1 / 17

CURRICULUM COMPACTING

No More “B” Word Office of Teaching and Learning TAG Department December 6, 2007 TAG Office 503-916-3358 www.tag.pps.k12.or.us. CURRICULUM COMPACTING. Today’s Objectives. What is Curriculum Compacting? Why use Curriculum Compacting? When? How? Resources. The Challenge.

mari
Télécharger la présentation

CURRICULUM COMPACTING

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. No More “B” Word Office of Teaching and Learning TAG Department December 6, 2007 TAG Office 503-916-3358 www.tag.pps.k12.or.us CURRICULUM COMPACTING

  2. Today’s Objectives • What is Curriculum Compacting? • Why use Curriculum Compacting? • When? • How? • Resources

  3. The Challenge • Students come at different readiness levels • Students learn at different rates • Students have different styles of learning • Students have varying interests • Students have a variety of needs

  4. The Problems With Meeting Needs of All Learners • Time constraints • Lack of systematic approach • Students becoming frustrated with repetitive work

  5. What Is Curriculum Compacting? • Instructional strategy for curriculum adjustments for any curricular area • Students show level of proficiency in basic curriculum, and then they may “buy back time” for other learning experiences

  6. Why (research) • To meet the needs of Gifted Students in Regular classrooms and eliminate the repetition of work that is already mastered or that can be mastered quickly Dr. Rimm #1 Begin Video Tape

  7. How To Use the Compacting Process • Define goals and outcomes • Identify students to participate • Provide acceleration; extension opportunities; and depth and complexity

  8. Goals & Outcomes Defined • Determine which tasks are new and which are review • Use scope and sequence charts, teacher manuals, curriculum guides and curricular frameworks

  9. Identify Candidates • Estimate which students have the potential to master material faster • Look at scores of previous tests • Observe students • Review student achievement tests • Pretest students (students may volunteer, teacher selects, or pretest the whole class)

  10. Plan and provide for curriculum extensions, enrichment options or acceleration Self directed learning activities New curriculum on same subject Group activities/projects Seminars Mentors, community helpers “The work that we plan for our students is really our work until it represents true learning for them.” ….. Susan Winebrenner Plan

  11. Compacting and Differentiation for Skill work Compacting and Differentiation for Content When New: p. 47-66 Old: p. 11-20 New: p. 67-88 Old: p. 21-50

  12. The CompactorDeveloped by Joseph Renzulli & Linda H. Smith • Use a separate compactor for each student • Record all Modifications to Curriculum in the compactor for the student • Keep a folder for each student for pre-tests, learning contracts, logs, notes, post-tests

  13. Extension Work • Daily logs keep students focused and accountable for independent work • Student “buy back” time should never be used to remediate learning weaknesses • Always allow students to capitalize on strengths that extend abilities p. 78 (N); p. 76 (O)

  14. Self-selected Projects Students who work on self-selected projects have increased motivation in mastering regular class work Product choices should reflect a student’s learning styles and interests Students will forget about the “B” word!

  15. Product Choices Chart p. 80 (N); not in OLD

  16. Resources for Extension Activities • AIMS Education Foundation www.aimsedu.org • Bertie Kingore www.bertiekingore.com • Creative Publications www.creativepublicatications.com • Dale Seymour Publications www.pearsonlearning.com • ETA/Cuisenaire www.etacuisenaire.com • Highline Advance Math Program www.blarg.net • Institute for Math Mania members. www.aol.com/rmathmania • Marilyn Burns www.mathsolutions.com • The Math Forum www.mathforum.com • Suntex International www.math24.com

  17. References • Reis, Sally M & Renzulli, Joseph S., Curriculum Compacting: “A systematic Procedure for Modifying the Curriculum for Above Average Ability Students” The National Research Center on the Gifted and Talented, University of Connecticut • Winebrenner, Susan. Teaching Gifted Kids in the Regular Classroom • -Teaching Gifted Kids in the Regular Classroom 6-12 CD-ROM -Susan Winebrenner • -Differentiating Instruction in the Regular Classroom-Diane Heacox, Ed D • Math Resources to Extend Learning 

More Related