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Project INVEST

Project INVEST. Purpose: Provide Florida’s teachers with model lesson using research based strategies addressing Next Generation Sunshine State Standards . Purpose.

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Project INVEST

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  1. Project INVEST Purpose: Provide Florida’s teachers with model lesson using research based strategies addressing Next Generation Sunshine State Standards.

  2. Purpose Purpose: Provide Florida’s teachers with model lesson using research based strategies addressing Next Generation Sunshine State Standards. This is why we are creating lesson plans which are duplicable and why they are submitted to a data base. Ultimately, all the lessons created through Project INVEST will be on the state’s searchable database for all Florida’s teachers to use.

  3. Goals Goals of the Grant: • To provide professional development to teachers in order to increase their platform of knowledge regarding the content of the NGSSS. • This is why teachers participate in a book study and USF professor lectures • To provide teachers with best practices • We use research-based, best teaching practices in order to demonstrate learning. This is why teachers see lessons modeled for them. Teachers need to see the techniques modeled for them so that they can go back to their classrooms and apply and utilize the techniques in their classroom with students.

  4. Best Practices: Strategies • 6 Interactive Strategies • Skill Builder • Experiential Exercise • Response Group • Problem Solving Group Work • Visual Discovery • Writing for Understanding

  5. Teaching Strategies Scotty Carroll Land ’O Lakes High School

  6. Multiple Intelligence Teaching Strategies • Experiential Exercise • Visual Discovery • Social Studies Skill Builder • Writing for Understanding • Response Group • Problem Solving Group Work

  7. Experiential Exercise: • Use short, memorable experiences to help students grasp social studies concepts. • Prepare your students for a safe, successful experience. • Make the experience as authentic as possible. • Allow students to express their feelings immediately after the experience. • Ask carefully sequenced questions to help students make connections between their experience and key concepts or events.

  8. Visual Discovery: • Arrange your classroom so projected images will be large and clear. • Use a few powerful images to represent a lesson’s key concepts. • Ask carefully sequenced questions that lead to discovery. • Challenge students to read about the image and apply what they learn. • Have students interact with the images to demonstrate what they have learned.

  9. Social Studies Skill Builders: • Teach the skill through modeling and guided practice. • Prepare students to work in pairs. • Set clear expectations, allow students to practice the skill repeatedly, and give immediate feedback. • Debrief the lesson to help students make connections to key social studies concepts.

  10. Writing for Understanding: • Use writing to help your students learn key social studies concepts • Give students rich experiences to write about • Have students record their ideas, thoughts, and feelings in prewriting activities • Provide students with authentic writing assignments. • Guide students through the writing process

  11. Response Group: • Create and move students into Response Groups. • Give students resources that inspire critical thinking. • Ask provocative critical-thinking questions. • Allow groups time to prepare their responses. • Facilitate a lively class discussion.

  12. Problem Solving Group Work: • Challenge students with engaging, multiple-ability projects • Prepare all students for successful group work • Give group members clearly defined roles and requirements • Give groups autonomy and time to prepare high-quality products • Have groups present their work

  13. It’s spring time. What is the typical eighth grader thinking about? (Standard 6.2.2, of course) We’re thinking about thedivergent paths of the American people in the 1880s and the purpose, challenges, and economic incentives associated with westward expansion, including the concept of Manifest Destiny and the territorial acquisitions that spanned numerous decades.

  14. Unwrapping Standards Determining what students need to learn so that a common assessment can be identified

  15. Course Objectives: • Participants will be able to: • See how unwrapping the standards is a process embedded within their Professional Learning Community. • Indentify essential standards within the curriculum. • Understand the importance of unwrapping the standards. • Apply the process of unwrapping the standards to your content that you teach. • Be able to communicate the process and decisions with colleagues. • Understand how to align lessons and assignments after standards have been unwrapped.

