Title: K-12 Social Studies Unit Development Training
1K-12 Social Studies Unit Development Training
Part II
Log onto the internet.
2- A morning break around 1030
- Lunch at 1200 noon
- Afternoon break around 230
- For unanswered questions and additional
discussion use the Parking Lot. - https//todaysmeet.com/12StepsforWallace
http//www.123rf.com/clipart-vector/logistics.html
3Ground Rules
- A few agreements for our two days together
- TRUST THE PROCESS
- Place electronic devices on vibrate or off
- Participate fully
- Limit side-bar conversations
- Respectfully disagree
4Ahas Oh Ohs From Yesterday?
Source http//drawn.ca/archive/gary-taxalis-oh-no
-oh-oh-toys/
Source http//eoprahwinfrey.com/2011/05/oprah-win
freys-top-10-life-lessons/
Day OneExit Ticket
5- Trust the Process!
- It really does work.
6Todays Purpose Expected Outcomes
- You will be able to
- Learn how to scaffold generalizations in order to
strengthen them and increase rigor. - Learn the purpose for the guiding/essential
questions and how to write your guiding questions
so that they lead students to inductively arrive
at the generalizations. - Learn how to develop performance tasks that
assess the KUD (Know, Understand Do). - Determine next steps for your district/school to
begin designing concept-based units of
instruction in preparation for the session in
March.
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8Your Turn
9GENERALIZATIONEnduring Understanding
- Two or more concepts in a relationship...
What do I understand as a result of this
study? CONCEPTUAL IDEAS THAT TRANSFER DEVELOP
DEEP UNDERSTANDING
10Helpful Guidelines To Remember When Writing
Generalizations
- Full sentence statements, describing what,
specifically, students should understand about
the critical concepts in the lesson
- Guidelines
- No proper or personal nouns or pronouns
- Use a present tense verb
- Show a relationship between at least two concepts
- Transferable idea that is supported by the
factual content - Sometimes needs the use of a qualifier (often,
can, may) - Think about the connections between and among
concepts in the various strands from your web.
11Common Errors
- Use of past tense verbs or proper nouns which
makes them facts instead of generalizations - Use of proper nouns or pronouns
- Only one concept represented
- Use of value statements
- Lack of clarity (poor word choice or sentence
construction) - Use of level 1 verbs impact, affect, influence,
is, are, have (need to scaffold)
12Lets Look at our GeneralizationsFrom Yesterday
Google Document
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14What is a Level 1 Generalization?
- Use the following verbs
- influence, impact, affect, is, are
- Lack clarity and specificity
- These are the generalizations we should scaffold
to Level 2.
15Scaffolding Thinking
- The ideas in your generalization
- Should grow in sophistication.
- Should become clearer from level to level because
of increased specificity use of more specific
concepts. - The verbs should be active and present tense.
- Should be based in fact. (Use often, can,
and may if not true all the time, but still
important) - Should be important and developmentally
appropriate.
16Scaffolding Thinking
- The verbs in your generalization
- Should be active and present tense.
- Should be clear and specific.
- Impacts, Influences, Affects, Is, Are(are
always Level 1 verbs only) - Level I verbs should be replaced to provide you
with a generalization that presents a clearer and
more specific idea.
17Scaffolding From Level I to Level II
Generalizations
- To scaffold a Level 1 generalization to Level 2
ask how? or why? - Level 1
- Government policies are influenced by societal
norms. - Now ask the question (How? or Why?) How are
governmental policies influenced by societal
norms? - Level 2
- Governmental policies differ based on time,
place, values, and beliefs.
18Scaffolding From Level I to Level II
Generalizations
- To scaffold a Level 2 generalization to Level 3
ask so what? - Level 2
- Governmental policies differ based on time,
place, values, and beliefs. - Now ask the question So what? What is the
significance or effect that these factors have on
governmental policies? - Level 3
- The more a countrys people participate in the
political process, the more the Governmental
Policies should benefit the General Welfare over
the welfare of Interest Groups.
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20Lets Look at our GeneralizationsFrom Yesterday
Do Any Need To Be Moved To Level II
Generalizations?
