Create Learning Stations: Flexible Seating Plan
Create Learning Stations: Flexible Seating Plan
Watching a video
Creating artwork
Reading an article
Completing puzzles
Listening to you teach
To help students process the content after they’ve been through the stations, you can hold a class
discussion or assign questions to answer.
3. Interview Students
Asking questions about learning and studying styles can help you pinpoint the kinds of content
that will meet your class’s needs.
While running learning stations or a large-group activity, pull each student aside for a few
minutes. Ask about:
Track your results to identify themes and students with uncommon preferences, helping you
determine which methods of instruction suit their abilities.
A lesson should resonate with more students if it targets visual, tactile, auditory and kinesthetic
senses, instead of only one.
When applicable, appeal to a range of learning styles by:
Playing videos
Using infographics
Providing audiobooks
Getting students to act out a scene
Incorporating charts and illustrations within texts
Giving both spoken and written directions to tasks
Using relevant physical objects, such as money when teaching math skills
Allotting time for students to create artistic reflections and interpretations of lessons
Not only will these tactics help more students grasp the core concepts of lessons, but make class
more engaging.
Interested in other teaching strategies to deploy in your classroom?
Differentiated instruction strategies overlap in important ways with a number of other
pedagogical approaches. Consider reviewing these supplementary strategies to find more
ideas, combine different elements of each strategy, and enrich your pedagogical toolkit!
Active learning strategies put your students at the center of the learning process, enriching the
classroom experience and boosting engagement.
As opposed to traditional learning activities, experiential learning activities build knowledge
and skills through direct experience.
Project-based learning uses an open-ended approach in which students work alone or
collectively to produce an engaging, intricate curriculum-related questions or challenges.
Inquiry-based learning is subdivided into four categories, all of which promote the importance
of your students’ development of questions, ideas and analyses.
Adaptive learning focuses on changing — or “adapting” — learning content for students on an
individual basis, particularly with the help of technology.
5. Share Your Own Strengths and Weaknesses
To familiarize students with the idea of differentiated learning, you may find it beneficial
to explain that not everyone builds skills and processes information the same way.
Talking about your own strengths and weaknesses is one way of doing this.
Explain — on a personal level — how you study and review lessons. Share tactics that do and
don’t work for you, encouraging students to try them.
Not only should this help them understand that people naturally learn differently, but give
them insight into improving how they process information.
As they continue to make entries, they should figure out which ones effectively allow them to
process fresh content.
Free study time will generally benefit students who prefer to learn individually, but can
be slightly altered to also help their classmates process your lessons.
This can be done by dividing your class into clearly-sectioned solo and team activities.
Consider the following free study exercises to also meet the preferences of visual, auditory
and kinesthetic learners:
Maintain a designated quiet space for students to take notes and complete work
Allow students to work in groups while taking notes and completing work, away from the
quiet space
By running these sorts of activities, free study time will begin to benefit diverse learners —
not just students who easily process information through quiet, individual work.
Offering structured options can help students demonstrate their understanding of content as
effectively as possible, giving you more insight into their abilities.
As well as benefiting students, this differentiated instruction strategy will clearly showcase
distinct work and learning styles.
Even if you’re confident in your overall approach, Carol Ann Tomlinson — one of the most
reputable topic thought-leaders — recommends analyzing your differentiated instruction
strategies:
Frequently reflect on the match between your classroom and the philosophy of teaching
and learning you want to practice. Look for matches and mismatches, and use both to
guide you.
Analyze your strategy by reflecting on:
Content — Are you using diverse materials and teaching methods in class?
Processes — Are you providing solo, small-group and large-group activities that best
allow different learners to absorb your content?
Products — Are you letting and helping students demonstrate their understanding of
content in a variety of ways on tests, projects and assignments?
In doing so, you’ll refine your approach to appropriately accommodate the multiple intelligences
of students.
16. “Teach Up”
Teaching at a level that’s too easily accessible to each student can harm your differentiated
instruction efforts, according to Tomlinson.
Instead, she recommends “teaching up.” This eliminates the pitfall of being stuck on low-level
ideas, seldom reaching advanced concepts:
We do much better if we start with what we consider to be high-end curriculum and
expectations — and then differentiate to provide scaffolding, to lift the kids up.
The usual tendency is to start with what we perceive to be grade-level material and then
dumb it down for some and raise it up for others. But we don’t usually raise it up very
much from that starting point, and dumbing down just sets lower expectations for some
kids.
Keeping this concept in mind should focus your differentiated teaching strategy, helping
you bring each student up to “high-end curriculum and expectations.”
You can hand out sheets to students for solo practice, or divide them into pairs and encourage
friendly competition. The first one to link three Xs or Os — by correctly completing questions
— wins.
So, depending on your preferences, this game will challenge diverse learners through either
individual or small-group practice.
Data — Provide spreadsheets, requiring students to manipulate data through trial and
error
People — Group students into pairs or triads to tackle a range of problems together,
supporting each other’s learning
Things — Offer a hands-on option by giving each student objects to use when solving
questions
Only allow students to switch stations if they feel the need. If they do, consult them about
their decision. In each case, you and the student will likely learn more about his or her learning
style.
Supplemented by your circulation between stations to address gaps in prior knowledge, this
activity exposes students to exercises that appeal to diverse abilities.