GO TOs
Core Values (TIU3)
Joy                                                        Trustworthiness
Learning Styles (TIU4) Learning styles with 2 examples – place a star by your preferred styles
 Style: Visual                      Style: Audio                                Style: Kinesthetic
 ex.                                ex.                                         ex.
         Graphic organizers               Lectures                                    Hands-on activities
 ex.                                ex.                                         ex.
         Detailed notes                   Reading aloud                               Field Trips
Activate the Brain – The R’s (TIU7)
      1. Relationships                4. Retrieval                              7. Re-Exposing
      2. Rigor                        5. Routing                                8. Rehearsing
      3. Relevance                    6. Retaining                              9. Recognizing
Teach the Vocabulary (SS1)
 1. Frayer Model                                     3. Word Games
                                                          Personal Dictionary
 2. Word Walls                                       4.
Strategies for Differentiation (SS2)
 1.
      Individualized Instruction                     3. Flexible Grouping
 2. Respectful Tasks                                 4. Formative Tasks
Strategies for Success (SS2-7) Provide 2 examples of each
Strategies for Success (SS2-7) – Provide 2 examples of each
                                 Example 1                              Example 2
                        Four Corners                       Jigsaw
 Cooperative Grouping
 Graphic Organizers     Concept Maps/Brainstorming Maps    Anchor Chart/ Venn Diagram
 Advanced Organizers Skimming                              Anchor Chart/ Venn Diagram
                                                           T-Chart
 Similarities / Differences Rank 'Em!
                            Plot Diagram                   Cornell Notetaking
 Summarizing & Notetaking
 Cues & Questions       1-Minute Paper                     Investigating the Question
Blooms Verbs (SS8-SS9)
Create       Reconstruct, Summarize, Arrange, Compose, Explain
 APPS:     Slideshow Creator, Adobe Spark Video
Evaluate         Justify, Assess, Evaluate, Summarize, Support
 APPS:    Weebly, Skype, Notion
Analyze               Predict, Analyze, Demonstrate, Solve, Write
 APPS:    Padlet, Wufoo, Popplet
Apply                   Apply, Demonstrate, Manipulate, Prepare, Practice
 APPS:   Koma Koma, Periscope, Google Docs
Comprehension               Summarize, Describe, Recognize, Renew, Translate
 APPS:   Annotate, Feedly, Adobe Spark Post
Remember                        Define, Describe, Identify, Recall, Match
 APPS:   Quizlet, VoiceThread, Mind Mapping
Four Questions to redirect behavior (CBM6)
      What are you doing?
 1.
 2.What should you be doing?
 3. Are you doing it?
 4. What are you going to do about it?
Modifications and Accommodations (E6)
               Quantity                                               Time                                        Level of Support
 Definition                                            Definition                                     Definition
Adapt the number of items that the                                                                   Increase the amount of personal assistance to keep
learner is expected to learn or the number
                                                      Adapt the time allotted and                    the student on task or to reinforce or prompt the use
of activities student will complete prior to          allowed for learning, task                     of specific skills. Enhance adult-student relationship;
                                                                                                     use physical space and environmental structure.
assessment for mastery.                               completion, or testing.
 Example                                               Example                                        Example
Reduce the number of social studies                  Individualize a timeline for completing a       Assign peer buddies, teaching assistants, peer
terms a learner must learn at any one                                                                tutors, or cross-age tutors. Specify how to interact
                                                     task; pace learning differently (increase       with the student or how to structure the
time. Add more practice activities or
worksheets.                                          or decrease) for some learners.                 environment.
                 Input                                              Difficulty                                           Output
 Definition                                            Definition                                     Definition
Adapt the way instruction is                         Adapt the skill level, problem type,           Adapt how the student can
delivered to the learner.                            or the rules on how the learner                respond to instruction.
                                                     may approach the work.
