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Teaching Practices Seminar Session 6
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TED 453 Session 6: 10/30/2013• Notes from the Field
• Mini-PACT: Context for Learning & Planning Feedback
• Crafting effective objectives
• Preview Mini-PACT: Instruction & Assessment Preview
• For Next Time (11/13/13): Bring Mini-PACT Instruction (including video) & Assessment
From the Field…
Instruction first; classroom management after
Planning, planning, planning– write it down
Craft your questions– write them down
Find ways to contribute; you will feel part of the school
Invite your principal to observe you
Observe other teachers– math/science and others
Becoming a teacher is not something that happens to you; it is something you must do.
Notes on feedback
The rubrics say “literacy,” but I only scored for content
You were scored on the 1st Context for Learning rubric, and the 1st 3 Planning rubrics. If you responded to the other prompts in either section, I
provided a score for you.
After you have completed the entire Mini-PACT, and revised as you like, then you will upload to TaskStream
Cite the textbook & other sources
List the textbook adopted for the class…
Then, you can say other materials are typically used
Tell where the other materials come from (supplemental curriculum, your Mentor, a mix, etc.)
Warm-Up is not Engagement
Be Specific
Do not generalize about typical development at this age; Describe what your specific students can do and are still learning
Do not discuss what usually happens in your class in the Planning Section; Tell exactly what you will do, in a specific step-by-step fashion
Justify All of Your Choices
Make a clear rationale for each of your instructional decisions (even if you are using a given curriculum): “I am using the self-assembly activity as a
warm-up because it gives students the opportunity to move around and visualize self-assembly.”
“Students will write a paragraph to summarize their learning about photosynthesis so that they have time to integrate their learning, and practice with academic language.”
Link All of Your Choices
Your instructional decisions should meet the needs that you identified in the Context for Learning
They should also employ the skills and knowledge that you identified If you said that students have strong social
skills, that justifies putting them in groups If you said that students need to become
more fluent in multiplication, that justifies having them practice math facts
Describe Academic Development
Tell what they can do and what they are still learning to do Include specific Prior Knowledge, Key Skills,
Developmental Levels, other needs The response for social and language
development are structured similarly
Patrick, Rachel, Mario, Linda, Samuel, Cristina, Adrian G.
Use People-First Language
From disabilityisnatural.com
Multiple Intelligences
Quinn’s 6 Questions
1. What are you teaching?
2. Why are you teaching it?
3. How are you teaching it?
4. Why are you teaching it that way?
5. How will you know that students are “getting it”?
6. How will students know they are getting it?
Crafting Effective Objectives
Effective objectives are: Observable Measurable Unambiguous Outcome-defined
Objectives are the tool by which you hold yourself and your students accountable for learning. They should also be designed for these specific students Take into account their interests, background, & prior
learning Challenge them to do their best (aim high, not low)
Crafting Effective Objectives
Well-crafted learning objectives have: The specific performance required to demonstrate
successful accomplishment of the instructional objective.
The learning outcome or product by which successful accomplishment of the objective can be determined.
The conditions under which the behavior is to be performed.
The criterion or standard used to determine successful performance or achievement of the instructional objective.
Crafting Effective Objectives
Well-crafted learning objectives have: Specific performance Learning outcome or product Conditions Criterion or standard
NGSS
CCCSS for Math
MS-LS4-5. Gather and synthesize information about the technologies that have changed the way humans influence the inheritance of desired traits in organisms.
CCSS.Math.Content.8.EE.A.1 Know and apply the properties of integer exponents to generate equivalent numerical expressions. For example, 32 × 3–5 = 3–3 = 1/33 = 1/27.
Crafting Effective Objectives
Well-crafted learning objectives have: The specific performance required to demonstrate
successful accomplishment of the instructional objective.
The learning outcome or product by which successful accomplishment of the objective can be determined.
The conditions under which the behavior is to be performed.
The criterion or standard used to determine successful performance or achievement of the instructional objective.
Mini-PACT: Assessment
1. Provide a copy of the assessment, if possible. If not, describe the directions or prompt.
2. Make a Summary of Student Learning.
3. Write a 1-2 page commentary that addresses the following prompts:
In narrative form, explain the results shown on your Summary of Student Learning. Tell whether, and to what degree, students met the Content Objective, and the Language Objective. Cite specific evidence for your claims.
Discuss what students understood well, and if relevant, any misunderstandings, confusions, or needs (including a need for greater challenge) that were apparent for some or most students.
Mini-PACT: Reflection
Write a 1-2 page commentary that addresses the following prompts: When you consider the content learning of your
students and the development of their academic language, what do you think explains the learning or differences in learning that you observed during the learning segment? Cite relevant research or theory that explains what you observed.
If you could go back and teach this learning segment again to the same group of students, what would you do differently in relation to planning, instruction, and assessment?
FNT: Session 7, 11/13/13
Mini-PACT: Assessment & Reflection
Session 8, 11/20/13, everything else will be due: Journal Hours Documentation Debriefing Notes
In order to receive a grade for the Mini-PACT, your final version must be uploaded to TaskStream by 11/30/13. 60 points (Combination of TAPs 5-8, PTR & Self-Analysis)
of 100 You must pass this class in order to student teach in
Spring