SIOP Definitions
Lesson Design
Accessibility
Engagement
Rubrics & Assessments
100

What does SIOP stand for?

What is Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol?

100

This type of support helps students perform tasks they couldn’t do independently.

What is a scaffold?

100

Previewing vocabulary before reading is an example of this support.

What is frontloading?

100

Students are more likely to stay engaged when lessons include this type of activity, which lets them make choices.

What are choice boards?

100

This tool outlines specific criteria and levels of performance for an assignment.

What is a rubric?

200

Name 2/8 components of SIOP

What is Lesson Preparation, Building Background, Comprehensible Input, Strategies, Interaction, Practice/Application, Lesson Delivery, and Review/Assessment 

200

Sentence frames or sentence starters help students with this.

What is constructing complete responses or using academic language?

200

Breaking down large chunks of text into smaller sections is called this.

What is chunking?

200

Using real-world problems in lessons increases this aspect of student engagement.

What is relevance?

200

Using exit tickets or quick checks during a lesson provides this type of assessment.

What is formative assessment?

300

What is the purpose of SIOP?

What is to provide a framework for teachers to deliver instruction that makes academic content accessible to ELLs while promoting their English language development?

300

This pre-reading strategy activates students’ prior knowledge.

What is a KWL chart or a schema activation activity?

300

Embedding videos with captions and transcripts supports which student groups.

What is ALL student?

300

Gamification, cooperative learning, and hands-on tasks are all strategies to boost this.

What is student motivation?

300

This type of feedback helps students understand their strengths and areas for improvement.

What is descriptive feedback?

400

What are some benefits to using SIOP?

What are improved academic performance for ELLs, enhanced language development, and more effective teaching strategies?

400

Scaffolds should be this over time, so students build independence.

What is gradually removed?

400

Assigning texts at varied readability levels for the same concept is an example of this strategy.

What is tiered instruction?

400

Giving students roles in group work and collaborative projects supports this principle of engagement.

What is active participation?

400

This type of assessment helps teachers understand what students already know before starting a new topic.

What is a diagnostic assessment?

500

Teachers use visuals and gestures to enhance this.

What is comprehensible input?

500

Aligning objectives, materials, and assessments with diverse learner needs is known as this.

What is backward design or universal lesson planning?

500

Designing lessons that can be accessed by all learners from the start is called this.

What is Universal Design for Learning (UDL)?

500

Posing a scenario where students have to solve a real-world issue fosters this type of engagement.

What is problem-based learning?

500

Unlike traditional rubrics, this type of rubric focuses only on the proficiency level, with space for noting areas of concern and excellence.

What is a single-point rubric?