Understanding the diverse learning needs of students
Workshop 2
Overview
• What do we need to know about the learner for planning?
• Who can provide information to inform planning?
Knowing about the learner for planning
Why do teachers need to know the learner?
• To provide opportunities for students to demonstrate what they know and can do
• To meet the individual student’s learning and assessment needs
• To provide flexible, challenging and appropriate opportunities for enriched learning
• To ensure that the student is actively engaged in learning• To promote individual success through learning • To progress learning for each individual• To promote a positive attitude toward learning
Ask these key questions when planning
• Do I know the abilities, needs and interests of each of my students?
• What do my students need to learn?• What interactions will facilitate and support students’
learning?• What situations will encourage and support learning?• What are the most appropriate ways for students to
demonstrate their learning?• What are the indicators of success in learning?
Physical skills
Organisational skills
Thinking strategies
Dispositions for learning
Your task
• List key ideas or questions to focus your thinking on what students know and can do.
Elements of learning to consider when planning
What students need to know:• Knowledge
– Conceptual and perceptual understandings
– Language, symbol systems and terminologies
• Procedures– Attention to the
activity/investigation/situation– Processes and techniques
• Skills– Organisational, operational and
management skills– Visual/spatial perceptions and skills
• Strategies– Thinking strategies – problem solving– Memory recall
What students need to do:• Physical and kinaesthetic
skills• Select, use and apply
knowledge, procedures, skills and strategies
• Demonstrate dispositions to learning
Finding out what students know and can do
Suggested strategies• Create a rubric• Use KWL• Brainstorm, discuss – create a word web, concept
map …• Ask: ‘What questions do you have now?’• Use records of prior learning, observations,
consultations …
Sample questions to ask students
• What hobbies do you have?• What do you want to learn about?• What do you like to read?• What do you like about maths?• How would you describe yourself as a learner?• How best do you learn?• What do you need to be comfortable in the classroom?• How can the classroom be more welcoming for you?• What is your favourite part of the school day?• What would be a perfect day at school, for you?• What else do I need to know to help you learn?
Example 1: Calvin
Calvin is a visual and kinaesthetic learner. He draws pictures as a way to conceptualise solutions to Maths problems. He reads simple text with a few well-spaced sentences but he feels anxious when confronted by a lot of text on a page. He needs assistance to interpret written language as he is unsure what he is being asked to do. Embarrassed by these difficulties, Kevin is hesitant to ask the teacher or classmates for help. He is more comfortable when things are presented visually.
Planning strategies for students with special needs – Teaching Children Mathematics, Oct 2004
What he knows What he needs support to learn
How to read simple sentences
How to develop visual ideas
He uses visualisation/drawing as a strategy to support his understanding of maths problems
Assistance to understand what he reads
Written instructions using visual clues
Include drawings/diagrams within his assessment of maths concepts
Example 2: Leita-Jane
Leita-Jane is 12 years old and has successfully demonstrated level 1 outcomes in English, SOSE, Science and Mathematics and is working toward level 2. She works well with peers and a teacher’s-aide. Her short-term memory is good and she can identify visual representations of familiar surroundings and people and make connections between where they work and what kind of work they do. In a geographical mapping exercise she can connect photographs of school personnel with their classrooms and staff rooms and describe their type of work.
What she knows What she needs support to learnIdentifies familiar surroundings and peopleCan read visual representationsMakes connections between separate pieces of informationCan manipulate equipment and media to create visual representations of concepts.
Assistance with reading written instructionsIntroduce visual clues to increase independenceSupport to access new and unfamiliar knowledge
Your task
Consider 3 or 4 of your students• Identify:
– what they know and can do– what support these students need to learn
• Record your information on the KISS planning sheet provided.
Who can provide information to support planning?
• Students, peers, friends• Family members• Other teachers involved in the learning programs
– e.g. music, library, physical education teachers• Specialists, school personnel, colleagues• QSA, and sector information/ policies
(Education Queensland, Cath. Ed., AISQ)
Your task
• Consider the people who can support your planning and teaching
• Identify the type of information these people may provide to assist you.
Teachers are invited to use this information to plan for adjustments in catering for the diverse learning needs of students and to maximise student learning.
What next?