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, The 7 Habits of Highly
Effective People, 1989, p. 98
Understanding by
design – Introduction Review
In order to remember and obviously keep them in (web) mind, I decided to post some interesting ideas I found about this intro.
Nearly
every teacher can empathize with the world history teacher’s struggle, given
the pressures to “cover” material. The challenge is exacerbated by the natural
increase of knowledge in fields such as science and history, not to mention
external testing obligations and additions to the curriculum in recent years
(e.g., computer studies and drug education). But at its worst, a coverage
orientation—marching through the textbook irrespective of priorities, desired
results, learner needs and interests, or apt assessment evidence—may defeat its
own aims. For what do students remember, much less understand, when there is
only teaching with no opportunity to really learn—to work with, play with,
investigate, use—the key ideas and points of connection? Such an approach might
correctly be labeled, “Teach, test, and hope for the best.” (Page 3)
Key term alert!
The twin sins of
design: Activity-focused teaching and coverage-focused teaching
Question to set us thinking! (Page 4)
- How
do we make it more likely—by our design—that more students really understand
what they are asked to learn?
- What’s
to understand?
- How
to design?
Understanding = various facets (Let’s read)
There are
different kinds of understanding; we need to be clear about which ones we are
after. Understanding, we argue, is not a single goal but a family of
interrelated abilities—six different facets of transfer—and an education for
understanding would more deliberately develop them all.This dual
purpose—clarifying the goal called “student understanding” while exploring the
means called “good design”—raises a host of vital questions in the real world
of teaching, of course. What is the best way to design for both content mastery
and understanding? How can we accomplish the goal of understanding if the
textbooks we use dispense volumes of out-of-context knowledge? How realistic is
teaching for understanding in a world of content standards and high-stakes
tests?
Book’s aim! (Page 4)
1. Propose an approach to curriculum
and instruction designed to engage students in inquiry, promote transfer of
learning, provide a conceptual frame-work for helping students make sense of
discrete facts and skills, and uncover the big ideas of content.
2. Examine an array of methods for
appropriately assessing the degree of student understanding, knowledge, and
skill.
3. Consider the role that predictable
student misunderstandings should play in the design of curricula, assessments,
and instruction.
4. Explore common curriculum,
assessment, and instruction practices that may interfere with the cultivation
of student understanding, and propose a backward design approach to planning
that helps us meet standards without sacrificing goals related to
understanding.
5. Present a theory of six facets of
understanding and explore its theoretical and practical implications for
curriculum, assessment, and teaching.
6. Present a unit template to assist in
the design of curricula and assessments that focus on student understanding.
7. Show how such individual units
should be nested in a larger, more coherent framework of courses and programs
also framed around big ideas, essential questions, and core assessment tasks.
8. Propose a set of design standards
for achieving quality control in curriculum and assessment designs.
9. Argue that designers need to work
smarter, not harder, by sharing curriculum designs worldwide via a searchable
Internet database.
Key words (Page 5)
- Curriculum:
desired results (content and performance standards). (desired results we mean
what has often been termed intended outcomes, achievement targets, or
performance standards.)
- Assessments:
Desired results are achieved and how are have been achieved (learning-focused
term)
- Understanding
(so far): is to make connections and bind together our knowledge into something
that makes sense of things - to do it
- To use what we know – to apply it (like it!)
Probably, all teachers across the globe have faced and struggled with one of the twin sins; to question the "coverage-oriented" approach and come up with a different approach is a real challenge. I hope UbD Design helps us "examine an array of methods for appropriately assessing the degree of student understanding, knowledge, and skill". Honestly, I think that is our "cornerstone". Backward design may help us understand what "appropriate assessment" is.
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