Co-Teaching:
An Inclusive Model
  Heather Lane and Sara Staub
  South Western School District
           June 18, 2012
Agenda
   Teacher Introduction
   Essential Questions
   Activator: What Co-Teaching Is and Is Not…
   Teaching:
       4 Types of Co-Teaching
       Jigsaw Activity and Discussion/Self-Reflection
       Collaborative Culture leads to a Cooperative Process
   Summarizer: Advantages and What Co-
    Teaching Is and Is Not…
It all started here…
Co-Teaching: An Inclusive Model
Essential Questions
   What is Co-Teaching?
   How can we use co-teaching to
    effectively increase student achievement
    in all subject areas within the inclusive
    classroom?
Activator              white worksheet




What Co-Teaching Is and Is Not
T-Chart

Complete Top Half
Sharing
What is co-teaching?                                    green paper

   Co-Teaching is…
       Two or more people sharing responsibility for teaching
        some or all of the students assigned to one classroom.
       A fun way for students to learn from two or more people
        who have different ways of thinking or teaching.
       A creative way to support and connect with others and
        to help all children learn.
       A way to make schools more effective.
       Like a marriage because it’s not always 50/50, it takes
        time to develop a relationship, there will be differences,
        and you may need a marriage counselor (consultant)
        from time to time.
Why do we co-teach?
Two federal laws govern education of children with disabilities. Neither requires inclusion,
but both require that a significant effort be made to find an inclusive placement.
   IDEA – The law requires that children with disabilities
    be educated “to the maximum extent appropriate” in
    the “least restrictive environment.” LRE is the regular
    education classroom.

   Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973- Section
    504 requires that a recipient of federal funds provide
    for the education of each qualified handicapped
    person in its jurisdiction with persons who are not
    handicapped to the maximum extent appropriate to
    the needs of the handicapped person.

http://www.weac.org/resource/june96/speced.htm
Models for Co-Teaching

   Supportive
   Parallel
   Complementary
   Team
    Can move in and out of the various models for any lessons and subject.
    As the co-teaching skills and relationships strengthen, co-teachers
    move into complementary and team-teaching models more often.
Jigsaw Activity                                        yellow worksheet



   Move to Home Group according to your folder color
   Once in Home Group, refer to letter on your folder (A, B, C, D) to
    determine your Expert Group
   Move to Expert Group to complete your part of the Co-Teaching
    Chart
       A - Supportive
       B - Parallel
       C - Complementary
       D - Team
   Move back to Home Group to share and complete remaining
    parts of the Co-Teaching Chart
   Whole group discussion (cream paper)
Supportive Co-teaching Model

   One teacher assigned primary responsibility
    for designing/delivering a lesson. Other
    member provides support to some or all the
    students in the class.
   One teacher leads, the other supports.
   “Sage on the stage, guide on the side”.
Parallel Co-teaching

   The teachers divide the class into groups and teach
    them simultaneously (same or different information).
   The student to teacher ratio is low.
   More time is devoted to learning versus students
    waiting for help.
   Opportunities for re-teaching are immediate.
   Support for the teacher is present.
   Communication is constant.
   Behavior problems can be minimized.
Parallel Teaching Video

   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YyxLvaScI0Q
   Thoughts, comments, discussion?
Examples of Parallel Co-teaching
structures
   Split class (writing)
   Station Teaching/Learning Centers (Math
    Workshop)
   Co-teachers rotate, rather than the students
   Cooperative Group Monitoring
   Supplementary Instruction (morning math)
   Guided Reading Instruction
Complementary Co-teaching

   When co-teacher does something to enhance
    the instruction provided by the other co-
    teacher
   Both teachers share in the delivery of the
    information
Complementary Co-Teaching examples

   One teacher verbally gives directions, the other
    writes the directions on the board
   One teacher might paraphrase the other co-
    teacher’s statements
   One teacher teaches the lesson, the co-teacher
    demonstrates how to take notes on key points
   Inclusive Math Lesson
Team Teaching Co-Teaching

   When two or more people do what the
    traditional teacher used to do.
   Both share responsibility for planning,
    teaching and assessing progress of students in
    the class.
   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYQZJjGlt8A
If one is doing this…The other can
be…                            pink paper
   Refer to t-chart outlining examples of all
    models of co-teaching
Co-Teaching, when done right…

      Co-teaching is a fluid process and classroom
       teaching configurations should change and be
       responsive to curricular and students’ needs.


