Transcript Slide 1

Engaging Students through
Rigorous and Relevant Instruction
Jim Miles
Senior Associate
International Center for Leadership in Education
[email protected]
THINK of a number from 1 to 10
MULTIPLY that number by 9
If the number is a 2-digit number,
ADD the digits together
Now SUBTRACT 5
DETERMINE which letter in the
alphabet corresponds to the
number you ended up with
(example: 1=a, 2=b, 3=c,etc.)
THINK of a country that starts with
that letter
REMEMBER the last letter of the
name of that country
THINK of the name of an animal
that starts with that letter
REMEMBER the last letter in the
name of that animal
THINK of the name of a fruit that
starts with that letter
Are you thinking of a
Kangaroo in Denmark
eating an Orange?
Think – Pair – Share
What makes a lesson
rigorous and relevant
for a student?
ICLE Philosophy
 Relationships
 Relevance
 Rigor
 All Students
Relationships + Relevance
Make Rigor Possible
Rigor/Relevance Framework
6 Knowledge
5
4
C
D
A
B
3
2
1
Application
1
2
3
4
5
Assimilation
of knowledge
Thinking
Continuum
Level of challenge
of the learning
for the student
Acquisition
of knowledge
p
Page 7
Knowledge Taxonomy
Awareness Level
 Recall specific information
 list, arrange, tell, identify, locate
 List the four functions of marketing
Comprehension Level
 Understanding or interpretation
of information
 define, explain, calculate, reword
 Explain how to take a patient’s pulse
Knowledge Taxonomy
Synthesis Level
 Combining knowledge to form a new idea.
 create, build, generate, reorganize
 Design a cell phone package that meets your needs
and budget; how would the bacterial population
respond genetically to quarantine procedures
Evaluation Level
 Choosing an alternative in making a decision.
 decide, classify, judge, prioritize
 Given two cell phone plans justify which plan best
meets your needs and budget; recommend policies
for your school to prevent disease from spreading
Knowledge Taxonomy
Application level
 Applying knowledge and understanding
to a new situation
 solve, operate, use, handle, apply
 Use Internet resources for a research paper
on our trade deficit
Analysis Level
 Separate a complex idea into its components
 categorize, simplify, examine, survey
 Compare the similarities and differences
between Excel and Access applications
Knowledge
Taxonomy
Verb List
Rigor is…
Rigor is not…
thinking
 Planning for thinking
 Assessing thinking
 More or harder
about content
 Recognizing the level of
thinking students
demonstrate
 Managing the teaching/
learning level for the
desired thinking level

 Scaffolding



worksheets
AP or honors
courses
The higher level
book in reading
More work
More homework
EVALUATION
RIGOR
MEANS
FRAMING
LESSONS AT
THE HIGH END
OF THE
KNOWLEDGE
TAXONOMY
SYNTHESIS
ANALYSIS
APPLICATION
COMPREHENSION
KNOWLEDGE
Action
Continuum
Acquisition
of knowledge
Application
of knowledge
Relevance of learning
to life and work
Application Model
Knowledge
 Learning Knowledge, Attitude, or Skills
 Learning how to use a calculator
Apply in Discipline
 Using the knowledge, attitude, or skills
within the course curriculum
 Using the calculator to determine the
material costs of a storage shed
Application Model
Apply Across Disciplines
 Using the knowledge, attitude, or skills in
all discipline curriculums
 Using the knowledge/skills learned in math
class to solve a manufacturing problem
Apply to Predictable Situations
 Use information to analyze and solve real
world problems with predictable solutions
 Read a recipe, calculate the ingredients
needed to triple the recipe
Application Model
Apply to Unpredictable Situations
 Using information to analyze and solve
real problems with unknown solutions
 Plan the transportation and lodging for
your family’s vacation to Disney World
 Plan a luncheon for students being
inducted into the Business National
Honor Society and their parents
A Relevant Lesson asks Students to:
USE THEIR KNOWLEDGE
TO TACKLE
REAL-WORLD PROBLEMS
THAT HAVE
MORE THAN ONE SOLUTION
Page 10
Adding Relevancy to Any Learning
Compare Learning to …







Student’s life
Family’s life
Student’s community
and friends
Our world, nation, state
World of work
World of service
World of business and
commerce that we
interact with
Use Real World Examples






Moral, ethical, political,
cultural points of view and
dilemmas
Real world materials
Internet resources
Video and other media
Scenarios, real life stories
News - periodicals, media
A Relevant Lesson answers:

What am I Learning?

Why am I learning it?

