『Ep 330: Differentiated Instruction for Multiple Prep Teachers: Plan Once, Not Three Times』のカバーアート

Ep 330: Differentiated Instruction for Multiple Prep Teachers: Plan Once, Not Three Times

Ep 330: Differentiated Instruction for Multiple Prep Teachers: Plan Once, Not Three Times

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概要

Middle and high school teachers juggling multiple preps, let’s get real about “differentiated instruction for multiple prep teachers.” Somewhere along the way, most of us were told to plan for the average student—then tack on extensions for high achievers and interventions for strugglers. It sounds smart until you try living it with a full schedule and three, four, or five different classes to prep each day. You’re burned out and barely holding it together, all because you’re basically writing three versions of every lesson. Host Khristen Massic calls out this outdated advice, and she’s got a better way.If you’re stuck in the plan-for-the-middle rut, you know what happens: your top students breeze through the work and get bored, the strugglers get lost, and somehow “average” becomes a code word for “meh.” You scramble to come up with side quests for the kids who finish early, and you tape together interventions for those who can’t get started at all. That’s not differentiated instruction—it’s full-blown teacher burnout.Let’s flip that script. Host Khristen Massic learned a game-changer after supporting gifted and talented students: if you plan for your top students and then scaffold down, you create one challenge-rich lesson for everyone instead of splitting yourself into three teachers. The magic? Scaffolds turn one complex task into a flexible, differentiated experience—kids who need help use the supports, and kids ready for more ignore them. No more separate packets, no more watered-down busywork, no more grading nightmares across “levels.”Here’s a practical glimpse inside Khristen’s classroom: when teaching drafting, she used to dole out simplified drawings and cobble together random extra-credit options for fast finishers. But those extensions didn’t always connect to the core lesson, and the struggling students ended up with a pile of work that missed the actual learning target. The new way? Everybody gets the complex 3D drawing problem. Students who need support get access to 3D-printed models, enlarged exemplar posters, or step-by-step checklists—any of which they can grab when and if they need them.Scaffolds aren’t more work on your part. A checklist or exemplar might take you five minutes to make, rather than hours crafting a whole “extension activity.” Sentence stems, graphic organizers, vocabulary banks, or formula sheets—all optional, all ready when kids reach for them. It’s not about lowering the bar; it’s about keeping expectations high while honoring where each student is starting.This approach isn’t just theory—it’s a life raft for multi-prep teachers. You’re not lazy for wanting to plan one strong lesson that works for every kid. You’re strategic, and you’re finally giving yourself the work-life balance you desperately need in the secondary classroom. Instead of grading three assignments on the same concept, you look at the end product and know each student had the chance to show real understanding—with or without the scaffolds, depending on what they needed.Khristen reminds us that when we make the scaffolds optional, we hand responsibility to the students. They get to decide what supports to lean on. You’re not stuck labeling or sorting kids in front of the class, and you’re not caught in a grading labyrinth. You set the bar high and believe that all kids can meet it when the right steps are in place.Multi-prep teachers: imagine shaving hours off your planning, freeing up your brain space, and finally having the energy to connect with your students, not just shuffle papers for them. Whether you’re teaching science, ELA, math, or career/tech, this structure has your back. Pick the real challenge, build in flexible scaffolds, and watch your classroom routines—and your energy—transform for the better.If you’ve been told that differentiated instruction means reinventing every lesson three times, it’s time to toss that myth out for good. One strong, scaffolded lesson gives you your life back and helps every student rise to the challenge.Cut your workload, not your standards. You don’t have to choose between being effective and having a life. Plan for the top, scaffold down, and let students show you just how much they can do.Kick the “plan for the middle” advice to the curb—your classroom (and your sanity) deserve better.Too many preps and not enough time? Let’s make your planning period actually work for you.Unlock 20 time-saving strategies designed to keep your students engaged and your sanity intact with the free Simple Teaching Strategies Toolkit. Each strategy comes with detailed instructions, objectives, and a materials list, all editable in a convenient Google Doc. https://khristenmassic.com/toolboxGet the Planning Period Reset Toolkit—a free set of quick-start tools to help you protect your time, focus faster, and finally finish something… even during chaotic school days. https:/...
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