Hi bloggers! I have been busy preparing for next year. I got
a job in a different district, teaching kindergarten again. However, unlike my
current class, who is generally homogeneously grouped, next year I will have all
different ability levels in my classroom. My goal will be to differentiate
instruction so that all learners are challenged. I have a few ideas of how I
hope to accomplish this.
For math, I plan to have a whole group lesson at the
beginning of class. This may involve either a pre-assessment to determine
ability grouping, or just an informal assessment with white boards at the
carpet area. From there, I will have choice time. There will be 10 tubs
available to students for choice time while I meet with groups. Inside the tubs
are activities/games of concepts we’ve already learned, or things tied to this
unit’s objective. This is determined by how much of the class needs to review
concepts previously taught. The tubs are labeled 1-10. In the 1-3 tubs will be
activities that are low on the Bloom’s Taxonomy framework (knowledge, and
comprehension). Tubs 4-7 will have application and analysis. Tubs 8-10 will
have activities that require the students to synthesize and evaluate concepts. During
choice time, I will work with groups based on ability or knowledge of that
particular objective. When the school year begins, I will post activities that I put in each tub, and how they are classified under the Bloom's Taxonomy framework.
For language arts, I hope to begin with traditional literacy
centers (with reading activities found in FCRR, Words Their Way, and Bevery
Tyner’s Small Group Reading Instruction), and differentiate activities at each
center. Once most of my class has learned to read DRA level 3 or 4 books, I
will begin implementing the Daily Five framework. I am very familiar with this
framework because I’ve implemented it before in a kindergarten classroom. It
has always worked surprisingly well. However, I’ve always had to wait until my
students acquire some fluency and automaticity in reading before I can
introduce it. This summer, I have been reading the Café book. In it, the
Sisters make the point that their reading groups are skill based. In other
words, students at each reading group can be reading different groups. However,
the one thing that ties the group together is the reading skill or strategy
they are working on. I have never grouped my students by skill instead of DRA
levels. However, I did think this was a unique concept, and the Sisters have a
great amount of research on which they base their book. For the time being, I
am going to implement their method of data collection for each student, and the
strategies taught on the Café board. If I find that I am able to implement
these things successfully, I will begin grouping my above grade level readers
based on the skill they are working on in the café board. I will keep you
posted on how my implementation is going.
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