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FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map Development Florida School for the Deaf and Blind St. Augustine, FL. August, 2010 8:00am – 3:30pm 1

FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map Development

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FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map Development. Florida School for the Deaf and Blind St. Augustine, FL. August, 2010 8:00am – 3:30pm. Are You On An Escalator?. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sb7mzUCpTyY. Objectives. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map

Development

Florida School for the Deaf and Blind

St. Augustine, FL. August, 2010

8:00am – 3:30pm1

Page 2: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Are You On An Escalator?

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sb7mzUCpTyY

Page 3: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Objectives Create district-wide Pacing Guides

for the 2010-2011 school year for each content area

Create district-wide Curriculum Maps for each content area for the 1st nine weeks of the 2010-2011 school year

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Page 4: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Standards-based Classrooms…

…Classrooms where teachers and students have a clear understanding of the expectations (standards). Teachers/students know what they are teaching/learning each day (standards), why the day’s learning is an important thing to know or know how to do (relevance), and how to do it (process).

Standards-based learning is a

process, not an event.

Page 5: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Standards-based Classrooms

Curriculum, Assessment, Instruction, and student learning are explicitly aligned to the standards

All students have access to the standards

Students produce evidence of learning

Page 6: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

What does alignment to the standards look like?

Page 7: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

What is Standards-based Evidence of Learning? Student work directly connected to

the standards Real world, relevant, and task-

based work that provides evidence that students are achieving high standards

Page 8: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

How do teachers ensure that instruction is standards-based?

Come to consensus regarding standards

Analyze and reflect upon instruction

Analyze and reflect upon performance tasks

Accept and provide feedback regarding instruction

Page 9: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

What will I see in a Standards-Based Classroom?

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Page 10: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Student work aligned to the standards

Written and oral feedback aligned to the standards

Performance tasks aligned to the standards, including culminating performance tasks

Data driven instructional decisions

On-going, formal and informal assessment for learning

Teaching and scoring rubrics aligned to the standards

Flexible groups of students

Differentiation of instruction

Standards-Based instructional bulletin boards

Page 11: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Teachers are the Key “Teachers must be the primary driving force behind change. They are best positioned to understand the problems that students face and to generate possible solutions.” James Stigler and James Hiebert,

The Teaching Gap

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Page 12: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Quality Instruction Makes A Difference

“Good teaching can make a significant difference in student achievement, equal to one effect size (a standard deviation), which is also equivalent to the affect that demographic classifications can have on achievement.”

Paraphrase Dr. Heather Hill, University of Michigan12

Page 13: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Differences in Instruction

“Our research indicates that there is a 15% variability difference in student achievement between teachers within the same schools.”

Deborah Loewenberg Ball, Dean of Education, University of Michigan13

Page 14: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

“What Matters Very Much is Which Classroom?”

“If a student is in one of the most effective classrooms he or she will learn in 6 months what those in an average classroom will take a year to learn. And if a student is in one of the least effective classrooms in that school, the same amount of learning take 2 years.”

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Page 15: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Research has indicated that... “teacher quality trumps virtually all other influences on student achievement.”

(e.g., Darling-Hammond, 1999; Hamre and Pianta,2005; Hanushek, Kain, O'Brien and Rivken, 2005;Wright, Horn and Sanders, 1997)

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Page 16: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Teaching for Conceptual Understanding

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Page 17: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Learning with understanding is essential to enable students to solve the new kinds of problems they will inevitably face in the future.

Conceptual Understanding

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Page 18: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

One of the most robust findings of research is that conceptual understanding is an important component of proficiency, along with factual knowledge and procedural facility.

(Bransford, Brown, and Cocking 1999)

Conceptual Understanding

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Page 19: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Concept-Based Teaching Concepts are taught and learned differently from

Processes and Facts Concepts cannot be memorized! Facts about concepts

can be memorized. Concepts must be constructed. A concept is not fully constructed by a particular grade or

age level. Layers  and further  additions to the concepts are (should be) continually added in subsequent grades.

Concepts’ connections and relationships with other concepts must be shown.

Initial concept learning cannot occur in cooperative learning settings

Students should be informed that concept construction is expected so that they don’t try to use inappropriate learning methodology.

