K-12 Curriculum Development

 
 
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Curriculum is written by state government, local school districts, individual teachers, non-profit organizations, and other groups which offer lessons and academic materials for teachers and students.  The written curriculum is designed to outline what students should know and be able to do and to support student achievement.  Teachers and organizations have spent thousands of hours developing curriculum, only to have it sit on the shelf in a classroom or misinterpreted.  What can teachers do to support student achievement?  How can teachers and administrators monitor the written and taught curriculum to ensure alignment?  The following curriculum types are important for teachers to understand as they reflect on curriculum, instruction and assessment.

I.    Intended
      
The intended curriculum consists of the written curriculum or plans that have
       been predetermined prior to the class.

II.   Enriched
       The enriched curriculum is when teachers enhance the curriculum or develop
       opportunities for acceleration for students who have mastered the written
       curriculum.  Enriched curriculum involves providing multiple opportunities for
       students to engage in key concepts and skills at their readiness level.

III.  Watered-Down   
        Some teachers offer the enriched curriculum to the students who are
        prepared for acceleration and the watered-down curriculum to the students
        who have demonstrated low growth or who do not understand the key
        concepts and skills identified in the unit.

IV.   Received
        Many teachers and administrators fail to monitor the received curriculum. 
        The received curriculum is what an individual student receives.  If one
        student receives the enriched curriculum and another student receives the
        watered-down curriculum, then each student's chance for success will be
        drastically different.  View Opportunity to Learn.

Conclusion:
All students should receive a guaranteed and viable curriculum (Marzano).  If the received curriculum varies from one class to the next, then it will be difficult for teachers at the next grade level to build on prior knowledge and understandings.  One of the goals of teaching is to ensure close alignment between the intended, taught, assessed, and received curricula.

Questions to Consider:

1.  Does your school have a guaranteed and viable curriculum?

2.  How is the intended curriculum different from the received curriculum?

3.  Do teachers implement the written curriculum/intended curriculum or do
     teachers create curriculum in isolation?

4.  Ask yourself, would I want my son or daughter to experience the
     watered-down curriculum and miss out on parts of the district's
     intended curriculum?
 
         What the best and wisest parent wants for his or her own child, 
                  that must the community want, for all of its children.

         John Dewey
         As cited by Gene Carter, Executive Director ASCD
         ASCD Education Update - December 2006, p. 2

5.  What mechanism does your school have in place to monitor the received
     curriculum?

    One of the tasks of curriculum leadership is to use the right methods to
    bring the written, the taught, the supported, and the tested curriculums
    into closer alignment, so that the learned curriculum is maximized.


                                                 -  Allan Glatthorn, Curriculum Renewal (1987), p. 4

 
Constitution Day 09/13/2009
 
Does your school have a coherent plan for implementing Constitution Day? In 2005, the United States Department of Education implemented Constitution Day and Citizenship Day based on legislation passed by Congress in December 2004 stating, “Educational institutions receiving Federal funding are required to hold an educational program pertaining to the United States Constitution on September 17th of each year” (118 Stat. 2809, 3344-45, Section III).  

An aligned approach to teaching students about the Constitution will enable and empower students.  While social studies is taught in kindergarten-twelfth grade, the United States Constitution is not the central focus of the North Carolina Standard Course of Study at each grade level. An aligned K-12 method of implementing Constitution Day will give students more opportunities to study the United States Constitution and concepts such as citizenship.  If school systems do not articulate a systematic plan, Constitution Day will become an annual day where students complete word find(s), worksheets, design mobiles (i.e., 3 branches of government), create acrostics to words such as freedom, play Bingo, watch videos and participate in other educational activities which will be repeated from one year to the next.

Constitution Day will become more relevant to students when teachers begin working collaboratively to identify what is being taught, what knowledge is worth understanding and how connections can be made across the K-12 social studies experiences and across disciplines.  The resources in this Constitution Day Teacher's Guide will assist teachers and administrators in developing a plan for Constitution Day 2009 and beyond.

Additional Resources:
Constitution Day: From Isolated Activities to Meaningful Experiences
A Teacher's Guide for Planning and Implementing Constitution Day (Attached)

Constitution Day Resource Guide
Developed by Steven M. Weber and the NC Civic Education Consortium

Constitution Day Presentation (Attached)
Presented at the North Carolina Council for the Social Studies Conference
(2008) - Feel free to use with your school staff.
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Curriculum decisions are made by a variety of stakeholders.  Parents make decisions regarding the curriculum when they elect to send their child to a private school, a charter school, a public school, a home school, or a boarding school.  Policy makers impact policy through laws, state mandates, declarations, blogs and websites.  School administrators impact the curriculum through holding teachers accountable for the written curriculum, facilitating curriculum development and revision, curricular reductionism, and encouraging teaching academics versus teaching the whole child.  Classroom teachers make decisions regarding the written, taught, assessed, differentiated, concept-based, hidden, standards-based, integrated, rigorous, and excluded curricula.  The following considerations are important for parents, policy makers, school administrators and classroom teachers to discuss.  If student achievement is our main priority, then we must reflect on our existing policies, practices, and educational goals.

