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Session Two January 26, 2010 Capilano Elementary Designing Instruction for Deep Learning and Diversity

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Page 1: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Session TwoJanuary 26, 2010

Capilano Elementary

Designing Instruction for Deep Learning and Diversity

Page 2: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Designs 2010 Series • January 12 Setting the Stage for Instructional Design that

fosters Deep Learning and Embraces Diversity

• January 26 Backward Design: Goal Setting, Enduring Understandings, Essential Questions

• February 9 Backward Design Stage Two: Assessment For, As, Of Learning

• March 29 Backward Design Stage Three: Teaching for Deep Understanding and Diversity

• April 12 Differentiated Assessment and Instruction Practices

Page 3: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary
Page 4: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Parking Lot

Please use a “scrap strip” on your table for any questions,

thoughts, or comments.

Post-its: Please post any of your wonderings

to one of the “Wonder

Walls” throughout the session.

Page 5: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

“To begin with the end in mind means to start with a clear

understanding of your destination.”

S. Covey The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People

Page 6: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

“Deliberate and focused instructional design requires us to make an important shift… The shift involves thinking a great deal, first, about the specific learnings sought, and the evidence of such learnings, before thinking about what we, as the teacher, will do or provide in teaching and learning activities.”

“Backward Design”

Page 7: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Effective units with deeper understandings

• Curriculum design that meets the needs of all learners in the class

UBD End Results

Page 8: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Backward Design Model – 3 Stages

1. Identify desired results

2. Determine acceptable evidence (Feb 9th)

3. Plan learning experiences and instruction (March 29th)

Page 9: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Three different but interrelated goals:

• For students to acquire important information and skills

• For students to make meaning of that content

• For students to effectively transfer their learning to new situations both within school and beyond it

Wiggins & McTighe (2008). Putting Understanding First. ASCD.

Learning For Understanding

Page 10: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

1. Activity-Oriented Design“Hands-on without “Minds On”

2. Curriculum Coverage“Marching through the textbook”

“Twin Sins” of Curriculum Design

Page 11: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Concept-Based Instruction:• Results in higher-level,

integrated thinking• Timeless, universal, and

abstract• Forces students to think

about topics and facts in terms of their transferable significance (cross-curricular)

• Allows flexibility to allow students to search for and construct knowledge

Topic-Based Instruction:• Holds learning to a fact or

activity level• Topical Theme Instruction

(e.g., Plants, Dinosaurs, Japan, Penguins)

• Has short term use – to cover an event, issue , or set of facts

• Increases the overloaded curriculum

Concept Based vs. Topic Based Instruction

Erickson, L. (2008). Stirring the head, heart and soul: redefining curriculum, instruction, and concept-based learning. p 30 - 41

Page 12: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Allows instruction to be more effective by providing the opportunity for teachers (K-12 and beyond) to work as a team to systematically build conceptual understandings throughout the student’s years of education.

Concept-Based Instruction

Erickson, L. (2008). Stirring the head, heart and soul: redefining curriculum, instruction, and concept-based learning. p 30 - 41

Page 13: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

BEFORE UbD

• Look at the Grade 3 Social Studies unit

• Which of the “twin sins” are represented in this lesson?

AFTER UbD

• Discuss the changes evident in the lesson after “Backward Design” has been applied

Pioneer Life: Lesson Make-Over

Page 14: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Unit Topic:

BIG IDEA(S):

STAGE 1: Desired ResultsSTAGE 1: Desired ResultsSTAGE 1: Desired Results

Prescribed Learning Outcomes:Prescribed Learning Outcomes:Prescribed Learning Outcomes:

Enduring Understandings: Enduring Understandings: Essential Questions:

Knowledge:Knowledge: Skills:

Backward Design Unit Template

Page 15: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Unit Topic

• Prescribed Learning Outcomes (Goals)

• Big Ideas (Concepts)

• Enduring Understandings

• Essential Questions

• Knowledge and Skills

Stage 1: Desired ResultsUsing the Planning Template

Page 16: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Danger of coverage mentality• Need to prioritize & identify BIG IDEAS• Clarity of goal essential for success• Planning for multiple ways of engagement

(UDL) – to tap into learners’ interests, challenge them appropriately, and motivate them to learn

Meaningful Use of PLOs

Page 17: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Provide a conceptual lens

• Are universal and timeless – carry through the ages and across cultures

• Are broad, abstract, transferable

• Are the “core” of the subject – they need to be uncovered allowing students “dig deep” into learning

• Are the building blocks for Enduring Understandings

• Examples: equity, good triumphs over evil, problem solving

BIG IDEAS

Page 18: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

1. Select 2-3 related PLOs – Look for a natural link or connection between

the content of the PLOs

– Select PLOs based on what you know about students’ learning needs, readiness, and interests

Finding the Big Ideas: Unpacking the Learning Goals (PLOs)

Page 19: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

2. Highlight the key (recurring) nouns and adjectives in the PLOs selected

3. Look at the lists of transferable concepts and use the “funnel” questions handout to assist in identifying the Big Ideas (concepts) implied by the nouns and adjectives in the PLOs

Finding the Big Ideas: Unpacking the Learning Goals (PLOs)

Page 20: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

4. Identify a pair (two) concepts that:– Indicate the kind of inquiries that must be

made (e.g., compare and contrast)

– Suggest the kind of rethinking that learners will need to do in order to understand the ideas and find them useful

Wiggins & McTighe (2005). Understanding by Design. P. 69-70

Finding the Big Ideas: Unpacking the Learning Goals (PLOs)

Page 21: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

PLOs for Grade 3 Social Studies

• B1: Identify changes that can occur in communities over time

• B2: Describe the importance of communities

• B3: Identify cultural similarities and differences

Big Ideas: change, similarities and differences, culture

Unpacking PLOs: Grade 3 Example

Page 22: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Work through the steps of unpacking the PLOs to find the Big Ideas (key concepts).

