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Depth of Knowledge

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Title: Depth of Knowledge


1
Depth of Knowledge
  • a professional development session prepared by
  • PREPS, Inc.
  • November 2, 2005

2
PREPS
  • GUIDE TO SERVICES PRODUCTS-2005
  • Regional workshops free to member districts
  • Targeted assistancecustomized for districts
  • New partner with MDE on
  • Mattie T Technical Assistance Center
  • MDE Facilitation for ICAI and TST Three tier
    training

3
Our children are smarter than we think. We must
give them more responsibility as young people and
then expect more of them as they grow and
develop. Secretary of Education Richard
Riley State of American Education Address
February 18,1997
4
Session Goals are to
  • Create knowledge base of definition of Depth of
    Knowledge (DOK)
  • Increase awareness of alignment of MS state tests
    to DOK
  • Establish a common vocabulary of key terms
  • Promote understanding of critical linkages across
    curriculum standards, instruction, classroom
    assessment and large scale assessments (MCT,
    SATP, Writing)

5
The Changing Role of the Classroom Teacher
Teacher
Content Instructor
Reflective Practitioner
Facilitator of Learning
Teacher of Reading
Diagnostic Evaluator
6
Why Analyze the Data?
  • Right thing to do
  • Valuable teaching and learning tool
  • Accountability
  • State
  • Local
  • National (NAEP)
  • Professional Credibility-
  • Ability to communicate successfully with
    colleagues, students, parents, public, and
    policymakers

7
Begin with the End in Mind
  • - Steven Covey
  • Each and every student here has potential for
    greatness.
  • Each deserves an equal opportunity to learn.
  • Which student do you want as your doctor, pilot,
    your grandchildrens teacher?

8
Thats good, because education paysAnnual
earnings of 25-34 year-olds by attainment, 2001
Source U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and
Bureau of the Census, Current Population Survey,
March 2002.
9
Unfortunately, when these new freshmen arrive in
college, many must take remedial (high-school)
level courses
10
Big gap between what students, teachers think is
necessary and what colleges and employers need
  • While parents, students and teachers continue to
    believe in the diplomas value, those who judge
    the quality of high school graduates most closely
    first-year college professors and employers
    express strong skepticism.

11
Both professors and employers have similar worries
Percentage of employers and professors rating
graduates skills as fair or poor
  • Most employers and professors question whether
    high school graduates have the knowledge and
    skills required on the job or in the college
    classroom.

12
Mississippi vs. NAEP Proficiency Levels
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Increased rigor has major benefitsA strong h.s.
curriculum improves college completion and
narrows gaps
11
28
Completing at least Algebra II plus other
courses. Source Adapted from Adelman, Clifford,
U.S. Department of Education, Answers in the
Toolbox, 1999.
19
Increased rigor in the curriculum offerings for
this state has major benefits
  • Better prepared students for higher level
    coursework
  • Better prepared students for the postsecondary
    experience
  • Better prepared students for workforce and
    technical related occupations

20
Monster.comWhat did YOU want to be?
21
  • Teach Different

22
Reflection
Without reflection, it is possible to teach a
single year 25 times over.
23
Conceptual Model of Focused Instruction
Curriculum Frameworks and Test Alignment
NAEP
  • MCT
  • SATP

Mississippi Curriculum Frameworks
National Professional Organizations (IRA/NCTE)
Thinking Skills --Depth of Knowledge
24
McRel findings
  • 200 standards and 3,093 benchmarks for 14
    different subject areas in national and state
    level documents
  • Average time to teach these standards and
    benchmarks is 15,465 hours. Average school year
    is 180 days with 5.6 hours /day of instructional
    time
  • Not all class time is used. Range of actual time
    used for instruction in a classroom is 21-69.

25
McRel findings (contd)
  • If the high of 69 is used to determine amount of
    instruction that actually takes place in a given
    school year, the total of instructional hours
    would be 9,042.
  • 15,645 hours are needed to teach all of the
    standards, yet best case scenario, teacher would
    have only 9,042 hours.
  • In order to address all of the standards,
    students would have to go to school K-grade 21!

26
DOK Glossary Prepared by PREPS, Inc.
  • Alignment
  • Benchmarks
  • Test Blueprint
  • Disaggregated Data
  • Skill
  • Objective
  • Proficiency Level
  • Standards
  • Cognitive Demand
  • Opportunity to Learn
  • Opportunity Gap
  • Differentiated Instruction
  • Strategic Extended Thinking
  • Universal Design

27
Increased rigor may be implemented in a number of
ways there can be differences in how the content
can be tested or taught.
  • In the present Mississippi Mathematics
    Curriculum Framework, students in the 5th grade
    are asked to identify, describe, compare and
    classify geometric figures.
  • To master this skill, students would identify
    rectangles, triangles, circles, and other
    geometric shapes. They would have to describe
    them, compare them, and know what characteristics
    are used to group them in classifications.

