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IBL Second Unit

IBL Second Unit. ITS REAL Area 5 LTC. Acknowledgements. Vickie DeWitt Area 5 LTC Director Helper Sandy Martin Presenter Deb Greaney ITS REAL Grant Coordinator. For Your Comfort…. Facilities Please turn off/vibrate all cells/pagers One voice in the air at a time

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IBL Second Unit

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  1. IBL Second Unit ITS REAL Area 5 LTC

  2. Acknowledgements • Vickie DeWitt • Area 5 LTC Director • Helper • Sandy Martin • Presenter • Deb Greaney ITS REAL Grant Coordinator

  3. For Your Comfort… • Facilities • Please turn off/vibrate all cells/pagers • One voice in the air at a time • Please take care of yourself • Parking lot

  4. Workshop Overview Day 1 • Review IBL/Reading Infusion process • Evaluate and modify first IBL unit Day 2 • Finish revisions if needed • Begin work on 2nd unit • Concept map • Essential question…. Day 3 • Complete IBL template

  5. The Process…. • Topic selection and creation of concept map • Write the essential question for the unit • Online research • Quick “reminder” of components and their criteria • Completing template sections • Review by coach and marking complete on checklist of each section

  6. Concept Mapping

  7. Create your concept map! Any Living Thing

  8. Essential Questions • Essential questions are the essence of what students need to examine and know by the end of the unit • Essential questions can be answered differently by different people • Essential questions can be investigated at different levels

  9. Gallery Walk • In teams, review each concept map around the room. • Take post-it notes and write an essential question for that map • Stick your suggested question post-it on the back of the concept map • Gather your map and post-its and write your essential question

  10. Template Section 3: Goals/Standards • BENCHMARK • Concepts that students need to know for the rest of their lives. • Concepts that students use to build an understanding of the world. • Concepts that allow students to scaffold to new understanding and add to their schema. • Show connections between concepts on map

  11. Know and apply concepts that explain how living things function, adapt and change State Goal 12, Standard B Know and apply concepts that describe how living things interact with their environment State Goal 12, Standard B Any Living Thing

  12. Power Verbs for Benchmarks • Remember: Recognizing, Recalling • Understand: Interpreting, exemplifying, classifying, summarizing, inferring, comparing, explaining • Apply: Executing, implementing • Analyze: Differentiating, organizing, attributing • Evaluate: checking, critiquing • Create: generating, planning, producing Remember: If you write a benchmark at a higher cognitive level, you most likely will also be working at a higher knowledge level.

  13. Template Section 3 Write! Goals Standards Benchmarks • Match standards & benchmarks to concept map • Make sure they reflect understanding of the connections/relationships between major concepts • Copy the complete ILS goal & standard (www.isbe.net) • Benchmarks • Address content at multiple levels of Bloom’s Taxonomy • Written using higher level power verbs • Review by coach and marking complete on checklist

  14. Template Section 5: Individual Assessment • Each benchmark is assessed individually AND COMPLETELY! • Assessments are guides to student progress • Can be used by teams to create part of FTP

  15. CONTEXT CONTENT Engaging the Learner Goals/Standards: (#’S) Teaching and Learning Events* • use ration and proportion and draw to scale Final Team Performance Individual Student Assessments Return to your local benchmarks and standards. Ask yourself:: “How will I know if each student has the knowledge and reasoning to communicate an understanding of the concept(s)?” Select a format for checking student knowledge. • create a garden design using measurements given for area at a scale of 5:1; graph location of plants in courtyard using given coordinates  = outcome is assessed (Number refers to assessment) Emily Alford, 1998

  16. Template Section 5 Write! Individual Student Assessments • Make sure that each assessment aligns to one of the benchmarks. • Make sure each benchmark is completely assessed. • Make sure you have a target/method match • Review by coach and marking complete on checklist

  17. Template Section 2: Final Team Performance • Created for a real audience & has a real use • Constructed in sections throughout the unit to allow students to apply & synthesize new knowledge & skills as they are learned • Reflects mastery of all benchmarks • Is a synthesis of individual & team work, not a collection of individual pieces • Students use technology in order to communicate & demonstrate learning