School Teams: Your Task

Page 23: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

1. Select 2-3 related PLOs

2. Highlight the key (recurring) nouns and adjectives in the PLOs selected

3. Identify concepts implied by the nouns and adjectives in the PLOs

4. Identify a pair (two) concepts that: - Indicate the kind of inquiries that must be made

- Suggest the kind of rethinking that learners will need to do in order to understand the ideas and find them useful

Finding the Big Ideas: Unpacking the Learning Goals (PLOs)

Page 24: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Enduring Understandings

What will the students

remember for:

40 seconds?40 minutes?

40 years?

Page 25: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Establishing Curricular Priorities

Worth being familiar with

Important to know and do

Big Ideas and Enduring

Understandings

Page 26: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Statements of conceptual relationships – includes two (or more) concepts (Big Ideas) derived from the PLOs

• Transfers through time and across cultures and situations

• Completes the stem “Students will understand that….”

Enduring Understandings Are:

Erickson, L. (2008). Stirring the head, heart and soul: redefining curriculum, instruction, and concept-based learning. p 87-88

Page 27: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Grade 3 Example: PLOs for Grade 3 Social Studies

• B1: Identify changes that can occur in communities over time

• B2: Describe the importance of communities

• B3: Identify cultural similarities and differences

Big Ideas: change, similarities and differences, culture

Enduring Understanding:Communities change over time to meet people’s needs.

Page 28: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Sort the statements in the envelope on your table into yes examples and no examples of enduring understandings

• Generate a list of the attributes of a “good” (exemplar) enduring understanding

• Write these attributes on the 11x17 paper on your table

Enduring Understandings Table Work: Sorting Activity

Page 29: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• What we believe is part of who we are.

• Homes reflect personal identity and local culture.

• Past civilizations shape present day systems and technologies.

• Exploration leads to discovery and develops new understandings.

• Imagination is a powerful tool for extending our ability to think, create and express ourselves.

• Family histories provide an insight into cultural and personal identity.

• Communities are enriched by their members and the different perspectives that they bring.

Yes Examples

Page 30: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Ancient Egyptians had a sophisticated irrigation system.

• Explore what an integer is.

• My family is special and unique.

• Finding peaceful solutions to conflict leads to a better quality of human life.

• Mammals have characteristics and needs.

• Communities would be enriched if everybody just got along!

• Do you really know who your parents are?

• It is important to preserve local ecosystems.

No Examples

Page 31: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Compare the attributes listed on the handout to those listed on your chart paper

• Enter into a brief dialogue of comparisons between the two…– “I notice that….”

Handout

Page 32: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Based on the Big Ideas (concepts) at the heart of the discipline - has enduring value beyond the classroom

• Need to be “uncovered” in order to be learned - through sustained inquiry

• What we want the students to understand 40 years from now

Enduring Understandings

Page 33: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

You’ve got to go below the surface…

Page 34: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Using the identified Big Ideas (concepts) write an Enduring Understanding.

Your Task

Page 35: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Help us stay focused on the Enduring Understanding

• Broad and open-ended

• Are arguable and important to argue about

• Raise more questions-provoking and sustaining engaged inquiry

• Spark meaningful connections

• Foster deep and transferable knowledge

Essential Questions

Page 36: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Big Ideas: change, similarities and differences, culture.

Enduring Understanding: Communities change over time to meet people’s needs.

ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS: • What defines a community?

• What are the similarities and differences between communities?

• How and why do communities change?

• How do people’s needs affect change in a community?

• How do communities reflect the needs of people living in them?

Examples of Essential Questions

Page 37: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Essential Questions– Asked to be argued– Designed to “uncover” new ideas, views, lines of

arguments.– Set up inquiry, heading to new understandings.

• Leading Questions– Asked as a reminder to prompt recall– Designed to ‘cover’ knowledge– Point to a single, straightforward fact-a rhetorical

question.

Essential vs. Leading Questions

Page 38: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Yes Examples:

• How do effective writers hook and hold their readers?

• What distinguishes fluent second language learners from native speakers?

• Who wins and who loses when technologies change?

No Examples:

• What is foreshadowing? Can you find an example?

• What are some French colloquialisms that native speakers would use?

• Name four technologies that have improved human life.

Essential Questions – Concept Attainment

Page 39: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• When was the Canadian Constitution signed?

• What are the relationships between popularity and greatness in literature?

• What do masks and their use reveal about a culture?

• Name six mathematical ideas or discoveries.

• What makes writing worth reading?

• How should governments balance the rights of individuals with the common good?

Essential Questions – Yes or No?

Page 40: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

• Design Essential Questions that will help students to understand the Enduring Understanding

Your Task

Page 41: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Where to Differentiate?Tomlinson & McTighe (2006) Integrating Differentiated Instruction and Understanding by Design. p. 36 Fig 3.3

Page 42: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary
Page 43: Designs 2010 Session 2 Elementary

Questions?

Remember to put any “Post-It” questions on one of the “Wonder Walls” before you leave!

Reflections and Feedback

Next Session:February 9th at the LMCC

Backward Design Stage Two: Assessment For, As, Of Learning