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WCU Practicum: 9/11/06 KIN 402 Dr. Cleland, Mr. Stevenson, Mrs. Lepage. First of all…. We don’t have all the answers Teaching a standards-based program is NOT how the vast majority of teachers were trained. Presentation Overview. Chapter 4 Quiz State Standards Review/Organization
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WCU Practicum: 9/11/06 KIN 402 Dr. Cleland, Mr. Stevenson, Mrs. Lepage
First of all… • We don’t have all the answers • Teaching a standards-based program is NOT how the vast majority of teachers were trained
Presentation Overview • Chapter 4 Quiz • State Standards Review/Organization • Standards vs. Non Standards Programs • Unpacking Standards Process
Handouts • Chapter 4 Quiz • Standards Verbs • Unpacking Standards Graphic Organizer • Unpacking Standards Worksheet • Standard Assessment Format
Chapter 4 Quiz • Answer questions independently • During Review – if a Question is False – explain WHY
PE Reality Check: In most programs… • Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment practices are not directly linked to state or national standards • NCLB and PSSA test performance rule the educational landscape • Assessment practices are based more on timeliness, dress, and behavior vs. what the students know and are able to do (more on this in the Assessment Lesson)
PA Standards Facts • Time Requirement Missing from the PA Requirements -previously 30 hours per year • Assessment is based on student proficiency in the standards • Proficiency is not based on seat time or activity time • Mandated by Chapter 4 - PA School Code
Standards – NOT a Curriculum • The unique way that each district uses to interpret the standards is the curriculum; the standards are a content guideline.
There is no “THEY” YOU Determine the Essential Content (interpretation of the standards) and Assessment Strategies
Standards vs. Activity-Based Instruction • Standards instruction: Addresses the essential content from the standards • The content is assessed (directly) • It’s not about the game…the game serves as a “vehicle” to deliver the content • It’s not about the book
Standards-Based vs. Standards-Referenced • Standards serve as the STARTING point for developing curriculum, units, lessons • Standards are “Unpacked” • Referenced = write the curriculum/unit/lesson plan - then “match” the standards to what was already developed.
Standards • Subject-areas are designated by a number • Health, Safety & Physical Education Standards #10 • Arts & Humanities #9
Health, Safety & PE Standards • 10.1 Concepts Of Health • 10.2 Healthful Living • 10.3 Safety & Injury Prevention • 10.4 Physical Activity • 10.5 Concepts, Principles & Strategies of Movement
Standard Statements • The Standard Statements are identified by Letters - i.e. 10.5.9.D • 10: Health, Safety and PE (subject area) • 5: Concepts, Principles, and Strategies of Movement (category) • 9: Grade 9 (grade level) • D: Principles of Exercise and Training • Bullets – standard descriptors
Standard Statements • Explain what students will learn • Standard Statements are assessed • Verbs and Nouns become more complex throughout benchmark years - grades 3, 6, 9 and 12 (Bloom’s Taxonomy)
Standard Descriptors • Standard Descriptors are the Bullets • Explain the complexity of the standard statement • School districts may add additional descriptors • e.g. Is an example • i.e. Must be taught
Unpacking Standards Process Unpacking Standards Graphic Organizer Unpacking Standards Worksheet
Backward Design Process • Identify desired results – Steps 1 to 5. • Determine acceptable evidence – Steps 6 & 7 • Plan learning experiences and instruction – Step 8
Step 1. Start with the Standard • Standard 10.5.12.D: • Incorporate and synthesize knowledge of exercise principles, training principles, and health and skill-related fitness components to create a fitness program for personal use. • Refer to State Standards
Step 2: Identify the Verbs and Nouns • Underline the Verbs • Circle the Nouns
Step 3: Define the Nouns • Exercise principles, training principles, health-related fitness components, skill-related fitness components, and fitness program
Exercise Principles • Guidelines to follow to obtain the maximum benefits from physical activity and exercise. • See Glossary • Refer to 10.5.3.D • FITT • District Interpretation • Warm up, Conditioning, Cool Down
Training Principles • Guidelines to follow to obtain the maximum benefits from an exercise plan. • See Glossary • Refer to 10.5.9.D • Specificity, overload, progression, etc.
Also, the Bullets are the Nouns • For standard statements that have Descriptors
Standard 10.5.3.D • Identify and use principles of exercise to improve movement and fitness activities. • Frequency – how often to exercise • Intensity – how hard to exercise • Time – how long to exercise • Type – what kind of exercise
Standard 10.5.6.D • Describe and apply the principles of exercise to the components of health-related and skill-related fitness. • Cardiorespiratory fitness • Muscular strength • Muscular endurance • Flexibility • Body composition
Standard 10.5.9.D • Identify and describe the principles of training using appropriate vocabulary. • Specificity • Overload • Progression • Aerobic/anaerobic • Circuit/interval • Repetition/set
Standard 10.5.12.D • Incorporate and synthesize knowledge of exercise principles, training principles and health and skill-related fitness components to create a fitness program for personal use.
Step 4: Compose Essential Questions Using the Nouns • Digging Deeper into the Essential Content – beyond the Knowledge Level: • Compose Essential Questions: what, why, how, when, where, similarities and differences, etc. • The answers to the Essential Questions serves as the Essential Content
Essential Questions – Training Principles • What are the training principles? • Why are the training principles important to understand in order to develop a personal fitness program? • What’s the difference between the exercise principles and the training principles? • How will the training principles be incorporated into the personal fitness program?
Step 5: Answer Essential Questions • The answers to the essential questions represents the Essential Content of the lesson
Step 6: What do the Verbs Imply? • Refer to Standards Verbs • Review the meanings of the Verbs to gain an understanding of the intent of the evidence (assessment)
Step 7: Brainstorm Assessment Ideas • Use the VERBS in the Standard Statement as your guide to developing assessments. ·Verb in standard statement – Analyze ·Align with the Verbs in learning objectives – The students will be able to analyze… ·Develop an assessment that requires analysis. • Standard Assessment Format
Step 8: Determine Possible Learning Activities • Provide a means for the students to USE and LEARN the essential content and/or answer the Essential Questions • Provide a means for the students to meet the assessment guidelines • The learning activity connects the standard to the essential content, learning objectives, and assessment. • Remember – it’s not about the game (or the book)
Common Mistakes • Beginning with the ACTIVITY in mind before doing the other steps – the activity is devised LAST • Not establishing the essential content • No assessment (no proof of learning) • Giving up…please have patience
10.5.9.F. Describe and apply game strategies to complex games and physical activities. • offensive strategies • defensive strategies • time management
10.5.9.B. Describe and apply concepts of motor skill development that impact the quality of increasingly complex movement. • response selection • stages of learning a motor skill (i.e. verbal cognitive, motor, automatic) • types of skill (i.e. discrete, serial, continuous)
Task: Breakout Groups • Work in groups of 3 • Each group will be assigned a PA Standard
Guidelines • Think-Pair-Share is a good strategy to use in Breakout Groups • Take your time – go for DEPTH • Use additional paper to flush out the details – use the Unpacking Standards Worksheet as the Final Draft
Suggested Resources • Understanding by Design, 2nd Edition: Wiggins & McTighe • Integrating Differentiated Instruction & Understanding by Design: Tomlinson & McTighe • Standards-Based PE Curriculum Development: Lund & Tannehill
NASPE Resources • NASPE Assessment Series • Moving into the Future: NASPE National Standards • Concepts of PE: What Every Student Needs to Know • Appropriate Practices for HS, MS and Elementary PE • PE Checkup Self Evaluation • What Constitutes a Quality PE Program?