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Janet Hale

Witty title: Coming to a Consensus - 0 views

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    "Ever since reading the articles on curriculum mapping, I have been obsessed with consensus and alignment. I feel that I have a pretty good handle on my curriculum guide, which plots out the sequence of standards to be covered for the year. But when it comes down to addressing the "scope" part of the assignment, where I detail to what degree these standards need to be met, I realize that I have no idea."
Janet Hale

Opportunity to Learn - ASCD EDge Blog post - 0 views

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    "How do school systems guarantee that the same skills and concepts are taught from one classroom to the next? Teachers and administrators understand the importance of aligning curriculum, instruction, and assessment. However, "curriculum design and delivery face one fundamental problem in schools. When the door is shut and nobody else is around, the classroom teacher can select and teach just about any curriculum he or she decides is appropriate" (English, 2000, p. 1). If education becomes dependent on a three-legged stool (curriculum, instruction, and assessment), then students may not receive the opportunity to learn a 'guaranteed' curriculum. Opportunity to learn, a concept introduced by John Carroll (1963), is controlled by classroom teachers."
Janet Hale

La Profesora Loca: teaching is hard to put on paper - 0 views

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    I agree with this teacher's comments. One must realize that horizontally and vertically articulated curriculum maps are ~90% curriculum design and ~10% curriculum practice. A teacher's daily lessons plans are the opposite: ~90% curriculum practice and ~10% curriculum design. Teachers' daily practices are the reason most of us get into this profession! While we are genuinely concerned with what we want students to know (content) and be able to do (skills), which is curriculum design, we are inspired and motivated by the planning and implementation of the "how" to make the knowing/doing learning expectations come alive as we interact with our students (curriculum practice). Oftentimes, the most memorable teaching moments happen in an instant in real time. These best-practice moments can be recorded in a Projected/Diary Map as an Activities/Strategies summary or as an attached Lesson Plan that is intra-aligned to the appropriate content/skills learning expectations. When such moments are incorporated into the ongoing Projected/Diary Maps, which this blogger refers to as looking "very flat and lifeless," the maps naturally transform into three-dimensional living histories of the "gift" of teaching, which the next "artists" will definitely enjoy viewing.
Janet Hale

College Readiness - ASCD EDge Blog post - 0 views

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    "College Readiness High schools that are designed to prepare large numbers of students for college success look dramatically different from those that prepare only a small proportion of their students for college success. - College Knowledge: Getting In is Only Half the Battle David Conley"
Janet Hale

Curriculum Mapping - 1 views

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    "Where are we with curriculum mapping, seven years on? Teachers have documented 269 courses. The map is publicly available on our website. Curriculum map pages receive approximately 100 page views per day."
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