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Thoughtful Curriculum Writing

What do you want me to understand?. What skills do you want me to acquire?. Thoughtful Curriculum Writing. What do you want me to know?. What attitudes do you want me to develop?. A Statement of Purpose. Standards. Knowledge Habits/Attitude

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Thoughtful Curriculum Writing

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  1. What do you want me to understand? What skills do you want me to acquire? Thoughtful Curriculum Writing What do you want me to know? What attitudes do you want me to develop?

  2. A Statement of Purpose Standards Knowledge Habits/Attitude Understanding Skills

  3. Essential Questions What perspectives can be used to explore this topic? What interests the students about this issue? How might this topic be explored creatively? What broad general concepts does the topic relate to? What are controversial issues or scholarly questions that the topic relates to? Examine your Core Content and Standards. What questions lie at the “heart” of the learning that can guide the “uncovering” of the core ideas?

  4. Assessment How do you differentiate curriculum, assessment, and instruction in a Thoughtful Unit of Study?

  5. One SucceedsOne Struggles What are some of the possible reasons why one student finds success and the other does not?

  6. Kick it up a notch…. • B • A • M ackground Knowledge Does your unit connect and build background knowledge? bility and skills Does your unit teach the necessary skills to succeed? otivation Does your unit provide choice, create interest, and address a variety of learning styles and multiple intelligences?

  7. The Results are CLEAR…. • Students who participated in discussion groups that matched their pattern of abilities outperformed students who were mismatched. In other words, when we teach students in a way that fits how they think, they do better in school. Students with creative or practical abilities, who are almost never taught or assessed in a way that matches their pattern of abilities, may be at a disadvantage in course after course, year after year. Educational Leadership September 2006 Robert J. Sternberg

  8. At the Heart of the Matter • Assessment and grading practices that were originally born and bred to help some students succeed and allowed others to fall away, must now help all students succeed. No Child Left Behind

  9. What comes to mind when you hear the word assessment? • What is the relationship between assessment and instruction? • What makes for a fair assessment?

  10. What is assessment, can we agree?

  11. What do the experts say…. Performance assessment fills a need in both our schools and our society; it asks students to think about their unique talents and how those talents can be used in the world that awaits them after school. Silver …assessment is the process of collecting, synthesizing and interpreting information to aid in decision making.” Airaisian What distinguishes assessment from testing is that assessment elicits information about the skills and potentials of individuals, with the dual goal of providing useful feedback to individuals and useful data to the surrounding community. Gardner “…comprehensive, multifaceted analysis of performance; it must be judgement based and personal.” Wiggins

  12. Assess The word assess came from the Latin “assidere” meaning “to sit next to.”

  13. Assessment is the process of providing students with work that… 1. helps them learn; • provides evidence about what they are learning; and • creates a setting in which teachers can provide feedback to help students develop proficiencies and learn more deeply.

  14. Five Keys to Effective Classroom Assessment • Clear Purpose: Provide a clear and understandable vision of the Learning Target. • Clear Targets: Use examples and models of strong and weak work. • Sound Assessment Design: Assessment is linked to standards and similar to state assessment models (e.g. multiple choice, open response, on-demand writing, portfolio writing). • Communication of Results: Offer regular descriptive feedback. • Student Involvement: Teach students to self assess and set goals. Teach students focused revision. Engage students in self reflection and ask them to keep track of and share their learning.

  15. What ways do you assess?

  16. Depth of Knowledge

  17. What is the relationship between Depth of Knowledge and Learning Styles? Mastery Interpersonal Understanding Self Expressive DOK THINKING

  18. Graduated Difficulty/Depth of Knowledge

  19. What’s missing? • People have impact upon the environment and cause change. These changes can have both positive and negative impact upon the animals living within an ecosystem. Animals must be able to adapt to the changes we bring about in their environment. • Identify THREE things you do that can have a positive impact upon the animals within your community. • Identify THREE things you do that can have a negative impact upon the animals within your community. • Write an editorial explaining how the importance of taking care of the animals that live in your community.

  20. Task Description Many of today’s growing health issues could be avoided through education and awareness building. Select a health issue you are concerned about (e.g. breathing second hand smoke, HIV, etc.) Research your topic and write a persuasive speech, design an informational brochure, or write an editorial on your views regarding the issue . Research to find how eating habits of Americans have changed in the past fifty years. Explain how these changes have impacted our society’s health. Design and implement a weekly health and wellness program (e.g. exercise plan, diet, etc.). Explain the benefits of the program so that others will understand the importance of proper diet and exercise. Eating habits of American children are causing serious health concerns in our society. More children are developing Type II diabetes as a result of poor exercise and eating habits. Research to find what changes in American society might be contributing factors to the rise in Type II Diabetes. Design and a cookbook of after school snacks that would be healthy and low in carbohydrates to share with the class. Present the cookbook ‘Emeril’ Style..BAM! to the class and explain the nutritional value. PHYSICAL EDUCATION & HEALTH

  21. Task Rotation

  22. What does each style want from assessment? Interpersonal students want a real life context in which they can apply what they have learned and an audience to listen to. They don’t want to spend a lot of time debating the fine points. Self Expressive students want assessments that stimulate their creativity and ask them to create original products that express their individuality. They don’t want to be locked in step by step. Mastery students want assessment based on clear content and standards you have taught. They don’t want surprises. Understanding students want assessments that will provoke their thinking and arouse their curiosity. They don’t want to think about their feelings.

