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Teachers Helping Teachers with Rigor/Depth of Knowledge / Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy

Teachers Helping Teachers with Rigor/Depth of Knowledge / Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy. Presented by NHCS Gifted Education Specialists. Intended Outcomes: Complete a rigor chart on a current unit Develop more unit activities to fill in rigor chart

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Teachers Helping Teachers with Rigor/Depth of Knowledge / Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy

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  1. Teachers Helping Teachers with Rigor/Depth of Knowledge / Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy Presented by NHCS Gifted Education Specialists

  2. Intended Outcomes: Complete a rigor chart on a current unit Develop more unit activities to fill in rigor chart Revise unit based on completed rigor chart and observations and reflections Submit revised unit (don’t forget common core labels ) and completed rigor chart Complete and turn in exit activity

  3. What is rigor? Show-And-Tell-Themes Write your personal definition of “cognitive rigor” as it relates to instruction, learning, and assessments. Collaborate with the person next to you

  4. Definition of Cognitive Rigor We believe that rigor is…. Rigor -

  5. Developing a Cognitive Rigor Matrix Currently, we use two different tools to describe cognitive rigor. Each addresses something different. RBT (Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy) – What type of thinking (verbs) is needed to complete a task? DOK (Webb’s Depth of Knowledge) – How deeply do you have to understand the content to successfully interact with it? How complex or abstract is the content?

  6. Bloom’s Taxonomy (1956) & Bloom’s Cognitive Process Dimensions (2005) Remember– Retrieve knowledge from long-term memory, recognize, recall, locate, identify Understand – Construct meaning, clarify, paraphrase, represent, translate, illustrate, give examples, classify, categorize, summarize, generalize, predict Apply – Carry out or use a procedure in a given situation; carry out or use/apply to an unfamiliar task Analyze – Break into constituent parts, determine how parts relate Evaluate – Make judgments based on criteria, check, detect inconsistencies/fallacies, critique Create – Put elements together to form a coherent whole, reorganize elements into new patterns/structures. Knowledge– Define, duplicate, label, list, name, order, recognize, relate, recall Comprehension—Classify, describe, discuss, explain, express, identify, indicate, locate, recognize, report, review, select, translate Application– Analyze, choose, demonstrate, dramatize, employ, illustrate, interpret, practice, write Analysis– Analyze, appraise, explain, calculate, categorize, compare, criticize, discriminate, examine Synthesis– Rearrange, assemble, collect, compose, create, design, develop, formulate, manage, write Evaluation– Appraise, argue, assess, choose, compare, defend, estimate, explain, judge, predict, rate, core, select, support, value

  7. What is DOK?– Let’s watch • Webb’s Depth-of-Knowledge Levels • DOK-1 – Recall & Reproduction – Recall of a fact, term, principle, concept; perform a routine procedure; locate details • DOK-2 – Basic Application of Skills/Concepts – Use of information; conceptual knowledge; select appropriate procedures for a given task; two or more steps with decision points along the way; routine problems; organize/ display data; interpret/use simple graphs; summarize; identify main idea; explain relationships; make predictions • DOK-3 – Strategic Thinking – Requires reasoning, or developing a plan or sequence of steps to approach problem; requires decision making or justification; abstract, complex or non-routine; often more than one possible answer; support solutions or judgments with text evidence • DOK-4 – Extended Thinking – An investigation or application to real world; requires time to research, problem solve, and process multiple conditions of the problem or task; non-routine manipulations; synthesize information across disciplines/content areas/multiple sources.

  8. Depth of Knowledge

  9. DOK is about depth & complexity – not difficulty! **Difficulty is a reference to how many students answer a question correctly. • The intended student learning outcome determines the DOK level. What mental process must occur? • While verbs may appear to point to a DOK level, it is what comes after the verb that is the best indicator of the rigor/DOK level. • Describe the process of photosynthesis • Describe how the two political parties are alike and different • Describe the most significant effect of WWII on the nations of Europe

  10. Hess’ Cognitive Rigor Matrix: Applies Webb’s DOK to RBT Cognitive Process Dimensions

  11. Some general rules of thumb • If there is only one correct answer, it is probably level DOK 1 or DOK 2   • DOK 1: you either know it (can recall it, locate it, do it) or you don’t • DOK 2 (conceptual): apply one concept, then make a decision before going on applying a second concept •  If more than one solution/approach, requiring evidence, it is DOK 3 or 4 • DOK 3: Must provide supporting evidence and reasoning (not just HOW solved, but WHY – explain reasoning) • DOK 4: all of “3” + use of multiple sources or texts

  12. Hess CR Matrix Write the number for each set of questions in the correct cell in the CR Matrix

  13. “Answers” for Discussion

  14. Some Implications for applying rigor to a unit design/ re-design: Reflect on the matrix. Are all the cells filled? Are there areas that need to be addressed? What are the overall learning goals & expectations (and cognitive demand) of the unit? Does the cognitive demand of the assessments match the stated learning expectations?  Do the learning activities in the unit have the coherence & increasing cognitive rigor to get students there?

  15. Resources DOK Livebinder

  16. Your Assignment: Complete a CR matrix on your unit Reflect on the CR matrix and create activities where needed Revise your unit Submit/turn in unit and CR matrix Exit survey

  17. Questions

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