Monday, April 8, 2019

Spring Cleaning My Curriculum for next year

Sorry for the late post. I usually get this blog out on Sundays, but it was a busy weekend at our sugar house and yesterday I was feeling under the weather. I was super excited to get my blog out this week because I came back from the Standards Based Classroom course last week fired up about the rest of this year and next year.

This week we're wrapping up our Economics unit and I'll be using a strategy from the conference to assess the learning. It's called "Tiles" here's an example of a tile sheet I made about my conference takeaways:
The idea is to collect ideas and make connections in a way where there's no wrong answer when it comes to organizing. Tiles can be moved, folded, turned over, etc as you think about things first before writing about it. What Stan and Emily emphasized was that this provides students with think time rather than writing and trying to sort the ideas about the topic out at the same time.

I was able to really put some thought into next year. I wanted to start with a vision. So I wrote a goal statement for Sterling Social Studies: Use transferable skills to think deeply about the modern world using the lessons of history to develop solutions for the future.

From there I created a graphic that I thought would capture the work needed to pull this off:

I borrowed from a graphic I saw from the Tarrant Institute where the roots feed the trees. I know our work needs to be rooted in the transferable skills, from there our 4 topics will grow out of with specific learning to each and the UN Sustainable Development Goals are the backdrop that are present throughout the learning. I'm not a graphic designer but I was pleased with the outcome!

I was able to create 2 units for next year through this lens and develop a KUD for both. Those will be published on the new Sterling Social Studies website when I feel it's worthy! Next steps include developing inquiry based units to move students through the KUD objectives as well as creating benchmark documents so students know up front what the expected learning looks like. I'm excited to keep designing and thinking and can't wait to see how the "Tiles" work goes this week.