Title: Curriculum Methods IS Dr' Glenda Black
1Curriculum Methods I/SDr. Glenda Black
Class 2
2Welcome
- Bell Work
- You have 5 minutes
- 1) In a group - talk about the best teacher you
ever had - Please hand in observation assignment and sign
the assignment tracking sheet
3Icebreaker
- songs hum and find others with same song
- Mary had a little lamb
- Baa. Baa, Black Sheep
- Rock-a-bye, baby
- Row, Row, Row your boat
- O Canada
- 100 bottles of beer on the wall, 100 bottles of
beer - O Danny Boy
- Who let the dogs out?? By Baha men
- We dont need no education by Pink Floyd
4Course Mantra
- If you fail to plan, you plan to fail!
5Planning
- Long Range Plans
- Outlines the year gives you and anyone else an
overview - When are you going to teach what unit / overall
concept - Helps with integration / double dipping
- Usually requested by principal by the end of
September - Short Term Plans (Unit Plans)
- A unit a group of lesson plans all focused on a
particular subject area or concept i.e., grade
4 Social Studies Medieval Times grade eight
Language a novel study on The Gifted / Big
Ideas or concepts such as Freedom,
Diversity. - Lesson Plans
- What you are going to teach for a specific
subject in a specific time period - Goes into a Daybook
6Relationship between Plans
What will happen during the Period Day Week S
tudy of a Topic/Concept Year
Lesson plans are put in Unit Plans
The Long Range Plan lists the main topic of each
Short Term Plan (Unit).
7- What Is Backward Design?
- 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 where you are now so that the
steps you take are always in the right direction. - Stephen R. Covey,
- The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People
- Design(vb)
- To have purposes and intentions to plan and
execute - Oxford English Dictionary
8Backward Design/ Design Down
- Wiggins and McTighe encourage teachers to think
like an assessor by beginning with the question
What will students know and be able to do at the
end of the learning time? and What is the
evidence of the understanding? - Three distinct stages for curriculum design
- (1) Identifying the desired results
- Key question What should students know and be
able to do? - (2) Determining acceptable evidence
- Key Questions (a) How will we know if the
students have achieved the desired - results? (b) What will we accept as evidence of
student understanding? - (3) Planning the learning experiences and
instruction - Key Question How will we teach them?
- retrieved August 14, 2007 from
http//www.ascd.org/ASCD/images/publications/books
/wiggins1998_fig1.1.gif -
9The Backward Design Model
Key question What should students know and be
able to do?
Key Questions (a) How will we know if the
students have achieved the desired results? (b)
What will we accept as evidence of student
understanding?
Key Question How will we teach them?
10Class Reflection from Class 1
- Which of the 7 reasons for becoming a
- teacher (you may have more than one) applies to
you? Why?
11- The Seven Reasons for Becoming a Teacher
- Reason 1 Born to Be
- Reason 2 The Experienced Teacher Candidate
- Reason 3 Enamored with Academics
- and the Institution of
Education - Reason 4 The Age Old Adage
- Reason 5 Lifestyle
- Reason 6 Now What Syndrome
- Reason 7 Combination
12How You Teach.
- General Mode of Instruction (GMI)
1. What shall we teach? 2. How can we assess
it? 3. How shall we teach? 4. How can we
organize it?
13Parts of a Lesson
- Expectations
- The enduring understanding
- For a lesson Take the curriculum expectation and
make it realistic for the lesson you plan - For a unit a curriculum topic, part of a
curriculum topic, a concept - Assessment (and Application / Routine)
- How will you know that they have the enduring
understanding? - Content / Strategies
- The body of the lesson
- Content is the what and Strategies are the How
- Preassessment
- What students need to know before you can teach
the lesson - What the room should look like, etc
- Resources you need to gather
- Reflection
- After the lesson, think about how it went and
make notes for next time
14CURRICULUM EXPECTATIONS
- Ministry of Education Definition Curriculum
expectations describe the knowledge and skills
that students are expected to develop and
demonstrate. Add to these below - Listed by grade, strand, subject
- Mandated for the grade in which they are listed
- Assessed and evaluated using the levels of
achievement - Used in program planning, instruction, assessment
and reporting. - Are observable and measurable
15Expectations ..
- provide direction and instructional intent
- provide the focus for selecting content, teaching
strategies and assessment - take into consideration the students level of
development cognitively affectively and with
respect to their psychomotor abilities - describe what the student is expected to know, to
do or to value
16Application
- Find a partner. You and your partner may
choose an expectation from one of the curriculum
documents. Complete the chart below with your
partner. It is found in your Methods A-Z booklet
under Expectations
17Before you go
- Homework
- Locate the DIPF template on website
- http//www.nipissingu.ca/faculty/glendab/EDUC4315/
resources.htm -
- HW complete first page, 1-3.