Showing posts with label curriculum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label curriculum. Show all posts

Thursday, July 13, 2023

Three Ways to Revitalize Lessons Throughout the School Year

Do you ever feel super energized just before and during the first month of school, and, then, begin to feel challenged to keep the momentum? I'm raising my hand! Since this is on my mind presently, I decided to sit down and write about the ways I try to keep the excitement going for as much of the 180 days as possible.

Whether our learners spend their days in 45-minute class periods, 90-minute blocks, or any other type of schedule for doing school, they like novelty. This often goes for the adults in the classroom, too. I am one of those people, and so I do something about it.

Our jobs as educators do not have to include what can be several days during which we dread a particular lesson, unit, or project. We may be limited by mandated, district-wide unit topics, book lists, and summative assessments, but we usually have some wiggle room to work within those limitations in such a way that our students can be not only engaged, but have teachers who are enjoying coaching and learning. It's possible! Case in point, *most* students and I enjoy the days when we have speaking summative assessments in French now that I made some gradual changes. It used to be a day of intense student nervousness and mental fatigue for everyone. There's still some of that, but it's a lot more enjoyable now. That’s a post for another day, though…

What about the precious little time we have to keep our heads above water? Personally, I don't usually put pressure on myself to create a new learning experience for any specific course or unit at any specific point in time. It just happens when inspiration comes to me, so I'm not suggesting that you devote much more time than you probably already do to your craft. Boundaries are necessary and allow us to bring our best selves to the classroom. 


#1 --- Read what educators from other content areas are doing. 
(Let me preface with this: If you are already up to date and following current practices in your content area, this is a nice addition to your resource bank.) This is one of my main strategies for finding inspiration to bring something new to my classroom. I do Google searches for a general topic and include a content area. If you're a World Languages teacher, you'd be surprised what you can learn from a Math teacher, for example. (I would like to take this opportunity to do a shout out to an amazing school librarian who taught me so much about the great 21st century learning that students can experience in collaboration with the school librarian. Thank you, Jane M., for sharing your brilliance with me!) When you have a minute or two, do a quick search, bookmark a page, and start thinking of ways you could apply what you learned to your content area. Think quick and easy prep.


#2 --- Poll your learners periodically. 
Ask them what types of learning experiences they would like to see in your class. Be sure to give them ideas (preferably a few they've seen and some new ones) to check off in case they need help imagining the possibilities. If you’re comfortable doing so, include an ‘other’ option with an open answer box for the ones who have their own ideas to share. Keep the poll short. Listen to their feedback. Students, just like their teachers, feel the love when they have agency.


#3 --- Talk out loud about teaching and learning with a colleague.
Whether you talk with a colleague on campus or someone in your virtual PLN, the chances that something inspirational will come out of the conversation are much higher than they would be if you silently just mull an idea over in your head. Bounce ideas off of someone, ask if they are doing something low prep and highly effective that could be shared, or just ask if they want to chat about a particular education topic. You never know where that conversation could take you! Make sure you are talking out loud -- this is helpful! 


Best wishes for a fantastic school year! If you'd like to chat more about an education topic of interest or ways to revitalize lessons, please message me here or via Twitter or Threads (@msfrenchteach). I'd love to connect with you!

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Unit Understandings: Documenting the Learning

Welcome back!  After a whirlwind spring semester and summer full of big changes, it's time to get ready to embark on a new journey as the French teacher at a large (soon-to-be 1:1) public high school near Charlotte. Before I begin this next chapter in my career, I would like to share the template I created last year to help both my learners and me better document the learning, particularly cultural understandings, as we progressed through each unit.  So, here's a breakdown of the development and implementation of this task along with a look at its efficacy. A link to the resource to follow!

Inspiration

The main motivation for developing this template came from a desire to better document (deeper) learning. Since it seems that we're going to reach more learners if we give them guided notes or a template rather than just tell them to take notes, it made sense to create a template that can be easily updated and shared at the start of each unit. Our K-12 learners need to be taught how to organize their thoughts, so it makes great sense to give them an outline with which to work.

Content

The following sections of the unit framework needed more attention by both my learners and me, so these were included in the design: essential and guiding questions, cultural knowledge, and personalized vocabulary. It can be challenging to come back to the essential and guiding questions over the course of a unit; in my case, it's because I forget about them. We also needed to better document cultural knowledge, especially since we don't have a textbook to just refer back to when studying for an assessment. As for the vocabulary, my intention was for learners to have a one-stop location for any vocabulary that they would need to express their interests and ideas.

Implementation

Please note that this template was implemented in all French courses (1-4AP) in a 1:1 iPad independent upper school. It was converted into a PDF and placed in the DropBox folder for each class after I typed up the unit title along with the essential and guiding questions. Then, learners moved it to their Good Notes app (hopefully, in a unit folder) where they took notes as we moved through the unit. All notes were guided either by whole class discussion or small collaborative groups with whole class debriefing.

End-of-Year Thoughts

Overall, the template positively impacted the learning. In the initial year, the attention to essential and guiding questions over the course of the entire unit was inconsistent, leaving major room for improvement. The cultural knowledge section was completed rather consistently, so this one was the most successful. In fact, learners referred to the document when studying for an assessment. This section helped me evaluate unit themes and essential questions for future revisions. As for personalized vocabulary, I required learners to record new vocabulary when they were researching topics of personal interest, but this did not happen for every unit of study. I do not know if learners recorded any new vocabulary on their own, but I would assume that very few, if any, did do it.  

Moving forward, I plan to better allot time to complete the document and provide more opportunities for learners to demonstrate understanding of what we discussed. I will not be grading work done on this document since it is really just guided notes, therefore, the follow-up tasks will make this work essential.

The Resource

Click here to access the document and feel free to revise it as you see fit. If I make any revisions to it as we move through the school year, I'll update this post.

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Please share what you do to document unit understandings in the comments below. I'd love to learn how other educators are helping their learners see the bigger picture.

Monday, July 14, 2014

Today's Share: My World Language Unit Planning Template

This is just a quick post in order to share the unit planning template I created for my world language classroom and explain a little bit about it.

1.  A thank-you and shout-out to Toni Theisen and ACTFL for their work on curriculum design! This template was inspired by both the one Toni prepared and published on her wiki and the one that can be found in the ACTFL publication, Implementing Integrated Performance Assessment.

                                                                                            Photo Credit: C. Vogel

2.  This template is also inspired by the Understanding by Design authors/gurus, Wiggins & McTighe.

3.  There's not much in this template that is different from what's out there. Mostly, I just changed up some of the wording.

4. As of 2013, South Carolina offers one World Language standard with a bunch of benchmarks under each mode/level of proficiency. Click here to view the document, if you're interested.

5.  To view the template, click here to go to my professional site. Once there, scroll down and click on the link to my Scribd account. Feel free to download the template and adapt it to suit your needs.

As always, comments are welcome!