Title: Understanding by Design
1Understanding by Design
the big ideas of UbD
23 Stages of (Backward) Design
3Why backward?
- The stages are logical but they go against habits
- Were used to jumping to lesson and activity
ideas - before clarifying our performance goals
for students - By thinking through the assessments upfront, we
ensure greater alignment of our goals and means,
and that teaching is focused on desired results
4Understanding by Design Template the basis of
Exchange
- The ubd template embodies the 3 stages of
Backward Design - The template provides an easy mechanism for
exchange of ideas
5The big ideas of each stage
What are the big ideas?
Whats the evidence?
How will we get there?
6Each element is found behind a menu tab when
designing units
Stage 1
Stage 2
Stage 3
L
Learning Plan
T
U
Understandings
Task(s)
R
Questions
Rubric(s)
Q
Content Standards
OE
Other Evidence
CS
Knowledge Skill
K
7Not necessary to fill in the template in order
- There are many doorways into successful design
you can start with... - Content standards
- Performance goals
- A key resource or activity
- A required assessment
- A big idea, often misunderstood
- An important skill or process
- An existing unit or lesson to edit
8Exchange featrues provide other entry points
- You can
- Search for, find, and attach other designers
essential questions and understandings to your
own unit - Use the web links provided to find ideas on
relevant sites for each design element - Study exemplary units and adapt them to your own
needs and interests
9Misconception Alertthe work is non-linear
- It doesnt matter where you start as long as the
final design is coherent (all elements aligned) - Clarifying one element or Stage often forces
changes to another element or Stage - The template blueprint is logical but the
process is non-linear (think home improvement!)
10The big ideas provide a way to connect and recall
knowledge
A2 B2 C2
11Big Ideas are typically revealed via
- Core concepts
- Focusing themes
- On-going debates/issues
- Insightful perspectives
- Illuminating paradox/problem
- Organizing theory
- Overarching principle
- Underlying assumption
- (Key questions)
- (Insightful inferences from facts)
Q
U
12Big Ideas in Literacy Examples
- Rational persuasion (vs. manipulation)
- audience and purpose in writing
- A story, as opposed to merely a list of events
linked by and then - reading between the lines
- writing as revision
- a non-rhyming poem vs. prose
- fiction as a window into truth
- A critical yet empathetic reader
- A writers voice
13Some 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?
14Youve got to go below the surface...
15to uncover the really big ideas.
163 Stages of Design, elaborated
2. Determine acceptable evidence
17Stage 1 Identify desired results.
- Key Focus on Big ideas
- Enduring Understandings What specific insights
about big ideas do we want students to leave
with? - What essential questions will frame the teaching
and learning, pointing toward key issues and
ideas, and suggest meaningful and provocative
inquiry into content? - What should students know and be able to do?
- What content standards are addressed explicitly
by the unit?
U
Q
K
CS
18The big idea of Stage 1
- There is a clear focus in the unit
- on the big ideas
- Implications
- Organize content around key concepts
- Show how the big ideas offer a purpose and
rationale for the student - You will need to unpack Content standards in
many cases to make the implied big ideas clear
19From Big Ideas to Understandings about them
U
- An understanding is a
- moral of the story about the big ideas
- What specific insights will students take away
about the the meaning of content via big ideas?
- Understandings summarize the desired insights we
want students to realize
20Understanding, defined They are...
- specific generalizations about the big ideas.
They summarize the key meanings, inferences, and
importance of the content - deliberately framed as a full sentence moral of
the story Students will understand THAT - Require uncoverage because they are not facts
to the novice, but unobvious inferences drawn
from facts - counter-intuitive easily
misunderstood
21Understandings examples...
U
- Great artists often break with conventions to
better express what they see and feel. - Price is a function of supply and demand.
- Friendships can be deepened or undone by hard
times - History is the story told by the winners
- F ma (weight is not mass)
- Math models simplify physical relations and
even sometimes distort relations to deepen our
understanding of them - The storyteller rarely tells the meaning of the
story
22Knowledge vs. Understanding
- An understanding is an unobvious and important
inference, needing uncoverage in the unit
knowledge is a set of established facts. - Understandings make sense of facts, skills, and
ideas they tell us what our knowledge means
they connect the dots - Any understandings are inherently fallible
theories knowledge consists of the accepted
facts upon which a theory is based and the
facts which a theory yields.
23Essential Questions
Q
- What questions
- 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?