      Contains 5 elements: face-to-face interaction,
       positive interdependence, interpersonal skills,
       monitoring, and accountability

http://www.vcld.org/pages/newsletters/00_01_spring/coll_teach.htm
Cooperative Process – 5 elements
   Must have a collaborative culture before establishing a
    cooperative process

       Face-to-Face Interactions
    Co-teachers decide when and how often they will meet and develop a system for
    communicating information when formal meetings are not scheduled.
       Positive Interdependence
    Co-teachers create the feeling that they are equally responsible for the learning of all
    students to whom they are now assigned.
       Interpersonal Skills
    Include the verbal and non-verbal components of trust, trust building, conflict
    management, and creative problem-solving.
       Monitoring Co-Teaching Progress
    Frequently debriefing about the successes and challenges of co-teaching lessons.
       Individual Accountability
    This is a form of acknowledging the importance of actions from each co-teacher.
Advantages to Co-Teaching                                  blue worksheet



   Advantages to the General Educator

   Advantages for the Special Educator

   Advantages for ALL Students

http://www.vcld.org/pages/newsletters/00_01_spring/advant.htm
   For General Education Teachers:
       Open communication lines early
       Realize many co-teachers feel just as uncomfortable as you with the situation--they might
        even feel as if they are invading your classroom
       Don't assume the co-teacher wants to take over.
       Don't assume the co-teacher is judging you.
       Share your beliefs and expectations with the co-teacher so that they know where you're
        coming from.
       Ask what the co-teacher's expectations are for you.

   For Co-Teachers:
       Open communication lines early
       Realize that the general education teacher feels ownership of their class--put them at ease
        by telling them you are not planning to take over.
       Share your educational beliefs and expectations.
       Ask what the general education teacher expects of you.
       Make sure to explain any absences you might have from the classroom while on campus.
       Discuss all student modifications with the general education teacher--get them to have a
        stake in the modification.
       Do not change the grading scale, etc. without first discussing this with the general education
        teacher.

   For Both Teachers:
       Realize you’re both educational colleagues--in the same boat
       Be professional.
       Learn to get along.
       Remember…You are there for the students!

    http://712educators.about.com/cs/specialeducation/a/coteaching.htm
Summarizer                                 white worksheet



   Complete bottom portion of What Co-Teaching
    Is and Is Not… T-chart
   Questions?
   Contact Information:
       Heather Lane – Heather_Lane@swsd.k12.pa.us
       Sara Staub – Sara_Staub@swsd.k12.pa.us
Citations
   Karen Cataldo and Eric Klansek, South Western School District
    teachers
   Villa, Richard A., Jacqueline S. Thousand, and Ann Nevin. A Guide
    to Co-teaching: Practical Tips for Facilitating Student Learning.
    Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin, 2008. Print.
   http://www.weac.org/resource/june96/speced.htm
   http://www.vcld.org/pages/newsletters/00_01_spring/advant.htm

More Related Content

PPTX
Structured peer tutoring
PPTX
Cooperative learning slide presentation
PPTX
Cooperative Learning
PPT
Justmeans power point
PDF
53 Interesting Things to Do in Your Seminars
PPTX
The emerging of cooperative learning
PPT
Cooperative Learning
Structured peer tutoring
Cooperative learning slide presentation
Cooperative Learning
Justmeans power point
53 Interesting Things to Do in Your Seminars
The emerging of cooperative learning
Cooperative Learning

