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Getting Started Teacher Training (U.S.)
Course: Getting Started Teacher Training (U.S.) > Unit 2
Lesson 1: Classroom strategies- Celebrate class progress with the LearnStorm Tracker
- Ideas for using Khan Academy in your classroom
- In-class practice
- Homework
- Review and test prep
- Differentiation and remediation
- Creating Mastery Goals with Khan Academy
- Using Khan Academy for self-paced practice
- Using Khan Academy for lesson-aligned practice
- Using Khan Academy for review
- Using Khan Academy for homework
- Strategies to engage and motivate students on Khan Academy
- Humanities with Khan Academy
- Tips for effective distance learning
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Differentiation and remediation
Target your instruction with real-time data.
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Video transcript
(light music) Good morning. Differentiation is super
important because not everyone is at the same level, we have
kids who are way up there and we have kids that are way down there. And I'm trying to teach here
in the middle okay so the ones who are very high level are
bored, the ones that are real down here, they're getting
frustrated because they're not getting it. But Khan Academy has given me
a little bit of an edge here of trying to meet those needs. Everyone works at different
level or different pace and this is pretty much at your own pace. Khan Academy frees me up
to be able to work with kids at all levels pretty much
all at the same time because I can group those kids and
allow them to work on a higher level or remediate while
I've got other students doing other things. And then what's the principle? Specifically for reteaching
and remediation, I look at my reports a lot, I
use data a lot to drive my instruction and to drive
what I need to reteach. It helps me monitor a little
bit closer as opposed to just assume that everyone is correct. They tell me exactly where
that student is, it tells me how many attempts have
they have done it specific, so there's real data telling
me hey this student is getting it wrong. Let's say a student is missing
on integers, I can assign it just for that one kid and
I can monitor it that way and it's beautiful because
then they can be like wait a minute you're missing this
idea and I get to see what they're doing wrong or I
can actually help intervene at that point. For differentiation,
after I assign an assignment and the kids have submitted
it, I will go into the reports tab and I can look at the
scores of each individual student based on that
assignment and then from there I can create those small
groups that I need to go back and review and I can see
which questions they missed or what standards they missed
so I know okay this group of students needs to work
on this specific standard or these students need to
work on procedural fluency. Another group might be they're
working on just comprehension on word problems like that's
big for a lot of them. When I'm looking to
differentiate there will be times where I might pull a small
group aside and have them work on a set of problems or
watch a video from Khan Academy while we're working on
an extension activity with another group who has
demonstrated knowledge of that given standard. Khan Academy really allows for
a small group to be working on their own even without
an instructor right by their side because of the way
that we can see that they're doing what we want them to do. I have a student who has
gone up three or four grade levels above what I teach
algebra, that's amazing, and he is content he is happy,
he also engages in my lesson which is good, and then you
have students who are maybe two or three grades below
and I'm even able to go ahead and aside to two or three
grade levels at their own level and they're able to do it
and they feel successful, because then that way I'm
not losing them and that's what I want. (light music)