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+ Chapter 9 Planning for Learning EDPC605
19

Edpc605 9&10

Sep 06, 2014

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Education

Barbara King

 
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Page 1: Edpc605 9&10

+

Chapter 9Planning for Learning

EDPC605

Page 2: Edpc605 9&10

+ Stage 3

Now that we’ve clarified what the desired results are (focus on Big Ideas) in Stage 1

And… Discussed appropriate assessments of these results

with an emphasis on Understanding in Stage 2 Now… We are ready to plan appropriate learning

activities in Stage 3

Page 3: Edpc605 9&10

+ A Chinese Proverb…

I hear. I forget.I see. I remember.

I do. I understand.

Page 4: Edpc605 9&10

+WHERETO The basic concept is that a lesson plan should be

designed with seven criteria or stages in mind, represented by the acronym WHERETO:

W = Where is the content headed? Where are the students coming from?

H = Hooking the students: how do we get them engaged with the material? How do we hold onto them once we've got them?

E = Explore and Experience, Enable and Equip: Students need to have experiences that will help them explore the Big Ideas of the unit. We also need to Equip them with the tools they'll need to perform well in the assessments and demonstrate understanding of the material.

Page 5: Edpc605 9&10

+WHERETO

R = Revise and Reflect: Return to the same questions and problems again and again. Challenge initial assumptions. Make the students think again about their first instincts, and see how their inferences change in the light of new knowledge. This mirrors what Howard Gardner said about "going deep": you have to stay with a topic long enough to get down to the student's essential misconceptions and dispel them before new understanding can take root.

E = Evaluate work and progress: This refers to letting the students evaluate their progress, not just the teacher. Give the students opportunities for constant reflection.

Page 6: Edpc605 9&10

+WHERETO

T = Tailor and personalize the work: I really, really appreciate what the authors say about this one -- namely, that “Every student body is diverse because all students come to the class with different strengths, weaknesses, prior knowledge, learning styles, interests, and preferences”.

It's important to keep pursuing the same Goals and Desired Results while making room for students to explore the content in different ways, as befits their strengths.

Page 7: Edpc605 9&10

+WHERETO

O = Organize for optimal effectiveness: It's important to present the material in a way that will generate the most interest and maintain that interest throughout the unit. Marching in a straight line through the content is bad for understanding on several levels -- it lowers interest in the material, which causes students to disengage, and also prevents students from going back to Reflect and Evaluate on previous content. I particularly liked the analogy here to soccer training: teach discrete skills, then build up to more sophisticated drills, then "play the game"

Page 8: Edpc605 9&10

+ Using the 6 Facets in Stage 3Students who really understand …

Facet 1. Can explain

Facet 2. Can Interpret

Facet 3. Can Apply

Facet 4. Can see in perspective

Facet 5. Demonstrate empathy

Facet 6. Reveal self-knowledge

Page 9: Edpc605 9&10

+ Brainstorming Learning Using the 6 Facets of Understanding

Nutrition

Explanation

Interpretation

Perspective

Self-Knowledg

e

Empathy

Application

Plan a menu

Develop a brochure to help otherStudents understand balanced diet.

Discuss what does thePopularity of fast foods Say about modern life?

Conduct research on the impact of diverse diets and longevity.

Reflect on how you mightBecome a healthier eater?

Imagine if you hadto live with adietary restriction?

Page 10: Edpc605 9&10

+ Design Theory/Challenge-Based Learning

Page 11: Edpc605 9&10

+

Chapter 10 Teaching for Understanding

EDPC605

Page 12: Edpc605 9&10

+ Definition of “Cover”

Cover, when used as a noun refers to something on the surface. (p. 229)

When we “cover” material - we’re putting a bedspread on the bed.

“To travel over” can also be used to “cover” material (The standards!)

Page 13: Edpc605 9&10

Coverage vs. UncoverageCoverage Uncoverage

on the surface to travel over superficial “marching through the standards” “teaching by mentioning” a “cover-up” or concealment

true understanding sets an end goal, a challenge demands the right experiences, discussions, and reflections a constructivist exercise achievement is the result of the learner making sense of our teaching

Page 14: Edpc605 9&10

+ Can understandings be “covered”?

“ An understanding can never be “covered” if it is to be understood.” (p. 229)

Page 15: Edpc605 9&10

+ Textbooks & Teaching for Understanding

Textbooks provide an oversimplified view or reality; they summarize what is known but rarely help students to understand the inquiries and arguments behind the summaries (p. 230)

Textbooks should not be used as a syllabus for units; it should be used as a “resource” to support desired results

Textbooks are a “guidebook in support of a purposeful journey.”

Page 16: Edpc605 9&10

Figure 10.1 (p.232) Uncoverage vs. Coverage in Using Textbooks

Uncoverage Coverage text as a resource used to uncover, highlight, & explore essential questions sections of the text are read in a sequence to support learning only one resource among many

text is the syllabus student’s job is to know what’s in the text (no essential questions for guidance) text is read in order of paginationPrimary source, additional sources rarely used

Page 17: Edpc605 9&10

+Uncoverage: Getting inside the subject’s processes and arguments

Since textbooks oversimplify and summarize what is known, teachers need to provide the tools for students to engage in inquiry and question what is written in books.

This “uncovering” naturally prompts teachers to consult other sources to shed further light… (pg. 237)

Page 18: Edpc605 9&10

+ The Teacher’s Role: Designing the Right Experiences Bringing concepts to life through experiences Helping students to uncover meanings of big

ideas and their interconnection Providing a telling experience and a conceptual

framework for making sense of the experience Students need chances to explore and work with

ideas before they understand them as “useful” This affects how and when we use direct

(didactic) instruction (modeling or demonstration, lecture)

Page 19: Edpc605 9&10

+What the teacher uses…

Didactic or Direct Instruction… Facilitative or Constructivist Methods (Socratic method,

open-ended questioning, discussion, guided inquiry, problem-based learning, simulation (mock trials), copperative learning)

Coaching – guided practice