Ass Overview of PCM Module 1
Ass Overview of PCM Module 1
Ass Overview of PCM Module 1
The Elephant in the Room: What does qualitatively differentiated curriculum really look like?
The Rationale for an Evolving Conception of Curriculum to Develop Expertise or Why do we need to think differently about curriculum than we have in the past?
Curriculum should guide students in mastering key information, ideas, and the fundamental skills of the discipline. Curriculum should help students grapple with complex and ambiguous issues and problems. Curriculum should move students from a novice to an expert level of performance in the disciplines. Curriculum should provide students opportunities for original work in the disciplines. Curriculum should help students encounter, accept, and ultimately embrace challenge in learning. Curriculum should prepare students for a world in which knowledge expands and changes at a dizzying pace. Curriculum should help students determine constants in the past and in themselves while helping them prepare for a changing world. Curriculum should help students develop a sense of themselves as well as their possibilities in the world in which they live. Curriculum should be compelling and satisfying enough to encourage students to persist in developing their capacities.
Theoretical Underpinnings
of the Parallel Curriculum Model
Effective Curriculum
for All Learners
Has a clear focus on the essential facts, understandings, and skills that professionals in that discipline value most Provide opportunities for students to develop in-depth understanding Is organized to ensure that all student tasks are aligned with the goals of in-depth understanding Is coherent (organized, unified, sensible) to the student Is mentally and affectively engaging to the learner Recognizes and supports the need of each learner to make sense of ideas and information, reconstructing older understandings with new ones Is joyful-or at least satisfying Provides choices for the learner Allows meaningful collaboration
Effective Curriculum
for All Learners
Is focused on products (sometimes students make or do) that matter to students Connects with students lives and worlds Is fresh and surprising Seems real, purposeful, useful to students Is rich Deals with profound ideas Calls on students to use what they learn in interesting and important ways Aids students in developing a fruitful consciousness of their thinking Helps learners monitor and adapt their ways of working to ensure competent approaches to problem solving Involves students in setting goals for their learning and assessing their progress toward those goals Stretches the student
Opportunities to transfer and apply knowledge using the tools and methods of the scholar, researcher, and practitioner
What is curriculum?
Curriculum is a design PLAN that fosters the purposeful, proactive organization, management and assessment of interactions among the teacher, the learners, and the content knowledge we want students to acquire.
What are the ten components of a comprehensive curriculum unit, lesson, or task?
Content Assessment Grouping Strategies Products
Introduction
Teaching Strategies Learning Activities
Resources
Extension Activities Modification
(Ascending Levels of Intellectual Demand)
Content is what we want students to know, understand, and do as a result of our curriculum and instruction. Standards are broad statements about what grade-level students should know and be able to do.
Introductory An introduction sets the stage A high quality for a unit. Components may Activities introduction will include: (1) a focusing question, (2) a needs include all six assessment to determine elements, as well as students prior an advance organizer knowledge,interests, and learning preferences (3) a that provides students teaser or hook to motivate with information that students (4) information they can use to help about the relevance of the goals and unit expectations, assess their (5) information about expectations for students, and acquisition of the (6) consideration of students units learning goals.
interests in or experiences that connect with the unit topic.
Benefit
Effective, short-term acquisition of new content knowledge
Direct Instruction
A method of teaching that consists of a teachers systematic explanation of a new concept or skill followed by guided practice under a teachers guidance.
Benefit
Acquisition of new categories, concepts, and macro concepts (e.g., vegetable, adjective, tragic hero, compromise)
Socratic Questioning
Acquisition of content related to social issues; enhanced ability to think issues through logically
Simulation
Increased likelihood that concepts and principles induced from the simulation will be transferred and applied to the real world
Benefit
Increased self-awareness; awareness of different points of view; enhanced curiosity; increased understanding of concepts and principles; enhanced ability to solve problems Acquisition of new knowledge, concepts, and principles; enhanced problem-solving ability
Effective