Chapter Three: Gaining Clarity on Our Goals

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Crafting Essential Questions Union Chapel Retreat November 16-18, 2012
Advertisements

Differentiated Instruction (DI) Meets Understand by Design (UbD) UB EDUC- 503 May 29, 2012.
Differentiated Instruction (DI) Meets Understand by Design (UbD) UB EDUC- 503 October 15, 2012.
Backwards Design for Standards-based Education
Understanding by Design Day 1
Writing Effective Essential Questions By: DonReita Nelson, M.Ed.
Bringing it all together!
Understanding by Design
Understanding by Design
Understanding by Design - Stage 1 -
Understanding by Design Ensuring Learning through Lesson Design
Ackward esign. Teachers are designers. The effectiveness of their designs corresponds to whether they have accomplished their goals for the end users.
An approach to curriculum designed to engage students in inquiry and uncovering ideas.
Understanding by Design An Overview by Eduardo M. Valerio, Ph.D.
Understanding by Design by Grant Wiggins & Jay McTighe Chapter 7: What is “Uncoverage”? Created & Presented by Jane Cook, EASTCONN Staff Development/Literacy.
Common Core State Standards in Mathematics: ECE-5
Introduction to UbD Stages 1
Lesson Planning Finding your way…
Understanding by Design: Stage 1 North Penn School District March 25, 2011.
Copyright (C) 1998 by the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development. All rights reserved. Workshop Understandings Effective curriculum design.
Good Instruction as a Basis for Differentiated Teaching
Lesson Planning Educ 3100.
ED 3501: Curriculum and Instruction Section GHI - Fall Understanding by Design Understanding and Creating Effective Instructional Design.
Understanding By Design (UbD) An overview Excerpted in large part from Making the Most of Understanding by Design By John L. Brown.
EdSe 4244 Social Studies Methods Understanding by Design: A Review.
UNDERSTANDING BY DESIGN
Enduring Understanding and Essential Questions in Inquiry Instruction Gretchen Lee- MRH 4th/5th
Enduring Understandings and Essential Questions Phase 1 of the Understanding by Design Process: Identify Desired Results By Bryon Christian and Cristy.
Tina Willis and Adrienne Walker YEARLONG CURRICULUM MAPS & UNDERSTANDING BY DESIGN.
Chapter 1 Defining Social Studies. Chapter 1: Defining Social Studies Thinking Ahead What do you associate with or think of when you hear the words social.
1 Session #6 Final Discussion of Interview Analysis InterviewData2010.xls Is Everything Worth Understanding? Selecting an essential understanding for unit.
Big Idea. The words know and understand are not synonyms. A student can have an accurate and thorough knowledge of something without understanding why.
Understanding Backwards Design – U. S. History Dr. Sarah Mathews Florida International University
Symbol Cards Accountable Talk Jig Saw Accountable Talk: Text Based discussion Creating our virtual classroom Stage 1 – Setting the stage for Learning –Goals,
The Backward Design Process
INTEGRATED LEARNING: STAGE 4 (SECONDARY COGS) Principles and process.
Adapted From the Work and Wisdom of Grant Wiggins & Jay McTighe, UBD 08/2002 Understanding by Design the ‘big ideas’ of UbD.
© 2002 Grant Wiggins & Jay McTighe UBD 08/ Understanding by Design the ‘big ideas’ of UbD.
Narrowing the Challenge: Revisiting Understanding by Design Cherie McCollough VaNTH-PER Professional Development June 1, 2004.
Crafting Essential Questions Adapted from the work of Traci Blanchard North Cobb High School Source: Understanding by Design by Jay McTighe & Grant Wiggins,
Matthew Birtel EDUC 503 FALL 2012 November 27, 2012.
DESIGNING AND PLANNING H-RMS CYCLE 1: WEEK 1 UBD STAGE I UNPACKING STANDARDS AND ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS September 18, 2014.
Understanding by Design In Social Studies in Social Studies Refresher Training Jennifer Rauscher, Angie Strick & Paul Aleckson March 2, 2009.
Stage 1: Desired Results What Standards will be addressed? What are the long-term learning goals? (What are the transfer goals implicit in the Standard?)
Understanding By Design
Understanding By Design Stage 1 BestPrep TIW Monday, July 30, 2012 What is UbD?
(Re)Designing Your Earth-Related Course for Improved Student Learning NAGT Traveling Workshops Program University of Washington - Tacoma 23 October 2015.
Understanding by Design grant wiggins & jay mctighe
Chapter 3- Gaining Clarity on our goals EDU 5103 Melisha Colon Paul Niland.
LaSalle County Teacher Institute Day Oct. 11, 2013.
UBD 101. Essential Question = a question that lies at the heart of a subject or a curriculum (as opposed to being either trivial or leading) and promotes.
Cohort Curriculum Spring 2010 ESU 6. Goals Participants will develop curriculum products. Participants will design collaboration networks.
Unwrapping & Unpacking Standards “focused alignment of curriculum, assessment, and instruction”
Effective lesson planning and design By Debora Chappelle.
Would you agree That the only thing over which we have control is the quality of the work we provide our students?
Differentiated Instruction (DI) Meets Understand by Design (UbD) UB EDUC- 503 Session VI.
“To begin with the end in mind means to start with a clear understanding of your destination. It means to know where you’re going so that you better understand.
ESSENTIAL GUIDING QUESTIONS
Understanding by Design DESIGNING CURRICULUM & INSTRUCTION.
Curriculum Writing with Curriculum Trak
Using Cognitive Science To Inform Instructional Design
Understanding by Design
Understanding by Design
Understanding by Design “Backwards Design”
Understanding by Design Ensuring Learning through Lesson Design
Understanding by Design
Crafting Essential Questions
Crafting Essential Questions
Crafting Essential Questions
Where do these terms come from?
Presentation transcript:

