Progress Monitoring and Small Groups in Kindergarten

This year is my first real experience in kindergarten. I have been having a blast working with a new team of educators and learning about the skills at this developmental age. With a son who started kindergarten this year as well, I am learning how hard kindergarten is, but also how magical it is! We have learners who are learning how to write letters, write words, expressively state the letter sounds in both Spanish and English, and learning how to put those sounds together to read words. Reviewing my son’s work and the learners that I work with, I have truly come to love the work that kindergarten educators and teams do and the progress in such a short amount of time is wonderful to be a part of. In this blog, I will review how to use progress monitoring tools to work with learners who may be struggling and how to keep them on pace with their peers and the curriculum.

For this blog post, I will be referring to The Autism Helper curriculum. I understand that there are many other curriculums used in school districts, however, I want to refer to this curriculum as to not get too detailed about the curriculum and maintain the ability to discuss the process and best practices about progress monitoring, interventions, and differentiating activities and lessons to meet the needs of all learners.

When we are teaching a skill, whether it be a functional or academic skill, myth. We gather baseline data to see where our learners are starting out.This can be in  a large group, small group, or even 1:1. It is beneficial to see where a learner is starting out and then see the progress and growth that happens along the way. Baseline data also helps differentiate the lessons and curriculum to fit the needs of the learner. After baseline data, the teaching begins. This is then repeated throughout the lessons and weeks and baseline data is then gathered again after the end of a unit and the start of something new. When teaching a lesson, differentiation and modifications happen throughout. This can be anything from using visuals when asking questions, repeating language, decreasing the amount of words used in a sentence and using simple sentences, running the lesson again individually, using hands on materials, etc. We see what works best for our learners to watch them grow. 
During the teaching phase, we track what learners are retaining nd what information they may need more help on. This work is then done in small group activities where a lesson objective is repeated as many times throughout the week as a learner needs. Progress monitoring is taken each week and we review the data to see how the learned are doing with the specific content. Do they need a lesson slowed down? Do they need a decreased amount of information each day? Can they show us what they have learned? Can they answer questions about the content? Can they show the content independently? The Autism Helper curriculum has all of this built in! We practice, teach, assess, and repeat based on each learner! Differentiation is hard and may be time consuming for some classrooms, but it is necessary and each learner deserves to learn at their own pace and to learn the best way they can. Progress is progress! As we get to know our learners, we then know how much progress to expect after each lesson and where to go after thy have mastered a skill.
I find it most beneficial when I read or learn something and get get started right away. The following links will help implement learner that is tailored to your learners that include ways to progress monitor and differentiate as needed!

Data sheets: https://shop.theautismhelper.com/collections/data-sheets-1

 

https://shop.theautismhelper.com/search?q=curriculum&options%5Bprefix%5D=last

 

https://shop.theautismhelper.com/search?q=file+&options%5Bprefix%5D=last

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *