Lesson 2 Getting To Know Your Students
Lesson 2 Getting To Know Your Students
Lesson 2 Getting To Know Your Students
Overview:
This lesson helps teachers to become familiar with the different ways in which their
students can differ. The goal is to help teachers understand the three areas: readiness,
interest, and learning profile and how they can get to know this about their students.
Learning Targets:
Understand the three areas that students can differ: readiness, interest, and
learning profile
Materials:
Readiness on Differentiation Video by Carol Tomlinson https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=MMvCd5Xafag
Table on Readiness, Interest, and Learning Profile
Get to Know Your Students Page by
http://iris.peabody.vanderbilt.edu/module/di/cresource/q2/p03/#content
Lesson Menu
Poster partitioned into thirds with the headings: Readiness, Interest, and Learning Profile
Time needed: 30 minutes
Procedure:
1. Give teachers the menu options for today and have them make choices for each
section to earn a total of 10 points.
2. After teachers complete the menu, give them each three sticky notes. Teachers will
write down one thing about each of the following: readiness, interest, and learning
profile, and then add to the chart in the front of the room. This could be something
they learned, a question they still have, or an idea to help address these during our
math instructional block.
3. Before teachers leave, they should complete the Professional Development
Evaluation (See Appendix C).
Lesson 2 Getting to Know Your Students
Name ____________________________________
___________________________
Date
Readiness
Interest
What I already
know
New Learning
Name ____________________________________
___________________________
Lesson 2 Getting to Know Your Students
Date
Learning
Profile
Explore on-line to find an interest survey that you might use in your
classroom with your students.
As discussed previously, when they differentiate instruction, teachers design lessons to address the needs of
groups of students. Before teachers can do this, however, they must first get to know their students in terms of:
Readiness
Interest
Learning Profile
Readiness
Readiness refers to a students knowledge and skill level regarding given content. A students readiness level
might vary across subjects or content areas. For example, a student may have extensive knowledge about
ancient Egypt but have little knowledge about the Incan civilization. Additionally, a students readiness may be
influenced by his or her background knowledge, life experiences, or previous learning. Teachers can determine
the level at which a student is working in a given subject area by:
Examining the results of formal or informal tests (e.g., standardized test, unit pre-test)
Asking students to complete a KWL chart (click here for an example KWL chart)
Interest
Lesson 2 Getting to Know Your Students
Interest refers to topics, skills, or activities that pique a students curiosity or inspire him or her. Teachers can
discover their students interests by determining what topics they enjoy or which activities they engage in
outside of class. They can do so by asking students to:
Learning Profile
Learning profile refers to a students preferred method of learning new information or skills (e.g., visually,
hands-on, through deductive means) and to environmental factors that influence a students learning (e.g., small
group, bright lights, no distractions). A students profile can also be influenced by gender and culture. For
example, students from cultural backgrounds that value cooperation over competition may perform better in a
small group versus working independently. Teachers can assess a students preferred method of learning by:
Differentiation doesnt ask teachers to begin by individualizing instruction. It asks teachers to look for
patterns of need.
Carol Ann Tomlinson (2010)