Google Document
21Practice Evaluating Scaffolding
- Your Task.
- Evaluate each of the generalizations you and your
group wrote for homework. - Scaffold ALL level 1 generalizations up to level
2. - Choose one of your new level 2 generalizations to
scaffold up to a level 3.
Level 2 Generalization
Level 2 Generalization
Level 3 Generalization
22Evaluating Scaffolding Criteria
- Do the ideas should grow in sophistication?
- Do the ideas should become clearer from level to
level because they are more specific (use more
specific micro concepts)? - Did the writers answer their question at each
level? - Did the writer avoid using impacts, influences,
affects? - Are the verbs active and present tense?
- Are the ideas based in fact? (Use often,
can, and may if not - true all the time, but still important)?
- Are the ideas developmentally appropriate?
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24Writing Guiding Questions
Step 7
25Guiding/Essential Questions
- Guide student thinking through the factual
material to inductively arrive at the
generalization - Can be factual, conceptual, or provocative
(debatable) - Engages student interest and intellect
- Promotes discussion and debate
- Promotes inquiry
- Each generalization should have 3-5 questions
- A complete unit should only have 1-2 provocative
questions for the entire unit.
26 Lets Observe Teachers Working On Guiding
Questions For Their Unit
27Factual Questions
- Locked in time, place, or situation
Example In what ways did the increasing
industrialization and overproduction in the late
19th century in the U.S. lead to a need for
foreign markets?
28Conceptual Essential Questions
- These questions can transfer over time and space.
Example Why do stronger nations conquer weaker
nations?
29Provocative Essential Questions
- These questions have no right or wrong answer
and should stir debate.
Examples
Was the New Deal a fair deal or a raw deal?
Is war ever justifiable?
30You decide.
- How did native peoples in Europe and South
America use and adapt to their environment? - Factual
- Conceptual
- Provocative
31You decide.
- Is economic stability in Africa possible?
- Factual
- Conceptual
- Provocative
32You decide.
- How can immigration present both advantages and
disadvantages for people moving to a new region
or nation? - Factual
- Conceptual
- Provocative
33An Example WH
- Generalizations Exploration and innovation
often brings regions into contact with one
another and result in the movement of people,
goods, and ideas. - What innovations and ideas enabled European
nations to engage in trans-Atlantic exploration?
- In what ways can economic goals affect government
actions and individual rights? - What is the economic impact of emigration on a
society? - In what ways does demand for natural resources
fuel exploration? - Why was gold such a desirable resource for
nations of Europe during the Age of Exploration?
- How is the need for oil affecting the way that
nations in South America and Europe participate
in the global economy?
- Unit Topic
- Historical Foundations of Contemporary Societies
- Conceptual Lens
- Patterns and Influence
- Unit Overview
- A variety of factors influence the way that
people lived and interacted in the past. Events
and ideas from the past continue to shape
contemporary societies. Those events and ideas
often form patterns that help us understand not
only the past, but the present as well. In this
unit we will examine the historical foundations
of contemporary societies around the world.
34An Example AH2
- Unit Topic
- Everybody Wants To Rule The World
- Note The content of this unit is the Cold War
and Its Effects. - Conceptual Lens
- Power Conflict
- Unit Overview
- This unit will focus on the elements of the
foreign policy known as containment and the major
conflicts that shaped the Cold War. Students
will begin to look at how containment affected
domestic policy and American life as well as the
U.S. position as a power in the global world.
- Generalization Democratic governments seek
public support and use propaganda to influence
issues of national security and domestic policy
issues and debates. - In what ways did the U.S. use emotional response
to generate public support for the search for
communists and anarchists in American government?
- How might fear affect political or government
action? - Is the restriction of civil liberties ever
justified? - How have both the Red Scare and the Patriot Act
impacted the constitutional rights of U.S.
citizens?
