Identifying Important Content Western Connecticut State University Lesson 3: Building the Framework for Science Instruction Learner Outcomes: As a result of the next set of experiences, candidates will… 1. Learn how to clarify what students should understand about science concepts, as the first step in a new method for planning effective lessons 2. Practice identifying rigorous, appropriate, worthwhile content 3. Participate in a reflective process to check your units and lessons to make sure they are focused on important learning goals The Puzzle of Learning The Puzzle of Learning 1. Each person receives 4 puzzle pieces. 2. These four pieces, when put together, form a square. 3. Your effort on this task will be timed. 4. When completed, the square does not have a hole in the middle Debrief 1. How persistent were you in solving the problem? 2. What was your response when you found out others could solve the problem faster or slower than you could? 3. What did you learn during the activity? 4. What strategies would have helped you to solve the problem? 5. What strategies can teachers use with students who are struggling with a science concept? Possible Solutions Review of the Research 1. Teachers often try to teach too much and there isn’t enough time for students to learn everything. (Stigler & Hiebert, 1998). Teachers can unburden their curriculum by Cutting major topics Pruning subtopics from major topics Trimming technical vocabulary Reducing wasteful repetitions American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2000 2. Teachers must clearly identify learning goals for students. Setting objectives and providing feedback will result in a 23 percentile gain in student achievement Instructional goals narrow what students focus on Instructional goals should not be too specific Students should be encouraged to personalize the teacher’s goals Marzano, Pickering, & Pollock, 2001 Review of the Research 3. By taking the time to study a topic before planning a unit, teachers build a deeper understanding of the content, connections, and effective ways to help students achieve understanding of the most important ideas and skills Keeley, 2005 4. Don’t overestimate what students can learn at a given age or underestimate what they can learn at any age. AAAS, 1993 5. Assessing for prior knowledge and preconceptions must occur to make certain that the content being taught is appropriate for students. Students come to the classroom with [preconceptions] about how the world works. If their initial understanding is not engaged, they may fail to grasp the new concepts and information that are taught, or they may learn them for purposes of a test but revert to their [preconceptions] outside the classroom Bransford, Brown, & Cocking, 2000, p, 14-15 Review of the Research 6. The standards themselves are not the curriculum. Standards and science frameworks must be unpacked so that the appropriate concepts are taught at each grade level. Teachers must know how the understanding of concepts develops as a part of learning trajectory. Expert researchers Know the structure of the knowledge in their disciplines Know the conceptual barriers that are likely to hinder learning Have a well-organized knowledge of concepts and inquiry procedure and problem-solving strategies Donovan, Bransford, & Pellegrino, 1999 7. To produce a coherent approach to teaching and learning, a teacher must acknowledge the relationship of content to instruction and assessment, address important content and appropriate instructional strategies, and provide multiple opportunities to assess learning. Congruence Triangle Types of Knowledge Declarative Knowledge: The information -facts, concepts, and generalization - within content knowledge Procedural Knowledge: Requires the learner to perform a process or to demonstrate a skill The most effective learning occurs when students develop an in-depth understanding of important concepts so that they can use that knowledge in school and life! Levels of Generality of Knowledge Declarative Knowledge Organizing Procedural Knowledge General Ideas 1. Concepts 2. Principles 3. Generalizations Details 4. Episodes 5. Cause-effect Sequences 6. Time Sequences Process 7. Tactics 8. Facts Vocabulary Specific 9. Algorithms Skills Adapted from Marzano, Pickering, & Pollock. (2001).Classroom instruction that works. What did you notice about your STC Unit ? What did you wonder about your STC Unit? Distinguishing Between Facts and Concepts Scientific Fact An understanding based on confirmable observations Subject to test and rejection Scientific Concept A broad idea that can only be understood by linking several ideas into a more comprehensive framework of ideas. Unify ideas within a discipline into general principles of understanding Example: The speed of light Example: Sound travels in waves, and is 186.000 miles per waves are propagated by second compression and expansion of air molecules. Fact or Concept? 1. Vibrations produce sound. 2. When you challenge the amplitude of vibration of a guitar string, you produce a louder sound. 3. Waves that travel in a direction perpendicular to the direction of motion are known as transverse waves. 4. When you pluck a guitar string, it tends to vibrate at a specific resonant frequency, creating a standing wave pattern. 