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Understanding by Design

Understanding by Design. Session One. Backward Design is a process of lesson planning created by Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe and introduced in Understanding by Design (1998).

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Understanding by Design

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  1. Understanding by Design Session One

  2. Backward Design is a process of lesson planning created by Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe and introduced in Understanding by Design (1998). • This lesson design process concentrates on developing the lesson in a different order than in traditional lesson planning.

  3. How is it different? Turn and Talk How do you see Backwards Design prepare students for future success?

  4. Set the vision.  Focus on the big ideas. • Create a shared vision. • Departmental activities to focus on • Enduring Understandings • Standards (national, provincial, division) • Essential Questions Identify desired results.

  5. Identify desired results. Determine acceptable evidence. Determine how students demonstrate their knowledge. Focus on assessment before designing the learning activities. Expand the assessment continuum.

  6. Identify desired results. Determine acceptable evidence. Plan instructional activities: Share best practice. Build in collaboration. Ensure success for all learners. Plan learning experiences and instruction.

  7. Identify Desired Results • What is important for students to be able to do, know, or perform? • What enduring understandings are needed? • What provincial standards need to be met? • What are the essential questions?

  8. Enduring Understandings Worth beingfamiliar with. Important to knowand do. “EnduringUnderstanding” Wiggins, G & McTighe, J. (1998). Understanding by Design. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

  9. Essential Questions • Go to the heart of the discipline. • Recur naturally throughout one’s learning and in the history of a field. • Raise other important questions. • Provide subject- and topic- specific doorways to essential questions. • Have no one obvious “right” answer. • Are deliberately framed to provoke and sustain student interest.

  10. Determine Acceptable Evidence • How will enduring understanding be measured? • How will assessments vary? • Both formal and informal • Scope • Time frame • Setting • Structure

  11. W.H.E.R.E.T.O. • Where is it going? • Hook the students. • Explore and equip. • Rethink and revise. • Exhibit and evaluate. • Tailor to the student. • Organize

  12. The following slide is an additional resource that can be viewed at a later date. The video is a practical example of a teacher planning her math year using the Backwards Design Model.

  13. Practical Example

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