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Curriculum Development => Differentiated Instruction => Thread started by: Jholman613 on November 17, 2011, 03:05:43 PM



Title: Standards are the prerequisite for Differentiation
Post by: Jholman613 on November 17, 2011, 03:05:43 PM
In order to differentiate instruction, the teacher has to decide
a) what material is core, necessary for every student, what is "need to know",
b) and what material is "nice to know"

This presuposes that the teacher, or beter yet, the school has decided what are the "standards" for their Chumash or Gemara curriculum.  Every state website has its own state standards of what kids need to know for math, reading etc. by the end of 2nd grade, 3rd grade, etc.  The teacher/school needs to decide this as well.

If a teacher's goal is to learn Bereshis 37:1-12, how can he/she differentiate?  That's just a list of psukim.  Lists of psukim are not goals or standards.  Skills are goals.  If the goal were, "the student will be able to identify and translate the prefixes XYZ", then the teacher would be able to differentiate.  How?  by skipping psukim in order to focus on skills for those weaker students.  Or... by focusing on skills and assigning extra psukim for the stronger students.

The starting point for DI is knowing what kids "need to know" before we start.

But to what extent do schools and teachers have discussions about what kids need to know in Chumash, Mishna, Gemara etc.?


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