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Page 20: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Teaching for Conceptual Understanding

Understanding How to DO, doesn’t mean you know How to

Teach

http://www.teachertube.com/viewVideo.php?video_id=119884

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Page 21: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Teaching for Conceptual Understanding and Depth Of Knowledge (DOK)

Students with conceptual understanding…

know more than isolated facts and methods,know why a mathematics or science idea is important and the kinds of contexts in which it is useful,are able to learn new ideas by connecting them to ideas they already know, andare able to remember or retain ideas….

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Page 22: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Teaching for Conceptual Understanding and Depth Of Knowledge

• Emphasis on BOTH ideas and skills• Problem-based interactive learning• Emphasis on connections 22

Page 23: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Teachers Are the KEYThe study of teaching and teachers’ knowledge is as important to educational reform today as it was 40 years ago. As Shulman (1983) noted, teachers are the key ingredient in our educational system.

..the teacher must remain the key. The literature on effective schools ismeaningless, debates over educational policy are moot, if the primaryagents of instruction are incapable of performing their functions well. Nomicrocomputer will replace them, no television system will clone anddistribute them, no scripted lessons will direct and control them, novoucher system will bypass them.

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Page 24: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

PACING GUIDES

Pacing guides put topics in a sensible order, determine what resources to draw on, and develop a good sense of how long different elements will take.

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Page 25: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Pacing Guide Research In pacing the year’s curriculum, teachers

have little control over the many variables that affect teaching and learning; however, they do have control over how they allocate time to teach the standards and grade-level objectives that every student must master. Instructional pacing is directly linked to time allocation and must begin the first day of the new school year (McLeod, Fisher, Hoover, 2003).

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Page 26: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

More Research “Pacing guides generally identify

when the teacher will teach specific content standards, which instructional materials are appropriate, and what types of instructional strategies teachers can deploy.” (Fisher, Grant, Frey, Johnson, 2008, p. 64).

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Page 27: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

And… The use of common pacing guides not only provides

teachers with these and other components but they also foster collaborative planning and promote instructional conversations. “Talking with colleagues that teach the same content and see the same data results is foundational to instituting improvements and helps teachers determine which instructional strategies are working, which materials are effective, and which students still need help to master the standards.” (Fisher, et. al. 2008)

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Page 28: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Big Ideas for Pacing In our zeal to cover as much as

possible, we lose sight of which skills are most critical for all students.

To improve student achievement, we must prioritize and then focus on the most important standards.

To truly have an impact, a prioritized curriculum must clearly communicate what each standard means and how important it is.

Page 29: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

What Pacing Does Provides a road map Gives teachers true picture of

students’ long-term experiences Serves as a communication tool Shows potential links Provides timeline for new teachers

The above statements are only true if the maps are living

documents that people use!

Page 30: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

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Page 31: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

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Your Turn!In your content specific groups, pace content prioritizing benchmarks that will be assessed on FCAT and EOCs.Science: Math: Language Arts:

6 grade – Earth Space 6, 7, 8 LA 6, 7, 87 grade – Life Algebra I, II Intensive Reading8 grade – Physical Algebra Ia, Ib English 1, 2, 3, 4Biology Algebra Honors Biology Honors GeometryEnvironmental Geometry HonorsIntegratedAnatomy

Page 32: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Now That You’ve Completed Your Pacing Guides…

Let’s talk about curriculum maps!

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Page 33: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Curriculum Map

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•Dates of Instruction •Benchmark and Short Description

•Essential Question and Guided Questions

•Vocabulary

•Assessment Dates and Assessment Types

Page 34: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

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Dates Benchmark/Description

Essential Question and Guiding Questions

Vocabulary Assessment Date(s) and Assessment

Type

Curriculum Map (School)

Page 35: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

What’s the Difference?

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Page 36: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Essential QuestionPurpose: To know the elements of explicit

instruction and apply them to our classrooms.

Essential Question: How will our knowledge of explicit

instruction raise student achievement in our schools?

Page 37: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Essential Questions Essential Questions are written in

student friendly language, posted in the classroom, and

referred to during every lesson to build connections between

activities and learning.

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Page 38: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Guiding Questions are…

Questions which combine to build answers to our

Essential Questions

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Page 39: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Guiding QuestionsGuiding Questions

Big questions (Essential) spawn families of smaller (Guiding) questions which lead to insight. The more skillful we and our

students become at formulating and then categorizing Guiding Questions, the more

success we will have constructing new knowledge.

Essential Essential QuestionsQuestions

Achieve Understandi

ng

Page 40: FSDB’s Pacing Guide & Curriculum Map  Development

Now, it’s time to get started on the creation of a 9-week Curriculum Map for your content area class!

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