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Showing posts from November, 2021

EDU 551 Learning Style Analysis

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  “While most people cross the lines of learning styles and can benefit from many types of learning, most people have a dominant learning style that helps them grasp and remember concepts more easily.” (Cornerstone, 2018)     Looking at the four students who took the inventory, all but one had a clear dominant learning style.     It will be easier to help them with their learning and assessments for the rest of the year. It is important to start and recognize the other areas of strengths and weaknesses beyond their learning styles.     For example, student number 1 has a dominant auditory learning style, but she is timid and withdrawn and doesn’t have the solid social skills of the rest of her classmates.     So, with that knowledge, auditory learning is excellent but not necessarily in a small group of peers.   I am in the process of taking the learning inventory and contacting the parents about the results. I have already heard back from one parent who was surprised and excited about

EDU 551 Assessing Technology-Based Resources for Differentiation

  Brief description of each technology. - 4 Google Documents. This is still one of the best ways for students to work together and for teachers to provide feedback to a student. Google documents allow me to put students in groups based on their grade-level knowledge. This puts all the students in the group on the same level playing field. This helps them not to feel intimidated by other classmates who they view as more intelligent than them.  Prezi - Again, still one of the best out there. I usually break my students into three levels of differentiation. Level 1 being below level and 3 being above level. Using Prezi I can record three different videos to push out to my students. Level 1 video offers more scaffolding and explanation, and Level 3 offers little guidance.   Flipgrid. I am still amazed at the number of teachers who don't know Flipgrid. Flipgrid allows me to send out an assignment video, and the students, in turn, "flip" it back to me with their answers. I can