28
Specific Example of Adding Rigor to the MS
Curriculum Frameworks
  • In the revised Mississippi Mathematics (2006)
    Curriculum Framework, students must take that
    knowledge further by justifying why a shape is a
    rectangle or triangle by understanding the
    properties of the figures and how these figures
    can be described using coordinate geometry.

29
Why do we care about cognitive demand?
  • Standards are big ideas!!!
  • Modern theories of learning focus on developing
    deep understanding to facilitate transfer.
  • Students cannot develop deep understanding unless
    they are provided opportunities on both learning
    and assessment tasks.

30
Analyzing Cognitive Demand Adapted from Webb,
Norman L., (1999). Alignment of Science and
Mathematics Standards and Assessments in Four
States.
  • Higher Demand
  • Strategic Thinking
  • Extended Thinking
  • Lower Demand
  • Recall
  • Basic Application of Skill/Concept

31
Blooms Taxonomy-the classic
  • Knowledge usually rote memory of factual
    material
  • Comprehension involves translating from one
    level of abstractions to another (e.g., give an
    original example of a concept or principle).
  • Application - the ability to use learned material
    in novel situations
  • Analysis - the ability to break down material
    into its component parts so that its
    organizational structure may be understood (e.g.,
    distinguishing fact from opinion)
  • Synthesis - the ability to put parts together to
    form a new wholeusually involved producing a
    product.
  • Evaluation - the ability to judge the value of
    material (statement, novel, poem, research
    report) for a given purpose. This is like
    analysis but with a logical and defensible value
    judgment

32
Depth of Knowledge Levels(Webb, 1999)
  • Recall-recall of a fact, information, or
    procedure
  • Basic Application of Skill/Concept-Use of
    information, conceptual knowledge, procedures,
    two or more steps, etc.
  • Strategic Thinkingrequires reasoning, developing
    a plan or sequence of steps has some complexity
    more than 1 possible answer generally takes less
    than 10 minutes to do.
  • Extended Thinkingrequires an investigation time
    to think and process multiple conditions of the
    problem or task and more than 10 minutes to do
    non-routine manipulations.

33
Expectations for Student Performance
Acquire
Use
Extend
Skill/Concept
Recall
Strategic Thinking
Extended Thinking
Memorize
Perform Procedures
Demonstrate Understanding
Conjecture, Generalize Prove
Solve non- routine/ make connections
Memorize
Conduct Investigations
Communicate Understanding
Analyze Information
Apply concepts /make connections
Recall
Demonstrate /Explain
Analyze/ Investigate
Evaluate
Generate /Create
34
Depth of Knowledge
  • Two factors
  • 1. Sophistication and complexity. Sophistication
    will depend on the abstractness of the activity,
    the degree to which simple knowledge and skills
    have to be recalled or drawn upon, the amount of
    cognitive processing required, the complexity of
    the content concepts used, the amount of content
    that has to be recalled or drawn upon, the lack
    of routine, and the need to extend knowledge
    meaningfully or produce novel findings.

35
Depth of Knowledge
  • 2. Prior instruction. Test items that address
    complex knowledge can still have a low depth of
    knowledge level, if the required knowledge is
    commonly known and students with normal
    instruction at a grade level should have had the
    opportunity to learn how to routinely
    (habitually) perform what is being asked

36
Depth of Knowledge
  • Level 1. Recall and Reproduction
  • This level represents recall of information such
    as a fact, definition, term, or a simple
    procedure, as well as performing a simple process
    or procedure. Level 1 only requires students to
    demonstrate a rote response, use a well-known
    formula, follow a set procedure (like a recipe),
    or perform a clearly defined series of steps. A
    simple procedure is well-defined and typically
    involves only one step.

37
Depth of Knowledge
  • Level 1. Recall and Reproduction - Examples
  • Language Arts Which of these means about the
    same thing as the word exacerbate?
  • Science What is the process called which plants
    use to manufacture sugar from sunlight?
  • Mathematics Which of the following numbers,
    when rounded to the nearest thousand, becomes
    90,000?
  • Social studies What was the main reason many
    leaders in Great Britain leaned toward supporting
    the Confederacy in the Civil War?

38
Depth of Knowledge
  • Level 2. Basic Reasoning, Using Skills and
    Concepts
  • This includes the engagement of some mental
    processing beyond recalling or reproducing a
    response. The content knowledge or process
    involved is more complex than in level 1. Items
    require students to make some decisions as to how
    to approach the question or problem. In science
    and mathematics, keywords that generally
    distinguish a Level 2 item include classify,
    organize, estimate, make observations,
    collect and display data, and compare data.
    These actions imply more than one step.

