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February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Using Co-Teaching in the Classroom Melanie MacInnis February, 2001.

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Presentation on theme: "February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Using Co-Teaching in the Classroom Melanie MacInnis February, 2001."— Presentation transcript:

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2 February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Using Co-Teaching in the Classroom Melanie MacInnis February, 2001

3 February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Overview Introduction Roles and Responsibilities Cons Pros Source

4 February 2001 Using Co-Teaching In 1997, Walther-Thomas conducted a study of 25 schools which were implementing co-teaching over a three-year period. Paticipants noted that students with disabilities became –less critical –more motivated –more skilled in recognizing their own strengths –and their social skills improved. Introduction

5 February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Co-Teaching Roles and Responsibilities The teaching team will: –plan and teach together –develop instructional accommdations –monitor and evaluate student performance –communicate student progress to others

6 February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Four variations of co-teaching Each of these variations will appear in the effective co-teaching classroom. –Interactive –Parallel –Alternative –Station

7 February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Interactive Co-Teaching Calls for the team ot alternate the instructional lead every 5 to 15 minutes Teachers work together to support, clarify and extend each other’s efforts ask clarifying questions rephrasing concepts or assigned tasks monitor behavour supervise practice modeling, role plays, demostrations

8 February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Parallel Co-Teaching the class is divided into two mixed-ability groups. teachers work with one group and both cover the same content/skills allows for closer monitoring, higher levels of student response, less intimidating for students

9 February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Station Co-Teaching Students rotate through stations set up around the class teachers work simultaneously, presenting or reviewing new content, supervising practice, or testing student skills

10 February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Alternative Co-Teaching One teacher works with a small, strategically-constituted group to work on specific skills, concepts, or projects groups are short-term of particular impact with students who have missed instuction also useful for extension or enrichment projects

11 February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Co-Teaching Pluses Promotes role/content sharing provides clarification (e.g. concepts, rules, vocabulary) encourages cooperation allows strategic grouping reduces student-teacher ratio offers time to develop missing skills

12 February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Co-teaching Minuses may be job-sharing, not learning enriching requires considerable planning and preparation increases noise level may be difficult to coordinate requires monitoring of partner’s pacing

13 February 2001 Using Co-Teaching Want to know more? Setting up an effective co-teaching team takes lots of time, energy and administrative support. For a closer look at Co-Teaching, refer to: Walther-Thomas, Kerrik,McLaughlan, Williams. “Meeting Student Needs Through Co- Teaching.” Collaboration for Inclusive Learning. Allyn & Bacon, pgs 183-209.


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