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Module 5A for Elementary Teachers. Florida Standards for ELA & Literacy: Focus on Universal Design for Learning. Professional Development Session Alignment Set 1. Data Use. Governing Board. Data Use. ELA Math. School Leaders. Module 3 PARCC. Data Use. ELA. Math. Teachers.
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Module 5A for Elementary Teachers Florida Standards for ELA & Literacy: Focus on Universal Design for Learning
Professional Development Session Alignment Set 1 Data Use Governing Board Data Use ELA Math School Leaders Module 3 PARCC Data Use ELA Math Teachers Leadership Teams Session 1 Session 2 Module 6 Florida Standards Math Module 7 ELA & Data Use
Professional Development Session AlignmentSet 2 Governing Board Florida Standards School Leaders Assessments Data Analysis VAM Data Use ELA Math Data & ELA Data & Math Teachers Leadership Teams Session 3 Session 4 Session 5 Session 6 Module 6 Florida Standards Math Module 7 ELA & Data Use Module 8 Math & Data Use Module 5 Florida Standards ELA
You Are Here Module 2 ELA Module 2 FL CCRS ELA Module 1 Data Use Module 4 Data Use Module 3 Math Module 5 ELA Module 5 FL CCRS ELA Module 8 Math & Data Use Module 7 ELA & Data Use Module 6 Math
Module 5A Outcomes • Assess understanding of the instructional shifts, aligned instructional practices, and Universal Design for Learning • Share experiences with developing and delivering Florida Standards aligned lessons • Examine lessons that teacher leaders have developed and delivered using the EQuIP Rubric and lesson planning process • Examine UDL supports to lessons aligned with the three instructional shifts • Collaborate on possible UDL supports to Florida Standards for ELA & Literacy aligned lessons • Identify relevant resources for implementation and strengthen the peer support network
Today’s Agenda • Welcome and Introductions • Pre-Assessment • Review of Florida Standards for ELA & Literacy Shifts and Sharing of Florida Standards-Aligned Lessons • Universal Design for Learning and Florida Standards Instructional Practices • Lunch • Universal Design for Learning and Florida Standards Instructional Practices (continued) • Post-Assessment and Wrap Up
Introductory Activity Pre-Assessment Guide Page 5
Section 1 Florida Standards for ELA & Literacy Instructional Shifts
Instructional Shift #1: Building Knowledge Through Content-Rich Text
Instructional Shift #2: Reading, Writing, and Speaking Grounded in Evidence
Instructional Shift #3: Regular Practice with Complex Text and Its Academic Language Reading Standard 10: Read and comprehend complex literary and informational text independently Reading Standard 4: Interpret words and phrases Language Standards 4-6: Determine the meaning of vocabulary and acquire/useacademic and domain-specific vocabulary; attention to text structure and syntax
How Will the 3 Shifts Impact: Goal: Improved student proficiency on grade level outcomes & readiness for college and careers lesson design instructional practices student practices Discuss the impact with your team. Create and fill out one sentence strip with reflections on changes to lesson design, a second strip with changes to instructional practices, and a third strip with changes to student practices.
Activity 1: Sharing Florida Standards for ELA & Literacy Aligned Lessons Guide Pages 7-8
Section 2 Universal Design for Learning (UDL)
Raise Your Hand If… • You have heard of UDL • You have used UDL practices
The BIG Question from Reading Standard 10: How do we help all students become independent and proficient readers (and writers) of complex text?