What Do We Value?

A Sea of Standards............................................Essential Standards
Coverage of Standards..................................... Transfer of Learning
Test Prep...........................................................Key Skills and Concepts
Textbook Perspective........................................Multiple Perspectives
Teacher Isolation...............................................Guaranteed and Viable Curriculum
Pacing Guide(s)..................................................Student's Needs and Abilities
Subject-Based Curriculum..................................Integrated Curriculum
Focusing on Student Weaknesses.....................Focusing on Student Strengths
Curriculum Chaos...............................................Aligned Curriculum
Learning for Some..............................................Learning for All
Project-Based Curriculum...................................Traditional Curriculum
Teaching.............................................................Opportunity to Learn
State Standards.................................................Unpacked Standards
Standardization.................................................Differentiation
Bloated Curriculum.............................................Narrow Curriculum
Assessment of Learning.....................................Assessment for Learning
Curriculum Clutter..............................................Curriculum Maps
Multiple Graduation Tracks.................................College Ready Track
Specific Facts and Information...........................Enduring Understandings
Curricular Reductionsim......................................Well-Rounded Curriculum
Written Curriculum..............................................Learned Curriculum
Teaching.............................................................Learning
Teaching Content................................................Teaching for Understanding

You may review the options listed above and say, both options are good.  This list of considerations is not meant to make stakeholders select one choice over the other.  For example, the written curriculum is very important to teaching and learning.  In most states and school districts, the curriculum is not optional.  Therefore, a teacher could not select the learned curriculum and ignore the written curriculum.  

Regardless of your answer, the value in this activity comes from the reflection, collaboration, conversations about curriculum and instruction, and the impact that these conversations have on curriculum policy, curriculum alignment, and student achievement.  If a school or school system has teachers and school administrators with conflicting values then the learned curriculum will be impacted.  Please feel free to share what you value in education.  How does your school district make Curriculum Decisions?   
 
Back-to-School 08/04/2009
 
“As teachers engage in this dialogue regarding what their students must know and be able to do as a result of this unit they are about to teach,
they become more clear, more consistent, and more confident in their ability to help all students learn” (
DuFour, DuFour, & Eaker, 2006, p. 43).

This quote reminds us of the power of teacher collaboration and determining essential learner outcomes at the beginning of the school year.  When I entered the teaching profession, I was given a key to my classroom, a grade book, a set of Teacher's Guides, the state standards and a lesson plan book.  While a first year teacher has creative ideas, a passion for teaching, and a desire to make a difference in the lives of students, a collaborative team is more powerful.  

Guiding Questions to Consider When Teams Meet:

1)  What essential understandings and skills do our students need?

2)  Which standards can be clustered or incorporated into others?

3)  What are the Big Ideas/Enduring Understandings I want students to
     discover on their own after learning these concepts and skills?

The time it takes to meet as a team (vertical, horizontal, content alike, district wide, or other team structure) is worth the time and effort.  "When school staff have a more informed conception of curriculum, a teacher's daily decisions about how to deliver instruction not only affect student achievement in that classroom but also future student achievement, for it is assumed that students will be entering the next classroom prepared to handle a more sophisticated or more expanisve level of work" (Zmuda, Kuklis & Kline, 2004, p. 122). While several theorists and professional organizations have debated the ‘what’ of curriculum, implementation of curriculum and curriculum decisions are made daily by K-12 classroom teachers.  Begin the year with the end in mind and provide teachers with time to work as a collaborative team.
 
Common Sense 07/15/2009
 
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Common Sense was published anonymously by Thomas Paine in January 1776. The purpose for this small pamphlet was to encourage change and to urge the American people to form their own government.



The purpose of this article is to offer some common sense advice which will impact K-12 education in any country. 

IN the following pages I offer nothing more than simple facts, plain arguments, and common sense; and have no other preliminaries to settle with the reader (Paine, 1776).

Education:
  • Students don't care how much we know until they know how much we
    care.

  • A guaranteed and viable curriculum is a critical factor to educational
    success.

  • Each student adds value to the classroom and to the school.

  • Character education makes the world a better place.

