Today’s One Thing is a series produced in partnership with The Learning Accelerator. Week 6: How do you differentiate remote instruction?   00:42 Recap of past episodes 01:40 What differentiation is and is not 03:35 Tips for looking at differentiation in 3 different ways: Targeting instruction by strategically grouping your students Offering opportunities for choice Universal accessibility of […]

Today’s One Thing is a series produced in partnership with The Learning Accelerator.


Week 6: How do you differentiate remote instruction?


 


00:42 Recap of past episodes


01:40 What differentiation is and is not


03:35 Tips for looking at differentiation in 3 different ways:

Targeting instruction by strategically grouping your students
Offering opportunities for choice
Universal accessibility of content

04:31 How are you using data?


05:04 Buffet analogy


05:41 Targeting instruction by strategically grouping your students – heterogeneous or homogenous grouping


07:00 Assigning differentiated playlists


07:13 Using leveled reading tools


07:50 Students know when they’re getting different content


08:25 Having interactive online discussions


Flipgrid https://info.flipgrid.com/


09:28 Thinking about what do all of my students need and what do some of my students need


10:56 Why some teachers have been hesitant to dive into differentiation


13:08 Offering opportunities for choice

Khan Academy https://www.khanacademy.org/
IXL https://www.ixl.com/
NoRedInk https://www.noredink.com/

14:40 Playlists 


15:11 Choice boards


15:49 Offering students choice for how they work and with whom they want to be working


17:38 The data should show you what is the best path for you.


18:01 Presenting the same content in multiple ways


18:56 Offering the content in multiple modalities


Combining the written or verbal material with visual material

Wave accessibility scanner https://wave.webaim.org/
Mercury Reader https://mercury.postlight.com/reader/
Open Dyslexic font https://opendyslexic.org/

21:30 Think about ways that you can flip your lesson plans to make them student-facing