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Curriculum Evaluation

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Opportunity to practice discriminating between similar skills or concepts. Distributed ... Practice and review needs work. Perhaps adequate initial practice, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Curriculum Evaluation


1
Curriculum Evaluation
2
Citation and Skill Focus
  • Charles, R. I., et al. (1999). Math, Teachers
    Edition, Vol 2. New York Scott Foresman-Addison
    Wesley. (Note This is the second volume of the
    1st grade edition.)
  • Reading and writing numerals above 10

3
Strategy
  1. Look in the table of contents and identify the
    likely lessons where the skill is being taught.
  2. Look for a skills trace or scope and sequence
    that addresses where skills are taught for more
    information.
  3. Limit or expand scope based on how many lessons
    you find.

4
Strategy cont.
  • Review lessons, focusing on issues addressed in
    Chapter 2 and on the instructional guidelines in
    the relevant chapter of the text.
  • Strategies explicit and generalizable?
  • Teaching procedures of high quality? (modeling,
    adequate examples, scaffolding)
  • Sequence appropriate?
  • Examples, practice and review adequate?
  • Assessment aligned and frequent?

5
Table of Contents
6
Skills Trace
First introduced Introduced Develop Practice/ Apply Review
Make and write numbers to 19 Grade K 257 257 258, 263-274, 271
Count, add, and write groups of 10 Grade 1 259 259 S60, 263-264, 271, 532 356, 420, 532
Write numbers to 60 as tens and extras Grade1 261 261 262, 263-264, 271 346, 356, 420
7
Expand or Limit?
  • 3-5 lessons
  • Lessons 7-1, 7-2, 7-3.

8
Strategies?
  • Make and write numbers to 19
  • Use double ten frame. Give each student 19
    counters.
  • Have children count out 13 counters and place
    them on Workmat 3.
  • How many ten frames did you fill?
  • How many counters are left over?
  • What number shows 10 and 3?
  • Explicit?
  • Not bad. Strategy is replicable and steps are
    clear.
  • Generalizable?
  • Appropriate at conceptual stage. No focus on
    teaching reading and writing teen numbers without
    ten frame.

9
Strategies?
  • Count and add groups of 10. Write the decade
    number.
  • For each number, ask children the following
    questions
  • How many counters are in each ten frame?
  • How many ten frames are there?
  • How many counters are there all together?
  • Explicit?
  • Ok for teaching tens place value skill. Again, no
    model.
  • Generalizable?
  • Again, appropriate at conceptual stage, but not
    taken to the next level. They only say Guide
    children to see that an easy way to add 20 and 10
    would be to think 2 tens and 1 ten is 3 tens, or
    thirty.

10
Strategies?
  • Write numbers to 60 as tens and extras.
  • Explain that 2 groups of ten and 6 extras make
    26. Help children verify by counting each object
    in the picture. Then students have 3 more
    opportunities to count tens and extras to achieve
    a total.
  • Explicit?
  • Not very. (better would befirst I count groups
    of tens, next)
  • Generalizable?
  • Not very. Students are still learning in context
    of counting rather than focusing on place value
    and column alignment.

11
Teaching Procedures?
  • For all skills
  • Almost no modeling. Usually only one example.
  • Teacher assistance is not gradually faded. It
    appears to go from high support to no support.
  • Error correction is available, but not extensive.
  • For example, in Make and Write Numbers to 19
  • Observation Children may have trouble counting
    out given numbers of counters.
  • How to Help Count aloud with the children as
    they touch or move the counters.

12
Sequencing
  • General Guidelines
  • Preskills are taught before they are needed in
    strategies.
  • Easy skills are taught before more difficult
    ones.
  • Strategies and information that is likely to be
    confused are spaced or separated.

