must be considered.
  • The more kids with special needs are included the more their peers start to see the kids for who they are.
    • julielyncarlson
       
      Kids are kids.
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  • Build Relationships:
  • Encourage Interaction:
  • Educate Yourself:
  • Education leads to understanding
  • Celebrate Diversity:
  • Strengths-Based Approach:
  • Teaching Strategies For Inclusion
  • “I do, We do, You do”
  • Have a Positive Attitude:
  • Inclusion is good for all students.
Siri Anderson

06 Writing Across the Curriculum v001 (Full).pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

  •  
    Helpful tips on teaching writing and teaching note taking
clwisniewski

Visual impairment in the classroom - 0 views

  • Visual impairment in the classroom
    • sadielaurenn
       
      Another great classroom resource!
  • Visual cues are central to most early childhood education systems.
    • sadielaurenn
       
      This is incredibly true, almost every lesson we will teach have some aspect of a visual. How will we accomplish our lessons without visuals?
  • In a school environment, visual impairments can cause difficulties when it comes to traditional reading and writing activities, reading at a distance, distinguishing colors, recognizing shapes and participating in physical education games which require acute vision, such as softball and kickball.
    • sadielaurenn
       
      Prior to research, when I heard "vision impairment" I would typically think of someone who is blind. Throughout researching this disability I have realized that it is so much more. Something as simple as needing glasses for being near sided or far sided is consider a vision impairment.
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  • Tips for teachers working with students who are visually impaired
    • sadielaurenn
       
      Below are some very basics tips to help accommodate your visually impaired students.
  • Children and adults with low vision are not considered legally blind, they simply have reduced vision at or lower than 20/70. Students who are blind have vision that is at or lower than 20/200. Nonetheless, only 15% of students with visual impairments are considered to be completely blind, with no light or form perception ability
    • clwisniewski
       
      An interesting statistic!
  • Children with visual impairments often start off learning to read and write with the assistance of low-tech solutions, such as high-intensity lamps and book-stands. Sometimes screen magnification and computer typing and reading programs are used. In other cases, low vision students will learn to read using the Braille system over text, or a combination of the two. However, as students progress through early grade levels and reading and writing activities become more demanding, periodic literacy skills assessment is required to ensure additional resources and adaptive strategy instruction are provided to meet their needs.
    • clwisniewski
       
      It's good to continue assessing visually impaired students in case they need further assistance.
  • For those students with visual impairments who do not master Braille, making use of technology to facilitate reading is fundamental. In fact, most talented Braille readers prefer to use computers or tablets when reading for fun anyway. And students who learn to use a computer not only find homework easier to complete, but often become faster readers. It is simply more efficient for low vision students to use a computer and word-processor over reading paper books and handwriting. This is particularly relevant at a high-school level, when reading and writing assignments become lengthier and more challenging.
    • clwisniewski
       
      This could be included in a student's IEP, so they have access to a device that can assist them with reading and writing.
nikkilh

Sample-Teaching-Activities-to-Support-Core-Competencies.pdf - 0 views

SEL

shared by nikkilh on 11 Apr 22 - No Cached
  • Sample Teaching Activities to Support Core Competencies of Social and Emotional Learning
  • What is SEL?
  • Four Strategies that Promote SEL
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