"One stop shop for your differentiation needs."
Differentiation is a way of teaching; it’s not a program or package of worksheets. It asks teachers to know their students well so they can provide each one with experiences and tasks that will improve learning. As Carol Ann Tomlinson has said, differentiation means giving students multiple options for taking in information (1999). Differentiating instruction means that you observe and understand the differences and similarities among students and use this information to plan instruction
Activities in which the student engages in order to make sense of or master the content.
What the student needs to learn or how the student will get access to the information,
Culminating projects that ask the student to rehearse, apply, and extend what he or she has learned in a unit.