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Defining & Aligning Local Curriculum. Individually consider your personal definition of the term curriculum What words do you think of when you hear the term curriculum?. What is Curriculum?. Curriculum exists and evolves within the operating culture of public schools.
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Defining & Aligning Local Curriculum
Individually consider your personal definition of the term curriculum What words do you think of when you hear the term curriculum? What is Curriculum?
Curriculum exists and evolves within the operating culture of public schools
The North Carolina Professional Teaching StandardsForm the Foundationof that Culture
Teachers Are Expected To: Work collaboratively to create a professional learning community in order to plan instruction appropriate for students.
Teachers Are Expected To: Understand how students learn and make the curriculum responsive to cultural diversity and to individual learning needs.
Teachers Are Expected To: Engage students in the learning process and understand that instructional plans must be constantly monitored and modified to enhance learning.
Teachers Are Expected To: Collaborate with their colleagues and use a variety of data sources for short and long range planning based on the North Carolina StandardCourse of Study.
When NC teachers are asked: “What is it you expect students to learn?” Curriculum They most often reply: “The North Carolina Standard Course of Study”
If this is the goal…. Achievement
Mountain Content Standards
Climbers Teachers & Learners
Gear Local Curricula
Teachers Are Expected To: Collaborate with their colleagues and use a variety of data sources for short and long range planning based on the North Carolina StandardCourse of Study.
Curriculum is a Complex Combination of Materials, Resources, and Actions
Curriculum Is: • What teachers teach • What students learn • What the district mandates • What DPI requires • What is expected by • Parents • Community • Higher Education
Dimensions of Curriculum: three distinct components • Curriculum • Identifies Critical Expectations • Instruction • Defines Essential Outcomes • Presents Relevant Information • Develops Understanding • Assessment • Reveals Students’ Achieved Skills • Formative Assessment • Summative Assessment
Dimensions of Curriculum: three distinct components Also Known As • Intended • Identifies Critical Expectations • Implemented • Defines Essential Outcomes • Presents Relevant Information • Develops Understanding • Achieved • Reveals Students’ Achieved Skills • Formative Assessment • Summative Assessment
Dimensions of Curriculum: three distinct components Also Known As • Written • Identifies Critical Expectations • Taught • Defines Essential Outcomes • Presents Relevant Information • Develops Understanding • Tested • Reveals Students’ Achieved Skills • Formative Assessment • Summative Assessment
Shared Responsibility Dimensions of Curriculum: three distinct components • DPI & District • Identifies Critical Expectations • Teacher • Defines Essential Outcomes • Presents Relevant Information • Develops Understanding • Student • Reveals Students’ Achieved Skills • Formative Assessment • Summative Assessment
Curriculum is a Complex Combination of Materials, Resources, and Actions, for clarity, we will refer to the components designed and deployed by a district as theLocal Curriculum
Curriculum is a Shared Responsibility • The Department of Public Instruction Deploys STANDARDS • The District Develops LOCALCURRICULUM • The Teachers Design INSTRUCTION
STANDARDS • Define the knowledge and skills students should have within their K-12 education careers to prepare them for higher education or work • Standards include multiple components: • Common Core Standards • Essential Standards • Major Concepts • Clarifying Objectives • Assessment Prototypes
LOCAL CURRICULUM • Articulates district expectations regarding scope, sequence, and achievement benchmarks for each content area • Local Curriculum may have a variety of components: • Clear Learning Objectives • Instructional Calendars and Timeline • Context and Cognitive Type Expectations • Local Assessments and Benchmarking • Local Rubrics and Scoring Guides • Recommended Resources for Instruction
Local Curriculum Sets the Bar and Identifies for the Community What is Expected of and Provided for Students in That District
INSTRUCTION • Provides learning experiences, aligned with local curriculum expectations, to prepare students to meet the standards set by the state • Instruction includes but is not limited to: • Essential Learning Outcomes • Lesson Timelines • Content Learning Experiences • Opportunities for Practice • Formative Assessment • Corrective instruction where required • Assessment of Student Knowledge and Skills using: • Teacher Designed Assessments • District Assessments (where available) • DPI Assessment Prototypes (where appropriate)
Teachers Are Expected To: Work collaboratively to create a professional learning community in order to plan instruction appropriate for students.
Professional Learning Communities are Guided by Four Essential Questions
What is it we expect students to learn? • How will we know when they have learned it? • How will we respond when they don’t learn it? • How will we respond when they already know it? DuFour Reference
If Students are to be Successful, Teachers Need a Clear Understanding of “it” • What is it we expect students to learn? • How will we know when they have learned it? • How will we respond when they don’t learn it? • How will we respond when they already know it? DuFour Reference
Guidance Comes From the Standards… But the Standards Alone are Not Enough
Teachers Need Tools and Resources to Help Them Define it: What is it we expect students to learn? Measure it: How will we know when they have learned it? Scaffold it: How will we respond when they don’t learn it? Extend it: How will we respond when they already know it?
In Addition to Standards, Teachers Need the Local Curriculumto Clarify District Expectations
LOCAL CURRICULUM • Articulates district expectations regarding scope, sequence, and achievement benchmarks for each content area • Local Curriculum may have a variety of components: • Clear Learning Objectives • Instructional Calendars and Timeline • Context and Cognitive Type Expectations • Local Assessments and Benchmarking • Local Rubrics and Scoring Guides • Recommended Resources for Instruction
Importance of Alignment • Alignment is an even stronger predictor of student achievement on standardized tests than are socioeconomic status, gender, race, and teacher effect. (Elmore & Rothman, 1999: Mitchell, 1998; Wishnick,1989)
Learning occurs best when there is: • A purposeful process that aligns: • Curriculum • Instruction • Assessment • Complete alignment: • Content • Cognitive Type • Context
Content Alignment “Does the teacher teach and test the topics listed in the curriculum?”
Lets Take a Test Please work independently
How Did You Do? Why Were Some More Successful Than Others?
Cognitive Type Alignment “Do the students get to work and think at the level the curriculum prescribes?”
Context Alignment “Are the parameters of the assessment reasonably similar to the parameters of the instruction?”
You have practiced all week! Are you for the test? How well do you expect to do?
The Local Curriculum Designs and Defines the “it” • What is it we expect students to learn? • How will we know when they have learned it? • How will we respond when they don’t learn it? • How will we respond when they already know it? DuFour Reference