Kindergarten - Equitable Access & Demand

collage of alphabet blocks, children drawing with chalk, children finger painting, and a child blowing bubbles

Learning occurs at the point of challenge. With each task or learning opportunity, support every student to find a way in (“access”) and be challenged (“demand”) to think or produce in new or expansive ways. This concept is also known as designing for a “low floor and a high ceiling”. Avoid over-scaffolding or simply asking students to memorize or receive information. Ultimately, we want each and every student to carry the cognitive load within the classroom.

Student Artifacts Link to this section

Standards-Based Skills: Students will be able to...

  • Gather information from sources in order to distinguish between evidence-based fact and opinion. (C3) (NGSS)
  • Ask and answer questions and construct an argument and/or explanation with reasoning. (C3) (CCSS)
  • Actively engage in group reading activities with purpose and understanding. (CCSS)
  • With prompting and appropriate support, ask and answer questions, identify the main topic and retell key details of a grade level text. (CCSS) (GP) (NGSS)
  • Use a combination of drawing, dictating, and writing to state an opinion and/or compose information about a topic or text. (CCSS)
  • Read grade-appropriate texts and/or use media to obtain information to determine patterns in and/or evidence about the world. (CCSS) (NGSS)
  • English learners read, analyze, interpret, and create a variety of literary and informational text types. (ELD)
  • Learn that content is organized in different text types and across disciplines using text structure, language features. (ELD) 

 

(These skills are taken from the kindergarten standards found within the - Common Core State Standards, Next Generation Science Standards, College Career and Civic Life Framework for Social Studies, ELD Framework, and SFUSD Graduate Profile.)

Reflection Questions Link to this section

  1. How can focusing on equitable access and demand develop academic ownership and honor students' experiences?
  2. What do access and demand currently look like in your practice? What is working well for students? How do you know? 
  3. What are the implications for your own practice? What will you do first?

This page was last updated on April 25, 2023