5. Sound waves travel through liquids and solids in the same way they travel through air. 6. An echo is caused by a sound wave that is reflected back. 7. Sound travels at about 344 meters per second. 8. When a sound source moves away from you, you hear a lower frequency due to the Doppler Effect. 9. When things blow up in outer space, they don’t make any sound. 10. When you talk, the vocal cords vibrate and set up a column of vibrating air in your throat. Quality of Science Content Content is significant and worthwhile Content information is accurate Content is appropriate for the developmental levels of students Teacher displays understanding of concepts Elements of abstraction are included when important Appropriate connections are made to other areas Students are intellectually engaged with important ideas Subject is portrayed as a dynamic body of knowledge Degree of sense-making is appropriate for the lesson Identifying Important Content 1. Identify the big ideas, key concepts, knowledge, and skills that describe what the students will understand The big ideas provide a way to connect and recall knowledge The Parallel postulate S.A.S. Congruence A2 + B2 = C2 2002 Wiggins & McTighe Like rules of a game Big Idea: A system of many powerful inferences from a small set of givens Like Bill of Rights Some questions for identifying truly “big ideas” Does it have many layers and nuances, not obvious to the naïve or inexperienced person? Can it yield great depth and breadth of insight into the subject? Can it be used throughout K-12? Do you have to dig deep to really understand its subtle meanings and implications even if anyone can have a surface grasp of it? Is it (therefore) prone to misunderstanding as well as disagreement? Are you likely to change your mind about its meaning and importance over a lifetime? Does it reflect the core ideas as judged by experts? 2002 Wiggins & McTighe There is a clear focus in the unit on the big ideas Implications: 1. Organize content around key concepts 2. Show how the big ideas offer a purpose and rationale for the student 3. You will need to “unpack” Content standards in many cases to make the implied big ideas clear LET’S START WITH THE BASICS… What are standards and where do they come from? National State Local National Science Teachers Association www.nsta.org Connecticut Science Curriculum Standards & GLE’s http://www.sde.ct.gov/sde/lib/sde/pdf/curriculum/sci ence/PK8_sciencecurriculumstandards2009.pdf Key Concepts: How to “Unwrap” or “Unpack” Standards 1. Underline the key concepts (important nouns and phrases) 2. Circle the skills (verbs) Concepts Skills 1. Underline the key concepts (important nouns and phrases) 2. Circle the skills (verbs) Grade 1: Structure and Function 1.3 — Organisms change in form and behavior as part of their life cycles. 1.3.a. Some organisms undergo metamorphosis during their life cycles; other organisms grow and change, but their basic form stays essentially the same. Students should be able to: 1. Explain that living things experience a life cycle during which they undergo a predictable sequence of changes from birth, growth, reproduction and death. 2. Distinguish between animals that are born alive (e.g., humans, dogs, cows) and those that hatch from eggs (e.g., chickens, sea turtles, crocodiles). Connecticut Prekindergarten–Grade 8 Science Curriculum Standards Including Grade-Level Expectations March 2009 http://www.sde.ct.gov/sde/lib/sde/pdf/curriculum/science/PK8_sciencecurriculumstandards2009.pdf page 11 Once You Unwrap the Standards… You now have a list of concepts and skills from which to build your unit and lessons! Identifying Important Content 1. Identify the big ideas key concepts, knowledge, and skills that describe what the students will understand 2. Prune extraneous subtopics, technical vocabulary, and wasteful repetition Pruning Practice…. Energy can be converted from one form to another. Kinetic energy can be converted into potential energy, and potential energy can be converted into kinetic energy. Thermal energy is often one of the forms of energy that results during energy conversion. When energy is converted from one form to another, the quantity of energy before the conversion equals the quantity of energy after the conversion. Un-pack the key concept (concepts v. facts) Unpack the Key Concept 1. Select two colors of highlighter…. Highlight concepts in (YELLOW) and Facts in (PINK)… 2. Then, list the concepts and facts below…. Concepts Adapted from: CALI Facts Facts Concepts Energy can be converted from one form to another. Kinetic energy can be converted into potential energy, and potential energy can be converted into kinetic energy. Thermal energy is often one of the forms of energy that results during energy conversion. When energy is converted from one form to another, the quantity of energy before the conversion equals the quantity of energy after the conversion. Adapted from: Tweed, A. (2009). Designing Effective Science Instruction Identifying Important Content 1. Identify the big ideas key concepts, knowledge, and skills that describe what the students will understand 2. Prune extraneous subtopics, technical vocabulary, and wasteful repetition 3. Create essential questions that engage students with the content Essential Questions Select questions which…. are arguable - and important