Education Articles

Differentiated Learning Articles

Articles on Differentiated Learning for teachers and other educators. "Differentiated learning (sometimes referred to as differentiated instruction) is a way of thinking about teaching and learning. It means using a variety of instructional strategies that address diverse student learning needs. It places students at the center of teaching and learning and student needs drive instructional planning. Differentiated learning is a way to enhance learning for all students by engaging them in activities that respond to particular learning needs, strengths, and preferences. The goals of differentiated learning are to develop challenging and engaging tasks for each learner (from low-end learner to high-end learner). Instructional activities are flexible and based and evaluated on content, process and product. Teachers respond to students’ readiness, instructional needs, interests and learning preferences and provide opportunities for students to work in varied instructional formats. In a nutshell, a differentiated learning classroom is a learner-responsive, teacher-facilitated classrooms where all students have the opportunity to meet curriculum foundational objectives." Source: Wikipedia.

21: Lesson Plans that Reach the Multiple Intelligences (Not Rated)
By Michele R. Acosta American schools have traditionally favored those students who excel in the linguistic and analytical arenas because these skills are highly valued in our culture. Unfortunately, this traditional approach leaves certain students behind to stumble blindly through an educational system which ignores their unique abilities. This is not to say that the development of linguistic and analytical skills should be abandoned in favor of nontraditional approaches to education. Rat

22: Multiple Intelligences - A Primer (4.33/5)
By Peter Petracco Intelligence Quotient (IQ) Testing - where did it come from?------------------------------------------------------------ Two psychologists named Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon created the first Intelligence Scale in 1905. The French government had commissioned this test to assess, which students would likely succeed or fail in the French school system.   In 1930, Lewis Terman made revisions to this original assessment and renamed it the Intelligence Test. Thi

23: Beyond Curriculum #2: A Research Project that Reaches the Multiple Intelligences (Not Rated)
By Michele R. Acosta Multiple intelligences instruction has the potential to reach and teach vast numbers of students, but incorporating it effectively while still meeting curriculum requirements and insuring that students are developing their verbal-linguistic and logical-mathematical intelligences is no small feat.In the first part of this series, I asked the question: How do you effectively incorporate the multiple intelligences, meet the requirements of your school's curriculum, and mak

24: Beyond Curriculum #1: A Literary Analysis Project that Reaches the Multiple Intelligences (Not Rated)
By Michele R. Acosta Teaching with the multiple intelligences in mind is an admirable goal - and a difficult one. How do you effectively incorporate the multiple intelligences, meet the requirements of your school's curriculum, and make sure that your students are developing their verbal-linguistic and logical-mathematical intelligences all at the same time? In most cases, the answer is: you don't - at least not all at the same time. With careful planning, teachers can create a balance in

25: Meeting National Standards with Integrated Curriculum, Differentiated Learning (Not Rated)
By Aldene Fredenburg In trying to implement the "No Child Left Behind" Act, schools are scrambling to standardize their curriculum and upgrade their instruction to make sure students can pass achievement tests mandated by the Act. In order to fit all the instruction and other demands of childhood education into the day, many schools have resorted to "teaching to the test," shortening lunch period, and cutting back on or even eliminating recess. There are better ways to