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Designs for Learning

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Title: Designs for Learning


1
Chapter 9
  • Designs for Learning

2
How to Read This Chapter
  • This chapter has been organized to help you
    become a creative designer of science teaching
    plans by drawing upon your knowledge of science
    and adolescent learners. You will develop a
    sequence of lessons as a mini-unit. You will
    also develop a course syllabus, giving you an
    opportunity to think about instruction at the
    level of an entire course of study.
  • It is advisable that you work through this
    chapter from beginning to end. When you finish
    the chapter, you will have created the following
    products
  • A rationale for a science unit with general
    goals.
  • A list of objectives (we'll call them intended
    outcomes) for a science unit grouped according to
    type of student learning.
  • A concept map showing the relationships among the
    central ideas in your unit.
  • An assessment plan describing measures to assess
    the major objectives of the unit to provide
    feedback to the students, and feedback for you on
    the effectiveness of your teaching.
  • An instructional plan (a set of lesson plans)
    describing the unit, including what learning
    objectives are intended, and the strategies you
    will employ to help student achieve the unit's
    objectives.

3
Invitations to Inquiry
  • What is pedagogical content knowledge? How is it
    different than content knowledge?
  • What processes can be used to design an
    instructional plan?
  • How should a teacher proceed to develop
    instruction?
  • What are intended learning outcomes? How do
    cognitions, affects, cognitive skills and
    psychomotor skills differ?
  • How can cognitive maps be utilized in the
    planning and development of teaching materials?
  • What are the elements of the following types of
    lessons direct/interactive, cooperative
    learning, constructivist and inquiry/laboratory?
  • What are the elements of a course of study?

4
Chapter 9 Map
5
Pedagogical Content Knowledge(PCK)
  • PCK is a teachers knowledge of how to help
    students understand specific subject matter.
  • Key questions include
  • What shall I do with my students to help them
    understand this science concept?
  • What materials are available to help me?
  • What are my students likely to already know and
    what will be difficult for them to learn?
  • How shall I best evaluate what my students have
    learned?

How would this help you teach about water on Mars?
6
Inquiry Activity 9.1 Science PCK
  • Visit one of the standards sites below
  • National Science Education Standards - Contents
  • Benchmarks On-Line
  • Select a science content area and at least one
    concept to teach.
  • Use Table 9.2 as a guide.
  • Identify one or more activities that will help
    students understand the chosen concept
  • Exploratorium
  • Access Excellence
  • Discovery Education

These are fast plants. What are are they? How
could fast plants help you teach concepts in
biology?
7
The Art of Designing Instruction
  • Just as an artist uses physical and intellectual
    tools to make a painting, this chapter presents
    you with tools to artistically design teaching
    plans and associated materials.
  • A cyclic process is outlined in this chapter to
    help to develop ideas for a science mini-unit.
  • To help you with the process, follow this link to
    a mini-unit developed by Jaime Delaney, a former
    graduate student at Georgia State University, and
    now a teacher in Colorado. Refer to it while you
    develop your own. Youll find lesson plans, a
    rationale, a concept map, and examples of
    outcomes, and evaluations.

8
Mini-Unit Design Process
9
Inquiry Activity 9.2 A Window into as High
School Science Teachers Approach to Lesson
Planning
  • Log-on to Teaching HS Science and select either
  • Chemical Reactions
  • Investigating Crickets
  • Exploring Mars
  • The Physics of Optics
  • View the video and record your responses to the 4
    procedural questions (2).
  • Summarize your thoughts, then follow Minds-on
    Strategies for this inquiry.

10
Design Step 1 Brainstorming
  • This should be a fast, free-flowing listing of
    terms, words, and phrases for the topic of your
    mini-unit. Work with a few peers to generate
    ideas.
  • You might want to look at the Standards and/or
    Benchmarks to spark your brainstorming.

11
Design Step 2 Name Your Mini-unit
  • This is way to give your unit focus-naming it
    helps.
  • Some ideas from your peers include
  • Whats Up with the Weather?
  • The Well Cell
  • Sensational Sediments
  • We are Family Study of Periodicity
  • What if you had a volcano in your backyard?

