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Differentiating Instruction With Style
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Differentiating Instruction With Style
Aligning Teacher and Learner Intelligences for Maximum Achievement

Edited by:


August 2005 | 184 pages | Corwin
The foundation of differentiated instruction is the teacher's ability to understand student preferences in thinking styles, learning styles, and multiple intelligences and then to use that understanding to plan instruction for the diversity of learners in the classroom. This important new book from Gayle Gregory provides teachers with a bridge between theory and instructional practice.

The book covers essential research and theory:

- core principles of brain-compatible learning;

- core theories from Jung, Gregorc, Kolb, McCarthy, Lowry, and others about learning styles;

- core theories from Costa, Gardner, Sternberg, Goleman, and others about intelligence;

- core taxonomies from Bloom, Quellmalz, Krathwohl, Williams, Eberle, and others about thinking and creativity.

Crossing all categories are instructional, analytic, and planning tools, strategies, and templates for putting all that theory into classroom practice. For readers new to Gayle Gregory's work on differentiated instruction, this is an ideal starting point. For readers who own Gayle's prior volumes, this new work is a must.

 
Preface
 
Acknowledgments
 
About the Author
 
Introduction: Differentiating Instruction With Style
 
1. Learning, Growth, and the Brain
 
2. Learning Styles
 
3. Intelligences: IQ or Many?
 
4. Thinking Skills and Styles
 
5. Making the Right Choices for Your Classroom
 
Bibliography
 
Index

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ISBN: 9780761931621
£30.99

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