being able to differentiate instruction for students at various developmental levels, according to their strengths, needs, and interests is an important part of being an educator.
Part 1
Using the “Grade 1 English Language Arts Lesson Plan”, complete the lesson plan by developing instructional activities that align with the given objective and differentiate each activity for students of all developmental levels (below grade level, at grade level, and above grade level).
Part 2
Write a 500-750 word rationale and reflection on developing instruction.
Include the following:
Explain how your instructional choices in the lesson plan meet the needs of all students, and reflect on students’ levels of readiness for learning, based on the pre-assessment data.
Describe the purpose and benefits of having specialized experts (e.g., special education teachers, instructional coaches) collaborate with teachers to develop lesson plans specific to the students in their classes.
Explain how you will use this information and experience in your future professional practice.
Cite 3-5 peer-reviewed articles as research that support your choices.
While APA style is not required for the body of this assignment, solid academic writing is expected, and documentation of sources should be presented using APA formatting guidelines, which can be found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center.
This assignment uses a rubric. Review the rubric prior to beginning the assignment to become familiar with the expectations for successful completion.
You are required to submit this assignment to LopesWrite. A link to the LopesWrite technical support articles is located in Class Resources if you need assistance.
This benchmark assignment assesses the following programmatic competencies and professional standards:
BS in Early Childhood Education
3.6 Collaborate with other professionals, including those with specialized expertise, to evaluate the outcomes of teaching and learning and to adapt planning and practice. [NAEYC 4a; InTASC 7(e), 7(o), 9(c); MC2]
Author: admin
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Title: Differentiating Instruction for All Students in a Grade 1 English Language Arts Lesson Plan: Rationale and Reflection
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Final Paper: Investigating the Causes and Cures of Poor Megaproject Performance Final Paper: Investigating the Causes and Cures of Poor Megaproject Performance
This research questions are in the discussion document Final paper (aggregation of all discussion board assignments):
The final paper should be the final product of your work throughout the term and the results of your weekly discussions. The core content of the final paper is the results of your readings and the findings you have devised. Reusing some of your posts in your final paper as you see fit is okay. At a minimum, in the Results and Discussion section of your final paper, try to address the following questions:
What are some of the possible answers to your questions?
What are some of the important findings you expect from your investigation?
What is the practical significance of your predicted findings?
What is/are the contribution/s of your findings to what we know or do not know about your topic?
Your submission should follow the format of a research paper and should be ready for sharing at a symposium, seminar, workshop, or conference.
The typical length of a paper for proceedings is 6-12 pages, including tables, charts, and references.
The main body of the paper should be numbered in consecutive order:
ABSTRACT
I. INTRODUCTION
II. METHOD
III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
IV. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
Important Note: The following link provides more information about what needs to go into each section of your final paper:https://library.sacredheart.edu/c.php?g=29803&p=185933
Here is an example of a Literature Review research paper:
Denicol, J., Davies, A., & Krystallis, I. (2020). What Are the Causes and Cures of Poor Megaproject Performance? A Systematic Literature Review and Research Agenda. Project Management Journal, 51(3), 328–345. https://doi.org/10.1177/8756972819896113Links to an external site.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/8756972819896113Links to an external site.
You can use this example to reference how to design and write your final paper. Other useful sources to help in designing your methodology:
https://library.sacredheart.edu/c.php?g=29803&p=185933 (Links to an external site.)
https://psychology.ucsd.edu/undergraduate-program/undergraduate-resources/academic-writing-resources/writing-research-papers/research-paper-structure.html#Discussion
Rubric -
“Exploring the Fascinating World of the San Diego Zoo: Researching and Presenting on an Animal of Your Choice”
Choose an animal from the San Diego Zoo to research in class. The information collected will be used to create a google slide presentation that describes your animal. Think about what makes your animal unique and the types of environments/biomes that your animal lives in. As you gather information about your animal, take notes and think about how you can organize this information and put it into your own words. Your google slide presentation will need to include references to material you included. Pictures are required on each slide as part of your project grade. https://animals.sandiegozoo.org/animals
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“The Expansion of Christianity under the Catholic Church: A Historical Analysis of Key Figures and Events in the 4th Century” Reflection: After extensively researching and writing about the expansion of Christianity under the Catholic Church in the 4th century, I have
This is a scenerio project in which the scenario you would be writing is as follows: In Constantinople, the emperor Constantine decrees that Christians must cut all ties with their Jewish heritage or face execution. Christianity under the Catholic Church continued to expand and convert citizens throughout the Mediterranean and Europe through the 4th century. Examine and analyze how the expansion occurred, discuss the key figures and their actions, including Emperors Constantine and Theodosius, be sure to include the Council of Nicaea, and explain the importance of the Nicene Creed and the new hierarchy of the Church.
the last page should be a reflection of the paper -
Economic Performance and Future Expectations: A Report on the UAE for the President and Cabinet
Task: The Country I have chosen is the UAE.
