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The New Basics Project

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An integrated framework for curriculum, pedagogy and assessment that defines ... To provide teachers with a simplified, ... Draw on a repertoire of practices ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The New Basics Project


1
The New Basics Project
2
Qld State Education - 2010
  • An integrated framework for curriculum, pedagogy
    and assessment that defines essential areas of
    learning, appropriate and effective approaches to
    teaching, affiliated modes of assessment and
    standards and assurances about student
    development at key points at schooling.

3
Aims of the Project
  • To provide Education Queensland schools with a
    futures-oriented, relevant approach to
    curriculum, pedagogy and assessment
  • To provide teachers with a simplified, useful
    framework for focusing pedagogy on improved
    intellectual and social outcomes
  • To provide parents and communities with a
    systematic, credible means for tracking students
    development and outcomes.

4
Conceptual Pivots
NEW BASICS
PRODUCTIVE PEDAGOGIES
RICH TASKS
5
The New Basics Organisers
  • Life Pathways and social futures
  • Who am I and where am I going?
  • Multiliteracies and communications media
  • How do I make sense of, and communicate with,
    the world?
  • Active citizenship
  • What are my rights and responsibilities in
    communities, cultures and economies?
  • Environments and technologies
  • How do I describe, analyse and shape the world
    around me?

6
The New Basics
  • Life Pathways and social futures
  • Who am I and where am I going?
  • Living in and preparing for diverse family
    relationships
  • Collaborating with peers and others
  • Maintaining health and care of the self
  • Learning about and preparing for new worlds of
    work
  • Developing initiative and enterprise

7
The New Basics
  • Multiliteracies and communications media
  • How do I make sense of, and communicate with the
    world?
  • Blending traditional and new communications media
  • Making creative judgements and engaging in
    performance
  • Communicating using language and intercultural
    understandings
  • Mastering literacy and numeracy

8
The New Basics
  • Active citizenship
  • What are my rights and responsibilities in
    communities, cultures and economies?
  • Interacting within local and global communities
  • Operating within shifting cultural identities
  • Understanding local and global economic forces
  • Understanding the historical foundation of social
    movements and civic institutions

9
The New Basics
  • Environments and technologies
  • How do I describe, analyse and shape the world
    around me?
  • Developing a scientific understanding of the
    world
  • Working with design and engineering technologies
  • Building and sustaining environments

10
Productive Pedagogies
  • Four dimensions of practice
  • intellectual quality
  • connectedness
  • supportive classroom environment
  • recognition of difference
  • The Queensland School Reform Longitudinal Study
    found that the presence of all four dimensions
    within a lesson will contribute to productive
    pedagogy.

11
  • Problem-based curriculum
  • Student direction
  • Social support
  • Academic Engagement
  • Explicit criteria
  • Self-regulation
  • Cultural knowledges
  • Inclusivity
  • Narrative
  • Group identity
  • Active Citizenship
  • Major Strategies
  • Higher-order thinking
  • Deep knowledge
  • Deep understanding
  • Substantive conversation
  • Knowledge as problematic
  • Metalanguage
  • Knowledge integration
  • Background knowledge
  • Connectedness to the world

Intellectual Quality
Sup. Class Env.
Rec of Dif
Connectedness
12
Rich Tasks
  • Have real-world value and use
  • They are problem-based and have relevance and
    power in everyday life and new worlds of work.
  • Draw on a repertoire of practices
  • There is a broad range of cognitive and
    cultural, linguistic and social skills to be
    acquired developmentally.

13
Rich Tasks
  • Range across operational fields and knowledge
  • Are transdisciplinary.
  • Are challenging
  • Have significant intellectual, cognitive and
    developmental depth and breadth.

14
Rich Tasks
  • There are three 3-year spans, Years 1 to 3,
    Years 4 to 6, and Years 7 to 9.
  • For 20012003, there are five Rich Tasks for
    Years 13, seven for Years 46, and eight for
    Years 79.
  • It is estimated that time allocated to Rich Tasks
    will be 4060 per cent of the school timetable

15
An Example of Rich Tasks
  • Years 1-3 , Rich Task 4
  • Read and Talk about Stories
  • Students will view, read and listen to fiction
    stories presented in different media forms. They
    will analyse characters and settings and compare
    different stories and different media,
    incorporating their own experiences. They will
    present their ideas in a performance using a
    selected combination of words, visual images,
    music and drama.

16
An Example of Rich Tasks
  • Years 4-6 , Rich Task 6
  • Design, Make and Display a Product
  • Students will design, or improve the design of,
    a purposeful product. They will make the product
    or a working model or prototype. As part of a
    public display promoting their product, they will
    flesh out a (restricted) marketing plan and
    explore the suitability of materials for mass
    manufacture.

17
An Example of Rich Tasks
  • Years 7-9, Rich Task 2
  • Improving Wellbeing in the Community
  • Students will work with a local community to
    develop a plan for improving an aspect of the
    wellbeing of this community and then enact the
    plan, modifying it as necessary. They will
    evaluate the level of success they experience in
    enacting their plan and, where necessary,
    recommend future actions.

18
TEACHERS WORK BACKWARDS FROM WHOLE, EDUCATIONALLY
MEANINGFUL, VALUABLE TASKS BY USING THEIR
PROFESSIONAL JUDGMENT TO BREAK THESE DOWN INTO
SEQUENCES OF INSTRUCTION AROUND TARGETED
REPERTOIRES OF PRACTICE AND VARIOUS OPERATIONAL
FIELDS OF KNOWLEDGE
19
Schools will need to
  • develop a curriculum profile of the school
  • determine the timing for the tasks
  • decide on the repertoires of practice to be
    taught
  • audit curriculum coverage.

20
Further Information
  • Assessment New Basics Branch
  • Education House
  • PO Box 33
  • Brisbane Albert Street Qld 4002
  • E-mail newbasics_at_qed.qld.gov.au
  • Web http//education.qld.gov.au/corporate/newbasi
    cs
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