Instructional Strategies: The teacher promotes student learning by using research-based instructional strategies relevant to the content to engage students in active learning and to facilitate the students’ acquisition of key knowledge and skills. 
- Engages students in active learning and maintains interest
 - An essay that encompasses your overall emphasis in student engagement and mastery of standards.
 - Lesson plans that show standard, concept, practice, and application of new ideas.
 - Examples and lesson plans of how the lesson builds on students' prior knowledge.
 - Pictures or copies of handouts of how you maintained students' interest
 - Builds upon students’ existing knowledge and skills
 - Lesson plans that consistently show activating students' prior knowledge
 - An essay that would detail how you regularly build on your students' pre-existing knowledge and skills.
 - Examples of handouts/worksheets that show scaffolding of knowledge
 - A list of the different ways you activate students' prior knowledge
 - Reinforces learning goals consistently throughout the lesson
 - Lesson plans that detail how the learning goal is reinforced throughout the lesson
 - Examples of depth of knowledge questions used during a lesson.
 - Words, sequencing, or structure that shows your regular reinforcing of the lesson.
 - Uses a variety of research-based instructional strategies and resources
 - Lesson plans that show differentiation of content, process, and/or product (differentiation can be one, two, or all three of those; additionally, it can be differentiated groups, locations, environment, etc.)
 - Provide pictures of differentiated classroom.
 - Lesson plans that detail acceleration and remediation
 - Lesson plans that show pacing, transitions, and expectations.
 - List of instructional strategies used for that learning goal (use the "75 Instructional Strategies" or the "Nine Most Effective Instructional Strategies" links for ideas)
 - Effectively uses appropriate instructional technology to enhance student learning
 - Examples (list) of technology used in learning goals and how they were used.
 - Lesson plans listing technology used for that lesson.
 - Examples of SmartBoard pages used for lesson
 - Examples of handouts, visuals, non-linguistic representations which help supplement learning
 - Communicates and presents material clearly, and checks for understanding
 - Examples of handouts, visuals, pictures, links that have been used to supplement students' learning.
 - Examples of the aural, visual, and kinesthetic means used to supplement students' learning.
 - Essay: 3.6; Checks for Understanding
 - Lesson plans showing depth of knowledge questions and sequencing of lesson
 - Develops higher-order thinking through questioning and problem-solving activities
 - Lesson plans detailing the sequencing of material for a learning goal; list higher order thinking questions, problem solving activities, and grouping activities; be sure to state how and why the students are grouped in the way they are.
 - Provide pictures with explanation of problem solving activities
 - Engages students in authentic learning by providing real-life examples and interdisciplinary connections
 - If you link your subject to real life examples or other subjects, this should be easy. Provide a copy of the program, the study guide, the other subject's connection to yours, etc.
 - Provide lesson plans of the integration of the interdisciplinary connections
 - Provide pictures of the out-of-classroom (real life) connectedness.
 
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