  23. Song and Dance Man foot bone is connected to ankle bone…. ankle bone’s connected to the leg bone… leg bone’s connected to the hip bone… and so on….. So, what does this have to do with designing curriculum?

  24. Content Standard Context You be the Teacher Here are eight percentage problems. Six of them are wrong. Now you get to be the teacher. All the work is shown. Find the errors and correct them. Explain the flaw in thinking that led to the errors. Create a lesson plan that would help the student correct this flaw in thinking. Thinking Frame Product

  25. Solving % problems Teaching You be the Teacher Here are eight percentage problems. Six of them are wrong. Now you get to be the teacher. All the work is shown. Find the errors and correct them. Explain the flaw in thinking that led to the errors. Create a lesson plan that would help the student correct this flaw in thinking. Error Analysis lesson

  26. Religions of the Middle East Life in Jerusalem You and your team have been selected to design a public use building that will bring together the three religions (Judaism, Islam, and Christianity) of the region by combining their traditions. Submit a model of your building and an explanation of how it will achieve its purpose. Design Model and Explanation

  27. What do you have when you marry the ideas of Task Rotation and Graduated Difficulty? Hook Level Level Level Level 4 3 2 1 Mastery Interpersonal Understanding Self Expressive +

  28. Introducing A New Portfolio for Learning Clubs

  29. Therefore, we must…. • What do these examples have in common? • How do students need to think in order to do well in these situations? • What are some situations in which your students need to think inferentially in your classroom?

  30. Inference Which of these goals is most important to you and why? • Identify Essential Information • Develop and Test Hypotheses • Finding and Evaluating Evidence • Developing Powerful Explanations and Interpretations

  31. Learning from the Students • Look at the sample of student work on page 11. • What do you think the teacher may have done to achieve this depth of knowledge? • What specific skills were evident in the student’s sample?

  32. Phase I: Identify the problem Phase II: Note Patterns or Relationships Phase III: Find Evidence Phase IV: Explain Phase V: Reflect

  33. A Sample Lesson:Life in Colonial New England Phase I: Identify the Problem, Strategy and Resources Suppose you stepped into a time machine and wound up in Colonial New England. What do you suppose ordinary people might be talking about? What are some words or phrases you might expect to hear?

  34. Word List apprentice furniture pelt axe gentry petticoat baptize goodwife pillory barrel governor pine Bible hoe Sabbath candles hogs saw claims homemade servant congregation house shift community import See figure 1.8 Page 14

  35. Phase II: Note Patterns and Relationships Group and Label

  36. Page 16 Work with your partner to record three hypotheses in the organizer. Hypothesis Support Refute

  37. Phase III: Find Evidence Page 17 Read and find evidence to support and or refute your hypotheses.

  38. Phase IV: Explain your reasoning and evidence. Were your hypotheses correct? Did you need to refine your hypotheses? What evidence did you find for each of the hypotheses?

  39. Phase V: Reflect What did you learn about the process of using clues to form hypotheses and gathering evidence to support your hunch? How are historians detectives?

  40. Planning Step 1: Purpose and Strategy Scenario An incomplete story

  41. Step 2: Develop a clear idea of what you want students to discover. • What do I want students to uncover? • All stories share common elements, and by changing the elements of the story we can create new stories. • There are as many stories that can be told as there are people with imaginations. • Good writers have writing techniques that make a story extraordinary.

  42. Step 3: Determine Clues and Information Source

  43. Step 4: Decide how students will demonstrate what they have learned? Reading/Writing Writer’s Club Synthesis Realistic Fiction Write a story about an ordinary event, but make it extraordinary. Make it a story worth reading by including the criteria we discussed in class. Use Microsoft Word to publish your story and illustrate it with watercolor. You may work in a group of no more than four.

  44. Step 5: Reflect upon the Process • What made “The Tree of Birds a Good Story?”

  45. What makes for a good story? Hook

  46. Mystery Student Phases Phase I: Identify the Problem, Strategy, and Data Sources Marcus found a book that looked interesting to him in the school library, but someone had not taken very good care of the book. Words were marked out with a marker, pages were torn out, and the only thing left of the book were some pictures. Help Marcus tell the story of “The Tree of Birds.”

  47. What clues in the picture tell you what happened before this page? What clues tell you what is happening now in the picture? What do you think will happen next?

  48. Mystery Strategy Phase II: Examine the Clues and NOTE any patterns or relationships. • Identify what you know. • Form a hunch. • Formulate a tentative hypothesis.

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