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Understanding by Design ( UbD ) according to Wiggins and McTighe. Backward Planning September 2012. Sometimes education feels like being caught in a wind tunnel . http://www.videobash.com/video_show/ducks-vs-wind-8233. Connections …. Common Core – Teaching inch wide & mile deep concept
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Understanding by Design (UbD)according to Wiggins and McTighe Backward Planning September 2012
Sometimes education feels like being caught in a wind tunnel. http://www.videobash.com/video_show/ducks-vs-wind-8233
Connections… • Common Core – Teaching inch wide & mile deep concept • Project COACH – Evaluation Model Planning Rubric =*Alignment & Mapping indicators • Rigor & Relevance – Quadrant D
Backward design calls for us to make our lesson goals and objectives specific and concrete. • Choices about teaching methods, sequence of lessons and resources materials can be successfully completed only after we identify desired results and assessments . • Remember when given a destination, what’s the most effective and efficient route?
Why use backwards design? UbD • Students develop deep, enduring understandings • Understanding-based design leads to active and engaged minds • Students work to uncover concepts Traditional • Students memorize for the test and then forget • Activity-based design leads to hands-on, but not minds-on, learning • Teachers do all the work to cover the skills
Stages of Backward Design Stage 1: Identify Desired Results • What should students know, understand, and be able to do? (long and short range) • This is where we consider the goals, examine content standards and review curriculum expectations. (Enduring Understandings, Essential Questions, Clear Learning Targets)
Understanding by Design • Consider the enduring understandings of your study. • Develop essential questions to carry the curriculum. • Identify targeted skills to improve over the year. • Establish unit understandings and unit questions. • Design lessons. • Structure the lesson deliberatelyfor authenticity. • Intentionally develop skills through the lens of content. • Strive for complexity of thinking. • Embed opportunities for contextualization. Based on the UBD work of Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe
Teacher Questions • How does my subject relate to the world/life? • What are the most important “take-aways” for students to have? • What do I want students to achieve? • How do my individual lessons fit with the overall goal for the class/subject? • Why am I teaching this lesson? • What does the learner need in order to accomplish the learning goals?
Student Questions • What’s the point of this? • What’s the big idea here? • What does this help me understand or be able to do? • To what does this relate? • Why should I learn this?
Our Enduring Understandings If you don’t know exactly where you are headed, then any road will get you there. Good design is about being more thoughtful and specific about your purpose and what it implies.
Enduring Understandings • Big-picture ideas retainable beyond the course • Every Achilles has a vulnerable heel. [History] • Algebra equips us with tools to become informed decision-makers. [Algebra] • Discipline is the key to a healthy lifestyle. [Health] • Humans are machines. [Biology] • Strong writers capture their audiences. [English] • Artists establish the dark, reserve the light, and negotiate the middle. [Studio Art] • Geometry brings order to chaos. [Geometry] • The best teaching changes lives forever. [Prof Dev] Based on the UBD work of Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe
Enduring understandings • Identifying concepts • What is your study really about? • Strip the curriculum to its guiding concepts. • Example: World History • CONTROL • Law & Order • Weakness & Exploitation • Power & Dominion Based on the UBD work of Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe
Enduring understandings • Grow understandings from the concepts. • CONTROL • Law & Order • Weakness & Exploitation • Power & Dominion • Every Achilles has a vulnerable heel. • All governments strive to achieve order; it is the breadth and depth of control that vary. Based on the UBD work of Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe
Consider your subject. Establish the ruling concepts. Generate enduring understandings. Share out with the people around you. Wisdom table…You try it. Based on the UBD work of Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe
What is an Essential Question? A question that lies at the heart of a subject (as opposed to being either trivial or leading), and promotes inquiry and uncoverage of a subject. Understanding by Design
An Essential Question… IS It frames and focuses research. It connects to enduring understandings. It encourages critical thinking. It tells your audience what your unit will address. It has no single “right” answer. Is NOT • It is NOT a question that can be answered with a yes or no. • It is NOT a question that can be answered in one sentence. • It is NOT a blurry or large question that requires a five-pound book to answer.
Essential questions • Not always fact-specific • May recur throughout the year in different units • Offer prospects for cross-curricular exploration • Examples: • WHAT IS THE TRAGIC FLAW? • WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE IN-BETWEEN? Based on the UBD work of Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe
What is the tragic flaw? • Can it anchor to an enduring understanding? • World History: Every Achilles has a vulnerable heel. • Is it relevant to multiple units of study? • What was the tragic flaw of Maximilien Robespierre? • According to Hindus what is the flaw of humanity? • Can the question extend beyond this class? • What flaws are borne by J.D. Salinger’s characters? • Are there any flaws that invalidate the experiment? • How does HIV tragically flaw human health? • What flaws do old-school artists find in today’s hip-hop? Based on the UBD work of Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe
Our Essential Question What is the best way to teach? or How can we teach them up?
More Examples • Why is the concept of cloning human beings controversial? • What invention of the 20th Century has had the greatest impact? • Why was _________ the greatest home run hitter in baseball history? • Which credit card is best for me? • To what extent does separation of powers cause deadlock in the U.S. government? • How can a diet be healthy for one person and not another? • What is the value of place value? • Is pain necessary for progress in athletics? • What “fictions” find there way into non-fiction? • To what extent is DNA destiny? • Can everything be quantified?
