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Day 2

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Revise your maps/common content and skills. Agenda: Day 3 ... Photo Essay w/ text. Comparative observations. 6-8. Persuasive essays. Descriptive essays ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Day 2


1
Day 2
2
College Credit
  • University of Sioux Falls
  • Workshop Name
  • Curriculum Mapping Strategies, Tools, Processes
  • No
  • EDU 544F
  • Dates
  • Sept. 13-15
  • Credit
  • 1
  • Location
  • Lander, Wy

3
Day 2 Agenda
  • The Cycle of Mapping its an ongoing process
  • Initial Read-thru activity
  • 3 month map
  • a PRINTed report
  • a frequency report
  • Revise your maps/common content and skills

4
Agenda Day 3
  • 8am-12noon Mapping work-time with TIE staff
    support
  • Make revisions based on the initial read-thru
  • Continue projection mapping thru 06-07
  • Option for small group/individual consultation.
  • 1pm Return to High School
  • Bring a PRINTed report (skills and assessment)
  • Creating conditions for sustainable change
  • The Fremont School District 1 Action Plan
  • Wrap-up, Conclusion and Evaluation

5
Q A
  • Questions from Day 1.
  • General questions about the software.
  • General questions about the process of mapping.

6
Questions
  • What happens if I loose my internet connections
    while Im entering data?
  • Time??
  • Will this help with technology and information
    literacy standards (imbedded)? Also incorporating
    library media.
  • Why do we need common language across
    buildings/grades?
  • How do we use CM when it is time to buy new
    textbooks/instructional materials?

7
More Questions
  • Micromanagement of lessons, inhibit creativity?
  • Will the maps look different in different
    schools?
  • Do we repeat the benchmark under the content box?
    Can I put the standards in first?
  • Why cant we do one map per grade level.
  • Clarification on diary, projection, when does it
    get changed.

8
More Questions
  • Why not quarterly standards or by content? Why by
    the month?
  • Resolving conflict between content areas using
    CM?
  • Can we rewrite standards?

9
Fremont County School District 1Curriculum
Mapping
Outcome Participants will gain an understanding
of the cycle of curriculum mapping.
10
WAKE UP SLEEPY HEAD
  • Mental Calisthenics

11
Mental Challenge
  • Select a partner.One of you face the
    screen.One of you have your back to the screen.
  • The partner facing the screen will give clues-
    like in Catch Phrase.
  • The partner with their back to the screen will
    guess the answer.

12
FROG
PRACTICE
13
Athletic Terms
  • Free throw
  • Soccer
  • Goalie
  • League
  • Dribble
  • Back nine
  • Backboard
  • Putt
  • Charging
  • Boxing

14
Curriculum Mapping Vocabulary
  • Content
  • Unit
  • Assessment
  • TechPaths
  • Essential Questions
  • Spiral
  • Benchmarks
  • Reports
  • Discussions
  • Lesson

15

Mapping is a COMMUNICATION TOOL
  • among teachers in the building
  • among teachers through-out district

16
Benefits for Students
  • Students get a K-12 curriculum without gaps and
    overlaps.
  • The curriculum is focused on essential learning
    experiences.
  • Student achievement and performance improve.

17
Lets take it one step at a time!
18
The Curriculum Mapping Process
  • Step 1 Collecting the data each teacher
    individually creates a map
  • Step 1a Initial Read-Through Are you doing it
    right?
  • Step 2 First read-through teachers read each
    others maps for content
  • Step 3 Small group review sharing findings
  • Step 4 Large group comparisons sharing
    findings from small group review
  • Step 5 Determine immediate revision points
  • Step 6 Determine points requiring more research
    and planning
  • Step 7 Plan for next review cycle

Susan Udelhofen/SU-Consulting
19
Step 1 Collecting the data
  • each teacher completes a map - individually
  • record content, skills, assessments and standards
  • collection, analysis and revision
  • This is the first draft

Susan Udelhofen/SU-Consulting
20
Remember...
  • Your curriculum map reflects
  • what actually occurs in your classroom
  • May look messy
  • May not be a pretty document
  • Thats ok!

21
Some Guidelines...
  • Include enough specifics to make the map
    useful(so it tells you something upon
    reflection)
  • Use specific vocabulary vs. vague/generic terms

22
More Guidelines...
  • Dont write too much!
  • No need to write out objectives or complete
    activities

23
Step 1a Initial Read-Through Are you doing it
right?
  • Are the content, skills, and assessments
    correctly entered?
  • Are they aligned to the standards?

Benchmark A quality map is so clear that the
map reader can understand what the map says
without the map writer being present to explain
the maps data.
24
Step 2 Editing First Read-Through
  • Each teacher individually reads a set of maps (at
    the site)
  • Ultimately everyone will be familiar with all
    maps

Susan Udelhofen/SU-Consulting
25
What to Look for
  • A clear connection between content, skills, and
    assessments
  • Clear, concise skills (action verbs)
  • A variety of assessments
  • Gaps in content and skills
  • Meaningless redundancies
  • Repetitions (spiraling)

26
Curriculum Spirals
27
Matching Learners and Assessment Genres
  • K-2
  • Captions
  • Labels
  • Simple interviews
  • Drawing
  • 3-5
  • Simple reports
  • Short stories
  • Photo Essay w/ text
  • Comparative observations
  • 6-8
  • Persuasive essays
  • Descriptive essays
  • Hypothesis testing
  • Original play writing
  • 9-12
  • Position papers
  • Business plans
  • Case studies
  • Legal briefs

