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Assessment In P.E. A Backward Design. A 3 stage instructional design that begins with the end in mind – what will the students be able to do by the end of the lesson/unit/term/semester/year
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Assessment In P.E. A Backward Design
A 3 stage instructional design that begins with the end in mind – what will the students be able to do by the end of the lesson/unit/term/semester/year • Once outcomes are identified teachers work backwards to develop lessons and materials that are needed to meet the outcomes What is Backward Design
Traditional Instruction Design Assessment Activities Content Topic
Start with learning goals/outcomes • Build in assessment • Plan activities/lessons Backward Design
Backward Design Model Plan lessons and activities Build in Assessment Start with outcomes
Identify desired outcomes • Determine acceptable evidence • Plan learning experiences and instruction (Cooper, 2010) Three Stages of Backward Design
What do I want the students to know and be able to perform as a result of this lesson or unit? • What is the big idea or ideas of this lesson or unit? Stage 1Identify Desired Outcomes
How will I know if students have achieved desired results? • What kind of formative and summative assessment do I build into the activity? Stage 2Determine Acceptable Evidence
Map out the instructional sequence that will prepare students for assessments • Include in the sequence in-class lessons and activities, out of class experiences, assessment for learning (formative) that build up to final assessment (summative) Stage 3Plan Learning Experiences and Instruction
W – students know where they are going, why they are heading there, what they know, where they might go wrong in the process, what is required of them. • H - hooking the students on the topic • E – students explore and experience ideas (outcomes) and are equipped with the necessary understanding to master the outcome(s) • R – students have time to rehearse, revise and refine their skills • E- student evaluation “Where” Approach