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Making Learning Centers Work for You

Making Learning Centers Work for You. Paula Hagan Instructional Coordinator, Northside Elementary 2013 Professional Development Summit. This session will…. Present different ways to set up learning centers that will meet the needs of all students in your classroom

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Making Learning Centers Work for You

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  1. Making Learning Centers Work for You Paula Hagan Instructional Coordinator, Northside Elementary 2013 Professional Development Summit

  2. This session will… • Present different ways to set up learning centers that will meet the needs of all students in your classroom • Show how to create learning centers from the IFD • Describe ways to differentiate learning centers for students with diverse educational needs • Cover ways to set up learning centers so they conquer the rigor of the curriculum

  3. Why Use Learning Centers? • Teacher’s Role- The teacher’s role changes from one of passing on information to one of providing a variety of learning experiences for the students and guiding them in those activities.

  4. Why Use Learning Centers? • Involvement- Students become eager participants, not just casual observers. • Variety- Each week brings something new.

  5. Why Use Learning Centers? • Choice-Children have the opportunity and responsibility to make choices within certain limits. • Variety- Each week brings something new.

  6. Why Use Learning Centers? • Sharing- As students work in small groups, they learn to share and help each other. • Individualization- Students are able to work at their own pace. Teachers have time to give individual help and attention to students.

  7. Center Simulation • Center descriptions/ model expectations • Time signal / expectations • Check for understanding • Begin simulation

  8. Simulation follow-up • Review each center for content • Set up: choose two – when would this work in your class? • If you finish early activities • What worked / what didn’t?

  9. Things to Remember… • Centers are an evolving process. No matter where you start, you won’t stay there. • Be flexible in designing and organizing centers. • Use every strategy available in getting children to learn. Not all children learn the same way. • Set high expectations. No one ever rises to low expectations. • Centers need to be in place before small group instruction begins. • Management of centers is KEY! If you don’t have control of the learning environment, reteach your expectations until the students get it!

  10. The Setup Schedule: self-contained Schedule: departmentalized You have a fixed amount of time for instruction- less flexibility I recommend to provide direct instruction at the beginning of the period, and centers at the end Even if you only have 15 minutes at the end – students can go to one center each day • You have more flexibility • I recommend to separate centers for Math and Literacy (am and pm) • Keep direct instruction brief (10-20 minute mini lessons each for word work, reading, and writing) and provide practice in centers (Daily 5)

  11. The Setup Monday Tuesday-Friday Students rotate through the centers the rest of the week. Students don’t have to go to every center every day – quantity is not always better than quality! Be sure to balance instruction time with centers! Don’t spend the entire instruction block on centers or direct instruction – balance! • Every Monday (or the beginning of a new cycle of centers) you will need to teach your center expectations for the week • Model each new center and check for understanding • The better the explanation on Monday, the smoother the week!

  12. The Setup How long should children be at centers? What about the children that finished fast/slow? Be sure to plan ahead and have “cushion activities” that students can access any time they finish work early • This answer depends on: • Student age • Classroom management • Class stamina • Other time factors

  13. The Setup • Classroom Considerations for Setting Up the Room • Create logical traffic patterns • Look for places to set up centers so you can leave them out • Use tubs/buckets to keep center supplies for easy setup/ cleanup • Separate quiet and noisy activities • Create a small area for small group instruction so teacher can see all work areas at a glance

  14. Using CScope’s IFD • Set up multiple centers at the beginning of each unit • Use Specificity and Performance Indicators to get ideas • Centers are a great way to reinforce skills directly taught – practice! • Centers should support what you are learning • Don’t rely on store-bought centers!!!

  15. Differentiation and Centers • Centers allow you to work with individual students or small groups • You can use center time to provide RTI interventions for specific students • You can level your centers high and low skill • You can have low level centers where students practice basic skills, or high level centers where students create!

  16. Rigorous Centers • When you focus on the specificity of the TEKS in your centers, they become purposeful. • Again, don’t rely on store-bought centers! • If you put the extra time in to create centers that fully support the TEKS, your students will show growth!

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