Choice and Challenge: Engaging Anchor Activities for the Differentiated Classroom
Book Details
PublisherPieces of Learning
ISBN / ASIN1937113884
ISBN-139781937113889
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank635,678
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
When your students have finished a classroom task, whether it is a reading test, a writing assignment, a page in the textbook, or a project, do they sit and do nothing or cause classroom management situations while you work with other students? How do you address their behavior?
The authors answer this question by providing descriptions and directions for 27 anchor activities to implement and modify for your students. Each activity is aligned to the ELA Common Core Anchor Standards and Mathematical Practices. In addition, they provide both choice and challenge because they are also identified by the 6 levels of Bloom s Taxonomy.
Because anchor activities should provide both a choice and a challenge, the activities in this book are
engaging
encourage matching students independent work levels
support key skills that students need to practice
foster thinking skills that support general classroom instruction
are self-checking when possible
But before you offer these activities to your students, the authors initially answer these questions for you
What is an anchor activity?
When should I use an anchor activity?
What makes a GOOD anchor activity?
How many anchor activities should I provide?
Who should engage in anchor activities?
What kind of recordkeeping should I do?
The authors answer this question by providing descriptions and directions for 27 anchor activities to implement and modify for your students. Each activity is aligned to the ELA Common Core Anchor Standards and Mathematical Practices. In addition, they provide both choice and challenge because they are also identified by the 6 levels of Bloom s Taxonomy.
Because anchor activities should provide both a choice and a challenge, the activities in this book are
engaging
encourage matching students independent work levels
support key skills that students need to practice
foster thinking skills that support general classroom instruction
are self-checking when possible
But before you offer these activities to your students, the authors initially answer these questions for you
What is an anchor activity?
When should I use an anchor activity?
What makes a GOOD anchor activity?
How many anchor activities should I provide?
Who should engage in anchor activities?
What kind of recordkeeping should I do?
