|
Instructional
Planning: Backwards Design Grade
Group:
|
||
|
ELEMENTS
|
GROWING SUCCESS MESSAGE
|
TEACHER CANDIDATE FRIENDLY LANGUAGE
|
|
Achievement
Chart Categories
|
A standard, province-
wide guide to be used by teachers to make judgements about student work based
on clear performance standards.
|
The achievement chart
categories include: Knowledge and Understanding, Communication, Application
and Thinking. Each category expands across 4 levels. Level 4 being the
highest and level 1 being the lowest. Teachers use the achievement chart
categories for every subject, and every assignment and every test. Every
rubric created uses the achievement chart to assess students work. There are
general definitions under each and they expand as you go across the levels to
what is expected from each student.
|
|
Learning
Skills and Work Habits
|
The skills and habits
that can be demonstrated by a student across all subjects, courses and grades
and in other behaviour at school. These learning skills and work habits
promote student achievement of the curriculum expectations. The six skills
and habits are: responsibility, organization, independent work,
collaboration, initiative, and self-regulation.
|
The six learning skills and work habits:
responsibility, independent work, organization, independent work,
collaboration, initiative and self-regulation are skills and habits that
should be seen in all aspects of student learning and school life. Students
receive feedback such as: Excellent, Good, Satisfactory and Needs Improvement
in each course, grade and aspect of school life from their teachers. Students
are encouraged to improve upon these skills and habits until the very end of
the year in order to be the best overall student that they can be for
themselves and their school community.
|
|
Learning
Goals
|
Brief statements that
describe for a student what he/she should know and be able to do by the end
of a period of instruction
|
The goals a student
should have by the end of an instructional lesson.
|
|
Purpose
and Nature of Assessment
|
Assessment for
learning-diagnostic assessment is used by teachers to determine what students
already know; formative assessment is used by teachers to monitor students’
progress towards achieving the overall and specific expectations
Assessment as
learning-formative assessment is used by students to provide feedback to
other students
Assessment of
learning- summative assessment is used by the teacher to summarize learning
at a given point in time
|
Assessment for
learning- diagnostic assessment is used by teachers to determine what
students already know; formative assessment is used by teachers to monitor
students’ progress in achieving curriculum expectations
Assessment as
learning- formative assessment is used by students to provide feedback to
their peers
Assessment of
learning- summative assessment is used by the teacher to summarize learning
at any point in time
|
|
Success
Criteria
|
Standards or specific
descriptions of successful attainment of learning goals developed by teachers
on the basis of criteria in the achievement chart, and discussed and agreed
upon in collaboration with students that are used to determine to what degree
a learning goal has been achieved. Criteria describe what success “looks
like”, and allow the teacher and student to gather information about the
quality of student learning.
|
A list of learning
goals that is to be met in order to be successful developed by the teachers.
It is a way for students to see what they must do in order to achieve the
necessary criteria.
|
|
Assessment
Strategies
|
The process of
gathering, from a variety of sources, information that accurately reflects
how well a student is achieving the curriculum expectations in a subject or
course.
Teachers use a
variety of educational assessment strategies and tools, which may include
(but are not limited to) direct observation, portfolios, journals, rubrics,
tests, projects, and self- and peer assessment.
Oral interviews,
learning logs, or portfolio
|
The ways that
teachers can assess students to determine their knowledge of the material. It
can be delivered through means like oral interviews, portfolios, journals,
tests, and many more. They can be changed in order to meet a student’s
specific needs.
|
|
Assessment
Tools
|
Teachers use a
variety of educational assessment strategies and tools, which may include
(but are not limited to) direct observation, portfolios, journals, rubrics,
tests, projects, and self- and peer assessment. Data from assessments, along
with information from parents and others who have worked with the student,
provide a detailed picture of the student’s learning needs.
|
Ways in which
teachers can evaluate students’ progress and work.
|
|
Differentiated
Instruction
|
An approach to
instruction designed to maximize growth by considering the needs of each
student at his or her current stage of development and offering that student
a learning experience that responds to his or her individual needs.
Differentiated instruction recognizes that equity of opportunity is not
achieved through equal treatment and takes into account factors such as the
student’s readiness, interest, and learning preferences
|
Ensuring that
instruction is manageable for all students in the class regardless of
individual differences and/or barriers and providing different avenues of
learning for these differences.
|
Monday, 31 October 2016
Elements in Planning Chart
Here is a chart I created with my classmates which defines the different elements in educational planning.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment