"If you are following the hallmarks and making lesson equally engaging and respectful for all of your learners you are tiering."
--Nancy Peterson
A great teacher learns to differentiate their lessons by
tiering the activities within the lessons, always with the students in your
class in mind. It is not enough just to have a good lesson that covers great
content; you need to design your lesson in a way that every student in your
class will get meaning from it. Not every student is going to be the same; they
are all going to be on different reading levels, they will all have different
interests and different ways that they learn the best. When tailoring a lesson
you MUST take these factors into account so that the objectives you are trying
to reach with the lesson are met by ALL students, not just a select few. I know
it sounds overwhelming, but I promise, it can be done. When developing your
lessons, first look at what you want the students to know, understand and be
able to do; from this starting point you can draft up the activities within the
lesson. Once you have done that, stop
and look back at the activities, decide which students in your class will
understand the context you have put them in and then clone the activity with
the other students in mind. What do I mean when I say, “clone”? Basically, just look at the activity, think
about your students and make some adjustments so that your other learners can
understand it in a context they know. This is what we call “tiering.” Sometimes
you may only have two tiers, other times you may need to clone your activity 3
times to encompass the broad spectrum of your students, it just depends on your
class. This is definitely something you shouldn’t take lightly though,
especially as a first year teacher. Differentiating can be hard and it takes
practice, but as the saying goes, “Practice makes perfect.” I am going to
adjust that a little, “Practice makes ALMOST perfect.” I include almost because
as a teacher you are always going to be learning and finding better ways to do
things, you will never be perfect, but you can strive for perfection. Differentiating
is something that will get easier with time.
Well, of course I see this as a wonderful posting... especially when you include such an insightful opening quote! (Hee hee!) 5 pts.
ReplyDeleteOne thing that stood out to me in this post was your amendment to the saying, "Practice makes perfect." I love that you said, "Practice makes ALMOST perfect." It is impossible to be perfect and I think teachers are reminded of this all the time...by parents and other spectators. ;) Differentiating is sooooo important and I am extremely glad that we are learning about tiering so we can create lessons that cater to student's needs!
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