Because it is
essential for gifted children to have a program designed to address their
individual characteristics, needs, abilities, and interests, differentiating
curriculum so that each child is appropriately challenged is at the core of Seabury
School’s mission.
Learn more about
differentiated instruction at Seabury in this Q&A with Head of School
Sandi Wollum.
How do you define
differentiated instruction?
I would say it goes back to the fundamental philosophy that every child
gets to learn something new at school every day. Giving every child equal
access to education means you need to do different things for different
children.
Isn’t that just common sense?
Not always. Some systems in schools are set up to say that
every kid should hit the same academic milestones in same way at the same time.
We don’t expect children to hit growth charts like that. We don’t expect their
T-ball skills to develop like that. Why do we expect their reading or math or
other academic skills to develop like that?
How do we ensure differentiation happens at
Seabury?
At Seabury, we have small classes and highly trained teachers in
order to be able to appropriately challenge every single child, every single
day. Most gifted kids are not equally gifted in every area. They have strengths
and weaknesses like everyone else. Although our classes are small, the range of
needs is extremely wide.
What might that look like in one of our
classes?
In a first grade class, we might find students whose reading
hasn’t really clicked yet, where they’re still struggling to sound out
words, but who also have highly advanced comprehension skills when they hear a story read. Other children might be reading chapter books meant for fifth or sixth graders,
and yet only have five or six years of life experience so while they
“understand” what they are reading, they don’t comprehend like an older student
would. It makes the range of abilities in any class wide. And they’re all still gifted.
How does a teacher address this?
What it means in a first-grade reading class is that kids who are
not decoding well need to be stretched in decoding, while still being offered
materials that allow them continue to stretch their already high level of comprehension.
With the early readers, Seabury teachers know that they usually
start reading spontaneously without relying on phonics, so the teachers work
with them to notice things like patterns that they haven’t been exposed to.
They don’t need phonics to be able to sound out words, but understanding word
patterns will help with spelling and vocabulary development.
You might have kids who are gifted in one facet of math
because they have had some previous exposure to it and learned it quickly. But
in other areas, they may have had little or no exposure and be totally new to
the concept being taught. Teachers need
to be able to assess what kids have mastered already and skip that material in
order to spend time on concepts they haven’t yet mastered. They need to sort out whether kids really
understand concepts, or have just memorized a series of steps for solving a
problem. And they need to adjust the
pace of instruction to match the child’s learning. Gifted kids need fewer repetitions to master
new material, so teachers need to be keen observers and able to adjust the pace
of instruction as needed.
How do our teachers find
out what children know?
We do a lot of pre-testing and post-testing, and assessments
all year long. Our teachers have to know our students really well. They are
keen observers every day, constantly monitoring the pace and depth and amount of practice
that kids need.
It sounds complicated.
It means really complex scheduling. Students are loosely grouped.
But teachers are constantly observing and readjusting. Who’s ready to go
faster? Who needs more practice? Who’s ready to move on? It might mean giving out three different
homework assignments for five kids. Or at the middle school, a math teacher
with a dozen students might need to create five different finals. Recently a
college professor looked at some papers done by our middle school students and
commented that the writing was better than much of the work turned in by his
students. Every one of our middle school students gets one-on-one time with a
teacher on those papers. Our teachers are good at asking things like, “I wonder
what would happen if you do this?”
Could we do what we do if we had 25 kids in a
class?
Not to the extent that we do. Not with the day-to-day adjustments
we do. No human teacher I’ve met could do it. There’s another layer on top of
the academic – the social-emotional stuff. Our teachers also know that this
kid really loves this; or this kid is having a rough time in his family; or
this kid is a perfectionist. If you’d asked me when I was a public school
teacher, I would have told you I knew all the kids in my class, but it wasn’t
the same. When I came here, I thought with 15 kids this is going to be so easy.
I spent so much more time with each kid. I knew them so much better. At the
same time I was working so much harder because the adjustments were so much
more nuanced.
Differentiation was originally devised so
teachers could move away from tracking groups of kids. How do we at Seabury
avoid having children making comparisons or feeling labeled if they know
they’re in a less advanced, math group, for example?
Our overall focus is always on everyone getting what they need. We
focus on kids’ strengths. After they’ve been here for a little while, they
should be very aware of their strengths. This is also one of the reasons it’s
important to have gifted kids with other gifted kids. In a class of more typically developing kids,
if they find that they’re always picking up on things before everyone else,
they don’t get a sense of their strengths – or weaknesses. They either get a
sense that everything should be easy and shy away from challenge, or they develop a fear that the first time
they don’t know something, there’s something really wrong. We want them to understand that they don’t
have to be good at everything, and at the same time help them develop the work
ethic and grit that comes from taking on challenges and being confident that
the effort is worth it.
What else is important to know about
differentiating for gifted kids?
The vast majority of teachers have zero training in gifted kids.
That means that despite their good intentions for our kids, they’re often
operating on myths that are just not true.
For example, more work is not better work. Rigor is not measured in hours of homework
per night and, in fact, more work for the sake of adding work can be
detrimental to the growth of gifted kids.
Research shows that gifted kids’ achievement goes down with excessive practice
beyond what is needed to master the skill they are learning. Gifted kids learn
quickly in their areas of giftedness, so need less time practice time to master
a skill and more time to apply it in new and more complex ways.
Seabury’s teachers understand gifted kids – how they learn, what
the research says about their intellectual, social and emotional development,
and how to both support and challenge them.
Our approach really goes back to that basic philosophy that EVERY child
deserves to learn something new EVERY day.
Including gifted kids.
Further reading on myths about giftedkids