 Example                                               Example                                        Example
Use different visual aids, enlarge text, plan more   Allow the use of a calculator to figure math Instead of answering questions in writing, allow
concrete examples, provide hands-on activities,
place students in cooperative groups, pre-teach
                                                     problem, simplify task directions, or change a verbal response. Use a communication book
key concepts or terms before the lesson.             rules to accommodate learner needs.          for some students, or allow students to show
                                                                                                    knowledge with hands-on materials.
           Participation                               Notes:
 Definition
Adapt the extent to which a learner
is actively involved in the task.
 Example
In geography, have a student hold the
globe, while others point out locations.
Ask the student to lead a group. Have the
student turn the pages while sitting on
your lap (kindergarten).
Suggestions for working with Students in Poverty (E12)
        Provide access to computers, magazines, newspapers, and books so                  Students who live in poverty may not always know the correct behaviors for
        low-income students can see and work with printed materials. School may           school situations. At home, they may function under a different set of social rules.
  1.    be the only place where they are exposed to print media.                     4.   Take time to explain the rationale for rules and procedures in your classroom.
                                                                                          Be careful about the school supplies you expect students to purchase.
  2. Keep your expectations for poor students high.                                  5. Keep your requirements as simple as you can for all students.
        Poverty does not mean ignorance.
  3. Don’t make comments about your students’ clothes or                             6. Arrange a bank of shared supplies for your students to
        belongings unless they are in violation of the dress code.                        borrow when they are temporarily out of materials for class.
Reading Strategies to Strengthen Literacy Skills (R8)
                 Strategy name                               When / how to use it                                                 Define it
                                                                                                                   An anticipation guide is a comprehension strategy that is used before reading to activate
 1. Anticipation Guide                               Before reading, individually, small groups                    students' prior knowledge and build curiosity about a new topic. Before reading, students
                                                                                                                   listen to or read several statements about key concepts presented in the text; they're often
                                                     or whole class setting                                        structured as a series of statements with which the students can choose to agree or
                                                                                                                   disagree. Anticipation guides stimulate students' interest in a topic and set a purpose for
                                                                                                                   reading.
                                                                                                                   Reader's theater is a strategy for developing reading fluency. It involves children in oral
 2. Reader’s Theater                                 During reading with a small group                             reading through reading parts in scripts. In using this strategy, students do not need to
                                                                                                                   memorize their part; they need only to reread it several times, thus developing their fluency
                                                                                                                   skills. The best reader's theater scripts include lots of dialogue.
                                                                                                                   Framed paragraphs are pre-writing tools that help students write well-developed
       Framed Paragraphs                             After reading, individually, with small                       paragraphs. They are skeleton formats containing information about the main ideas and
                                                                                                                   transition words that guide the organization and the development of supportive details.
 3.                                                  groups or whole class                                         Framed paragraphs offer a structure for students to use as they begin to write paragraphs
                                                                                                                   and essays.
Making content comprehensible for ELL students (R9)
Write at least 3 strategies / techniques that you could easily implement in your classroom for your content
                                                                        Graphic organizers
 1. Prepare the lesson                                                  Adapted text
                                                                        Supplementary materials
                                                                         Contextualize key vocabulary
 2. Build background                                                     Content word wall
                                                                         Personal dictionaries or glossaries
                                                                        Appropriate speech
 3. Make verbal communication understandable                            Scaffolding
                                                                        Wait time
                                                    Thinking aloud
 4. Learning strategies (this one should be easy!) Summarizing  strategy
                                                                        Prompting, questioning and elaborating
 5. Opportunities for interaction                                       Encouraging more elaborate responses
                                                                        Wait time
                                                                        Clarify key concepts
 6. Practice and application                                            Hands-on materials and manipulatives for practice
                                                                        Application of content and language
                                                                        Integration of language skills
 7. Lesson delivery                                                     Content objectives
                                                                        Language objectives
                                                                        Pace of lesson
 8. Review and assess                                                   Review of key vocabulary
                                                                        Review of key content concepts
                                                                        Assessment of lesson objectives