39
Depth of Knowledge
  • Level 3. Complex or Strategic Thinking
  • This level requires reasoning, planning, using
    evidence, and a higher level of thinking than the
    previous two levels. Students would go beyond
    explaining or describing how and why to
    justifying the how and why through application
    and evidence. The cognitive demands at Level 3
    are complex and abstract. The complexity does not
    result only from the fact that there could be
    multiple answers, a possibility for both Levels 1
    and 2, but because the multi-step task requires
    more demanding reasoning.

40
Depth of Knowledge
  • Level 3. Complex or Strategic Thinking
    Examples
  • Language Arts The style in this passage is
    characterized by similes like these smooth as
    pudding, crisp as a fresh apple, and rough as
    shredded coconut. Which of these best explains
    the authors purpose in using these similes?
  • Science In a laboratory experiment, an enzyme
    is combined with its substrate at time zero. The
    absorbance of the resulting solution is measured
    at five-minute intervals. In this procedure, an
    increase in absorbance is related to the amount
    of product formed during the reaction. The
    experiment uses three preparations. (Students
    will see illustrations.) The most likely reason
    for the failure of the absorbance to increase
    significantly after 10 minutes in preparation III
    is that . . . . (multiple choice options)

41
Depth of Knowledge
  • Level 3. Complex or Strategic Thinking Examples
  • Mathematics Julie wants to fence in an area for
    her dog. She can afford only 36 feet of fencing.
    She is considering various shaped for the fenced
    in area, but she wants the shape to have four
    sides that are whole numbers lengths and contain
    four right angles. What is the largest area that
    Julie can enclose with 36 feet of fencing?
  • Social Studies A newspaper prints a story that
    criticizes the current administrations policies.
    The Bill of Rights allows a government official
    to respond to this headline by . . . . (multiple
    choice options)

42
Depth of Knowledge
  • Level 4. Extended Thinking or Reasoning
  • This level represents tasks with high cognitive
    demands and that are very complex. Students are
    required to make several connectionsrelate ideas
    within the content area or among content
    areasand have to select or devise one approach
    among many alternatives on how the situation can
    be solved. Many on-demand assessments will not
    include any assessment activities that could be
    classified as Level 4. However, competencies and
    objectives can be stated in such a way as to
    expect students to perform extended thinking.
    Also, classroom assessments could require Level 4
    tasks.

43
Depth of Knowledge
  • Level 4. Extended Thinking or Reasoning
    Examples
  • Language Arts Your teacher has given you an
    assignment to write an informative essay.
    (Generation of a product planning, writing,
    editing)
  • Science Your teacher has asked you to design and
    conduct a science investigation. (Generation of a
    product data collection, display,
    interpretation)

44
Depth of Knowledge
  • Level 4. Extended Thinking or Reasoning
    Examples
  • Mathematics Students are asked to identify a
    real world problem that requires the
    application of mathematics, describe the possible
    procedure(s) for solving, and explain the outcome
    and their reasoning.
  • Social Studies Students are given the scenario
    of acid rain potentially causing problems in a
    specific farming community. Students are to
    define and describe the problem with supporting
    data, propose alternative solutions to the
    problem, select one solution, and explain why it
    would be the best.

45
Depth of Knowledge
  • Assessments must be demanding cognitively as what
    students are expected to know and do as stated in
    the curriculum frameworks. This is one aspect of
    the alignment between assessments and curriculum.
  • Each test question does not have to have
    precisely the same depth-of knowledge level as
    the corresponding competency or objective.
    However, the majority of test items on an
    assessment must correspond to the most common
    depth-of-knowledge level for competency and
    related objectives.

This information is adapted from Webb, Norman L.,
Research Monograph No. 8, Criteria for Alignment
of Expectations and Assessments in Mathematics
and Science Education, Council of Chief State
School Officers, 1997.
46
More than Magic!
  • Diagnosing learning characteristics of students
    is one of a teachers greatest challenges, BUT
  • Tackling the problem is a moral obligation that
    we as educators have.

47

Tell me I forget Show me I remember Involve
me I understand.
48
  • What can we do to ensure that all students are
  • prepared with the appropriate depth of knowledge
  • to be successful beyond grade twelve?
  • Analyze cognitive demand for district, and state
    instruction and assessment standards
  • Make appropriate adjustments to address range of
    cognitive
  • Choose essential standards to make it easier to
    move to challenging depths of knowledge.

49
Opportunity to learn has the strongest
relationship with student achievement of all
school level factors identified. (What
Works in Schools, Marzano, 2003.
50
  • One of the most overlooked instructional tools is
    the CLASSROOM assessment.

51
It Only Happens WhenAll the Stars are Aligned
52
Data tell what isWe determine what will be.
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