Chapter Three: Gaining Clarity on Our Goals Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards – Kierkegaard (1843)

UBD is Goal Directed We aim for specific results and design backward from them accordingly. The desired results in Stage 1 dictate the nature of the assessment evidence needed in Stage 2 and suggest the types of instruction and learning experiences planned in Stage 3 Avoid the “twin sins:” aimless coverage of content, and isolated activities that are merely engaging (at best) while disconnected from intellectual goals in the learners mind. A teacher hasn’t taught until the student has learned, no matter how elegant you think your lesson is. - RJH p.56

See Figure 3.1: Stage 1 Established Goals Desired Understandings Content standards, course/program objectives, learning outcomes Desired Understandings Enduring Understandings based upon Transferable big ideas that set the context for content meaning, facts and skills Essential Questions Frame EQ’s to guide student inquiry and focus instruction on the important ideas in the content p.57

See Figure 3.1: Stage 1 continued Key Knowledge/skills students will acquire Targeted knowledge can be three kinds Building Blocks for desired understandings Knowledge and skills stated or implied in the goals Reference “enabling” knowledge and skills needed to perform the complex assessment tasks identified in Stage 2 p.57

Unpacking Standards Common complaint is that there are too many, too big, too small, or too vague Solution: Unpack the big ideas (GI’s) and core tasks I don’t have the time (wah, wah, wah)

Unpacking World Geography Standard “The student will analyze the regional development of Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, and the Caribbean, in terms of physical, economic, and cultural characteristics and historical evolution from 1000 A.D to the present”

Unpacking World Geography Standard Re-framed “The geography, climate, and natural resources of a region influence the lifestyle, culture, and economy of its inhabitants”. Essential Question: “How does where you live influence how you live and work?” Transferability: Compare the early civilizations of the Indus River Valley and the Huang-He of China .” See figure 3.2, p.64

Unpacking Standards - Research How People Learn (Bransford, Brown, & Cocking, 2000) A key finding in the learning and transfer literature is that organizing information into a conceptual framework allows for greater transfer. (p.17) Learning with understanding is more likely to promote transfer than simply memorizing information from a text or a lecture (p.236)

Unpacking Standards - Research Experts first seek to develop an understanding of problems, and this often involves thinking in terms of core concepts or big ideas. Novices’ knowledge is much less likely to be organized around big ideas; novices are more likely to approach problems by searching for correct formulas and pat answers that fit their everyday intuitions. (p.49)

Big Ideas? Core Tasks? UBD guarantees nothing. It’s elegant application ensures its power and effect. Every topic has more “content” than anyone can reasonably address therefore we must make deliberate choices and set explicit priorities. See Figure 3.3 p. 66

Big Ideas? Core Tasks? Learners should be able to answer these questions: What is most important here? How do the pieces connect? What should I pay most attention to? What are the (few) bottom line priorities? Big Ideas connect the dots – conceptual Velcro! The challenge: Identify a few big ideas and design carefully around them and teach “surgically” around them. p. 66

Five Biggest Ideas in Science Quantum physic’s model of the atom Chemistry’s Periodic Law Astronomy’s Big Bang Theory Geology’s Plate Tectonics Model Biology’s Theory of Evolution What questions do they answer?  (Wynn & Wiggins, 1997)

Big Ideas at the “core” of a subject Need to be uncovered through Inquiry (Gotta go slow to go fast) Big Ideas are the hard-won results of inquiry, ways of thinking and perceiving that are the province of the expert BI’s are not obvious Most expert BI’s are abstract and counterintuitive to the novice, prone to misunderstanding

Big Ideas at the “Core” vs. “Basics Basic Terms Ecosystem Graph Four basic operations Picture composition Fact v. Opinion Experiment Core Ideas Natural selection “Best fit” data curve Associativity and transitivity Negative space Credible thesis Inherent error and fallibility of methods and results

The big ideas at the core of a subject are arrived at, sometimes slowly, by teacher-led inquiries and reflective work by students Uncovered by design, understandings and essential questions that push to the core of a subject. “Excavate the essence” of a subject or topic” – (RJH, 2002)

SpEd students work to uncover the essence (BI’s) of Macbeth – honor and loyalty Essential Questions: What are the difference between things that happen to us and things that we make happen? What is honor? Is there a cost or price for honor? Is it worth it? What is loyalty? Is there tension between loyalty and honor in Macbeth? In our own lives? Why is defending your honor so hard?