What's hot (15)

PPTX
Cooperative learning
PDF
THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO ONLINE TEACHING
PPTX
Introduction to the Structural Approach to Cooperative Learning
PPTX
Cooperative Learning
PDF
Student centric web - Red Centrada en el Estudiante
PPT
overview of structure in cooperative learning
PPTX
Collaborative Learning advantages-and-benefits
PPT
The Choice is Yours: Do You Want to Help or Hamper Inclusion?
PPTX
Cooperative Learning Overview Ppt For Hour Meeting
PPTX
Collaborative classroom
PPTX
Introduction to cooperative learning
PDF
CHALLENGES AND STRATEGIES IN ENGAGING STUDENTS (June 23)
PPTX
cooperative learning
PPT
Empathy and the Autistic Spectrum: Empowering Adolescent Achievement through ...
PPTX
COOPERATIVE LEARNING
Cooperative learning
THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO ONLINE TEACHING
Introduction to the Structural Approach to Cooperative Learning
Cooperative Learning
Student centric web - Red Centrada en el Estudiante
overview of structure in cooperative learning
Collaborative Learning advantages-and-benefits
The Choice is Yours: Do You Want to Help or Hamper Inclusion?
Cooperative Learning Overview Ppt For Hour Meeting
Collaborative classroom
Introduction to cooperative learning
CHALLENGES AND STRATEGIES IN ENGAGING STUDENTS (June 23)
cooperative learning
Empathy and the Autistic Spectrum: Empowering Adolescent Achievement through ...
COOPERATIVE LEARNING
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PPTX
Inclusive education and right to education in India
PPTX
Inclusive Education
PPT
BEACON: Can Digital Terrestrial Television lead to an inclusive society?
PPT
Inclusion Benefits New
PPTX
In clusive education
PPTX
Inclusive education and child friendly school environment
PDF
How to be a school leader
PPT
Co teaching
PPTX
How to Create an Inclusive Advantage: Embedding Cultural Inclusion
PDF
Co-Teaching
PPTX
Inclusive Education & Its Implication in Classroom Teaching
PPT
Collaboration and co teaching strategies for effective classroom practice
PPTX
Inclusive education
PPT
Inclusive education ppp
PPTX
Inclusion Power Point
PPTX
Presentation on inclusive education
PPTX
BARRIERS AND BENEFITS OF INCLUSIVE EDUCATION
PPTX
Slideshare.Com Powerpoint
PPT
Slideshare Powerpoint presentation
PPTX
Slideshare ppt
Inclusive education and right to education in India
Inclusive Education
BEACON: Can Digital Terrestrial Television lead to an inclusive society?
Inclusion Benefits New
In clusive education
Inclusive education and child friendly school environment
How to be a school leader
Co teaching
How to Create an Inclusive Advantage: Embedding Cultural Inclusion
Co-Teaching
Inclusive Education & Its Implication in Classroom Teaching
Collaboration and co teaching strategies for effective classroom practice
Inclusive education
Inclusive education ppp
Inclusion Power Point
Presentation on inclusive education
BARRIERS AND BENEFITS OF INCLUSIVE EDUCATION
Slideshare.Com Powerpoint
Slideshare Powerpoint presentation
Slideshare ppt
Ad

Similar to Coteaching psu 2012_4 (20)

