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Office of Learning and Teaching Designing a curriculum for the future Secondary Schools.

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1 Office of Learning and Teaching Designing a curriculum for the future Secondary Schools

2 Learner at the centre Leadership Integration of student learning initiatives Organisational structures and learning environment Performance and development culture Student Learning Whole School Self Assessment Tool

3 Student Learning Whole School Self Assessment Tool

4 Questions for reflection Whole school level –Individually, rate your current situation against each of the five areas. –What’s your evidence for your placement? –Compare your ratings within your team. –Finalise your school rating. Groups within your school –Would you give the same rating to each of the groups within your school? Why/why not? –What can you learn from those groups that have/haven’t made progress?

5 Why bother? Our curriculum challenges

6 The economic challenge is to develop in young people the skills, knowledge and personal qualities they need for a world where work is undergoing rapid and long- term change The technological challenge is to enable young people to make their way with confidence in a world that is being shaped by technologies which are evolving more quickly than at any time in history.

7 The social challenge is to provide forms of education that enable young people to engage positively and confidently with far-reaching processes of social and cultural change. The personal challenge is to develop the unique capacities of all young people, and to provide a basis on which they can build lives that are purposeful and fulfilling. Creative and Cultural Education- All Our Futures Summary, 2000 Prepare our students for high levels of challenge, complexity and individual responsibility

8 Two types of knowledge ‘FRAGILE’ KNOWLEDGE can be: Missing (exposed to, but can’t remember) Inert (it’s there but you can’t do anything with it) Naïve (simplistic, stereotypical or wrong) Ritualistic (pattern useful for school task, nothing more) ‘GENERATIVE’ KNOWLEDGE focuses on: Retention of knowledge AND Understanding of knowledge AND Active use of knowledge. (David Perkins) requires ‘GOOD’ THINKING

9 A good performer in Math had this to say about her strategy: I know what to do by looking at the examples. If there are only two numbers I subtract. If there are lots of numbers I add. If there are just two numbers and one is smaller than the other it is a hard problem. I divide to see if it comes out even and if it doesn’t I multiply. ‘Smart Schools’ David Perkins (1992) p.25

10 Desforges and Cockburn (1987) reported on research from UK - They noted that students used considerable ingenuity to avoid thinking about classroom tasks wherever possible. Students were predominantly task focused, and were more interested in completing a task rather than comprehending it. Is this true for your students? If yes, where did they get this view?

11 What do your students value? What are your students’ perceptions of: the role of the teacher? the role of the student? what is effective learning? They work to pass and not to know, alas they pass and do not know! Bertrand Russell

12 MY PERCEPTIONS OF MYSELF AS A LEARNER Amanda McGraw

13 Building learning capacity What is it? learning skills? learning dispositions? Ready, willing and able

14 Positive learning dispositions ResilientResourcefulReflectiveReciprocal CuriousQuestioningClear thinkingCollaborative AdventurousOpen-mindedThoughtfulIndependent DeterminedPlayfulSelf-knowingOpen to feedback FlexibleImaginativeMethodicalAttentive ObservantIntegratingOpportunisiticEmpathic FocusedIntuitiveSelf-evaluativeImitative Guy Claxton, 2006

15 Building on what students know and are able to do (Vygotsky)

16 Instruction is powerful only when it is sufficiently precise and focused to build directly on what students already know and to take them to the next level. While a teacher does and must do many things, the most critical is designing and organising instruction so that it is focused. Without focus, instruction is inefficient and students spend too much time on completing activities that are too easy and do not involve new learning or too little time on tasks that are too difficult and involve too much new learning or relearning. ‘Breakthrough’ Fullan,Hill & Crevola (2006)

17 Student engagement/disengagement What is the current level of student engagement in Years 7-10? Does it vary from year level to year level? Is it an issue for all students, for some students? What do you currently do to address engagement? Should engagement be a prerequisite or an outcome?

18 Victorian Essential Learning Standards Can the Victorian Essential Learning Standards assist us to address some of these challenges? Changing world Generative knowledge/Deep understanding Building learning capacity – skills and dispositions Building on what students know and are able to do Student engagement

19 Victorian Essential Learning Standards Physical, Personal and Social Learning Discipline-based Learning Interdisciplinary Learning Three core, interrelated strands:

20 Dimensions in all domains are based on an underlying continuum of learning. Standards define what students should know and be able to do at different levels. Progression points provide examples of what typical progress towards the standard may look like. Level 1 Level 3 Level 4 Level 5 Level 6 Level 2

21 The learner at the centre

22 Requires whole school curriculum planning … and attention to the learning culture of the school.

23 A curriculum for the future …. Which direction? Where are we now? What are the issues, dilemmas and challenges we face? Where do we want to be?

