C
urriculum Building Web-Assisted ModuleThis module has been specifically designed to be viewed electronically and to allow you to open Web sites with "hot" links for information that will assist in understanding the content.
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Curriculum Documents arise from each faculty member understanding the district's mission and priority goals. Establishing the mission and goals must be completed prior to a curriculum document taking shape. The successful implementation of curriculum lies in the degree to which a curriculum-building team agrees with and adopts a coherent mission and accompanying goals and objectives. Inconsistency in shared vision, values, and underlying philosophies manifests itself in a fragmented effort and lack of student achievement.
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Mission & Goals in National & State Initiatives

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Planning the Components of a Written Curriculum

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C. Assessment Criteria and Methods per course objective
D. District Initiatives:
E. Unit and Lesson Objectives
are then derived by the school and/or teacher from the Course/Level Objectives.
F. Curriculum-based assessments built around benchmark standards will be used to determine acquisition and mastery of the learning.
G. Authentic Assessments built into the curriculum should include:
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Effort -- in knowledge, organization, management and communication skills -- including drafts to show the stages of development
- Progress -- convincing evidence that growth has taken place
- Achievement -- samples of best work
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Portfolios may be bound, unbound (folder), or
electronic.
Visit this site for more information:
http://www/tech/tasa/page3a.htm
Curriculum Analysis
1. Minimum Guide Components Criteria
2. Connectivity & Predictability
3. Equitable
4. Authenticity Blooms --- > How can you document that you have provided each student with a challenging curriculum?
5. Best Practices research-based
6. Quality of Activity -- as determined by the ENGAGED LEARNER MODEL
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A Compass for Building Quality

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Experimental: Uses direct, active, hands-on concrete, engaging experiences.
Reflective: Has learners reflect on experiences and think about what they has learned.
Authentic: Uses content-rich, real ideas, events and material in purposeful context, useful, usable information.
Social: Uses social interaction and construction sharing, supports individual learning and thought.
Collaborative: Has cooperative learning, which allows for developing and learning outside the confines of competition.
Child-Centers: Uses childrens own interest, investigates their own questions, empowers the child.
Cognitive: Uses higher-order thinking skills in conjunction with concepts to be understood. Children self-monitor their own thinking.
Developmental: Activities are adjusted for the needs of each child.
Constructivist: Has children recreate knowledge and content to fit their own understanding.
Psycholinguistic: Uses language as the primary tool for learning.
Challenging: Presents genuine challenges, choices, and responsibility for students in their own learning.
Activity Variety: Uses a variety of approaches, including thematic studies, collaborative group activities, learning logs, classroom workshop, conferences, centers.
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Beyond the Continuous Progress Approach to Education
Success as New Structure (Resource)
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Quality & Creativity:
EMAIL COMMENTS, QUESTIONS, CONCERNS
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Excellent Lesson Plans Examples
Whole to Part to Whole Language Arts Curriculum
History / Social Studies Lesson Plans