How will I use it?
Application Model
5 Application to real-world
unpredictable situations
4 Application to real-world
predictable situations
3 Application across disciplines
2 Application within discipline
1 Knowledge of one discipline
course
Rigor/Relevance Framework
6
Knowledge
5
C
D
Understands
4
3
A
2
1
B
Knows
Application
1
2
3
4
5
Rigor/Relevance Framework
Teacher/Student Roles
C
R
I
G
O
R
High
D
Student
Thinks
B
A
Low
Student Thinks
and Works
Teacher
Works
Low
Student
Works
RELEVANCE
High
Verbs by Quadrant
A
name
label
define
select
identify
list
recite
locate
record
memorize
B
apply
sequence
demonstrate
interview
construct
solve
calculate
dramatize
interpret
illustrate
C
analyze
compare
examine
contrast
differentiate
explain
dissect
categorize
classify
diagram
discriminate
D
evaluate
formulate
justify
rate
recommend
infer
prioritize
revise
predict
argue
conclude
Product by Quadrant
A
definition
worksheet
list
quiz
test
workbook
true-false
reproduction
recitation
B
scrapbook
summary
interpretation
collection
annotation
explanation
solution
demonstration
outline
C
essay
abstract
blueprint
inventory
report
plan
chart
investigation
questionnaire
classification
D
evaluation
newspaper
estimation
trial
editorial
play
collage
machine
adaptation
poem
debate
new game
invention
knowledge
CAREER
DEVELOPMENT
Self-knowledge
• Who am I?
Career exploration
• Where am I going?
Career Plan
• How do I get there?
application
INTEGRATED
LEARNING
• What am I learning?
• Why am I learning it?
• How can I use it?
UNIVERSAL
FOUNDATION SKILLS
(SCANS)
• What do I need to know?
• What skills are
important for me”
skills
Questions
students
should be able
to answer
Which Quadrant ?? Why??






Calculate medical dosages for different weight
children.
Design a model bridge to carry a specific loads.
Use word processing software to write a business
letter requesting information.
List safety procedures.
Compare the similarities between 2 cameras.
Analyze commercials for purpose and impact.
Which Quadrant ?? Why??

Calculate medical dosages for different weight
children. B


Design a model bridge to carry a specific loads. D
Use word processing software to write a business
letter requesting information. B

List safety procedures. A

Compare the similarities between 2 cameras. C

Analyze commercials for purpose and impact. C
Select one activity and describe how you
would make it a Quadrant D Activity.






Calculate medical dosages for different weight
children.
Design a model bridge to carry a specific loads.
Use word processing software to write a business
letter requesting information.
List safety procedures.
Compare the similarities between 2 cameras.
Analyze commercials for purpose and impact.
Quadrant A
Ask questions to recall facts, make
observations or demonstrate understanding











What is/are__?
What did you observe__ ?
What else can you tell me__?
What does it mean__?
Where did you find that__?
Who is/was__?
In what ways_?
How would you define that in your own terms?
What did/do you notice about this __?
What did/do you feel/see/hear/smell __?
What do you remember about _?
Quadrant B
Ask questions to apply or relate













How would you do that?
Where will use that knowledge?
How does that relate to your experience?
How can you demonstrate that?
What observations relate__?
Where would you locate that information?
Calculate that for __?
How would you illustrate that?
Who could you interview?
How would you collect that data?
How do you know it works?
Can you apply what you know to this real world problem?
How do you make sure it is done correctly?
Quadrant C
Ask questions to summarize, analyze,
organize, or evaluate













How are these similar/different?
How is this like___?
What's another way we could say/explain/express that?
What do you think are some reasons/causes that _____ ?
Why did __ changes occur?
How can you distinguish between__?
What is a better solution to__?
How would you defend your position about__?
What changes to __ would you recommend?
What evidence can you offer?
How do you know?
Which ones do you think belong together?
What is the author’s purpose?
Quadrant D
Ask questions to predict, design, create











How would you design a __ to __?
How would you compose a song about__?
How would you rewrite the ending of the story?
What would be different today, if that event occurred?
Can you see a possible solution to__?
How could you teach that to others?
Which resources would you use to deal with__?
How would you devise your own way to deal with__?
What new and unusual uses would you create for__?
Can you develop a proposal which would_?
How would you do it differently?
I have come to a frightening conclusion. I am
the decisive element in the classroom. It is my
personal approach that creates the climate. It
is my daily mood that makes the weather. As a
teacher, I possess tremendous power to make
a child's life miserable or joyous. I can be a
tool of torture or an instrument of inspiration. I
can humiliate or humor, hurt or heal. In all
situations, it is my response that decides
whether a crisis will be escalated or deescalated, and a child humanized or dehumanized."
Haim Ginott