Friday, May 10, 2013

How is Differentiating One's Instruction Like Being an Athletic Coach?

     Many of you have either been athletic coaches, been coached in athletics yourselves, or have children or nieces and nephews who are being coached athletically. Think about what the athletic coaching experience is all about...and check out this metaphor: Differentiating your instruction in the classroom is a lot like being an athletic coach out on the field.

     Picture this: 
     It's the end of the summer (I know, most of us do NOT want to picture that, but stay with me -- this is just a scenario!). A football coach is preparing for the first practice of the season. He knows that some of his team members worked out during the summer, staying in good shape, while others most likely did not. So, he plans a quick five minute drill that will allow him to know who's been working out and who hasn't. He also plans two or three different workouts to assign right then and there to his athletes, depending on who is in what kind of shape.
     Throughout the practice, this coach models for his players the skills and strategies they need to master. He gives feedback in real time so his athletes can improve. He pulls some kids aside based on what he observes, realizing he may need to model a technique for them again, or show them a new way of thinking about it. He knows he doesn't need to "grade" everything that occurs during practices, and that this real time feedback is what's really going to be helpful in preparing for the game (or the "test").

     This coach is a master of differentiation. He gave a pre-assessment at the start of practice, and then used the data he received from this pre-assessment to assign tiered tasks to his athletes based on their level of readiness, having proactively planned for this. He models for his players, gives real time feedback, and uses formative assessment to help inform his coaching and to help his players improve before the big game.
     I borrowed parts of this metaphor from Cris Tovani's (2011) So What Do They Really Know?: Assessment That Informs Teaching and Learning, in which she claims, "If you can do it for football players, you can do it for students" (p. 39). 

     What would our classes look like if we taught in this way? How might we use our classroom time? What would our assessments look like, and how would we use the data from them to inform our instruction? How and when would we model for students? How and when would we give feedback?


     (Shameless plug alert: If you want to explore questions like those above in relation to your own classroom -- and you teach in the same district as me -- check out my summer workshop, A Practical Approach to Differentiation in the Classroom. Let's come up with answers together!!)

No comments:

Post a Comment