EDUC 547 Quiz: Defining Differentiation
- Differentiation is a strategy that can be used once in a while in a classroom.
- What phrase most clearly aligns with the author’s definition of differentiating instruction?
- The three curricular elements in all classrooms are: content, process, and assessment
- Differentiated classrooms:
- Which phrase best describes why differentiation is different from individualized instruction:
Set 2
- Differentiated instruction blends whole-class, group, and individual instruction, but prioritizes individualized instruction over whole-class and group.
- Differentiated classrooms:
- Differentiation is a strategy that can be used once in a while in a classroom.
- Differentiated instruction relies heavily on:
- Differentiation is not:
EDUC 547 Quiz: Needs and Rationale for Differentiation
- The focus of the book is:
- Advanced learners hide their status because they fear peer ramifications for appearing too smart.
- Understanding the students we ask to learn is foundational to creating learning opportunities that enliven them.
- The definition of “a good education” is the same among educators, politicians, parents, and the citizenry at large.
- English Language Learners (ELLs) are:
- The most devastating wound teachers inflict on students is:
- Few students are advanced in everything all the time.
- The meaning-making process is influenced by the student’s:
- Understanding the students is:
- Motivation to learn increases when the learner feels a kinship with, interest in, or passion for the subject.
EDUC 547 Quiz: Differentiated Classroom Environment
- Differentiation reminds us that what may hook one student might puzzle, bore, or irritate others.
- Highly effective teachers:
- Teachers should coach students to be contributing members of a group.
- Teachers should anticipate potential problems in activities and trouble-shoot them effectively.
- As one of the principles of effective teaching, the teacher maintains:
- Making meaning out of important ideas takes a back seat to “covering information.”
- The teacher engages the student by:
- Examples of scaffolding include:
- Mutual respect is:
- When we begin to see the wide array of assessment opportunities in the classroom, we open our eyes to new ways to learn about learners.