  • A focus on learning is more important than 'coverage' of standards.

  • Curriculum alignment should not be optional.

  • Closing achievement gaps is ethical and possible.

  • Differentiated instruction is good for all students.

  • Instruction which builds on prior knowledge increases student
    understanding.

  • Opportunity to learn has a greater impact on student achievement than
    the written curriculum.
*  Many different researchers have noted the items above and have
    described how student achievement increases when one or more of the
    processes or viewpoints are implemented.  For example, Marzano (2003)
    shared, the number one factor impacting student achievement is a
    guaranteed and viable curriculum (p. 22).  “Standards alone
cannot
    change these realities.  Instead, successful change occurs when all
    aspects of the local curriculum are linked to standards through a
    purposeful, coherent system of process and products” (Carr & Harris,
    2001, p. 1). Wiggins and McTighe (2007) wrote, “Schooling at its best
    reflects a purposeful arrangement of parts and details, organized with
    deliberate intention, for achieving the kinds of learning we seek” (p. 9).
 


         Please feel free to share your Common Sense recommendations
                                      for K-12 education.

References:

Carr, J.E., & Harris, D.E. (2001).
Succeeding with Standards: 
      Linking Curriculum, Assessment, and Action Planning
.
      Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum
      Development.  


Marzano, R.J. (2003). What working in schools: Translating
      research into action
.  Alexandria, VA: Association for
      Supervision and Curriculum Development.


Paine, T. Common sense (1776). The Library of Congress.
      Retrieved July 14, 2009, from 

        
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/treasures/trm028.html

Wiggins, G. & McTighe, G., (2007) Schooling by design.
     Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum
     Development.
 


 
 
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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.

Curriculum mapping is a process for aligning the written and taught curriculum, but unless teachers guarantee they will teach the key skills, concepts and content outlined on the map, students will not receive the same opportunity to learn information which is considered essential.  Ravitch (1996) wrote, identifying what children are expected to learn is necessary for educational improvement because it is the starting point for education.  “When educators fail to agree on what children should learn, it means that they have failed to identify their most fundamental goals” (p. 134).

Once a common curriculum has been established, instruction and assessment can be organized to help each student learn the prioritized curriculum or the essential curriculum.  What systems are in place in your school or school district which guarantee that each student will receive the opportunity to learn?  The Professional Learning Community Model is one example of how teachers can utilize curriculum maps to identify and share the school district’s curriculum.  Having a plan is an important first step, but communicating the plan and developing benchmarks to check student understanding of the written curriculum throughout the school year is essential.  

The Professional Learning Community Model
Four Guiding Questions in a Professional Learning Community


1.   What is it we want our students to learn?
      (Developing a Curriculum)


2.   How will we know that they have learned it?
     (Assessing Opportunity to Learn)


3.   What will we do when they don't learn it?
      (Revisiting Opportunity to Learn in a new way)


4.   What will we do when they already know it?
     
(Taking Opportunity to Learn to a new level or 
       building on the learned curriculum)

(DuFour & Eaker, 1998)


Glatthorn (1987) wrote, “One of the tasks of curriculum leadership is to use the right methods to bring the written, the taught, the supported, and the tested curriculums into closer alignment, so that the learned curriculum is maximized” (p. 4).  If educators are expected to raise student achievement, then opportunity to learn must be addressed.

Questions to Consider prior to the 2009-2010 School Year:

1)  Does our school district have a common curriculum?

2)  How do educators obtain a copy of the common curriculum?
    (i.e., online, password protected site, three-ring binder, etc.)

3)  Will educators meet prior to the first week of school to guarantee
      that the curriculum will be provided to each student?


4)  How will educators know if students are learning the district’s curriculum?

5)  How often will school administrators schedule uninterrupted time for
     classroom teachers and school staff to discuss curriculum and student
     understanding?

6)  How will teachers communicate about curriculum and instruction with
     teachers in other schools?
     (i.e.,
blog, web site, wiki, Ning, email, videoconferencing, etc.)

7)  How will teachers and administrators know if each student had the
     opportunity to learn the district’s curriculum?


References:

Carroll, J. B. (1963). A model of school learning. Teachers College Record 64:
         723-733.

DuFour, R., & Eaker, R. (1998).
Professional learning communities at work:  
        Best practices for enhancing student achievement
.
Bloomington, IN:
        Solution Tree.


English, F.W. (2000). Deciding what to teach and test: Developing, aligning,
        and auditing the curriculum
. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.


Glatthorn, A.A. (1987). Curriculum renewal. Alexandria, VA: Association for
        Supervision and Curriculum Development.


Ravitch, D. (1996). The case for national standards and assessments.
The
        Clearing House
69: 134-36.