  18. Template Section 2 Write! Final Team Performance • Identify the final team product students will be creating • In teams, discuss how you might break the FTP into pieces that students can work on after each benchmark • Fill out an FTP organizer for your unit • Review by coach and marking complete on checklist

  19. Template Section 1: Encountering the Issue • Hook • Opening activity • Is of personal relevance/interest to students • Allows ALL to participate • Introduces the “big ideas” of the unit • Authentic Connection • Letter, Invitation, Challenge • Audience awareness • Describes FTP (final team performance/product) • Has standards/benchmarks embedded

  20. Template Section 1 Write! Hook and Authentic Connection • Identify the Hook activity for your unit • Create your Authentic Connection • Letter • Invitation • Challenge • Review by coach and marking complete on checklist

  21. Research! • Online exploration of topic • Increase teacher understanding and awareness • Location of online resources and varied teaching & learning activities: “Ask an Expert”, virtual field trips, experiments, simulations, web quests • Open a word document and copy and paste the URLs into it for inclusion later

  22. Template Section 4: TEACHING &LEARNING EVENTS Activities in which students will participate to help them reach the benchmarks and develop the product.

  23. Important Points About T/L Events • Your T/L events are just a sentence or two. Lesson plans are written later. • Every T/L Event should tie directly to at least one of your benchmarks. • T/L Events can be science experiments, interviews, field trips, demonstrations, simulations, text book work, video, Webquests, software. • Some of your T/L Events will be used as individual assessments. • Technology should be used throughout your teaching and learning events.

  24. First TLE-Task Analysis • Answers the questions, “What do we need to know?” and “What do we need to do?” • Completed using the letter, invitation, challenge (Authentic Connection)

  25. Second TLE - Opening Vocabulary Activity Making Connections with Words • Vocabulary knowledge is the single most important factor contributing to reading comprehension J. G. Laflamme, The effect of the Multiple Exposure Vocabulary Method and the Target Reading Writing Strategy on Test Scores. 1997 • Your unit must have an opening and ongoing vocabulary activities

  26. Third TLE - Jigsaw • Investigating Information • Begin with Jigsaw to build background knowledge • Add questions to Task Analysis Jigsaw ???

  27. CONTEXT CONTENT Engaging the Learner Teaching and Learning Events* Goals/Standards: (#’S) • students read letter and complete task analysis • opening/ongoing vocabulary activity • inquiry begins with students seeking information from • a variety of sources • jigsaw information in teams, organize and share with • class In modeling the opening we: • brainstormed appliances • calculated costs • received the letter • determined coal usage • activity • activity • activity • activity Benchmark • Individual assessment • teams create slides, pictures, text…for FTP • Students continue asking questions & seeking answers • Ongoing vocabulary work Benchmark • activity • activity • activity Final Team Performance Individual Student Assessments  = outcome is assessed (Number refers to assessment) *Numbers after Teaching and Learning Events refer to assessments Emily Alford, 1998

  28. Stages of Inquiry in the Classroom • Encountering the Issue • getting the “big idea” • making connections • Making Connections • Text to text, text to self, text to world • Open and closed word sorts • Making Connections • Text to text, text to self, text to world • Open and closed word sorts • Task Analysis • defining the task • asking questions • Asking Questions • Right there, think and search • Author and you, in your head • Investigating Information • seeking, organizing, analyzing, • applying to project • Determining Importance • Features, structures of text • Note taking, graphic organizers • Facts to main ideas, summaries • Reasoning with Information • evaluating, creating, judging, • inferring, visualizing • making decisions • Inferring and Visualizing • creating models • using text clues and prior knowledge • using implicit and explicit information to reach conclusions • Acting on Decisions • synthesizing • communicating findings • Synthesizing • text to text, self and world • applying to new settings and contexts • in your head

  29. Template Section 4 Write! Teaching and Learning Events • Activities that will lead students to mastery of the benchmarks • Color code to match to benchmarks • Include all inquiry & reading strategies • Use Reading Strategy Guide to choose appropriate activities • Review by coach and marking complete on checklist

  30. Your Second Unit is Done! • Electronic copy saved by your coach • Paper copy and checklist turned in

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