to argue about? are at the heart of the subject? recur - and should recur - in professional work, adult life, as well as in classroom inquiry? raise more questions – provoking and sustaining engaged inquiry? often raise important conceptual or philosophical issues? can provide organizing purpose for meaningful & connected learning? Adapted from: 2002 Wiggins & McTighe ESSENTIAL QUESTION How do I know if my students have learned what I have taught them? Essential Question What is the relationship between the Earth and the Moon? Chasing the Moon – grade 3 Application: Moon Phases Observation Anchor Activity – Learning Centers Longitudinal Study Flip book How it’s done… The science behind the experience Phases of the Moon Calendar Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday September 12 September 13 September 14 September 15 September 16 September 17 September 18 Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: September 19 September 20 September 21 September 22 September 23 September 24 September 25 Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: September 26 September 27 September 28 September 29 September 30 October 1 October 2 Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: October 3 October 4 October 5 October 6 October 7 October 8 October 9 Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Time: Weather: Identifying Important Content 1. Identify the big ideas key concepts, knowledge, and skills that describe what the students will understand 2. Prune extraneous subtopics, technical vocabulary, and wasteful repetition 3. Create essential questions that engage students with the content 4. Develop Assessments that correlate to the conceptual understanding and related knowledge and skills FORMATIVE AND SUMMATIVE ASSESSMENT IN THE CLASSROOM 39 Summative Assessment Assessment of learning Employed mainly to assess cumulative student learning at a particular point in time Traditionally used to assign a grade Summative Assessments Test Quiz Paper Formative Assessment Assessment for learning Process used by teachers to determine how to adjust instruction in response to student needs, and by students to adjust learning strategies. Used to inform and adjust instruction Formative Assessment Observation Inventories Checklists Rating Scales Rubrics Performance Assessment Portfolio Assessment Participation Peer Evaluation Self Evaluation Discussion Performance Assessments Performance assessments are authentic! Designing authentic assessments: 1. Rich context permitting inquiry 2. Fill context with wide variety of questions 3. Identify critical indicators for learning 44 Identifying Important Content 1. Identify the big ideas key concepts, knowledge, and skills that describe what the students will understand 2. Prune extraneous subtopics, technical vocabulary, and wasteful repetition 3. Create essential questions that engage students with the content 4. Develop Assessments that correlate to the conceptual understanding and related knowledge and skills 5. Clarify and sequence the learning activities to focus instruction on conceptual understanding Advance Organizers The evidence mentioned before a unit or lesson begins is usually delivered in written form. Advance organizers allow students to organize and analyze as they read. Ideas and theories are usually “put together” through written responses Advance Organizers allow students to organize evidence as it is written Application: Final Project You will be assigned to a group Your group will initially discuss the development of the mini-unit in class and continue online in Blackboard in Discussions, forming a continuous discussion thread You will identify a mock class, for which the mini-unit will be designed. The final project will be a mini-unit, based on one of the STC units from Carolina Biological. Grade Levels K-1 Group 1 2-3 Group 2 4-5 Group 3 2-3 Group 4 6-8 Group 5 STC Program Alignment Weather Life Science Earth Science X X Rocks and Minerals X Motion and Design Sound Catastrophic Events X X Physical Science Technology X X X X X X X MOCK CLASS Mock Class Intellectual Profiler: Ace GT identified in Math & Language Arts King GT identified in Language Arts, not math but functioning @ grade level Queen GT identified in Math, not language arts but functioning @ grade level Jack Strong in Arts 10 Strong in Leadership qualities 9 Strong intellectually, not identified GT, ADHD 8 Functioning slightly above grade level in all subjects, loves Reading 7 Functioning at grade level in all subjects 6 Functioning at grade level with some assistance (tier 1) 5 Struggles with math (tier 1), slightly below grade level in Reading (tier 1) 4 Struggles with Reading and Writing (tier 1) 3 Identified LD in reading/language arts (tier 2), at grade level, loves math 2 Identified LD reading/language arts &math (tier 2), good communicator GT = Gifted/Talented LD = Learning Disability ADHD – Attention Defecit Hyperactive Disorder Tier 1 & 2– refers to intervention levels of CTScientific Research-Based Interventions (SRBI) Mock Class Personality Characteristics: Spades Social leaders in the classroom Diamonds Self-motivated, easy to get along with Hearts Quiet students who are often anxious to perform Clubs Nonconformists; all clubs are discipline problems
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