35Practice Writing Essential Questions
- Choose one of your generalizations and write one
of each type of guiding question. - Factual
- Conceptual
- Provocative
http//www.online-stopwatch.com/world-games-runnin
g/
36Steps 8 9
Identifying Key Content Skills
36
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39Skills and Content
40 Lets Observe Teachers Discussing The Key
Concepts and Key Skills of Their Unit
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42Step 10
Aligning Assessments (Performance Tasks and
Other Assessments)
42
43 Assessing for Understanding
Step 10
- Begin with the end in mind (KUD) and
- work toward assessing for understanding.
- Identify the desired results (KUD
Know/Understand/Do). - Design meaningful performance tasks that meet
critical KUDs. - Develop effective criteria to evaluate the
results.
U
D
K
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45Developing The Performance Tasks
- The Student Performances
- Combine content and skills into a format that
shows what students know and can do with what
they understand. - Reflect the most important
- Understand (Generalizations),
- Know (Factual Knowledge), and
- Able to Do (Skills) of the unit.
- Student Performances are the assessment evidence
of mastery. - Provide students with opportunities to actively
demonstrate understanding of concepts,
generalizations and content in the standards and
the unit. - Student Performances are not simple activities.
46- How do you design performance tasks
- that demonstrate mastery of desired
- outcomes?
47A Quality Performance Assessment Is
- Aligned with generalizations/essential
understandings - Authentic/Scenario/Simulation based
- Designed to offer students options
- Evaluated against clear criteria
48The Components To Developing Performance Tasks
Performance Task Template What
Topic Why Generalization(s) How
Student Performance
49Heres A Performance Task Example
What As one of a team of cultural
anthropologists, analyze the interactions of
the early European settlers and American
Indians. Why In order to understand that
Interaction between different groups may lead
to cultural diffusion. How Research one
aspect of early Native American Indian and
European culture (history, arts, religion,
government, daily living, land use...) before
and after the interaction between the groups.
Drawing from your research, write a case study
describing the obvious impacts or influences
that these merging cultures have had on each
other over time. As one member of the
anthropological team, present an insightful and
powerful speech to the state historical society,
using visuals or multi-media, detailing the
positive and negative lessons to be learned from
the historical study of merging cultures.
50Lets Observe Teachers Trying to Decide Upon a
Performance Task for Their Unit
51Working It Out Together!
Is It A Task or An Activity?
52Practice Recognizing Performance vs. Activity
- Curriculum Standard
- Analyze Lincolns ideas about liberty,
equality, union, and government as contained in
his first and second inaugural address and the
Gettysburg Address. - Enduring Understanding (Generalization)
- Watershed events mark turning points in
history. - Student Performance or Activity?
- Recite from memory key passages from the
Gettysburg Address.
ACTIVITY
53Practice Recognizing Performance vs. Activity
- Curriculum Standard
- Analyze Lincolns ideas about liberty,
equality, union, and government as contained in
his first and second inaugural address and the
Gettysburg Address. - Essential Understanding (Generalization)
- Watershed events mark turning point in
history. - Student Performance or Activity?
- Recite from memory key passages from the
Gettysburg - Address. Use these passages to tell why
Lincolns Gettysburg Address is considered a
watershed event in American History. -
54Practice Recognizing Performance vs. Activity
- Curriculum Standard
- Explain the impact of significant
international events such as WWI and WWII on
changes in the role of government. - Predict the effects of selected
contemporary legislation on the roles of
government. - Essential Understanding (Generalization)
- As a society becomes more complex, the role of
government increases in the daily life of its
citizens. - Student Performance or Activity?
- Create a 3-column chart. In the first column
list significant international events such as
WWI, WWII and Global Terrorism. In the second
column show some of the resulting U.S.
legislation, or governmental policies, enacted in
response to these events. In the third column
detail the impact of the legislation on the daily
life of citizens. In a paragraph below the chart,
answer this question How does the increasing
complexity (social, economic, political) of a
society lead to the expansion of government?
PERFORMANCE
55Working on Performance Statements
- Curriculum Standard
- Identify the reasons for and describe the system
of checks and balances outlined in the U.S.
Constitution. - Essential Understanding (Generalization)
- The values, beliefs, and ideals of a country are
reflected in their laws and political documents. - Student Performance or Activity?