  16. How does this fit into the PLC process? Unwrapping the Standards

  17. The Process of Instructional Planning Traditional Practice Select a topic from the curriculum Design instructional activities Design and give an assessment Give grade or feedback Move on to new topic Standards-based Practice Select standards from among those students need to know Design an assessment (the end in mind )through which students will have an opportunity to demonstrate those things Decide what learning opportunities students will need to learn those things and plan appropriate instruction to assure that each student has adequate opportunities to learn Use data from assessment to give feedback, reteach, or move to the next level

  18. Essential Learning What knowledge and skills must I impart to my students THIS year so that they will enter NEXT year’s class with confidence AND readiness for success?

  19. “We may be focused on the tested standards today, but overall success of our students it is important to keep in mind what they will need for Success in subsequent years of schooling and in life itself”. Douglas Reeves

  20. The Big Picture To begin with the end in mind means to start with a clear understanding of your destination. It means to know where you’re going so that you better understand where you are now so that the steps you take are always in the right direction. -Stephen R. Covey

  21. The Steps of Unwrapping the Standards Learning Objectives – What do I want my students to understand? What skills and knowledge will they need? Evidence/Assessment- How do I know they understand? Planning- What next?

  22. What type of targets are included in each standard?

  23. Types of Learning Targets Knowledge Reasoning Skills Products

  24. Knowledge Targets • The facts and concepts we want students to know. • Often stated using verbs such as knows, lists, names, identifies, and recalls. • Also call for procedural knowledge, knowing how to do something, uses.

  25. Reasoning Targets Students use what they know to reason and solve problems. Represent mental processes such as predicts, infers, classifies, summarizes, compares, concludes, analyzes.

  26. Skill Targets Students use their knowledge and reasoning to act skillfully. Skill targets refer to performances that must be heard or seen to be assessed. Knowledge targets always underlie skill targets.

  27. Product Targets Students use their knowledge, reasoning, and skills to create a concrete product. Product targets include creating a table, graph, or scatter plot, notate music, use desktop computer to create presentation, create wellness plan.

  28. Example Describe how events, ideas, or information are organized (e.g., chronology, comparison, cause and effect) in a whole text or in part of a text.

  29. What type of targets are included in each standard?

  30. Bloom’s Taxonomy

  31. H.O. 27

  32. H.O. 28

  33. Cognitive Complexity Cognitive complexity refers to the cognitive demand associated with a standard. What are students asked to DO!

  34. Webb’s Depth of Knowledge

  35. Beginning the Process

  36. LEARNING OBJECTIVE Abstract A focus on larger ideas Helps students see relevance and purpose Helps to ensure student understanding Allows for transfer to other content

  37. LEARNING OBJECTIVES Learning Objectives represent that deep thinking, the end result we want students to ‘walk away with’ and see as relevant to their own lives. It is the educator that decides the Learning Objective, but it is the student that will ultimately say them. That is why as educators we must often word Learning Objectives in student friendly language. US pg. 30

  38. Samples of Adult-worded to Student-worded Understand the characteristics, distribution, and migration of human populations. I will be able to explain how people live and interact, and why they settle in certain areas.

  39. Identifying Learning Objectives Read the standard thoroughly Underline ideas Make additional notes Look for nouns (Knowledge) and skills (verbs) Phrase in a way that lets the student know what they need to concentrate on and why

  40. Standard Bencmarks Essential Question

  41. Start with the STANDARD Determine the meaning of words and phrases in a text, including vocabulary specific to domains related to history / social studies.

  42. Learning Objectives Determine the meaning of words and phrases in a text, including vocabulary specific to domains related to history / social studies. Learning Objective: I will illustrate the meaning of vocabulary words and phrases that I read in social studies text.

  43. Your Turn Understand the fundamental concepts and interrelationships of the United States economy in the international marketplace. 7th GRADE ECONOMICS

  44. STUDENT LANGUAGE I will compare how the USA’s economies relate to other country’s economies.

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