Lean on concepts and EU’s. Construct an Essential Question. Evaluate against the criteria. Revise. Share out with the people around you. Wisdom table…You try it. Based on the UBD work of Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe
Establish an understanding of Clear Learning Targets • Learning Targets: Statements of what we want students to learn and be able to do. Aren’t Learning Targets the same as standards? NO. Standards are externally created goals for student learning. Several Learning Targets must be achieved to master one standard, & those targets are created at the classroom level.
Aren’t Learning Targets the same as activities? No Activities are the methods teachers use to help the student achieve the learning target--what students do in class. What did you do? vs. What did you learn? “Just remember why many teachers are activity-based rather than goal-based…You can survive the day without a goal, but you can’t survive the day without an activity.” Mike Rutherford
Learning Target Types: • Knowledge targets • Reasoning targets • Skill targets • Product targets Utilizing Learning Targets helps to deconstruct a content standard into smaller teachable parts—knowing the type will help identify the enabling learning targets.
Knowledge Targets:Master factual and procedural knowledge, to be learned outright or retrieved.•Recognizes and describes patterns •Understands long-term physiological benefits of regular participation in physical activity •Explains the important characteristics of U.S. citizenship •Knows that energy can be transformed between various forms
Reasoning Targets: Use knowledge to reason and solve problems. Thought processes to learn.•Uses statistical methods to describe, analyze, evaluate, and make decisions•Analyzes fitness assessments to set personal fitness goals, strategizes ways to reach goals, evaluates activities •Examines data/results and proposes meaningful interpretation
Skill Targets: Demonstrate mastery of specific performance skills—demonstration or physical skill-based.•Measures length in metric and US units •Reads aloud with fluency and expression •Dribbles to keep the ball away from an opponent •Participates in civic discussion with the aim of solving current problems •Uses simple equipment and tools to gather data
Product (Performance) Targets: Create quality products—focus is the product. •Constructs bar graphs •Develops a personal health-related fitness plan •Constructs physical models of familiar objects •Creates a scripted scene based on improvised work
Target types tend to be cumulative or hierarchical: • Knowledge = knowledge • •Reasoning = knowledge + reasoning • •Skill= knowledge + reasoning + skill • •Product/Performance= • Knowledge + reasoning + skill + product/performance • Rigor & Relevance – Quadrant D
Examples of Learning Targets from the Common Core State Standards Knowledge Targets: Math- Recognizes acute, obtuse, & right angles. ELA- Identifies nouns & verbs. Reasoning Targets: Math- Identifies shapes as two- or three-dimensional. ELA- Evaluates the argument in a text, with relevant evidence. Skill Targets: Math- Measures the length of an object. ELA- Responds to questions that relate to broader themes. Product Targets: Math- Draws a bar graph to represent data with four categories. ELA- Creates a visual display for use in a presentation to enhance the message.
Learning Targets use student-friendly language… • I can… • When I’ve learned this… Can students tell you what they are learning? I can write summary of a newspaper article. I can locate fractions on a number line. I can describe the interactions contained in the rock cycle. I can identify cause & effect relationships in an informational text. *Rather than the language of the Standard which was created for teachers. From clear Learning Targets create your “Question for the day.” Those questions that can be answered at the end of the day/class period. Vs. “ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS”…
Our Topic Our Unit Goal/Standard Backward Planning/Understanding by Design • Have effective, efficient planning that leads to student mastery • Create a unit based on backwards planning Our Learning Target/Lesson Objective • Write Enduring Understandings, Essential Questions, and Clear Learning Targets
Select a standard for your EU and Essential Question. Write Learning Targets that align to the standard. Share out with the people around you. Wisdom table…You try it. Based on the UBD work of Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe
Let’s begin with the end in mind! Plan for GOALS and OBJECTIVES NOTMATERIALS AND ACTIVITIES.
http://www.wingclips.com/movie-clips/school-of-rock/just-give-up Film: The School of Rock • Guiding Concept: “Salvation” • Enduring Understanding: The Man will beat you down. • Essential Question: How do you stick it to the man? • Learning Targets: I can… • analyze the rock-n-roll experience; • trace the history (chronology) of rock-n-roll; • compare and contrast rock with other musical genres; • explain how rock-n-roll can save the world. • Evidence of Understanding: Project “Rock Band”
http://worldsciencefestival.com/videos/the_power_of_the_pentatonic_scale: Music • CONCEPT • Power • ENDURING UNDERSTANDING • Music is one of humanity’s most powerful tools. • ESSENTIAL QUESTION • How can music unify humanity? • LEARNING TARGET and UNIT ? • I can identify and perform the pentatonic scale. • How powerful is the pentatonic scale?
Remaining pages in packet…. • Sample Templates from different disciplines from the book Understanding by Design. Please fill out the Teacher Training Evaluation Form & either leave it here or return it to me by the end of the day. Thanks! Have a great rest of the day!