 
 
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By July, most school systems have received data from student report cards, state testing results, feedback from parents/guardians, and student portfolios which demonstrate the student's growth from the beginning of the school year until the last day of school.  What processes will teachers and administrators use to improve the written and taught curriculum in the upcoming school year?  What strategies should be developed to provide additional support to struggling readers?

According to Senge, Scharmer, Jaworski, and Flowers (2004), "Most change initiatives that end up going nowhere don't fail because they lack grand visions and noble intentions.  They fail because people can't see the reality they face"
(p. 29).  A tool for identifying the realities faced by a school and one which will help your team determine 'next steps' is a SWOT Analysis.  A SWOT Analysis looks at and defines the strengths and weaknesses of the internal environment of the school or school system, as well as the opportunities and threats within the environment external to the organization or organizational unit.

Once educators have identified the existing strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats, they can build plans to support student achievement.  Instructional priorities will based on the outcomes of the SWOT Analysis, rather than focusing on 'what worked' last year.  Educators will notice that what is perceived as a threat for the upcoming school year could also be a new opportunity. 

"Systems don't change by themselves. Rather, the actions of individuals and small groups working on new conceptions intersect to produce breakthroughs"
(Fullan, 1993).

Resource:
SWOT Analysis Template (See attached document)

References:

Fullan, M. (1993). Change forces: Probing the depths of educational reform.
        London: Falmer Press.


Senge, P., Scharmer, C.O., Jaworski, J., & Flowers, B.S. (2004). Presence: An
          exploration of profound change in people, organizations, and society.
          New York: Doubleday.

swot_analysis.doc
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Does your school system have an established method or strategies which assist teachers and administrators in determining the K-12 curriculum?  Each year, parents send their children to school with the hopes that the teachers and the educational experiences offered will prepare students for the next grade level and for life in an ever changing, interdependent world.  Should each teacher determine the curriculum?  According to DuFour (2004), “Despite compelling evidence indicating that working collaboratively represents best practice, teachers in many schools continue to work in isolation. Even in schools that endorse the idea of collaboration, the staff's willingness to collaborate often stops at the classroom door” (p. 8).  

The following strategies will assist collaborative teams of professional educators in unwrapping state standards, prioritizing curriculum, aligning skills and concepts which spiral throughout the curriculum, and most importantly begin a conversation about the essential curriculum (a.k.a., Power Standards – See Ainsworth).  Select one strategy and begin developing your plan for students.

Strategies for Determining the K-12 Curriculum

I.  Unwrapping Standards: 

“Unwrapped standards provide clarity as to what students must know and be able to do.  When teachers take the time to analyze each standard and identify essential concepts and skills, the result is more effective instructional planning, assessment, and student learning” (Ainsworth, 2003, p. 1).

For the process, see
Unwrapping Standards: A Simple Process to Make Standards Manageable (Ainsworth, 2003)


II.  Curriculum Mapping:

“Choosing important knowledge, sequencing it well, and getting it behind every classroom door in every grade” is an important part of ensuring that all students receive a rigorous and relevant education (Parker, 1991, p. 84).

For the process, see Mapping the Big Picture: Integrating Curriculum and Assessment K-12 (Jacobs, 1997).

See Using Curriculum Mapping and Assessment Data to Improve Learning (Kallick & Colosimo, 2009)

III.  Identify Declarative and Procedural Knowledge:

Jane Pollock (2007) distinguished between declarative (content mastery) and procedural (skill mastery) knowledge.  She wrote, “In a curriculum document, the statements of declarative knowledge (facts, concepts, generalizations and principles) are identified by the words understands or knows” (p. 35) that “serve as placeholders for active verbs, which translate into activities and experiences that help students organize declarative knowledge.”  For procedural knowledge, a statement of student learning would begin with “a verb that describes the steps that need to be practiced to attain automaticity such as add, compose, sing, draw, or graph” (p. 36).  The latter requires extensive repetition and practice.  Does your school system’s curriculum clarify the difference between declarative and procedural knowledge which is guaranteed to be taught at each grade level?

IV.  Clarify Content Priorities:

“Because we typically face more content than we can reasonably address, and because it is often presented as if everything were equally important for students, we are obliged to make choices and frame priorities” (Wiggins & McTighe, 2005, p. 70).

Planning Tool - See Figure 3.3 (Wiggins & McTighe, 2005, p. 71).

V.  Use Dr. Reeves’ Criteria for Identifying
      Power Standards
:


a)  Endurance     b)  Leverage    c)  Readiness for the
                                                 next level of learning

Use the following question:
 
What do your students need for success – in school (this year, next year, and so on), in life, and on your state tests” (Ainsworth, 2003, p. 14)?