- Design a graphic organizer demonstrating the U.S.
system of checks and balances. Then have students
use the graphic organizer to write a defense as
to why they think the system of checks and
balances reflects American values and beliefs.
PERFORMANCE
56Work Together At Your Table To Turn The Following
Two Activities Into Performances
- 2
- Curriculum Standard
- Analyze the causes and effects of
physical and human geographic
factors on major
historical and
contemporary events in the
United States. - Essential Understanding (Generalization)
- The availability of human and
material resources provide tactical
advantages in times of war. - Turn The Below Activity Into A Performance
- Create pie graphs which show
available resources to the
North/South before
the Civil War.
1 Curriculum Standard Analyze the
effects of increased global trade on the
interactions between nations in Europe, Southwest
Asia, the Americas and Africa. Essential
Understanding (Generalization) The desire for
resources and markets can be catalysts for
exploration and may lead to increased global
interaction, economic competition and additional
colonial possessions. Turn The Below Activity
Into A Performance Create a virtual poster that
visually shows at least 3 effects of European
nations acquisition of colonial resources in the
New World.
http//www.online-stopwatch.com/eggtimer-countdown
/
57Now Its A Performance
- 1
- Curriculum Standard
- Analyze the effects of increased global
trade on the interactions between nations in
Europe, Southwest Asia, the Americas and Africa. - Essential Understanding (Generalization)
- The desire for resources and markets can be
catalysts for exploration and may lead to
increased global interaction, economic
competition and additional colonial possessions. - Student Performance or Activity?
- Create a virtual poster that visually shows at
least 3 effects of both Spain and Britains
acquisition of colonial resources in the New
World. - Use this poster to support an argument that
would persuade someone that the benefits far
outweighed any negative consequences.
58Now Its A Performance
- 2
- Curriculum Standard
- Analyze the causes and effects of physical
and human geographic factors on major historical
and contemporary events in the United States. - Essential Understanding (Generalization)
- The availability of human and material
resources provide tactical advantages in times of
war. - Student Performance
- Create pie graphs which show available
resources to the North/South before the Civil
War, and describe the availability of those
resources affected the outcome of the war for
each side.
59Your Turn
Performance Task Template What
Topic Why Generalization(s) How
Student Performance
http//www.online-stopwatch.com/world-games-runnin
g/
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61Step 11
Learning Experiences
61
62 The Learning Experiences
Planning With The End In Mind
Step 11
- Learning Experiences
- Are developed after you have designed the
performance task - Are the content, understandings and skills that a
teacher will need to teach and students will need
to learn in order to effectively complete the
performance task.
63Lets View A Few Examples
Activity Performance Generalization (What Students Should Understand)
Recite from memory key passages from the Gettysburg Address. In a speech recite passages you have learned from Lincolns Gettysburg Address and tell why these passages provide evidence to support the Address being considered a watershed event in American History. Watershed events mark turning point in history.
Design a graphic organizer demonstrating the U.S. system of checks and balances. Design a graphic organizer demonstrating the U.S. system of checks and balances. Use the information in that graphic organizer to write a defense as to why they think the system of checks and balances reflects American values and beliefs. The values, beliefs, and ideals of a country are reflected in their laws and political documents.
Draw a Venn diagram showing the comparisons between life as a Athenian citizen and life as a Spartan citizen. Draw a Venn diagram showing the comparisons between life as a Athenian citizen and life as a Spartan citizen. Use this diagram to support a speech that could be given to someone from ancient Egypt whom you are trying to convince to come live in Sparta or in Athens. People are often introduced to new goods, ideas and opportunities as they move from one place to another.
Example One
Example Two
Example Three
64Practice
- Your task now is to craft deliberate learning
experiences that will lead students to
successfully demonstrating their knowledge,
understanding and skills of the learning. - Working with your partners, craft appropriate and
deliberate learning experiences that align with
the standards, generalizations, and performance
task that you have been given!
65Lets Watch Our Teachers One Last Time Deciding
On The Learning Experiences
66- Trust the Process!
- It really does work.
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68Planning Your Next Steps
69Exit Ticket
- Please complete the post-assessment evaluation.
- Thank You!