24Essential vs. leading Qs used in teaching
(Stage 3)
- Essential - STAGE 1
- Asked to be argued
- Designed to uncover new ideas, views, lines of
argument - Set up inquiry, heading to new understandings
- Leading - STAGE 3
- Asked as a reminder, to prompt recall
- Designed to cover knowledge
- Point to a single, straightforward fact - a
rhetorical question
25Sample Essential Questions
Q
- Who are my true friends - and how do I know for
sure? - How rational is the market?
- Does a good read differ from a great book? Why
are some books fads, and others classics? - To what extent is geography destiny?
- Should an axiom be obvious?
- How different is a scientific theory from a
plausible belief? - What is the governments proper role?
263 Stages of Design Stage 2
27Stage 2 Assessment Evidence
- Template fields ask
- What are key complex performance tasks indicative
of understanding? - What other evidence will be collected to build
the case for understanding, knowledge, and skill? - What rubrics will be used to assess complex
performance?
T
OE
R
28The big ideafor Stage 2
- The evidence should be credible helpful.
- Implications the assessments should
- Be grounded in real-world applications,
supplemented as needed by more traditional school
evidence - Provide useful feedback to the learner, be
transparent, and minimize secrecy - Be valid, reliable - aligned with the desired
results of Stage 1 (and fair)
29Just because the student knows it
- Evidence of understanding is a greater challenge
than evidence that the student knows a correct or
valid answer - Understanding is inferred, not seen
- It can only be inferred if we see evidence that
the student knows why (it works) so what? (why it
matters), how (to apply it) not just knowing
that specific inference
30Assessment of Understanding via the 6 facets
- i.e. You really understand when you can
- explain, connect, systematize, predict it
- show its meaning, importance
- apply or adapt it to novel situations
- see it as one plausible perspective among
others, question its assumptions - see it as its author/speaker saw it
- avoid and point out common misconceptions,
biases, or simplistic views
31Scenarios for Authentic Tasks
T
- Build assessments anchored in authentic tasks
using GRASPS - What is the Goal in the scenario?
- What is the Role?
- Who is the Audience?
- What is your Situation (context)?
- What is the Performance challenge?
- By what Standards will work be judged in the
scenario?
G
R
A
S
P
S
32Reliability Snapshot vs. Photo Album
- We need patterns that overcome inherent
measurement error - Sound assessment (particularly of State
Standards) requires multiple evidence over time -
a photo album vs. a single snapshot
33For Reliability SufficiencyUse a Variety of
Assessments
- Varied types, over time
- authentic tasks and projects
- academic exam questions, prompts, and problems
- quizzes and test items
- informal checks for understanding
- student self-assessments
34Some key understandings about assessment
- The local assessment is direct the state
assessment is indirect (an audit of local work) - It is therefore always unwise to merely mimic the
states assessment approaches - The only way to assess for understanding is via
contextualized performance - applying in the
broadest sense our knowledge and skill, wisely
and effectively - Performance is more than the sum of the drills
using only conventional quizzes and tests is
insufficient and as misleading as relying only
on sideline drills to judge athletic performance
ability
353 Stages of Design Stage 3
2. Determine acceptable evidence
36Stage 3 big idea
37Stage 3 Plan Learning Experiences Instruction
- A focus on engaging and effective learning,
designed in - What learning experiences and instruction will
promote the desired understanding, knowledge and
skill of Stage 1? - How will the design ensure that all students are
maximally engaged and effective at meeting the
goals?
L
38Think of your obligations via W. H. E. R. E. T.
O.
L
W
- Where are we headed? (the students Q!)
- How will the student be hooked?
- What opportunities will there be to be equipped,
and to experience and explore key ideas? - What will provide opportunities to rethink,
rehearse, refine and revise? - How will students evaluate their work?
- How will the work be tailored to individual
needs, interests, styles? - How will the work be organized for maximal
engagement and effectiveness?
H
E
R
E
T
O
39Note that some fields require you to enter one
idea at a time
- One idea per box allows for more powerful
searching, selecting, and attaching to units when
you browse - Essential questions
- Enduring understandings
- Tasks of complex performance
- Rubrics
- Also makes expert reviewer assignment of blue
ribbons more precise
Q
U
T
R
40Help in the Exchange about all template design
elements
- Get to know the icons!
- A summary of each field
- Examples for each field
- A self-test of your understanding for that field
- FAQs and Glossary
- A special unit in which each field is explained
click the icon for UBD TEMPLATE - Web links to resources for that field
Q
v
?
Ubd template
41for further information...
- Contact us
- Grant Wiggins, co-author grant_at_ubdexchange.org
- Jay McTighe, co-author jmctigh_at_aol.com
- Steve Petti, webmaster steve_at_newimagemedia.com