VI.  Determine What You Won’t Teach:

Jacobs reminds educators, “Given the limited time you have with your students, curriculum design has become more and more an issue of deciding what you won’t teach as well as what you will teach.  You cannot do it all.  As a designer, you must choose the essential” (as cited by Ainsworth, 2003, p. 12).

Conclusion:


Wiggins and McTighe (2005), wrote, “In the absence of a learning plan with clear goals, how likely is it that students will develop shared understandings on which future lessons might build” (p. 21)?  If your school system does not have a common curriculum, select one of the strategies above and watch student achievement soar.

References:

Ainsworth, L. (2003). Power standards: Identifying the
       standards that matter the most
. Englewood, CO: Lead +
       Learn Press.

Ainsworth, L. (2003).
Unwrapping the standards: A simple
       process to make standards manageable.
Englewood, CO:
       Lead + Learn Press.

DuFour, R.(2004, May). What is a professional learning
       community? Educational Leadership, 61(8), 6-11.


Jacobs, H.H. (1997).
Mapping the big picture: Integrating
       curriculum & Assessment K-12.
Alexandria, VA:
       Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

Kallick, B., & Colosimo, J. (2009).
Using curriculum mapping
       and assessment data to improve learning
. Thousand
       Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.


Parker, W. C. (1991). Renewing the social studies curriculum.
       Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and
       Curriculum Development.

Pollock, J. E. (2007). Improving student learning one teacher
       at a time.
Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision
       and Curriculum Development.


Wiggins, G., & McTighe, J. (2005). Understanding by design:
      Expanded 2nd edition
. Alexandria, VA: Association for
      Supervision and Curriculum Development.
 

 
 
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Do opposing forces prevent your school system from aligning the curriculum?  Opposing forces include time, co-workers, competing district initiatives, changes in leadership, and the failure to define the purpose for curriculum alignment efforts.  Educators are aware of the need for curriculum alignment, yet most school systems struggle with making curriculum alignment an ongoing process.

A planning tool named the Force Field Analysis will provide your team with valuable data regarding the opposing forces which interfere with curriculum alignment efforts.  The Force Field Analysis is a simple but powerful technique for building an understanding of the forces that will drive and resist a proposed change. 

The attached document provides a template for teachers and teacher teams.  The Force Field Analysis can also be used for other educational goals which are difficult to achieve due to opposing forces. 

Additional information regarding this tool is available at:
Force Field Analysis



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Smedley said, "A speech without a purpose is like a journey without a destination" (as cited by Koegel, 2007, p. 34).  The same can be said about curriculum development.  A curriculum without a purpose is like a journey without a destination.  Do the teachers and administrators in your school system have agreed upon learning outcomes for students at the end of each grade level?  Do teachers and administrators have time scheduled throughout the school year to discuss which instructional strategies are working with certain grade levels or even with individual students?

The list below contains several of the skills and understandings that most teachers and parents would agree students should develop during the K-12 experience(s).  If a parent moved from another state or country and asked teachers in your school district which skills and understandings are taught in the seventh grade, would the parent receive the same answer from teachers at three different middle schools?

Using the list below, add skills and understandings that you feel are missing.  Are some of the identified skills more essential than others?  Should some of the skills be taught in each grade, K-12?  Should some of the skills be deemphasized due to the skills required by a changing workforce?  Most importantly, what is the purpose for including each of these skills or understandings in the K-12 curriculum?  Is your district's current curriculum meeting its intended purpose?  What can be done to realign the district's curiculum in order to meet the agreed upon purposes during the 2009-2010 school year?

1.   Citizenship     
2.   Geographic Awareness     
3.   Decoding Skills
4.   21st Century Learning Skills     
5.   Presentation Skills
6.   Writing Skills     
7.   Problem Solving Skills
8.   World Languages
9.   Literacy Skills
10. Self-Awareness
11. Character Education
12. Healthful Living
13. Personal Financial Literacy
14. Apply Mathematics in a variety of settings
15. Communication Skills
16. The Arts
17. Career Development
18. Interview Skills
19. Critical Thinking Skills
20. How to Apply Skills and Understandings     

"All learners benefit from and should receive instruction that reflects clarity about purposes and priorities of content."
                                                        -  Carol Ann Tomlinson and Jay McTighe

References:

Koegel, T.J. (2007). The exceptional presenter. Austin, TX: Greenleaf Book Group
         Press.

Tomlinson, C.A., & McTighe, J. (2006). Integrating differentiated instruction and
        understanding by design. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and
        Curriculum Development.