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Differentiation LiveBinders

By Tamara Fisher — April 17, 2012 2 min read
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LiveBinders are a free, virtual 3-ring binder, a place to collect and store (using cloud technology) documents, links, PowerPoint presentations, images, videos, etc. One nice feature of LiveBinders is you can view the external link (or other source) within the LiveBinder page, so you’re not constantly loading new windows, media, or pages (unless you want to, and a separate link is provided for that option.) They are a great way for students and teachers to gather together information and other resources for various educational purposes.

A selection of excellent LiveBinders are publicly available, many of them with strategies, tools, and other digital media that teachers can access for ideas on many topics (such as lesson plans for various content areas, school-friendly web tools, Common Core information and resources, etc.) Of particular interest to many of you would be the over 100 LiveBinders tagged as relating to Gifted Education. For today, I wanted to highlight a few that focus on differentiation of instruction.

The best one I have found: AHA (Advocates for High Ability Learners) has an extensive and thorough compilation of resources in their Differentiation for High Ability Learners LiveBinder. Tabs within it include “Tiered Lessons,” “Flexible Grouping,” “Assessment,” “Collaboration,” and “Triangles for Advanced Learners,” which shows many great examples of what RTI/MTSS interventions can look like for advanced learners. You can find templates for creating differentiated lessons, a menu of possible final products, and a diagram that makes clear the essential steps and pieces of differentiation. Click this icon of a binder and it will preview AHA’s Differentiation LiveBinder for you:


Differentiation for High Ability Learners

Another great Differentiation LiveBinder is this one by Leslie Graves of Ireland. Tabs include “Differentiated Instruction Activities,” “Differentiating Instruction for the Gifted,” and “Differentiating Instruction for Advanced Learners in the Mixed Ability Classroom.” This binder icon will preview the full collection for you:


Leslinks- Differenciation

A wealth of information is also collected in this Identifying Gifted Learners LiveBinder by Ginger Lewman. Tabs have tips for “Records Review,” “General Ed Interventions,” and “Early ID,” among others. Here is the icon for a full preview:


Identifying Gifted Learners

It’s pretty fun (and easy) to poke around these and other LiveBinders and find incredible ideas. A helpful tip: click the “P” in a little screen icon on the right side of the top bar. It will open the binder up into a bigger, more readable window. (It looks like this:

)

Have an iPad? There’s even an app for that!

Want to explore more Differentiation LiveBinders? You can find dozens here.

Which LiveBinders have you discovered that others might find useful? Happy exploring!

The opinions expressed in Unwrapping the Gifted are strictly those of the author(s) and do not reflect the opinions or endorsement of Editorial Projects in Education, or any of its publications.