28
Step 3 Small Mixed Small Group Review
  • groups of 5-6 faculty members are formed
  • its best if the groups consist of individuals
    who do not work together
  • looking at the big picture
  • results are compiled
  • Based on open/honest communication

Susan Udelhofen/SU-Consulting
29
As a group of teachers of varied grade levels or
varied courses within a department...
  • Provides opportunity to collaborate with
    colleagues across grade levels and courses
  • Time to discuss findings from individual
    read-through

30
Real Conversations About Real Data The Best Part
Susan Udelhofen/SU-Consulting
31
Purpose of Subsequent Read-Throughs
  • Check for gaps
  • Check for redundancies
  • Check for literacy
  • Check for spiraling of skills

32
Step 4 Large Group Review
  • small group findings are shared with entire
    faculty
  • review findings and identify emerging patterns

Susan Udelhofen/SU-Consulting
33
Examples of Group Review Results
  • Math
  • Fractions at what grade levels are parts and
    whole fractions being introduced? When and how
    is it being assessed?
  • How and when are analyzing graphs and charts
    being taught?
  • How are basic math facts taught and assessed
    (H.S. math classes still reviewing???)
  • Language Arts
  • We need a list of core books being taught at
    grades K-8th
  • How is mastery of phonics defined?
  • How do we as a district assess writing?
  • How and when is grammar taught and assessed?
  • Social Studies
  • We need to address the repetitions as a K-12
    District
  • i.e. Civil War
  • When are the specific U.S. time periods taught
    at what grade level?

34
Using Curriculum Mapping
  • To drive discussions and decisions about
    curriculum, teaching, and learning will transform
    your school into a professional learning
    community.

35
Step 5 Determine Areas for Immediate Revision
  • faculty analyzes results and identifies those
    areas that can be handled by the site with
    relative ease
  • a timetable is established for revisions

Susan Udelhofen/SU-Consulting
36
Step 6 Determine Areas Requiring Long Term
Planning
  • Faculty identifies areas requiring more in-depth
    investigation

Susan Udelhofen/SU-Consulting
37
Step 7 The Cycle Continues
Susan Udelhofen/SU-Consulting
38
If we dont use the reports to make curricular
decisions, we fail ourselves and we fail our
students.
39
Ensuring Student Learning
  • What do we want each student to learn?
  • How will we know when each student has learned
    it?
  • How will we respond when a student experiences
    difficulty in learning?

Richard DuFour--On Common Ground
40
SUMMARY
  • Curriculum Mapping is an on-going process that
    enables teachers to gather data on what is
    actually being taught and what students are
    actually learning.
  • Maps allow teachers to put their instructional
    curriculum into a common format (like a blue
    print) that enables conversations on effective
    teaching and learning.

41
Summary (continued)
  • Maps continually evolve based on the needs of the
    students
  • The purpose of maps is not to create the map it
    is a record of what is actually occurring in
    classrooms.
  • Investigating the maps helps align teaching and
    the learning process to standards and have data
    for articulation.

42
Maps are never finished they are a work in
progress!
43
Never doubt . . .
  • a small group of thoughtful committed citizens
    can change the world. Indeed it is the only thing
    that ever has.
  • Margaret Mead

44
The Curriculum Mapping Process
  • Step 1 Collecting the data each teacher
    individually creates a map
  • Step 1a Initial Read-Through Are you doing it
    right?
  • Step 2 First read-through teachers read each
    others maps for content
  • Step 3 Small group review sharing findings
  • Step 4 Large group comparisons sharing
    findings from small group review
  • Step 5 Determine immediate revision points
  • Step 6 Determine points requiring more research
    and planning
  • Step 7 Plan for next review cycle

Susan Udelhofen/SU-Consulting
45
The Initial Read-Thru
  • Initial Read-Through Hale (2005) defines a
    quality map as a map wherein map readers do not
    need the map writer or writers present to
    correctly interpret the maps data.
  • During the beginning stages of learning to diary
    map, it is recommended that teachers and
    administrators, as learners, are afforded the
    opportunity to take part in an Initial
    Read-Through.
  • It is a unique review in that an individuals
    Diary Map is being reviewed not for a task such
    as finding gaps or repetitions, but rather to
    provide self-reflection on ones abilities to
    synthesize the knowledge of correct format,
    verbiage, and mechanics to insure quality
    mapping..

46
Materials you will need
  • Three Month Map
  • Standard addressed in map with frequency report
  • A PRINTed copy of 3 months of your map.
  • Initial Read-Thru reporting form (in your folder)

47
Directions
  • We will be providing each other with feedback
    concerning our initial diary map data.
  • We will be looking specifically at content,
    skills, assessment and alignment to standards.
  • In other words can you clearly tell what the
    students in this class will be learning and doing?

48
What are we looking for?
  • Content noun or noun phrase, can you tell what
    the students will know?
  • Skills starts with an action verb, can you tell
    what the students will do with the content?
  • Assessment only a title
  • alignment to standards does the rest of the map
    fit with the standard?

49
Friday Homework
  • Continue mapping Friday morning in your own
    buildings.
  • Return to this auditorium at 1pm with your
    Homework.
  • Please bring a PRINTed landscape (all months)
    report. With your skills and assessments.
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