Imagine that you are working as an economic advisor for the government. The president
has gathered the cabinet to discuss the economic performance of the country and its future
policies. As the economist of the team, you are asked to write a written report on its economic
performance and expectations. Critically evaluate its economic performance relying on the
material and the concepts covered in our course.
Which are Inflation, GDP Growth, Real GDP vs Nominal GDP, and Unemployment Rate. I will attach the graphs down below as an image.
Note: The president and his advisors are not acquainted with economic terms.
Your report will include the following elements:
• Description of the current state of the economic condition of your selected country or
region, based on at least a couple of credible sources, which can be news or scholarly.
When preparing this section, indicate the unemployment rate, inflation rate, and
where the country is in the business cycle. You should include graphs and tables and
rely on your Discussion Forums, as well as instructor and peer review.
• Description of forecasts and what is the economic condition expected to be in the next
five or ten years. How is that related to the past historical performance (shown in point
1 above)?
• Summation of your findings, including at least two policy recommendations for future
improvements. You may also include here any findings regarding the current fiscal
and/or monetary policy that the country is using.
Goal: The goal of the project is to enable you to research, identify, and implement the economic
parameters and models learned in this course.
In Addition -
“Examining Ethics and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in a Research Study”
Part of the appraisal process should include an examination of ethics and DEI. Write a 1-2 page narrative addressing the following questions.
a. Ethics – was the study designed and implemented in an ethical manner?
· Was the possibility of harm addressed?
· Were vulnerable populations included in the study?
· How do the authors describe the process for obtaining informed consent?
· How does the study protect the privacy and confidentiality of the participants?
· Was IRB approval obtained? How do you know?
b. Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
· Was the sample diverse and how do you know?
· Did the inclusion/exclusion criteria create bias?
· Where the data collection tools, culturally and linguistically appropriate?
· What are the international and cross-national considerations, if any?
· Did the authors describe attempts to include DEI? -
Title: “Structured Approaches to Complex Managerial Decision Problems: Exploring Decision Models and Management Science Ideas”
Find some structured ways of dealing with complex managerial decision problems.
Explain simple decision models and management science ideas that provide powerful and (often surprising) qualitative insight about large spectrum of managerial problems.
Demonstrate the tools for deciding when and which decision models to use for specific problems.
Build an understanding of the kind of problems that is tackled using spreadsheet modeling and decision analysis.
12.2 Action Required:
Read the following chapter of your Textbook.
Chapter 11: Integer Optimization
12.3 Test your Knowledge (Question):
Explain the Capital Budgeting Problem
Describe the Set Covering Problem.
12.4 Instructions
Answer both questions in test your knowledge section.
Post your answer in the discussion board using the discussion link below (Week11: Interactive learning Discussion) -
“The Impact of Xenophobia, Orientalism, and Islamophobia on Marginalized Groups in America” Title: Racialization and its Significance in Ethnic Studies Concept: Racialization is the process of attributing racial meanings to previously unclassified relationships, social practices, or groups. It is a cultural process that makes “race” matter
From A Different Shore
Xenophobia is a form of prejudice or behavior against people from other countries. Attitudes and behavior associated with xenophobia typically reject, exclude and often vilify persons, based on the perception that they are of a different racial group, ethnicity, religion, or culture. Xenophobia has little impact on society without social groups fomenting actions and influence toward public and foreign policy. Anti-immigration movements in the U.S. have always been characterized in part by their xenophobic attitudes. These U.S. movements are made up of key organizations, events, and people who were responsible for shaping public perception of non-whites as outsiders or foreigners. For example, Euroamerican companies, including news publications, profited from attacks and vilified Chinese immigrant workers after the 1850s. Anti-Asian violence is not new but it has long been part of U.S. history and American culture. Xenophobia towards Asian immigrants and Asian American has often been described by white politicians and news reporters as the “Yellow Peril.”
Orientalism is the way Western countries and cultures enact cultural imperialism. Coined by Edward Said in 1978, the concept of orientalismdescribes how western culture (literature, art, cinema, etc.) constructs images of the Orient or the East in such a way that validates the preference for Western civilization and culture. The image of Asians in U.S. society is constructed and generally utilized in three ways, according to Edward Said. Orientalism can be found in academia and English literary tradition. It is also found in the worldview, representation, and “style of thought” of Western countries. Third, orientalism is a powerful political instrument of domination. In other words, the word “Orient” does not describe a people or countries. Instead, the term is a construction of the Western gaze toward people east of the invention of Europe. In short, there is no such thing as an Oriental person but there is such a thing as an “Orientalist” (Western gaze).
