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Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning CSTA 2013: CFGs for Course Planning Knowing how to think empowers you far beyond those who know only what to think.” ---Neil deGrasse Tyson, astrophysicist. Bethany Dixon, Tom Freeman, and Dana Grooms

Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

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Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning. Bethany Dixon, Tom Freeman, and Dana Grooms . Coherent Curriculum Planning with NGSS. Finding your course themes Structuring a meaningful storyline Scheduling activities for impact. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow

Graphics for Course Planning

CSTA 2013: CFGs for Course Planning

“Knowing how to think empowers you far beyond those who know

only what to think.” ---Neil deGrasse Tyson, astrophysicist.

Bethany Dixon, Tom Freeman, and Dana Grooms

Page 2: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

1. Finding your course themes

2. Structuring a meaningful storyline

3. Scheduling activities for impact

Coherent Curriculum Planning with NGSS

Page 3: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Multiple objectives: (Science content, process, communication skills)

interconnected ideas that span the document

Few Ready-made references exist

How do we make sense of this?

Page 4: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

NGSS

Page 5: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Based on the K-12 Science Framework, these are the core concepts needed to be a scientifically literate individual in each of the major core disciplines

What you should be teaching and the depth to which it should be taught at each grade level

Includes assessment boundaries to clarify the depth of knowledge that is expected

NGSS: New Standards for New Learning

Page 6: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Performance Expectations: What the students should know and be able to do after instruction; includes:◦ Clarification statements-gives examples◦ Assessment boundaries-limits to

assessment questions

Disciplinary Core Ideas: Broken down into Life, Physical, Earth Science and Engineering/Technology Application; This is the content, in progression from K-12

Parts of the NGSS

Page 7: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Science and Engineering Practices: The knowledge and skills the students should possess; the application of science

Crosscutting Concepts: Fundamental concepts that bridge all the Disciplinary Core Ideas

NGSS

Page 8: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Structuring your Curriculum: More than Following a Book…

Curriculum planning carefully is good practice It takes time Structure and strategies to improve it will

help Overall course design (connections) are

usually obvious to teachers but may not be to students

CFGs can be shared with students as a curriculum guide

Page 9: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

CFG from A Human Approach

Page 10: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

HHMI BioInteractive Resources

Page 11: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Includes all “NGSS” pieces Well thought-out Embedded

◦ Formative assessment◦ Metacognition◦ Science and Engineering

Practices◦ Review◦ Summative Assessments

How did they DO that?

Page 12: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Curriculum Flow Graphics

Structuring a Meaningful Storyline

Publically represent a coherent storyline as we sequence crosscutting concepts related to disciplinary core ideas (content goals) with the statements of performance expectations (themes).

What do you notice about the representation?

Page 13: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Built with a connection to an overall Core Idea: ◦ Theme will connect the course through different

topics.Each unit is sequenced around the 5E model Each unit links together questions that tie in each

lesson.

Why did they do that!?

Page 14: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

What NGSS has given us is what the students need to know: not how to help them know it:1. Read the colored cards for your NGSS

Standard with your table.

How to develop CFGs

Page 15: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Arrange your disciplinary core idea cards in a logical storyline that helps address the concepts in the NGSS.

CFG Development

Page 16: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Record on sticky notes activities that you use that would support the core ideas.

• How well will students be able to make sense of the storyline?

• Are there missing concepts that students need to make sense of the content?

CFG Development

Page 17: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

◦ At this point we would use the storyline, add in crosscutting concepts and science and engineering practices that are supported by your curriculum.

◦ Do any of your activities already support one of these concepts or practices?

CFG Development

Page 18: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

After the CFG is constructed, we need to incorporate both summative and formative assessment opportunities and add them into the plan.

Return to your stoplight sheet:◦ Do you feel a little more comfortable about some

of the standards in your disciplinary area regarding the NGSS? (skip the “mid” assessment and go to the “post”

column)

CFG Development

Page 19: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

How do you determine students’ prior knowledge of a learning target?

How do you assess students before the summative assessment?

How do you determine that student thinking has advanced?

Elbow partner share

Meta-moment: Thinking about student learning.

Page 20: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

"It is not an instrument or an event, but a collection of practices with a common feature: they all lead to some action that improves learning.”

7 Strategies for Formative Assessment (Chappuis, 2009).

Formative Assessment

Page 21: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

What Gives Formative Assessment Its Power?

The collection of hundreds of studiesBlack & Wiliam (1998a, 1998b) examined represent a diverse array of interventions,all which featured some form of formative use of assessment data or processes.

Page 22: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

• Use of classroom discussions, classroom tasks, and homework to determine the current state of student understanding, with action plans take to improve learning/correctmisunderstandings.

Practices yielding the largest achievementgains displayed the following characteristics:

Page 23: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Good teaching includes teaching processes of thought as well as content.

Colored Craft Sticks Traffic Light Assessment Gots and Needs Gallery Walk Meta Moments

Formative Assessment Tools:

Page 24: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Curated vs. Uncurated Constructive Student Comments “I wonder” “I notice” Add questions

Gallery Walk CFG Share

Page 25: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

What are the benefits of using a CFG to frame your curriculum?

What are the drawbacks?

How can using CFGs impact your curriculum?

Thoughts on development and Implementation (2 min.)

Page 26: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Online stopwatch Traffic Light Formative Assessment Meta Moments HHMI Resources BSCS Resources Formative Assessment Sticks Gots and Needs closure

Unpacking the Strategies

Page 27: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Obtain two sticky notes

Using the first sticky note, please write down one thing you “got” from today’s PD.

On the second sticky note, write down one thing that you “need” with regard to CFGs or any of the material presented here today.

When you have finished, please stick them to

their posters.

Gots and Needs (2 minutes)

Page 28: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Please fill out a PD form so that we can improve in our practice.

Thank you for your time and effort!

Evaluation

Page 29: Make Your Class a Story Worth Telling: Curriculum Flow Graphics for Course Planning

Special Thanks