Standard
9 - Teacher leaders evaluate and use effective curriculum design.
Starting this program, I felt comfortable discussing a curriculum, but not really critiquing or altering a curriculum. As the past two years have progressed, I feel my ability to do just that has grown with each passing course. This past summer, I began to feel quite comfortable with both critiquing and altering my curriculum. With the initial discussion about what actually constitutes a solid curriculum I was forced to look deeply at the curriculum I am using. Luckily, I had some practice with this during the past couple school years as I participated in a curriculum adoption and formation within my district. I found the adoption process, along with the discussion and points of view of my peers, to be invaluable in helping me to determine what elements of my curriculum and lesson planning are good and what things need tweaking. Developing pacing guides and curriculum guidelines with my fellow teachers allowed me to further develop my ability to identify quality curriculum.
The past summer in the Curriculum Design class (EDU 6524), I had to determine what my curriculum had going for it and what areas needed support or adjustment. Upon completing this (Module 1 Paper), I began looking at the standards, at least the major ones, to determine what is essential to the unit I was looking at in detail. This work is not something I have too much experience doing, but found that through our classwork and the guidance of my peers and professors that this was something that I felt comfortable doing. I was able to pare down the eight standards covered to a focus of three standards (Module 2 Paper). Moving forward, this ability to recognize the standards central to a unit is going to serve me well as knowing what is necessary for my students to understand and what is extraneous, or at least not as important, is vital.
I then began looking at learning targets and designing lessons. My school requires learning posted for student information, but we have not had much work around the aspects of a quality learning target. Through the readings, particularly (Knowing Your Learning Target), we see what it takes to have an effective learning target. The anecdote of driving somewhere without knowing where to go or how to get there really struck me as a key reason why having an effective learning target is so important. To guide my students as well as possible, I need to ensure that my students know where we are heading in a lesson and how we will know we are there. This learning and practice will prove instrumental in becoming the teacher I want to be.
To get students to achieve the learning target, we see the importance of engaging students in the learning. We first created brief engagement activity explanations and then completed several full lesson plans. This portion of the class proved to be the most challenging for me. I feel comfortable putting lessons together, but I often lack diversity in engagement plans. This is something I know that I struggle with and want to improve and as we created plans with more details I received several strong ideas and suggestions to change things up from my normal lesson routines. These ideas, although strong, are still difficult for me to plan and are pieces of my practice that I will be focusing on the years ahead. To show my progress, I have attached my brief and full lesson plans (Unit Plan). These initial plans and changes to my plans represent the most significant portions of my learning in this course.
Finally, the aspects of differentiation, evaluating learning and adjusting plans comes into play. These portions of planning are areas where I feel I have a bit of experience, but I definitely want to improve. One of the differentiation techniques (see lesson 6 in my unit plan) I borrowed from a peer (Erin Hocevar-Ortiz) is to create a handout of the definitions previously learned, including the terms we will define during that lesson, for students to tape into their journals. This acts as a resource for students to refer to and will help increase the use of the academic language. This is also a great way to engage students who are English Learners or students who have learning disabilities. "Instructional scaffolding provides temporary support structures within lessons to support students with learning new skills" (O'Keeffe and Medina, 2016, p. 80). Utilizing vocabulary lists will allow students to be able to develop their academic language and does not isolate students who are having difficulty because all students are receiving this support.
I also switched an exit ticket for an assessment problem creation (an idea from How to Keep Kids Engaged in Class) to aid in evaluating student learning (see lesson 2 in my unit plan). This represents another shift in my focus from having students solve problems to them creating problems to show they understand how polynomial multiplication. These two examples of adjustment represent another step I have taken this quarter in improving my practice.
All of the work undertaken in this program has been beneficial to my overall process in planning lessons and units. Looking at standard nine, this program, and Curriculum Design in particular, I found many connections between what is needed to be successful as a student and as a teacher. We worked through a unit from start to finish, looking at strengths and weaknesses, essential standards covered, learning targets and pre-assessment, engagement activities, and complete lesson plans. These practical skills will allow me to move forward in my practice and become the teacher I want to be.
Frondeville,
T. (2009). How
to keep kids engaged in class. Retrieved from http://www.edutopia.org/classroom-student-participation-tips
Moss, C.M.,
Brookhart, S.M., & Long, B.A. (2011). Knowing your learning
target. Retrieved from http://www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/mar11/vol68/num06/Knowing-Your-Learning-Target.aspx
O'Keeffe, S. B., & Medina, C. M. (2016). Nine strategies for helping
middle school students weather the perfect storm of disability, diversity, and
adolescence. American Secondary Education, 44(3), 72-87.