Model Minority is a myth but believed to be true due to the process of racialization. There have long been policies and military actions that have promoted in American culture that African Americans, Mexican Americans, and indigenous populations are, for one reason or another, not desirable populations in the country. After the Immigration Act of 1965, on the other hand, there has been a popular perception that Asian Americans are closest to White Americans in regards to attitude and abilities in higher education and professional careers. While there have been numerous studies debunking this myth, the Model Minority stereotype continues to be placed as a cultural expectation on Asian Americans as a group that each individual will be naturally smart, wealthy, hard-working, self-reliant, living the “American dream,” docile and submissive, obedient and uncomplaining and/or spiritually enlightened and never in need of assistance. Asian Americans are a diverse group of individuals with diverse experiences, yet individuals who identify as Asian American may feel pressured to meet these cultural expectations and feel self-blame if unable to do so. The stereotype also reinforces the public perception that Asian Americans don’t need help, yet the pressures behind the stereotype impact mental health according to one study (2021). Although the Model Minority stereotype is untrue, the effects of the myth are damaging not only to Asian Americans but other marginalized groups as well. For example, the myth is often used to drive a racial wedge between the Black community and Asian Americans by using the term to blame Black people for not being like Asians.
Islamophobia is an extreme fear of and hostility toward Islam and Muslims. It often leads to hate speech and hate crimes, social and political discrimination, can be used to rationalize policies such as mass surveillance, incarceration, and disenfranchisement, and can influence domestic and foreign policy (Georgetown). Religion and culture outpace politics across all regions surveyed by Gallop as the root cause of tension between Muslim and Western worlds (2011). While countries in the Middle East usually come up in discussions around Islamophobia, larger muslim populations exist outside the region. For example, the largest muslim country in the world is Singapore in southeast Asia. The fear and hate speech toward muslims is highest in “isolated” regions of Western countries, yet hate crimes toward Muslims are most common in urban or suburban areas in the U.S.
Racialization is a cultural process from which members of a society make “race” matter to the functioning of said society. Omi and Winant define the term as “the extension of racial meaning to a previously racially unclassied relationship, social ptractice, or group” (Omi and Winant 2014: 111). As a concept, it explains how “race” matters to people and institutions no matter an individual’s beliefs about racism. Racialization happens at all levels of society. Xenophobia, or a distrust for other racial groups, promotes racialization of individuals according to group stereotypes or racial myths. An example is the racial myth that the best athletes are Black and smartest students are Asian. Neither is scientifically true as race does not exist, yet society makes “race” matter by racializing individual-group associations with natural abilities, social attitudes, and typical behaviors. Another example of racialization – how “race” is made to matter to a society – is the Model Minority myth. Begin to think and think again
You have a mind; what’s it thinking?
Instructions: Write 100+ words on one (1) course concept above.* Define what the concept means in your own words (3 pts).
Think of a useful description or example of the concept (4 pts).
Create your own reason that explains why this concept is significant to Ethnic Studies (3 pts).
Guidance: Follow the three (3) requirements above to receive maximum points. No other rules apply (citations, format, etc.). Base your response on what you already know, not the unit lecture. In other words, use your own knowledge to create knowledge about a concept: you can tie in your own personal experiences, stories, and examples. You can also use other concepts from this course to explain any aspect of your response. -
“Visualizing the Impact of [Essay Topic]: A PowerPoint Presentation”
So my assignment is that my teacher wants a powerpoint with pics or any other kind of visual stuff with it from the essay that I′ve attached. First link is the actual essay with all the info
Second link is the instructions for the powerpoint -
“My Journey with ‘The Climb’: A Personal Reflection on the Impact of a Song”
Pick a song that personally connects with you (because you have found it to be especially meaningful, emotionally stirring, thought-provoking). If possible, pick one that you can at least generally remember the first time you heard it–that is, remember the context of your first time hearing the song. And when I say, “heard it”, I mean heard it, not simply heard it.
Next, write a personal reflection essay on your relationship with the song with a focus on your first noteworthy experiences with the song and how it has impacted you, detailing how and why the song struck you and how the larger context of those moments of contact influenced how you reacted to and interpreted the song. If you like, you may even then discuss how your relationship/interpretation of the song has evolved over time and how later experiences you have had contributed to you seeing the song in a new or modified light.
Thus, the story of your experiences with the song will constitute the way you will be framing your paper. Be sure to highlight and quote specific lyrics related to the song’s meaning and/or aspects of the song’s instrumental composition so that the relationship between your interpretations/reactions to the song and the larger contexts you describe from your life are clear.Pick a song that personally connects with you (because you have found it to be especially meaningful, emotionally stirring, thought-provoking). If possible, pick one that you can at least generally remember the first time you heard it–that is, remember the context of your first time hearing the song. And when I say, “heard it”, I mean heard it, not simply heard it.
Next, write a personal reflection essay on your relationship with the song with a focus on your first noteworthy experiences with the song and how it has impacted you, detailing how and why the song struck you and how the larger context of those moments of contact influenced how you reacted to and interpreted the song. If you like, you may even then discuss how your relationship/interpretation of the song has evolved over time and how later experiences you have had contributed to you seeing the song in a new or modified light.
Thus, the story of your experiences with the song will constitute the way you will be framing your paper. Be sure to highlight and quote specific lyrics related to the song’s meaning and/or aspects of the song’s instrumental composition so that the relationship between your interpretations/reactions to the song and the larger contexts you describe from your life are clear.