PPTX
Coteaching model1 nolan_eng
PDF
Collaboration.richmond.elem 2013 rt
PPTX
Working in Teams as Co-Educators: A Shared Responsibility
PDF
CR4YR collaboration.Aug 2013, Oct Prince Rupert
PPTX
ITL602 Group Assignment
DOCX
Teaching approches
DOCX
Teaching approches
PDF
Surrey collaboration primary
DOCX
DISCUSSION ISSUES ON TEACHING APPROACHES
PPT
Justmeans power point
PPT
Justmeans power point
PPT
Justmeans power point
PPT
Justmeans power point
PPT
Justmeans power point
PPT
Justmeans power point
PDF
Teaching team
PDF
Team teaching stratege
PPTX
Ut teach here co teaching
PDF
Coquitlam.LIF teams.Collaboration
PPTX
3.25 - collaboration pd.pptx
Coteaching model1 nolan_eng
Collaboration.richmond.elem 2013 rt
Working in Teams as Co-Educators: A Shared Responsibility
CR4YR collaboration.Aug 2013, Oct Prince Rupert
ITL602 Group Assignment
Teaching approches
Teaching approches
Surrey collaboration primary
DISCUSSION ISSUES ON TEACHING APPROACHES
Justmeans power point
Justmeans power point
Justmeans power point
Justmeans power point
Justmeans power point
Justmeans power point
Teaching team
Team teaching stratege
Ut teach here co teaching
Coquitlam.LIF teams.Collaboration
3.25 - collaboration pd.pptx

More from Julie Wise (20)

PPT
QR Codes for Education
PPTX
Digital Poetry
PPTX
Max Brand
PPT
Real Reading PM
PPT
Real Reading
PPTX
Literacy Menu
PDF
Literacy lesson planning menu
PPT
Mentor Texts Break Out
PPT
Mentor Texts Keynote
PPTX
Word Walk
DOCX
Boys and literacy (1)
PPTX
High impact literacy strategies 2012
PDF
Anne Goudvis Break Out
PDF
Anne Goudvis Keynot
PPTX
Getting to the CORE of Literacy
PPT
Writing academy
PPT
Julie b. wise capital reading council
DOC
Transfer to organizer 3 x 5 cards
PPT
Ss text structure
PPT
11 lled 12 text structure
QR Codes for Education
Digital Poetry
Max Brand
Real Reading PM
Real Reading
Literacy Menu
Literacy lesson planning menu
Mentor Texts Break Out
Mentor Texts Keynote
Word Walk
Boys and literacy (1)
High impact literacy strategies 2012
Anne Goudvis Break Out
Anne Goudvis Keynot
Getting to the CORE of Literacy
Writing academy
Julie b. wise capital reading council
Transfer to organizer 3 x 5 cards
Ss text structure
11 lled 12 text structure

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
Introduction to pro and eukaryotes and differences.pptx
PPTX
Computer Architecture Input Output Memory.pptx
PDF
advance database management system book.pdf
PDF
Environmental Education MCQ BD2EE - Share Source.pdf
PDF
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
PDF
ChatGPT for Dummies - Pam Baker Ccesa007.pdf
PPTX
Chinmaya Tiranga Azadi Quiz (Class 7-8 )
PDF
MBA _Common_ 2nd year Syllabus _2021-22_.pdf
PPTX
CHAPTER IV. MAN AND BIOSPHERE AND ITS TOTALITY.pptx
PDF
Τίμαιος είναι φιλοσοφικός διάλογος του Πλάτωνα
PPTX
History, Philosophy and sociology of education (1).pptx
PDF
Empowerment Technology for Senior High School Guide
PDF
IGGE1 Understanding the Self1234567891011
PPTX
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
PDF
International_Financial_Reporting_Standa.pdf
PDF
Complications of Minimal Access-Surgery.pdf
PPTX
A powerpoint presentation on the Revised K-10 Science Shaping Paper
PDF
Chinmaya Tiranga quiz Grand Finale.pdf
PDF
Hazard Identification & Risk Assessment .pdf
PDF
Weekly quiz Compilation Jan -July 25.pdf
Introduction to pro and eukaryotes and differences.pptx
Computer Architecture Input Output Memory.pptx
advance database management system book.pdf
Environmental Education MCQ BD2EE - Share Source.pdf
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
ChatGPT for Dummies - Pam Baker Ccesa007.pdf
Chinmaya Tiranga Azadi Quiz (Class 7-8 )
MBA _Common_ 2nd year Syllabus _2021-22_.pdf
CHAPTER IV. MAN AND BIOSPHERE AND ITS TOTALITY.pptx
Τίμαιος είναι φιλοσοφικός διάλογος του Πλάτωνα
History, Philosophy and sociology of education (1).pptx
Empowerment Technology for Senior High School Guide
IGGE1 Understanding the Self1234567891011
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
International_Financial_Reporting_Standa.pdf
Complications of Minimal Access-Surgery.pdf
A powerpoint presentation on the Revised K-10 Science Shaping Paper
Chinmaya Tiranga quiz Grand Finale.pdf
Hazard Identification & Risk Assessment .pdf
Weekly quiz Compilation Jan -July 25.pdf

