Differentiating for Students of Different Ability Levels and Learning Needs
It’s remarkable to consider that there was a time when classroom instruction followed the practice of “teaching to the middle.” Back then, it was commonly believed that the majority of students would acquire the necessary skills and knowledge for academic progress and achievement. Unfortunately, this approach often overlooked students with unique abilities, needs, and learning preferences. Fortunately, those days are now behind us. Students of all kinds are now benefiting from thoughtful and differentiated instruction that provides fair access to new learning opportunities.
What is Differentiated Instruction?
Differentiated instruction is an instructional approach that recognizes each student as a unique learner with specific strengths and challenges. In this model, tasks are customized to meet the individual needs of each student. This marks a departure from the one-size-fits-all approach of the past. Differentiated instruction for student success allows both students and instructors to focus on varying the presentation of new concepts and the understanding of learned concepts, centered around four specific areas: content, environment, process, and product.
• Content: Refers to the knowledge, skills, behaviors, or attitudes taught in a lesson.
• Environment: Involves the location or context where learning occurs.
• Process: Encompasses the format, activities, or experiences a teacher uses to convey content.
• Product: Represents artifacts or evidence of learning.
Benefits of Differentiated Instruction
In addition to traditional classroom writing instruction practices like explicit teaching, modeling, and emulation, teachers can utilize MI Write to provide students with a range of experiential learning opportunities through targeted tasks that refine their writing skills at their own pace. Different opportunities lead to different outcomes, each of which reveals crucial information about a student's progress along the skills and knowledge continuum. For example, a class “exit ticket” might demonstrate a student’s full grasp of recently covered content, whereas a constructed-response entry on an assessment could indicate the need for improvement in organizing thoughts logically and with greater clarity. Similarly, a journal entry might showcase a student’s keen observation and creativity in a descriptive review, while an outline for an argumentative piece could suggest the need for further practice with claim-linked reasoning. By incorporating MI Write into their writing instruction routine, teachers gain an additional method to assess students’ knowledge, capabilities, and supporting evidence in the form of student work data.
Utilizing MI Write for Student-Centered Opportunities
With regard to the four focus areas, specific examples of how MI Write assists teachers in identifying ways to differentiate instruction or gauge students' mastery of instructional goals can be found in the table below.
Focus Area |
How does MI Write help? |
Content |
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Environment |
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Process |
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Product |
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