Showing posts with label tiering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tiering. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

What's that say?

Do your scholars endeavor to comprehend clauses with brobdingnagian vernacular? Er, what?! What we mean to say is this: do your students struggle to read passages with big words?

Recently, a teacher recommended Rewordify, a website that provides reading level and vocabulary options for digital text. And, it's very user friendly. We really hope you research it check it out.

Monday, November 4, 2013

5 Ways to Make Stuff Stick?



At our ATA PD day last week, Rick Smith shared strategies from his presentation 50 Ways to Leave a Lecture.

We appreciated this slide for its use of differentiation and its potential for tiering. It highlights some of those strategies and the five modalities teachers can use to pause the lecture and have students interact with the material presented. In other words, five ways to make stuff stick.

Thursday, September 26, 2013

High, medium or low?

Many teachers have strategies intended to elicit deeper thinking. One teacher in our school division was willing to share her high-medium-low strategy.

Maybe this could work for you too? Based on Blooms, the verbs on each poster say it all: moving from red to green students increase their ability to connect, infer, apply, demonstrate and evaluate their learnings. Posted in her classroom, she challenges students to think, question and apply their learning on these three different levels.

It reminds us of a questioning strategy useful for any grade but especially younger ones: thick and thin questions. Click the links for more information or to see a teacher-created poster using thick and thin questions.

HFCRD37 teachers can also search for strategies and resources in our coaching toolbox on the S Drive. Or check out our prezi on questioning.