Coteaching psu 2012_4

  • 1. Co-Teaching: An Inclusive Model Heather Lane and Sara Staub South Western School District June 18, 2012
  • 2. Agenda  Teacher Introduction  Essential Questions  Activator: What Co-Teaching Is and Is Not…  Teaching:  4 Types of Co-Teaching  Jigsaw Activity and Discussion/Self-Reflection  Collaborative Culture leads to a Cooperative Process  Summarizer: Advantages and What Co- Teaching Is and Is Not…
  • 3. It all started here…
  • 4. Co-Teaching: An Inclusive Model Essential Questions  What is Co-Teaching?  How can we use co-teaching to effectively increase student achievement in all subject areas within the inclusive classroom?
  • 5. Activator white worksheet What Co-Teaching Is and Is Not T-Chart Complete Top Half Sharing
  • 6. What is co-teaching? green paper  Co-Teaching is…  Two or more people sharing responsibility for teaching some or all of the students assigned to one classroom.  A fun way for students to learn from two or more people who have different ways of thinking or teaching.  A creative way to support and connect with others and to help all children learn.  A way to make schools more effective.  Like a marriage because it’s not always 50/50, it takes time to develop a relationship, there will be differences, and you may need a marriage counselor (consultant) from time to time.
  • 7. Why do we co-teach? Two federal laws govern education of children with disabilities. Neither requires inclusion, but both require that a significant effort be made to find an inclusive placement.  IDEA – The law requires that children with disabilities be educated “to the maximum extent appropriate” in the “least restrictive environment.” LRE is the regular education classroom.  Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973- Section 504 requires that a recipient of federal funds provide for the education of each qualified handicapped person in its jurisdiction with persons who are not handicapped to the maximum extent appropriate to the needs of the handicapped person. http://www.weac.org/resource/june96/speced.htm
  • 8. Models for Co-Teaching  Supportive  Parallel  Complementary  Team Can move in and out of the various models for any lessons and subject. As the co-teaching skills and relationships strengthen, co-teachers move into complementary and team-teaching models more often.
  • 9. Jigsaw Activity yellow worksheet  Move to Home Group according to your folder color  Once in Home Group, refer to letter on your folder (A, B, C, D) to determine your Expert Group  Move to Expert Group to complete your part of the Co-Teaching Chart  A - Supportive  B - Parallel  C - Complementary  D - Team  Move back to Home Group to share and complete remaining parts of the Co-Teaching Chart  Whole group discussion (cream paper)
  • 10. Supportive Co-teaching Model  One teacher assigned primary responsibility for designing/delivering a lesson. Other member provides support to some or all the students in the class.  One teacher leads, the other supports.  “Sage on the stage, guide on the side”.
  • 11. Parallel Co-teaching  The teachers divide the class into groups and teach them simultaneously (same or different information).  The student to teacher ratio is low.  More time is devoted to learning versus students waiting for help.  Opportunities for re-teaching are immediate.  Support for the teacher is present.  Communication is constant.  Behavior problems can be minimized.
  • 12. Parallel Teaching Video  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YyxLvaScI0Q  Thoughts, comments, discussion?
  • 13. Examples of Parallel Co-teaching structures  Split class (writing)  Station Teaching/Learning Centers (Math Workshop)  Co-teachers rotate, rather than the students  Cooperative Group Monitoring  Supplementary Instruction (morning math)  Guided Reading Instruction
  • 14. Complementary Co-teaching  When co-teacher does something to enhance the instruction provided by the other co- teacher  Both teachers share in the delivery of the information
