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Cash in on Learning: What’s So Different About Differentiation for the Gifted?

Now that “differentiation” has become a common term in the general lexicon of education, we need to differentiate the practice of differentiation. The idea of differentiation has a long history in general terms. In the 1930s, as the reach of public education broadened to include more than just the elite, it was found that some students had academic needs beyond those provided in the general curriculum. These “gifted” students, it was said, required a “differentiated learning experience” to ensure their continued academic growth.

More recently, Carol Ann Tomlinson, professor of education at the University of Virginia, led the charge for using the methodologies of differentiation in all classrooms with all children. The implementation of differentiation has a profound effect on meeting students where they are at in the learning process (readiness), getting students engaged in learning (interest), and focusing instruction on how students like to learn (learning preferences). This is all accomplished through the content (what we teach), process (how students come to own the information), and products (how students show what they have learned).

Well, if differentiation is now considered a practice to address all learners’ needs, we should make sure that when we differentiate for gifted students we implement specific practices that are effective with these students. This is exactly what Diane Heacox and I did when we wrote Differentiation for Gifted Learners: Going Beyond the Basics. We suggest that the essential characteristics of differentiation (content, process, and product) can be adjusted to meet the needs of gifted students through:

Examples of advancing the levels of the content through interdisciplinary concept development:

Examples of advancing the levels of the process through embedding sophisticated levels of thinking:

Examples of advancing the levels of product creation by requiring authentic products for authentic audiences:

Examples of advancing student involvement in the learning:

Keep in mind that there are also three critical practices that must be incorporated into the education of gifted students:

Critical Practice #1: Accelerated Pace

Pace is related to the instructional practices and management within the classroom environment. For advanced learners, instructional pace is increased or accelerated by spending less time on developing background knowledge, offering fewer examples on how to do particular methods, and providing less teacher-led practice. Students are expected to develop independence more rapidly than in the regular classroom setting.

Suggestion:

Critical Practice #2: Sophisticated Levels of Complex Thinking

Complexity is defined as the levels of thinking used by the students within the learning activities. For advanced learners, activities require them to use more sophisticated levels of higher order thinking (analysis, evaluation, and synthesis), creative thinking, critical reasoning, decision making, and problem solving. Situations are more abstract and infuse greater levels of ambiguity. Students are expected to perform within the course using various formulas to find answers. There is a greater need for students to work together and be able to clearly and succinctly communicate results. In most cases, complexity is considered the breadth of thinking and doing within a discipline of study.

Suggestion:

Critical Practice #3: Increased Discipline Knowledge and Practice Through Depth

Depth is related to the degrees to which a student explores the content and develops a greater understanding of the discipline. For advanced learners, the content offers greater abstractions of the concepts and connections to other content areas. Students will learn and use the principles (rules) and theories of the discipline. In advanced courses students will investigate topics that have authentic applications in real-world situations.


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Suggested Resources
Differentiation for Gifted Learners: Going Beyond the Basics by Diane Heacox and Richard M. Cash. Find ideas on meeting the needs of gifted students in many diverse classroom environments. Offers ideas on a progressive program model, how to address the Common Core State Standards, how to design a true honors course, meeting the needs of twice-exceptional learners, facing the challenges of diversity, using the co-teaching method, and more.


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