24 There is no such thing as ‘best practice’ or even ‘next practice’ – in abstract. You cannot say what is good teaching, good school organisation, good leadership, (or even good curriculum?) until you have specified what it is you want youngsters to have gained, in the light of the particular world they are being readied for. Guy Claxton 2006

25 OUR EDUCATIVE PURPOSE What is powerful to learn? Victorian Essential Learning Standards What is powerful learning and what promotes it? Principles of Learning and Teaching LEARNER How do we know it has been learnt? Assessment Advice Who do we report to? Students Parents Colleagues School System

26 Curriculum Planning Modules Module 1 - Whole school curriculum planning to suit our students Module 2 - Planning programs for cohorts of students

27 Module 1 Whole school curriculum planning to suit our students Activity 1.1 Characteristics of effective whole school curriculum planning Activity 1.2 School context Activity 1.3 Victorian Essential Learning Standards Activity 1.4 Drivers for student learning Activity 1.5 Curriculum design Activity 1.6 Learning, teaching and assessment

28 Use template 1.1B in your school team to audit your current practices. Characteristics of effective whole school curriculum planning

29 Module 1 Whole school curriculum planning to suit our students Activity 1.1 Characteristics of effective whole school curriculum planning Activity 1.2 School context Activity 1.3 Victorian Essential Learning Standards Activity 1.4 Drivers for student learning Activity 1.5 Curriculum design Activity 1.6 Learning, teaching and assessment

30 StrengthsAreas for improvement Learning Outcomes Engagement and well being Transitions and pathways SCHOOL CONTEXT Where are we at with student learning?

31 Equity funding, ESL funding MIPS funding LSF funding Other……

32 School Context What are our goals and targets? What are our key improvement strategies?

33 Module 1 Whole school curriculum planning to suit our students Activity 1.1 Characteristics of effective whole school curriculum planning Activity 1.2 School context Activity 1.3 Victorian Essential Learning Standards Activity 1.4 Drivers for student learning Activity 1.5 Curriculum design Activity 1.6 Learning, teaching and assessment

34 Everyone (leadership team and teachers) must be familiar with: characteristics of learners (adolescents) domains dimensions purpose of each domain & dimension standards learning focus statements Victorian Essential Learning Standards

35 Module 1 Whole school curriculum planning to suit our students Activity 1.1 Characteristics of effective whole school curriculum planning Activity 1.2 School context Activity 1.3 Victorian Essential Learning Standards Activity 1.4 Drivers for student learning Activity 1.5 Curriculum design Activity 1.6 Learning, teaching and assessment

36 Curriculum drivers Curriculum drivers: are a way of structuring learning to connect domains and dimensions in the Victorian Essential Learning Standards reflect our students’ learning needs and provide a structure for them to achieve the Standards

37 Drivers for student learning Curriculum drivers may reflect: what we want our school to stand for the diverse needs, backgrounds, perspectives, interests, achievements and ways of learning of our students the ‘big ideas’ that we want our students to engage with deeply the future learning needs of our students particular domains

38 Drivers for student learning – some examples Environmental sustainability Studies of Asia Globalisation Multiculturalism Healthy school Civics and citizenship – leadership The Arts

39 Humanities – some essential questions Why do people seek to discover what is unknown? How does learning about other cultures help us understand ourselves? What does it mean to ‘come of age’ and how does it differ across culture, time and gender? Can we all be individuals as equal parts of a whole? What keeps people of different cultures from living/working successfully together? How does reflection on your work and thinking help you understand? How do we find out the truth about things that happened long ago and far away? How do you see through bias? (from Ron Ritchhart ‘Intellectual Character’)

40 English – some essential questions From English KLA – GWSC How does studying our texts inform us about the world we live in? How does the study of literature (our texts) deepen our understanding of the human condition? How does reflecting on my English skills in journals and reflective pieces improve my ability to communicate? How does being able to use the conventions of English improve our ability to communicate? How does the use of diverse spoken language skills aid in communicating with an audience?

41 English – some essential questions, cont… How does knowing how to create a dynamic interaction of various spoken language skills improve our ability to engage an audience? How does writing about my experiences differ from other kinds of writing? How should imagination be used in developing skills in the English language? How does studying an issue develop our ability to think using the English language?