Core Idea of Loyalty… Involves inescapable dilemmas, because loyalties invariably collide. Learning that does not penetrate to the core of what is vital about an idea yields abstract, alien, and uninteresting lessons. p.68

Attributes of “Big Ideas” Broad and Abstract Represented by one or two words Universal in application Timeless Represented by different examples that share common attributes Lynn Erikson, 2001, p.35

W & McT define BI’s as… Providing a focusing conceptual lens for any study Providing breadth of meaning by connecting and organizing many facts, skills, and experiences; serving as the linchpin of understanding Pointing to ideas at the heart of expert understanding of the subject

W & McT define BI’s as… Requiring “uncoverage” because its meaning or value is rarely obvious to the learner, is counterintuitive or prone to misunderstanding Having great transfer value: applying to many other inquiries and issues over time – “horizontally” (across subjects) and “vertically” (through the years and in later courses) in the curriculum and out of school.

W & McT define BI’s, and finally… A BI is not merely “big” by virtue of its intellectual scope. IT has to have pedagogical power; and, most notably, be helpful in making new, unfamiliar ideas seem more familiar A BI is not another fact or vague abstraction but a conceptual tool for sharpening thinking, connecting discrepant pieces of knowledge, and equipping learners for transferable applications What “big idea” has helped you thus far in making new, unfamiliar ideas seem more familiar? Answer: LC’s and associated tools

BI’s typically manifest Concept Theme Ongoing debate and point of view Paradox Theory Underlying assumption Recurring question Understanding or Principle p.70

A Prioritizing Framework What content is worth being familiar with? What content is important to know and do? What are the Big Ideas and Core Tasks? See Figure 3.3. Upon reflection, what priorities have you noticed thus far in UBD and how might you use them to reframe your instruction? See “More tips for finding big ideas” pp.73-78

Framing Goals for Transfer Core tasks are the most important performance demands in any field Core tasks are authentic and involve realistic situations Core tasks are contextually aligned to real-world opportunities and difficulties Core tasks reflect the transfer with big ideas sought over time. They are not merely interesting assessments.

Framing Goals for Transfer Core tasks with authentic challenges embody our educational aims: The goal of school is fluent and effective performance in the world, not mere verbal or physical response to narrow prompts Transfer, reflective of understanding, involves expertly addressing authentic challenges at core tasks, where content is a means. Successful transfer means that students can perform well with minimal hand-holding, guidance, or cueing by teachers

Framing Goals for Transfer A challenge of reading a text is to gain an understanding of what the text might mean, despite the obstacles of ones ABBA’s, limited tools and experience as a reader A challenge in music is to turn a complex set of instructions onto a fluent and moving whole, more than just the sum of the notes

Framing Goals for Transfer A challenge in studying another language is to successfully translate meaning idiomatically, not just do a 1 to 1 translation of each word Your turn 

Transfer Demand/Degree of Cue 4. The task looks unfamiliar, even odd or puzzling, and is presented without cues as to how to approach or solve it. Success depends on “far transfer.” 3. The task looks unfamiliar but is presented with clues or cues meant to suggest the approach or content called for (or to narrow the options considerably). Success depends on realizing what recent learning applies in this somewhat ambiguous or different scenario – “near transfer.”

Transfer Demand/Degree of Cue 2. The task is presented with explicit reference to ideas, topics, or tasks previously studied, but no reference is made to the specific rule or formula that applies. Minimal transfer is requires. Success requires recognition and application of which rule applies and uses it. 1. The task is presented so that the student need only follow directions and use recall and logic to complete it. No transfer is required – simply a “plug-and play” approach.

Transfer Demand/Degree of Cue Challenging tasks at the core of a subject can clearly help us prioritize our aims if we think of them as organizing clusters of related knowledge and skill They would be the performance equivalent of Phenix’s “representative ideas” in each field

Transfer Demand/Degree of Cue Core tasks embody: Key state and local standards and goals Are related to Stage 1 Specify the conditions that any proposed assessment must meet in Stage 2 Clarity that makes it far more likely that our goals will be intellectually vital and coherent Academic goals setting process should mirror authentic performance-based goals in the arts, athletics, or carpentry.

Hey, where the hell is Bob? See what Bob is up to? What about his journey resonates with you? What questions are raised? What “aha” moments have occurred? p.81

Transfer Demand/Degree of Cue What transfer/cue demand is required of your NCATE assignment? What transfer/cue demand is required of your classroom assignments? No wonder we and our students are struggling in the “real world!”