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+ Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate, CNE, and Williamsburg Local School Districts in Partnership with the Clermont Co. ESC

+ Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

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Page 1: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+

Transforming UnitsSTEMstitute – June 23, 2014Presented by the Clermont County Gifted ProgramFay Wagner, Gifted Intervention SpecialistBethel-Tate, CNE, and Williamsburg Local School Districts in Partnership with the Clermont Co. ESC

Page 2: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Our Mission

To develop a program that challenges students toward rigorous learning by blending virtual learning with face-to-face lessons

Page 3: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+What are “higher-order” thinking skills (HOTS)?

Page 4: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+

“Defining thinking skills, reasoning, critical thought and problem solving is troublesome to both social scientists and practitioners. Troublesome is a polite word; the area is a conceptual swamp.”

-Cuban, 1984

Page 5: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+A Working Definition of HOTS:

Higher Order Thinking takes thinking to higher levels than just restating the facts. HOTS require that we do something with the facts. We must understand them, connect them to each other, categorize them, manipulate them, put them together in new or novel ways, and apply them as we seek new solutions to new problems.

-Thomas and Thorne, Center for Development and Learning (2008)

Page 6: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+

The research says…

YES!

Page 7: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+

A Sample Unit…

Page 8: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+The Mystery of Felix Navidad

GEMS “Mystery Festival” curriculum

Page 9: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Dan Meyer: https://

www.ted.com/talks/dan_meyer_math_curriculum_makeover

Page 10: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Keeping up withCognitive Demand…

We must pay attention to the kind and level of thinking our students are being asked to do.

We have to allow for a great deal of interaction with content.

Page 11: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Blooms…

The Old The New

Page 12: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Depth of Knowledge (Webb)

Page 13: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Depth of Knowledge – Levels of Complexity

Page 14: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Caution #1: The Verb Trap

It’s not about what verb you use!

It is about what follows the verb!

Example: Describe three characteristics of metamorphic

rocks.

Describe the difference between metamorphic and igneous rocks.

Describe a model that you might use to represent the relationships that exist within the rock cycle.

Page 15: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Caution #2: The Difficulty Trap

A difficult task does not necessarily involve HOTS!

We must focus on the outcome.

Example: What is the definition of exaggerate?

What is the definition of prescient?

Page 16: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+

Let’s try it!

Page 17: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Transforming The Mystery of Felix Navidad…What needed to change?

Page 18: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Student Designed Investigations…

Page 19: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

Data Analysis and Graphing…

Page 20: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

Claims and Evidence in an Online Writing Assignment…

Page 21: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Blended Learning Component…

Page 22: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Advice from the trenches:

Watch me do this! (teacher modeling)

Let’s do this together! (guided learning)

Now do this on your own! (student-led)

Page 23: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+A note about student engagement… 21st Century Skills (The 4 Cs) – Communication, Collaboration,

Critical thinking, Creativity

Mark Edwards (author of Every Child, Every Day) – Drivers of Student Engagement: instruction must be relevant, collaborative, personalized, and connected.

Beers & Probst (authors of Notice and Note) – “…rigor does not reside in the barbell, but in the act of lifting it.” Students should be engaged, observant, responsive, questioning, and analytical.

Carol Dweck (author of The New Psychology of Success) - Growth Mindset vs. Fixed Mindset

Jim Stigler – Struggle for Smarts

Page 24: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+

Take a step back…Wows? Wonders?

Page 25: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+

Assessing HOTS…

Credits to: Susan M. Brookhart

Page 26: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Assessment always involves:

Specifying what you want to assess. (Be clear and exact!)

Designing tasks or questions that require students to demonstrate knowledge or skill.

Deciding what you will accept as evidence that students have shown the knowledge or skill.

Page 27: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Special Considerations for Assessment of HOTS #1:Use introductory material for tasks. This will give students something about which to think!

Example:

Stacey and her friends have noticed a problem in their neighborhood. The garbage cans in the public park are overflowing. Name at least two things Stacey and her friends could do on their own to help solve this problem. Which one would you recommend they try first? Explain why.

Page 28: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Special Considerations forAssessment of HOTS #2:Use novel material. The formats should not be consistently interchangeable.

Example A:

A chef opened a jar of olives. He used them to make 45 identical plates. There were 2 olives on each plate. Write an equation, that when solved, will tell how many olives were in the jar.

Example B:

During the canned food drive, each student collected 10 cans of food. The students collected 80 cans in all. Randy says the following equation can express this: s x 10 = 80. Brian thinks the equation should be written as 80 x 10 = s. Compose a text message to the boys explaining who is correct and why.

Page 29: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Special Considerations forAssessment of HOTS #3:Manage difficulty and cognitive complexity separately. Difficulty and the level of thinking are two different qualities.

Easy Difficult

Recall Name three examples of animals that are mammals.

What is the taxonomy for a bottle-nosed dolphin?

Higher-Order A scientist just discovered a new animal in the Amazon rain forest. Design a flow-chart she could use to determine if the animal should be classified as a mammal.

What do you think Carolus Linnaeus would think of our modern system of biological classification? Provide specific examples to support your conclusion.

Example:

High Level of Difficulty ≠ Higher-Order Thinking!

Page 30: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Using Multiple Choice Questions…

Low Level:In order for precipitation to fall as snow instead of rain, the temperature must be below:a. 0˚ F c. 32˚ Fb. 20˚ F d. 35˚ F

Higher Level:

In which city did snow most likely fall at some time during the day?a. City 1 c. City 3b. City 2 d. City 4

The “thinking” is encoded in the choosing. If the questions are to reflect the level of thinking, the questions must be designed so that HOTS are really required to get the correct answer.

City 1

City 2

City 3

City 4

High Temp.

65˚ F

80˚ F

48˚ F

25˚ F

Low Temp.

56˚ F

66˚ F

38˚ F

10˚ F

Preci-pitation

2 in. 0 in. 1 in. 1 in.

Page 31: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Using Rubrics…

The quality of thinking demonstrated in the work should be included in at least one of the trait scales.

Use rubrics that describe qualities rather than quantities.

It is helpful if the same general scheme can be applied to different assignments. This will encourage students to see their thinking as a learning goal, rather than just content.

A caution: Be sure that your rubric doesn’t squash the HOTS you’re trying to encourage.

Page 32: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Student Self-Assessments:

Definitely involves HOTS!

Often takes the form of checklists or rubrics.

Use for: self-assessing drafts of students’ own work. analyzing the quality of provided work samples. student discussion groups. establishing points of discussion for student-teacher

conferences.

Page 33: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+

Assessing HOTS…Wows? Wonders?

Page 34: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Technology Resources that Encourage HOTS…

Page 35: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

Blended Learning…

Page 36: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

http://infohio.org

Page 37: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Computer Coding

Scratch: http://scratch.mit.edu/ Introduction to Computer Science: http://learn.code.org/

Code Academy: http://www.codecademy.com/

Page 38: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

http://atlantisremixed.org/

Page 41: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+

Other Resources?

Page 42: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+

Transforming Our Units…What are the next steps?

Page 43: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+

“Progress is impossible without change, and those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything.” -George Bernard Shaw

Page 44: + Transforming Units STEMstitute – June 23, 2014 Presented by the Clermont County Gifted Program Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist Bethel-Tate,

+Thank you for your time!

Contact Information:• Fay Wagner, Gifted Intervention Specialist: [email protected]

Contact Information for Administrators or Professional Development Requests:• Amy Bain, Clermont County Gifted Coordinator: [email protected]