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Thinking About Planning Amalia Lopez

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Presentation on theme: "Thinking About Planning Amalia Lopez"— Presentation transcript:

1 Thinking About Planning Amalia Lopez
Day 3 Thinking About Planning Amalia Lopez

2 Review of Backwards Design
Know Your Learners Name the categories Know Your Curricular Objectives What does this mean? Build Your Assessment(s) How do you do this? Create Learning Experiences How do you get students there?

3 Knowing Your Learners Complex Learners Learning Styles
Applies to all categories of complex learners Learners can be EL, Special Ed, struggling readers AND have a very specific learning style

4 What Kind of Learner Are You?
Take the survey Calculate your results

5 Assessing Your Learners
Surveys Class Activities Posters Consensagrams Reflections & Quickwrites

6 Learning Styles Learning Styles (Modes) Multiple Intelligences

7

8 Learning Styles With your handouts and the videos, fill in your graphic organizer with: The basic characteristics Some possible teaching strategies you can use for your content for these different learning styles/modalities

9 Learning Styles & Lessons
Variety is the key Blend of learning experiences in multiple modalities Project-Based Learning (see website) Don’t teach like you learn!

10 Know Your Curricular Objectives
All lessons should aim for integrated teaching Should have a literacy or numeracy focus Common Core aligns some contents already Every learning experience in every content should develop transferrable literacy or numeracy

11 Addressing Literacy Common Core focus: Transferrable literacy skills
College & career-readiness All teachers are teachers of literacy Transferrable literacy skills Reading with fluency Reading for main ideas and arguments Writing arguments and informative texts Speaking skills that are both collaborative and presentation-based

12 3 Levels of Literacy “All kids deserve a great teacher by design, not by chance.” Surface- expose students to knowledge Deep- foster self regulation, self talk and develop expertise Transferrable-

13 3 Levels of Literacy

14 Surface Literacy Surface
Acquisition- help students summarize and outline a topic of study Consolidation- students confirm what they’ve acquired through practice and feedback

15 Developing Surface Literacy
Leverage Prior Knowledge (0.65) Anticipation Guides Cloze Passages Phonics & Direct Instruction (of reading skills) (0.54, 0.59) Phonemic awareness, alphabetics, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, reading comprehension Vocabulary (0.67) Generalization, application, breadth, precision, availability Annotating (0.63) Note-taking (0.59, 0.85) Repeated Reading (0.67) Receiving Feedback (0.75) Collaborative Learning with Peers (0.59)

16 3 Levels of Literacy Surface Deep Transferrable Deep acquisition
Deep consolidation Transferrable

17 Deep Literacy Concept Mapping (0.60)
Has greatest effect when used as an intermediate step to something else Discussion & Questioning (0.82, 0.48) True discussion is when students discuss learning without the teacher 4 Levels of Questioning: Literal, Structural, Inferential, Interpretive Reciprocal Teaching (0.74) Summarizing, Questioning, Clarifying, Predicting Close Reading ( ) Metacognitive Strategies ().69) Self-Questioning (0.64) Feedback to Student (0.75)

18 Videos on Deep Literacy
QUESTIONING:

19 3 Levels of Literacy Surface Deep Transferrable
Occurs throughout surface and deep learning Near transfer- can make close connections based on learning Far transfer- can make LARGE connections based on learning

20 Transferrable Literacy
Organizing Conceptual Knowledge (0.85) Identify analogies Compare & Contrast (Marzano) Peer Tutoring (0.55) Problem-Solving Teaching (0.61) Transforming Conceptual Knowledge (0.85) Socratic Seminars Extended Writing

21 How to Use Literacy Standards in Your Content
Reading Reading closely (analysis questions) Logical inferences (read between the lines) Citing evidence from the text (graphic organizers, summaries, essays) Complex, grade-level text (textbook, primary & secondary sources) Nonfiction, informational texts (70%)

22 How to Use Literacy Standards in Your Content
Writing Arguments (teaching learners that “everything is an argument”) Informative / Explanatory texts (7 rhetorical modes: cause/effect, definition, compare/contrast, process analysis, classification/division) Drawing evidence from texts (pulling from multiple sources, citing in MLA or APA) Assessing the credibility of sources (annotated bibliography)

23 How to Use Literacy Standards in Your Content
Speaking Range of conversations and collaborations (Socratic seminar) Clearly and persuasively Adapt speech to different contexts (individual, class, and group)

24 Marzano’s 9 Strategies (Classroom Instruction that Works)

25 Addressing Numeracy Numeracy refers to the ability to make sense of mathematics and to use mathematics effectively in real-life situations. Numerate students are able to: use appropriate techniques, tools, and units in order to measure solve problems by applying their understanding of numbers and the relationships between numbers, using different computational methods analyze and describe geometric shapes and figures, location, and movement analyze and make predictions from patterns collect, organize, and analyze data.

26 Addressing Numeracy

27 Integrated Teaching & Assessments
Assessment process naturally includes assessments of literacy or numeracy: Essay Close Reading Questions Constructed Reponses Explanation of formula or process Reflection of progress

28 Working With Your Standards
CONTENT STANDARDS: Go to class website Find your set of standards Find your grade level/ focus Choose 1 standard to work with LITERACY/NUMERACY STANDARDS: Choose either ELA or Math (Common Core) Find your grade level/focus Choose 1 standard that NATURALLY matches your content standard and plan for instruction

29 Your Lesson Delivery Take one tiny piece of your lesson plan
Warm-up activity, problem-solving activity Make it collaborative- show me you can get your class talking and engaging with each other 1 page outline of your lesson (see examples on Canvas) Pull directly from your lesson or unit Upload it to Canvas (if you use other materials such as PPT, etc. upload those also) One specific mini-skill Context clues, factor, identify the parts of plant, etc.

30 Your Lesson Delivery Keep it simple- 5 min. max
Bring your own props, materials etc. 1 page outline of your lesson (see examples on Canvas) Pull directly from your lesson or unit Upload it to Canvas (if you use other materials such as PPT, etc. upload those also)


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