Making the Right Choices
Which Play Is Appropriate Considering the Audience, Schoolhouse and
Resources?
Preproduction Considerations
Back Drop, Scenery, Ambiance
Creating the Climate
Organizing the Script
Designing the Curriculum
Writing the Script
Lesson Planning
The Opening Scene
Generating and Sustaining Attention
Developing the Plot
Selecting Instructional Strategies
The Plot Thickens
Active Learning and Deeper Understanding
Technical Staging
Using Technology to Enhance Learning
Bringing the Curtain Down
Closing the Lesson and Homework Techniques
Where Is My Place Onstage?
Planning for Differentiated Learning in the Block
Stage Management
Classroom Management Strategies
Critic′s Choice
Understanding and Assessment
Taking the Show on the Road
Suggestions for Practice and Learning from the Field
Pam Robbins earned her doctorate in educational administration from
the University of California, Berkeley. Currently, she consults
with school systems, professional organizations, State Departments
of Education, leadership academies, and corporations throughout the
United States, Canada, Great Britain, Europe, Asia, and South
America. Her presentation topics include professional learning
communities, effective teaching, how the brain learns, emotional
intelligence, leadership, teaching in the block schedule, peer
coaching, school culture, and presentation skills. Pam has served
as a teacher, high school basketball coach, administrator, director
of special projects and research, and director of training for the
North Bay California Leadership Academy. She has lectured at
several universities, authored and co-authored books, and developed
training materials for several principals’ academies.
Gayle H. Gregory is first and foremost a teacher, having
experienced teaching and learning in elementary, middle, and
secondary schools, community colleges, and universities. She has
had extensive district-wide experience as a curriculum consultant
and staff development coordinator. Gayle was principal/course
director at York University for the Faculty of Education, teaching
in the teacher education program.
Her areas of expertise include brain-compatible learning,
differentiated instructional and assessment strategies, block
scheduling, emotional intelligence, student motivation, RTI Tier
One, collaborative learning, common core, renewal of secondary
schools, enhancing teacher quality, coaching and mentoring,
managing change, and building professional learning communities.
She also a trainer for Visible Learning Plus with Corwin.
She is an author of numerous books related to educational
neuroscience and differentiated instruction, assessment, and
curriculum, including the following titles:
• Data Driven Differentiation in the Standards-Based
Classroom, Second Edition (2014, with Lin Kuzmich)
• Differentiated Instructional Strategies: One Size Doesn’t
Fit All, Third Edition (2013, with Carolyn Chapman)
• Differentiated Instructional Strategies Professional
Learning Guide: One Size Doesn’t Fit All, Third Edition (2013)
• Differentiated Literacy Strategies for English Language
Learners, Grades K–6 and Differentiated Literacy Strategies for
English Language Learners, Grades 7–12 (2011, with Amy Burkman)
• Differentiated Instructional Strategies for the Block
Schedule (2010, with Lynne E. Herndon)
• Student Teams That Get Results: Teaching Tools for the
Differentiated Classroom (2009, with Lin Kuzmich)
• Teacher Teams That Get Results: 61 Strategies for Sustaining
and Renewing Professional Learning Communities (2009, with Lin
Kuzmich)
• Differentiated Instructional Strategies for Science, Grades
K–8 (2009, with Elizabeth Hammerman)
• Differentiating Instruction With Style: Aligning Teacher and
Learner Intelligences for Maximum Achievement (2005)
• The Activities for Differentiated Classroom series (2007,
with Carolyn Chapman)
She is affiliated with organizations such as ASCD and Learning
Forward. Her ASCD publication is The Motivated Brain: Improving
Student Attention engagement and Perseverance (2015, with Martha
Kaufeldt).
Gayle consults internationally with teachers, administrators, and
staff developers.
She and her family of two daughters and two granddaughters all
reside in Burlington, Ontario.
Gayle is committed to lifelong learning and professional growth for
herself and others. She may be contacted at
gregorygayle@netscape.net, www.gaylehgregory.com, and
@gaylegregory6.
Lynne Herndon has over twenty years experience teaching science at
the middle, high school and college level, five of which have been
in a block schedule. She has conducted workshops at the local,
state, and national levels in the areas of classroom management,
curriculum mapping, differentiated instruction, integrating
technology and teaching in a block schedule. She also has
experience working in staff development, curriculum design and
school improvement planning.
Lynne’s educational background includes a Bachelor’s Degree in
General Science from Buena Vista University and a Masters Degree in
Science Education from the University of Northern Iowa. Lynne is
dedicated to providing research-based growth opportunities that
have practical applications for classroom teachers. Lynne’s written
works includes Differentiated Instruction in a Block Schedule
written with co-author Gayle Gregory, Thinking Inside the Block
Schedule written with co-authors, Pam Robbins and Gayle Gregory,
Thinking Inside the Block: The Teacher′s Day Planner, written with
co-author Pam Robbins, both published by Corwin Press (1998). Lynne
may be contacted at 702-269-4872 or by E-mail at
lynne.herndon@herndons-net.com.
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