  • 15. Complementary Co-Teaching examples  One teacher verbally gives directions, the other writes the directions on the board  One teacher might paraphrase the other co- teacher’s statements  One teacher teaches the lesson, the co-teacher demonstrates how to take notes on key points  Inclusive Math Lesson
  • 16. Team Teaching Co-Teaching  When two or more people do what the traditional teacher used to do.  Both share responsibility for planning, teaching and assessing progress of students in the class.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYQZJjGlt8A
  • 17. If one is doing this…The other can be… pink paper  Refer to t-chart outlining examples of all models of co-teaching
  • 18. Co-Teaching, when done right…  Co-teaching is a fluid process and classroom teaching configurations should change and be responsive to curricular and students’ needs.  Contains 5 elements: face-to-face interaction, positive interdependence, interpersonal skills, monitoring, and accountability http://www.vcld.org/pages/newsletters/00_01_spring/coll_teach.htm
  • 19. Cooperative Process – 5 elements  Must have a collaborative culture before establishing a cooperative process  Face-to-Face Interactions Co-teachers decide when and how often they will meet and develop a system for communicating information when formal meetings are not scheduled.  Positive Interdependence Co-teachers create the feeling that they are equally responsible for the learning of all students to whom they are now assigned.  Interpersonal Skills Include the verbal and non-verbal components of trust, trust building, conflict management, and creative problem-solving.  Monitoring Co-Teaching Progress Frequently debriefing about the successes and challenges of co-teaching lessons.  Individual Accountability This is a form of acknowledging the importance of actions from each co-teacher.
  • 20. Advantages to Co-Teaching blue worksheet  Advantages to the General Educator  Advantages for the Special Educator  Advantages for ALL Students http://www.vcld.org/pages/newsletters/00_01_spring/advant.htm
  • 21. For General Education Teachers:  Open communication lines early  Realize many co-teachers feel just as uncomfortable as you with the situation--they might even feel as if they are invading your classroom  Don't assume the co-teacher wants to take over.  Don't assume the co-teacher is judging you.  Share your beliefs and expectations with the co-teacher so that they know where you're coming from.  Ask what the co-teacher's expectations are for you.  For Co-Teachers:  Open communication lines early  Realize that the general education teacher feels ownership of their class--put them at ease by telling them you are not planning to take over.  Share your educational beliefs and expectations.  Ask what the general education teacher expects of you.  Make sure to explain any absences you might have from the classroom while on campus.  Discuss all student modifications with the general education teacher--get them to have a stake in the modification.  Do not change the grading scale, etc. without first discussing this with the general education teacher.  For Both Teachers:  Realize you’re both educational colleagues--in the same boat  Be professional.  Learn to get along.  Remember…You are there for the students! http://712educators.about.com/cs/specialeducation/a/coteaching.htm
  • 22. Summarizer white worksheet  Complete bottom portion of What Co-Teaching Is and Is Not… T-chart  Questions?  Contact Information:  Heather Lane – Heather_Lane@swsd.k12.pa.us  Sara Staub – Sara_Staub@swsd.k12.pa.us
  • 23. Citations  Karen Cataldo and Eric Klansek, South Western School District teachers  Villa, Richard A., Jacqueline S. Thousand, and Ann Nevin. A Guide to Co-teaching: Practical Tips for Facilitating Student Learning. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin, 2008. Print.  http://www.weac.org/resource/june96/speced.htm  http://www.vcld.org/pages/newsletters/00_01_spring/advant.htm