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Title: Connecting Depth of Knowledge to Instruction: Instructional Rigor'


1
Connecting Depth of Knowledge to Instruction
Instructional Rigor.
  • Kentucky Department of Education
  • sean.elkins_at_education.ky.gov

2
Todays goals
  • Review the four levels of DOK
  • Discuss the importance of DOK with regard to the
    the classroom
  • Discuss the relationship of rigorous assessment
    to rigorous instruction.
  • Find ways to increase instructional rigor

3
National Standards Learning Goals Academic
Expectations
Program of Studies
Core Content
Depth of Knowledge
District and School Curriculum
Curriculum Hierarchy
4
Depth of Knowledge (DOK)
  • Taken from the model developed by Norman Webb,
    University of Wisconsin, to align standards with
    assessments
  • Used by the Council of Chief State School
    Officers (CCSSO) for assessment alignment in more
    than ten states

5
Why Depth of Knowledge?
  • Mechanism to ensure that the intent of the
    standard and the level of student demonstration
    required by that standard matches the assessment
    items (required under NCLB)
  • Provides cognitive processing ceiling for item
    development

6
Why Depth of Knowledge?
  • No Child Left Behind (NCLB) requires assessments
    to measure the depth and breadth of the state
    academic content standards for a given grade
    level (U.S. Department of Education, 2003, p.
    12)

7
Depth of Knowledge
  • Focuses on the cognitive processing that is
    required to complete an assessment task
  • Descriptive, not a taxonomy
  • Not the same as difficulty

8
Depth of KnowledgeFour Levels of Depth of
Knowledge
  • Recall and Reproduction - Level 1
  • Skills Concepts/Basic Reasoning - Level 2
  • Strategic Thinking/Complex Reasoning - Level 3
  • Extended Thinking/Reasoning - Level 4

9
Recall and Reproduction - Level 1
requires recall of information, such as a fact,
definition, term, or performing a simple process
or procedure. A student either knows the answer
or doesnt. Answering a Level 1 item can involve
following a simple, well-known procedure or
formula. Simple skills and abilities or rote
responses characterize DOK 1.
10
Recall and Reproduction Examples
  • List animals that survive by eating other
    animals.
  • Locate or recall facts explicitly found in text
  • Describe physical features of places
  • Determine the perimeter or area of rectangles
    given a drawing or labels
  • Identify elements of music using musical
    terminology
  • Recognize basic rules for participating in simple
    games and activities

11
Skills Concepts/Basic Reasoning - Level 2
includes the engagement of some mental processing
beyond recalling or reproducing a response. Items
require students to make some decisions as to how
to approach the question or problem. These
actions imply more than one mental or cognitive
process/step.
12
Skills and Concepts Examples
  • Compare desert and tropical environments
  • Identify and summarize the major events, problem,
    solution, conflicts in literary text
  • Explain the cause-effect of historical events
  • Predict a logical outcome based on information in
    a reading selection
  • Explain how good work habits are important at
    home, school, and on the job.
  • Classify plane and three dimensional figures
  • Describe various styles of music

13
Strategic Thinking/Complex Reasoning - Level 3
requires deep knowledge as exhibited through
planning, using evidence, and more demanding
cognitive reasoning. The cognitive demands at
Level 3 are complex and abstract. An activity
that has more than one possible answer and
requires students to justify the response they
give would most likely be a Level 3.
14
Strategic Thinking Examples
  • Compare consumer actions and analyze how these
    actions impact the environment
  • Analyze interrelationships among elements of the
    text (plot, subplots, characters, setting)
  • Solve a multiple-step problem and provide support
    with a mathematical explanation that justifies
    the answer

15
Strategic Thinking Examples
  • Develop a scientific model for a complex idea
  • Propose and evaluate solutions for an economic
    problem
  • Explain, generalize or connect ideas, using
    supporting evidence from a text or source
  • Create a dance that represents the
    characteristics of a culture

16
Extended Thinking/Reasoning - Level 4
requires high cognitive demand and is very
complex. Students are expected to make several
connectionsrelate ideas within the content or
among content areasand have to select or devise
one approach among many alternatives on how the
situation can be solved. Due to the complexity
of cognitive demand, DOK 4 often requires an
extended period of time.
17
However, extended time alone is not the
distinguishing factor.
18
Extended Thinking Examples
  • Gather, analyze, organize, and interpret
    information from multiple (print and non print
    sources) to draft a reasoned report
  • Analyzing authors craft (e.g., style, bias,
    literary techniques, point of view)
  • Create an exercise plan applying the FITT
    Principle

19
Extended Thinking Examples
  • Analyze and explain multiple perspectives or
    issues within or across time periods, events, or
    cultures
  • Specify a problem, identify solution paths, solve
    the problem, and report the results
  • Write and produce an original play

20
DOK is NOT Difficulty
  • List Kentuckys 120 counties.
  • (Hard, but not complex)
  • List the most embarrassing event of your life.
    Explain why it was so embarrassing, then describe
    what you would do differently if you could relive
    that event.
  • (Complex, but not hard)