13
Sequencing
  • Make and write numbers to 19 (recommended from
    Stein text)
  • Preskills
  • Reading Read numerals between 0 and 10, rational
    counting of 2 groups.
  • Writing Read teen numbers accurately and
    fluently (i.e., 5 teen numbers at a rate of
    approximately 1 per sec.)
  • Sequence of instruction similar to reading teen
    numbers.
  • Introduce first irregular teen about 2 days after
    regular teens
  • Then introduce at a rate of about 1 per day if
    students are successful.

14
Sequencing
  • Make and write numbers to 19 (from AW text)
  • Preskills taught
  • Read and write numbers to 12
  • Addition
  • Sequence
  • All teens numbers introduced at once

15
Sequencing
  • Count and add groups of 10. Write the decade
    number.
  • Preskill (recommended from Stein text) Count by
    1s to 100 Skip count by 10s to 100
  • From AW text Not clear where or if these
    preskills are addressed

16
Sequencing
  • Write numbers to 60 as tens and extras.
  • Preskill (recommended from Stein text) Read
    teens numbers accurately and fluently (5 teens
    numbers in 8 seconds) Count by 1s to 100 Skip
    count by 10s to 100 tens place value facts.
  • From AW text
  • Teen numbers introduced, but not to fluency
  • Not clear whether Count bys and Skip counting
    were introduced.
  • Tens place value facts in previous lesson, but
    not to mastery.

17
Practice and Review
  • Initially massed to solidify students knowledge
  • Opportunity to practice discriminating between
    similar skills or concepts.
  • Distributed
  • Revisited over time
  • Accumulated
  • Concepts that are initially taught separately are
    reviewed together
  • Varied
  • Concepts are applied to a range of applications
    to promote generalization

18
Practice and Review
First introduced Introduced Develop Practice/ Apply Review
Make and write numbers to 19 Grade K 257 257 258, 263-274, 271
Count, add, and write groups of 10 Grade 1 259 259 S60, 263-264, 271, 532 356, 420, 532
Write numbers to 60 as tens and extras Grade1 261 261 262, 263-264, 271 346, 356, 420
19
Practice and Review
  • Make and write numbers to 19
  • 9 practice pages total
  • 16 items for introduction
  • Practice page 8 items
  • Reteaching page 4 items
  • Enrichment page 2 items
  • Problem Solving page 5 items
  • Practice Game unlimited
  • Stop and Practice 7 items
  • Mixed practice 4 items

20
Practice and Review
  • Count and add groups of ten
  • 13 pages total
  • Introduction 15 items
  • Practice page 11 items
  • Reteaching page 8 items
  • Enrichment page 7 items
  • Problem Solving page 5 items
  • Mixed Practice 1 item
  • Cumulative Review 1 item
  • Cumulative Review 1 item
  • Skill Practice Bank 6 items

21
Assessment and Instruction Link
  • Placement tests?
  • No
  • Recommendations for acceleration and remediation?
  • Yes, but limited
  • Another way to learn section
  • Options for reaching all learners
  • Enrichment and problem solving pages
  • Reteaching page
  • Assessments carefully aligned with instruction?
  • Not really.
  • Assessment in Close and Assess section

22
Conclusions
  • Strategies are reasonably explicit, but not
    highly generalizable
  • Teaching procedures are not well-articulated,
    although there are some error correction
    procedures
  • Sequencing is weak. Preskills possibly taught,
    but not to mastery. New skills not sequenced
    well.
  • Practice and review needs work. Perhaps adequate
    initial practice, but not for discriminative,
    distributed, and varied.
  • Assessment needs to be more frequent and aligned.

23
Adaptations for Students in Special Education
  • Add more modeling of strategies
  • Provide more scaffolding (leading) on how to
    apply strategies
  • Assess preskills and make sure they are firmly
    taught.
  • Improve sequence of instruction. For example,
    introduce regular teens first, then irregular.
  • Add additional practice and review. Focus on
    appropriate discriminative practice. Distribute
    over time.
  • Plan for more frequent assessment opportunities.
    Align to instruction more closely.
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