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OCTOBER 4, 2012 Presenting Instructional Content
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Presenting Instructional Content

Mar 22, 2016

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Presenting Instructional Content. October 4, 2012. Objective. Teachers will be able to explain how the indicators for the presenting instructional content portion of the rubric are implemented at a proficient level in the classroom. . Agenda. Evaluation Review Differentiation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Presenting Instructional Content

OCTOBER 4 , 2012

Presenting Instructional Content

Page 2: Presenting Instructional Content

Objective

Teachers will be able to explain how the indicators for the presenting instructional content portion of the rubric are implemented at a proficient level in the classroom.

Page 3: Presenting Instructional Content

Agenda

Evaluation Review Differentiation

Identify Need Reinforcement objectives and qualitative walk through information

Obtain New Learning Modeling Visuals

DevelopmentDevelop modeling script

Apply (In your classroom)

Page 4: Presenting Instructional Content

Evaluation

How did you differentiate for your students?

What examples can you provide from your lessons last week?

Page 5: Presenting Instructional Content

Need

Page 6: Presenting Instructional Content

Descriptors for PIC

visuals that establish the purpose of the lesson, preview the organization of the lesson, and include internal summaries of the lesson.

examples, illustrations, analogies, and labels for new concepts and ideas.

modeling by the teacher to demonstrate his or her performance expectations.

concise communication.logical sequencing and segmenting.all essential information. no irrelevant, confusing, or non-essential information.

Page 7: Presenting Instructional Content

Research about PIC

Kagan (1992) found that student performance is higher in classrooms where teacher expectations for what the student is to learn (i.e., lesson goal) and what the student is to do (i.e., instructions) are explicitly stated. Anderson (1985) concluded that students perform better in classrooms where the instructional goal is clearly communicated because the goal provides directions to the student (Good & Brophy, 1984) and provides the basis for evaluation and mastery (Bloom, 1976).

Page 8: Presenting Instructional Content

Obtain New Learning

I Do Model Visual

We Do Practice a visual with a similar idea.

You Do Develop and implement a visual in your lessons next

week.

Page 9: Presenting Instructional Content

Compare and Contrast

Yoda Darth Vader

Page 10: Presenting Instructional Content

We Do: Modeling

Basketball Soccer

Page 11: Presenting Instructional Content

Development

Develop a model with a visual for your lesson What visuals will you include in the lesson. How will you make sure that students know exactly

what you expect them to do/know? How will you sequence your instruction to support

all learners in your classroom? How will you connect previous indicators in your

lessons next week.

Page 12: Presenting Instructional Content

Go Forth & Apply

Describe what you will be modeling next week