How We Can Work Together to Make a Difference

By Craig Herring
Coordinator of Secondary Instruction and School Support
Students arrive at school with different backgrounds, knowledge, interests, and learning styles. Understandably then, these differences can be challenging for teachers as they strive to enable all students to master the content of each subject as defined by the FCPS Program of Studies (POS).
In schools, collaborative teams have discovered the power of working together to meet this challenge head on.
Not only can collaborative teams collectively unpack standards to understand what students need to know, understand, and be able to do, and to create common assessments to measure student progress—they can also design lesson plans that differentiate the learning for students.
Differentiation Is the Key to Success
Undeniably, instruction that meets the needs of each student is best achieved through differentiation. This philosophy of teaching maximizes student growth, learning, and success because:
1. It is focused on the learner and responds to students’ academic, social, and emotional needs.
2. It is proactive and requires purposeful and intentional planning.
3. It is rooted in ongoing assessment and adjustment of high-quality, standards-based instruction according to readiness, interest, and/or learning profile.
4. And, it is guided by the use of respectful tasks.
Unintended Consequences
An essential component of differentiation is the guarantee of a high-quality curriculum. However, an unfortunate side effect of the current environment of accountability, standards, and high-stakes testing is for schools and teachers to focus solely on the acquisition of knowledge (know) and practice of skills (do).
In reality, it is more important for teachers to identify the big ideas and teach for the understanding and internalization of these ideas (understand).
Big ideas are core concepts, principles, or theories that teachers identify because they have value beyond the classroom (Wiggins & McTighe, 1998).
In the differentiated classroom, the importance of knowledge is not ignored. In order for students to gain enduring understanding, they must easily access key vocabulary, definitions, dates, places, and people.
Similarly, the acquisition of skills allows students to demonstrate that they understand the big ideas.
When collaborative teams plan curricular units that are focused around important transferable ideas, or understandings, it sets the stage for high-quality differentiation.

Craig Herring is the coordinator of Secondary Instruction and School Support for FCPS for grades 7-12. His began his career as a math teacher in 1994, and became the mathematics curriculum specialist for FCPS in 2005. He since has co-authored an Algebra I SOL manual for Barron’s Educational Publishers and is an adjunct professor for the University of Virginia, School of Continuing & Professional Studies. Herring has a master’s degree in Teaching from the University of Virginia, a master’s in K-12 Educational Leadership from George Mason University, and frequently presents on differentiation, instructional best practices, and the effective use of data. Learn more: CAHerring@fcps.edu.