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Elizabeth Durkin

Tiered instruction: rationale, and characteristics of a tiered lesson - 0 views

  • Whether we isolate high achieving students into accelerated courses, learning disabled students into special education classes, students who have fallen behind into remedial classes, or English language learners into a stream of their own, we frequently do so at a cost to both the students themselves and to the mainstream population from which they’ve been separated. If we embrace full inclusion without applying effective differentiation strategies, we fail as well.  Diverse classrooms where every learner makes significant progress are possible in part through tiered instruction and assessment.
  • Students at the beginning end of the readiness continuum will have learned the most. Students who were initially in closer proximity to the learning target will have grown less. It’s possible, if not likely, that some highly advanced students may be proficient while having experienced no growth at all. We will deserve credit for helping struggling students develop proficiency and will deserve  blame for setting a limit on what our advanced students were able to learn.
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    Why use this instruction model for middle school mathematics? How does a tiered lesson look? Strategies for managing a tiered classroom.
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