Pre-assessment is important at PE because we jump through units very quickly and it is essential to get baseline for each class so you can avoid reteaching concepts they already know and reinforce ideas that students struggle with. A pre-assessment that I use often is to use the summative assessment for the grade below the student's current grade. Looking at the beginning of a fourth grade football unit, I would distribute a third grade level summative assessment to gauge where the class is at. Students are divided into three separate differentiation groups. The first differentiation group is a group of five students who answered most, including the most difficult, of the pre-assessment questions correctly. It is important to me that these students are challenged and given curriculum that engages them in learning. I would want these students to help other students who are struggling, but also have time to experience gameplay at their level. The students progress would be monitored ...
This mock data was used to simulate the assessment results from the Football unit for my 4th grade Physical Education students. Homogenous Groups — My class operates on the principle of having six teams for game play and team work. In this class there are 23 students, which equates to 5 groups of four students and 1 group of three. When looking into homogenous groups for this class, I decided to make my strongest students my smallest group because they would have the easiest time functioning as a team of three during gameplay. After setting up that team, I worked through the data to make groups mainly based on the end of unit assessment. There were a few students in between the groups that either progressed or regressed throughout the unit. In general, I decided to place those students in the lower level group so they could support or be supported within their group. The groups were then assigned colors in rainbow order based on skill level with Red being my strongest studen...