1 / 28

My Transition to a student-centered classroom

My Transition to a student-centered classroom. A look at the theories, tools, problems, and solutions from the journey. “A child mis -educated is a child lost.” -JFK. Contents:. Layer C Layer B Layer A implementation L to J RtI Technology & Tools Resources. page 5 page 10

Download Presentation

My Transition to a student-centered classroom

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. My Transition to a student-centered classroom A look at the theories, tools, problems, and solutions from the journey. “A child mis-educated is a child lost.” -JFK

  2. Contents: Layer C Layer B Layer A implementation L to J RtI Technology & Tools Resources page 5 page 10 Page 12 page 14 page 19 page 23 page 27 page 28

  3. Morsels that prompt change: • was working my tooshie off and not seeing the hoped-for achievement • Students lacking passion for their education • Block schedule • Students must feel acceptance and success to strive for their best. • A feeling of control means survival is not threatened.

  4. Layered curriculum: • “Every student deserves a special education.” Kathie F. Nunley, PhD • 3 Keys 1) choice 2)encourage complex thinking 3) increase accountability • Goal – improve student’s lives without doing harm.

  5. C layer: • Goes first • Highest grade possible with satisfactory completion of this level – C • Add to bank of knowledge, basic facts, basic skills • Have 3-4x as many choices as you want them to complete

  6. C Layer Examples: • Listening to “lecture”** • Notes • Discussion • Flashcards • Informative poster • (next slides will break it down by learning type) • **Dr. Nunley suggests making the direct instruction optional; she stresses it’s not actually becoming optional – it’s just a perspective shift in the students. • In her experience, they all still participate in direction instruction, but believe it to be their choice.

  7. Layer C for Visual: • Traditional Textbook: • Read chapter, answer questions, explain illustrations • Periodical Literature: • Read & give 60 sec. summary, highlight article, answer worksheet on article • Video: • Watch video, take notes, write 15 interesting things, fill-out worksheet • Demonstrations: • Watch demo & do worksheet/discuss/make own demo • Computers: • Summarize key ideas, online worksheet, online quiz

  8. Layer C for Auditory: • Taped textbook reading: • Listen & follow along in book/answer questions, listen & do activities, listen & answer questions orally • Lectures: • Listen & take notes, listen & fill out outline • Debates: • plan a group debate using 3 sources, read an article & debate with a friend • Song writing: • Write a song & include 10 facts in it

  9. Layer C for Kinesthetic: • Computer programs • Flashcards • Bulletin board • Posters • Dioramas • Construct a book/booklet • Collages • Mobiles • Models • Board game creation

  10. B Layer: • Start after layer C is complete • Highest possible grade upon completion is a B • Take layer C info and manipulate it; hook it to other concepts and situations • Lab time! Or, problem solve! • (NO pre-fabricated labs.)

  11. B Layer Examples: • Lab, and lab questions • Make 5 questions to follow steps of Inquiry • Diagrams • Vocab stories • Puppet show • Make a Prezi, Powerpoint, or webpage • THIS is the place for interdisciplinary projects

  12. A Layer: • Last layer - Ideal end-point • Highest possible grade upon completion is a A • Critical thinking and analysis • They need to think!

  13. A Layer Examples: • Science mysteries (short stories with critical thinking questions at the end) • Current events • Find 3 sources • Read write opinion using knowledge gained in layer C • Questions to ask: • Is cloning research a good idea? • When will we have a cure for cancer? • Was there ever life on our moon?

  14. Grading: • Partial points vs. all-or-nothing • Who is responsible for keeping track? • Student – binder with sheet • Teacher – spreadsheet, iPad • If you do it in class – include it in the layers • L to J • Vocab flashcard practice • Vocab bingo • Bell ringers

  15. Modifications (higher & lower): • lower - Removing a layer • Lower - Reducing number of items to complete per layer • Higher – “quizzing” out of layer C • Higher – test at the end • As per Dr. Nunley’s suggestion, points of test should equal the total points needed from layers C,B, and A

  16. When to start: • Mid-year: • If not already a highly student-centered operation, keep things clear with opening the flood-gate little by little. • Ex: those of you doing choice 1 please sit on west side of room, choice 2 please sit on the right • Start of year: • Limit number of choices for each layer, walk kids through the schedule

  17. Pacing & communication: • Ease into it. • Students will need to be “led” through the first time • Give the “menu” to students at the start of the chapter.

  18. Troubleshooting: • Reluctant students • Student absence • Front-loading! • Making contact with each student on each choice for each layer

  19. L to J

  20. L to J - Overview: • Used as a “preview/review” • Great way to collect data to gauge effectiveness in vocabulary acquisition • Students quizzed weekly on the square root of the year’s vocab bank • Students graph their result in classroom binder • Class average recorded on wall chart. • Meet or exceed week’s goal = lollipop

  21. L to J Artifacts: • Student • Word bank • Individual graph • Test blank • Teacher • Word bank • Definition bank • Random generator • www.random.org • Class wall charts

  22. L to J – results: • Students who struggle with vocabulary are actively engaged • A nice way to reinforce that students do not have permission to forget material • Helps build connections within words • Minor: weekly exposure to graphing, organizational skills, another routine for familiarity, a quiz students get excited for!

  23. Response To Intervention (RtI) – explicit teaching • “It’s not what you say or do that ultimately matters… It IS what you get the students to do as a result of what you said and did that counts.” -Archer, Feldman, Kinsella

  24. My socks are still missing… • “If it’s worth one student doing it – they all should do it.” -Anita Archer, Ed.D. Engagement is essential; those students we really need to reach are those who are not typically engaged. They all need to do everything!

  25. RtI – worth looking into: • Choral responses • Partner/small group work • Written responses • Random/strategic calling on students • NO HAND RAISING. • If you only call on students raising hands to answer, you will get the same 3 kids every time, and no one else will be engaged.

  26. RTI - • Too much information to go into more depth here…but it reinforces why layered curriculum is important. • Worth looking into the website/going to the seminars. • Basically tells us what we’ve been doing all our lives could be greatly improved. • Paradigm shift can be uncomfortable.

  27. Technology & other tools: • Technology usage is imperative. In my room: Clickers – used for quizzes and tests teacher lead & student lead vocab bingo flashcards classroom binders online textbook consumable textbook *website utilized: lots of resources

  28. Sources: Layered Curriculum – Kathie F. Nunley, Ed.D. L to J – Lee Jenkins, Ph.D. Response To Intervention (RtI) – Anita Archer, Ph.D.; Kevin Feldman, Ed.D.; Kate Kinsella, Ed.D. www.help4teachers.com www.brains.org www.toolsfordifferentiation.pbworks.com www.nerds.unl.edu/layered

More Related