ECAP Presentation
By April Daniels-Schluns
Research Questions
• What are current strategies being used in designing lesson activities?
• What are methods used in lesson design using student pre-assessment?
Audience•Honors English II students (2 classes)
•English II students (2 classes)
•Intermediate English II students (1 class)
Competency ModelKnowledge needed for creativity:•Innovating•Process•ProductKnowledge needed for problem solving:•Identify the problem•Brainstorm solutions and strategies•Evaluate conclusions
EvidenceModel
Rubrics used to assess three things:•Creativity•Problem solving•CollaborationScores arranged as follows:•Advanced components – 4 points•Proficient components – 3 points•Developing components – 2 points•Beginning components – 1 point
Evidence ContinuedRubrics point value, based on skills:•Creativity – 20 points•Problem solving – 20 points•Collaboration – 24 points
EvidenceContinued
Effective rubrics consist of:•Detail skills to be evaluated•Clear and concise definitions•Strong strategy for scoring(Reddy & Andrade, 2010, p.435).
EvidenceContinued
Rubrics must produce two things:•Reliable results•Valid results(Stellmack, Konheim-Kalkstein, Manor, & Schmitz, 2009, p.102).
Task Model•Short story unit•Introductory activity to include:
•Sketched diagram•In-depth description
•Will answer three questions:
•What does creation look like?•How is creation to be used?•What is the purpose of the creation on the market?
Task Model ContinuedVariations may include:•Collaboration of ideas•Improvement of pre-existing products•Presentation•brochures
Promotion of InnovationStudents are to work through:•Creation of innovative ideas•Problem solving mechanics of ideas
Promotion of 21st Century LearningFurther development of skills:•Creativity•Problem solving •Collaboration (if applicable)
Impact on Learning•Individual levels – demonstrate a higher level of learning
•Group levels – better equipped to work together
•Organizational levels – better equipped to succeed in the future
Utilization of Knowledge•Create effective lesson activities
•Foster development of four elements:•Critical thinking•Communication•Collaboration• creativity(Gordon, 2011, p.31)
Next Steps
•Fostering of 21st century skills
•Development of 21st century skills
•Create effective learning activities
ReferenceBlack, J., & Browning, K. (2011). Creativity in digital art education teaching
practices. Art Education, 64(5), 19-24.Crosby High School. (ND). Problem solving and critical thinking rubric.
www.waterbury.k12.ct.us/chs/site/files/problemsolvingandcritical.docGordon, D. (2011). Return to sender. T.H.E. Journal, 38(3), 30-32.Greenstein, L. (2012). Assessing 21st century skills: A guide to evaluating
mastery and authentic learning. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin.Kimber, K, & Wyatt-Smith, C. (2010). Secondary students’ online use and
creation of knowledge: Refocusing priorities for quality assessment and learning. Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 26(5), 607-625.
Plymouth Regional High School. (2010). 21st century school-wide learning expectations. www.prns.sau48.org/aboutprhs/rubrics/5-PRHS%20Creativity%20Innovation%20Rubric.pdf
Reference ContinuedRevere High School. (ND). School-wide rubric for creativity expression.
www.revereps.mec.edu/reverehighschool/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/sw_Rubric_Creative_Expression.pdf
Steers, J. (2009). Creativity: Delusions, realities, opportunities and challenges.International Journal of Art & Design Education, 28(2), 126-138.
Stellmack, M.A., Konheim-Kalkstein, Y., Manor, J.E., Massey, A.R., & Schmitz,J.A.P. (2009). An assessment of reliability and validity of a rubric for grading APA-style introductions. Teaching of Psychology, 36(2), 102-107.
TeacherVision. (2013). Designing rubrics to fit assignments.www.teachervision.fen.com/rubrics/teaching-methods/6354.html
University of Wisconsin-Stout. (2011). Middle school and high school collaboration rubric. www2.uwstout.edu/content/profdev/rubrics/secondaryteamworkrubric.html