42 Module 1 Whole school curriculum planning to suit our students Activity 1.1 Characteristics of effective whole school curriculum planning Activity 1.2 School context Activity 1.3 Victorian Essential Learning Standards Activity 1.4 Drivers for student learning Activity 1.5 Curriculum design Activity 1.6 Learning, teaching and assessment

43 Possible design options Incorporate the interdisciplinary and physical, personal and social strands of the Standards into existing discipline-based subjects and broaden their focus in this way. Integrated approach where one or more disciplines and other relevant domains are combined and addressed through key questions or themes. Combine all three strands in the context of extended projects that students are to complete. Mix of integrated and domain specific subjects Different approaches at different year levels A mix of approaches at each year level PLUS others

44 What might a future curriculum look like? Learning would be structured mainly through projects. Some projects would be individual, while many would be group-based. Problems and goals would not be completely predefined by the curriculum. Students would repeatedly practise identifying and solving problems, rather than having them placed before them. Learning would take place in a range of contexts and use a range of methods. Projects would not all be research-based or within a traditional classroom environment. Students would be involved in doing as much as in thinking or knowing.

45 Alongside more traditional, teacher-centred assessment, students’ work would be evaluated by field experts, peers, parents and so on. It would be evaluated for different kinds of skills and knowledge - interpersonal, thinking strategies, self- organisation, depth of understanding and so on. Thinking and self assessment would be embedded across the curriculum. Students would focus particularly on learning to make connections between different contexts - the transfer and application of knowledge across different domains. Skills would be revisited and practised over time, so that knowledge gained earlier in an educational career could be applied creatively to new problems.

46 Students would gain depth of understanding in a number of disciplines, or domains of knowledge, including traditional academic subjects. They would also learn explicitly how to combine interdisciplinary knowledge in completing a project goal. The Creative Age- Knowledge and Skills for the New Economy. DEMOS 1999.

47 Community views? Implementation issues? Curriculum Models Look at different curriculum design models from various schools. What are their strengths? What are their limitations?

48 Reporting (as distinct from teaching) Who will report to parents on each of the domains? Consider: –elements of domains and dimensions covered in each subject/program –identification of teachers who will report on particular domains and students –coordination of information for reporting purposes if more than one teacher has assessment information on a domain/s for particular students

49 Transition Model for reporting against the Standards 2007 to 2008 20072008 Minimum expectations To report against the Standards in: English Mathematics Health & Physical Education Personal Learning Civics & Citizenship The Humanities (Economics, Geography, History) Communication ICT Other subjects to be reported against the CSF Minimum expectations To report against the Standards in: English Mathematics Health & Physical Education Personal Learning Civics & Citizenship The Humanities (Economics, Geography, History) Communication ICT Interpersonal Development The Arts Languages Other Than English Science Design, Creativity & Technology Thinking Processes

50 Module 1 Whole school curriculum planning to suit our students Activity 1.1 Characteristics of effective whole school curriculum planning Activity 1.2 School context Activity 1.3 Victorian Essential Learning Standards Activity 1.4 Drivers for student learning Activity 1.5 Curriculum design Activity 1.6 Learning, teaching and assessment

51 The learner at the centre

52 What promotes powerful learning? Principles of Learning and Teaching P-12 1.The learning environment is supportive and productive 2.The learning environment promotes independence, interdependence and self-motivation 3.Students’ needs, backgrounds, perspectives and interests are reflected in the learning program 4.Students are challenged and supported to develop deep levels of thinking and application 5.Assessment practices are an integral part of teaching and learning 6.Learning connects strongly with communities and practice beyond the classroom

53 How do we know if it has been learnt? Identifying purpose of assessment is a key consideration for curriculum planning: Assessment for learning – occurs when teachers use their inferences about student learning to inform their teaching (formative) Assessment as learning - occurs when students reflect on and monitor their progress to inform their future learning goals (formative) Assessment of learning – occurs when teachers use evidence of student learning to make judgments about student achievement against goals and standards (summative)

54 Implementation issues

55 Key questions to be explored For next year? What is the most appropriate curriculum design based on the learning needs of our students and staff knowledge and expertise? Will the same curriculum design be appropriate for all cohorts of students? How will we arrange students, staff and resources to best implement our curriculum design? In two years? In five years?

56 Evolution or revolution? ‘Steady as she goes’ with as little tinkering as possible Continue with process of curriculum change we have already begun and incorporate changes as needed Use this as a catalyst to reconceptualise our curriculum …a big bang or evolutionary change?

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58 Possible questions for reflection What are the existing structures in our school that may be preventing us from moving forward? What is our plan for the next few years? What’s working for us? What’s working against us? What do we need to do when we get back to school? How do we build this into our Strategic Plan and Annual Implementation Plan?

59 Student Learning Whole School Self Assessment Tool

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