Universal Design for LearningDiminishing Barriers to Learning “Barriers to learning are not, in fact, inherent in the capacities of learners, but instead arise in learners' interactions with inflexible educational goals, materials, methods, and assessments.” Teaching Every Student in the Digital Age, p. v CAST (Center for Applied Special Technology)
What is Universal Design for Learning? • Discussion Prompts • What is the main purpose of UDL? • Why do you think multiple means of representation, expression, and engagement may help more students be successful and thwart barriers to learning? • What do the terms “universal,” “design,” and “learning” refer to in the learning process? UDL Principles and Practices National Center on UDL View the Video
Universal Design for Learning To be fair, we will all take the same assessment on ‘How to Climb a Tree’, now, please show me what you have learned… Retrieved from: http://scholasticadministrator.typepad.com/thisweekineducation/2012/08/cartoons-climb-that-tree.html#tp
Let’s Take A Break… Be back in 15 minutes…
The Learning Brain and UDL Guidelines • the “what” of learning • Multiple means of representation • the “how” of learning • Multiple means of action and expression • the “why” of learning • Multiple means of engagement Retrieved from: http://www.cast.org/udl/index.html
Students have: Options for how they learn Options for how they demonstrate their learning Options which will engage and increase interest Teachers provide multiple: Ways of representing and presenting lesson content Methods of expression and assessment Options for student engagement Universal Design for Learning:Three Principles
Review the UDL Framework in Your Guide Guide Pages 10-12
Multiple Means of Representation How can I make certain: • new concepts and key information are equally perceived and accessible by all students? (display, visual, auditory, manipulative, hands-on) • my students will understand and will be able to generalize and transfer thisinformation? (multiple illustrations, patterns, organizing information)
Designing Lessons to Address Means of Representation • Assistive technology • Offer text-to-speech, video, or audio support • Provide vocabulary support • Highlight critical features & main ideas • Use colors, large font size, underlining • Word Sorts • Analytic Graphic Organizers
View UDL Book Editions Text-to-speech, highlight, dictionary, encyclopedia links, and English to Spanish translations Ks
REPRESENTATIONKey vocabulary study guide in a table using images
Multiple Means of Expression Have I provided: • materials and resources with which all students can interact, navigate, and express what they know? • modalities for expression to allow all students the opportunity to express their knowledge, ideas, and concepts in various ways?
Designing Lessons to Address Means of Expression • Students show what they know - voice recording, graphic displays, performance • Models, charts, graphs, posters • Supports such as story starters, guided outlines, etc. • Assistive technology • Coding the Text
Microsoft Photo Story3, also consider www.prezi.com Microsoft-photo-story.en.softonic.com
Multiple Means of Engagement Have I provided: • alternative ways to increase student interest, ways that may help motivate them to want to learn more? • options for students who differ in motivation and self-regulation skills?
Designing Lessons to Address Means of Engagement • Vary levels of challenge and support to prevent frustration or boredom • Tie work to real-world examples • Where possible, give choices • Teach self-assessment and reflection • Hands-on manipulative • Collaborative work • Multimedia
View UDL Book Builder Use this site to create, share, publish, and read digital books
Activity 2: View and Discuss Florida Standards for ELA & Literacy Aligned Lessons with UDL Supports Guide Pages 13-16
Guide Page 14
Guide Page 15
Guide Page 16
Section 3 Florida Standards for ELA & Literacy Aligned Instructional Practices with UDL Supports
What is the Relationship Between: Three UDL Principles Multiple methods of representation Multiple methods of action and expression Multiple methods of engagement Three Florida Standards for ELA & Literacy Shifts Building knowledge through content-rich nonfiction Reading, writing, and speaking grounded in evidence from text, both literary and informational Regular practice with complex text and its academic language
UDL and the Florida Standards • UDL allows teachers to draw on brain research to teach all students to reach the Florida Standards with: • appropriate learning goals • effective methods, materials • accurate and fair ways to assess students' progress
Analytic Graphic Organizers • Instructional Shift 1 • Building Knowledge Through Content Rich Text • Coding the Text • Instructional Shift 2 (a) • Close Reading • Quote, Question, Response • Instructional Shift 2 (b) • Writing with Evidence • Instructional Shift 3 • Complex Text and its Academic Language • Word Sort
Instructional Shift #1: Building Knowledge Through Content-Rich Text Guide Pages 18-20