21
DOK is not verb-dependent
22

DOK 1- Describe three characteristics of
metamorphic rocks. (simple recall) DOK 2-
Describe the difference between metamorphic and
igneous rocks. (requires cognitive processing to
determine the differences in the two rock types)
DOK 3- Describe a model that you might use to
represent the relationships that exist within the
rock cycle. (requires deep understanding of rock
cycle and a determination of how best to
represent it)
Same verbthree DOK levels
23
Remember
  • Depth of Knowledge (DOK) is a scale of cognitive
    demand.
  • DOK requires looking at the assessment
    item/standard-not student work-in order to
    determine the level. DOK is about the
    item/standard-not the student.
  • The context of the assessment item/standard must
    be considered to determine the DOK not just a
    look at what verb was chosen.

24
Increasing DOK levels
  • DOK 1 items arent evil
  • Assessment design suggests a mix of complexity
  • KCCT DOK designations are ceilings, not floors
  • Increased DOK on assessments must be accompanied
    by classroom practice that supports cognitive
    complexity

25
Increasing DOK levels (cont.)
  • Response to graphics (meaningful)
  • Justification-explain thinking
  • Multiple plausible responses
  • Prediction, extrapolation
  • Synthesize data from multiple sources
  • Develop a model
  • Reliance on evidence
  • Focus on concepts, not trivia
  • Less what, more how and why
  • Comparison, analysis

26
Instructional Implications
  • Rigorous assessment- examine classroom summative
    and formative assessments for levels of DOK.
  • Rigorous instruction- your instructional
    strategies must support cognitively complex
    assessment.

27
Instructional Implications
  • DOK was created specifically to measure
    assessment-it is not an instructional term.
  • We already have plenty of measures of
    instructional depth (Blooms, anyone?)
  • Use DOK to talk about assessment
  • Strategies that increase DOK on assessments are a
    good place to start when changing instructional
    practice

28
Next steps
  • Deconstructing standards to uncover student
    learning targets
  • Connecting instruction to assessment- assessing
    learning targets
  • Crosswalk activities and assessments
  • Effective instructional strategies

29
Assessment and Instruction must work hand in hand
30
You need a common understanding of rigor, not a
common definition!
31
Rigor?
  • I shall not today attempt to define the kinds of
    material I understand to be (it) and perhaps I
    could never succeed in intelligibly doing so.
    But I know it when I see it...

-Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart, ruling on
what constitutes obscenity in Jacobellis v. Ohio
32
Do we know it when we see it?
Rigorous instruction?
33
What is rigor?
  • Questions to discuss
  • Whats the difference between hard (difficult)
    work and rigorous work?
  • Can you have an assignment that is rigorous but
    not difficult?

34
What is rigor?
  • Instructional Rigor and Student Engagement a
    teacher supports and encourages a students
    commitment to initiate and complete complex,
    inquiry-based learning requiring creative and
    critical thinking with attention to problem
    solving
  • (from CHQTL document)

35
What is rigor?
36
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37
Ranking rigor
  • Briefly scan the lesson plans with your group
  • Rank them ino rder of increasing rigor-discuss
  • Move around the room and observe how other groups
    have ranked them--do we all agree?

38
Whats missing from this equation?
Rigorous Instruction Rigorous Assessment (X)
Student Success
X Student Engagement
39
Engagement is the path to rigor
  • Gateway to acceptance of rigorous work
  • Engaged students dont become office referrals
  • Positive attitudes foster positive results
  • The person doing the work is the person doing the
    learning school shouldnt be a place where kids
    come to watch teachers work

40
(No Transcript)
41
Planning for Rigor
  • What is the most rigorous lesson you teach all
    year? What makes it rigorous?
  • What is the most engaging lesson you teach all
    year? What makes it engaging?
  • How can you blend the attributes? (not the
    content!)

42
Rigor Safari!
  • Best done in PLCs, small groups
  • Tuning protocols
  • Common definition is critical
  • Is it rigorous or is it just hard? is the most
    common question

43
Roadmap to Rigor
  • Identify learning targets
  • Practice backward design (targetsgtassessmentsgtlear
    ning experiences)
  • Check for alignment-CRUCIAL

44
  • If students make a good-faith effort on every
    activity and assignment, will I have given them
    the opportunity to learn (or demonstrate) what my
    assessment actually measures?

45
Roadmap to Rigor
46
Roadmap to Rigor
  • Start with your most engaging activities
  • Find ways to incorporate higher levels of
    thinking discussions, extensions, real-life
    connections
  • Dont be a Blooming idiot

47
Try it yourself
  • Think about the most engaging lesson you taught
    (or observed) this year. How could it have been
    more rigorous?
  • Think about the most rigorous lesson you taught
    (or observed) this year. How could it have been
    more engaging?

48
Vocabulary clues A
  • DOK 3
  • DOK 1
  • Rigor
  • Difficulty

49
Vocabulary clues B
  • DOK 2
  • DOK 4
  • Engagement
  • Relevance
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