12
Design Step 3 Identify Focus Questions
  • Focus questions should help you define the heart
    of your unit or course. Two or three well
    designed questions will help your students draw
    upon prior knowledge and keep sight of the big
    idea.
  • Focus questions should center around the
    enduring understandings that promote science
    literacy.

13
Design Step 4 Identify Intended Learning
Outcomes
  • Use your initial list of ideas to create a list
    of intended learning outcomes. Outcomes are
    statements of what you want students to know or
    be able to do.
  • They are skills, concepts, and values you intend
    the students will learn.
  • Write these as precise statement starting with a
    verb, that indicates what learners should be able
    to do to demonstrate their knowledge.

14
Design Step 5 Categorize Outcomes
  • In this step, you will sort your outcomes into
    skill and nonskill categories.
  • Here is an example of intended outcomes from an
    environmental unit categorized into nonskill and
    skill groups.

15
Design Step 6 Develop a Concept Map of the Unit
  • Use the ideas developed by Novak and Gowin to
    develop a map of your mini-unit. You will
    probably revise this as you further develop the
    unit. The map is a tool for your planning and
    your students learning. Share it with them.

16
Design Step 7 Write a Rationale
  • At this stage youve worked with your unit enough
    so that you can write a rationale. How might this
    learning
  • affect the students future?
  • contributes to societal issues?
  • reflects the spirit and character of the
    scientific enterprise?
  • See the samples in the text. Here is part of one
    rationale.
  • The abilities, interests, needs, and talents of
    your students must also inform the rationale and
    emerging plans.

17
Design Step 8 Categorize Outcomes-Cognitions,
Affects and Skills
  • This step you will actually delay until after you
    have listed potential activities (step 9), and
    written lesson plans (step 10). You can then
    pull your outcomes from your lesson plans, and
    categorize them into four groups
  • Cognitions
  • Affects
  • Cognitive skills
  • Psychomotor skills
  • You should, however, review the nature of these
    categories of outcomes before you go to the next
    two steps.
  • Use the map on the next slide, and text material
    to write out one outcome for each category
    related to your mini-unit.

18
Map of Learning Outcomes
19
Design Step 9 Develop an Assessment Plan
  • Assessment in your mini-unit should include
  • Daily Formative Assessments of various types
    (observing, listening, informal quiz, written
    quiz, lab work, project, etc.)
  • One end of unit Summative Assessment (performance
    task, project, or traditional test)
  • Start with your initial ideas about assessment,
    then look ahead to Chapter 10 for more
    assessments ideas.

20
Design Step 10 List Potential Activities
  • Now that you have a framework for your mini-unit,
    you can do some exploring of science activities
    (use online and print resources), and then
    brainstorm with peers a list of potential
    activities. For web resources, check the section
    On the Web in The Art of Teaching Science text,
    or at the Art of Teaching Science online site.

21
Potential Activities
  • Youll find a collection of Planning Activities
    on the Companion Website. Take a look at them
    for examples of activities for you unit, and for
    further ideas on lesson plans

22
Design Step 11 Develop Lesson Plans
  • The mini-unit should contain between four and six
    lesson plans. You will find three types of
    templates for developing your plans. I recommend
    the first one, the Constructivist template, as
    there are many examples in the Art of Teaching
    Science, and Jaime Delaneys site, shown here,
    used the same template in the development of her
    lesson plans.
  • Sketch out your plans using the template of your
    choice, and then meet with at least one peer to
    explain the plans, and solicit feedback.
    Finalize your plans. Now you can pull all of the
    outcomes from your plans, and organize your
    learning outcomes.

Link to Jaime Delaneys Mini-unit to see examples
of lesson plans, and other elements of the
mini-unit.
23
Design Step 12 Implementation Revision
  • Teach your mini-unit to a group of middle or high
    school students.
  • If you cant do this, present one lesson to a
    group of peers.
  • In either case, video tape one lesson.
  • Reflect on your mini-unit by using the feedback
    you obtained from students, and peers. A complete
    list of reflection questions is located in the
    text. One example is
  • To what extent did students attain the learning
    outcomes (objectives) of the unit?
  • What revisions would you make in the unit?

24
Inquiry 9.3 Designing a The Course Syllabus
  • In this activity you will identify and describe
    the major elements of a course of study for a
    subject and content area of middle or high school
    science. Your product will be a course syllabus.
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