Teacher Work Sample Unit Title Magnificent Middle School, Alpine
Transcription
Teacher Work Sample Unit Title Magnificent Middle School, Alpine
Teacher Work Sample Carrie Cougar Unit Title BYU ID: 555555555 Brigham Young University Spanish Teaching Major Winter 2011 Magnificent Middle School, Alpine District Spanish II Grades 10-12 Table of Contents Contextual Factors (2-3 pages) .................................................................................................................................................................... 3 Community ........................................................................................................................................................................................... 3 Characteristics of School & Student Body ...................................................................................................................................... 3 Characteristics of Your Particular Classroom & Students ............................................................................................................. 3 Instructional Implications ................................................................................................................................................................... 3 Contextual Factors Rubric ...................................................................................................................................................................... 4 Unit Overview & Rationale (1 page) .............................................................................................................................................................. 5 Unit Planning Web (1 page) ........................................................................................................................... Error! Bookmark not defined. Unit Objectives (1 page) ................................................................................................................................................................................. 9 Unit Overview and Learning Objectives Rubric ................................................................................. Error! Bookmark not defined. Assessment Plan .............................................................................................................................................................................................. 15 Assessments ........................................................................................................................................................................................ 15 Scoring ................................................................................................................................................. Error! Bookmark not defined. Performance Criteria ......................................................................................................................... Error! Bookmark not defined. Adaptations ........................................................................................................................................ Error! Bookmark not defined. Appendix A, Assessments ................................................................................................................. Error! Bookmark not defined. Assessment Plan Chart ................................................................................................................................................................................... 16 Assessment Plan Rubric ............................................................................................................................................................................. 17 Design for Instruction ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 18 Unit Outline ........................................................................................................................................................ Error! Bookmark not defined. Lesson Plan ........................................................................................................................................................ Error! Bookmark not defined. Design for Instruction Rubric ................................................................................................................................................................. 22 Instructional Decision-Making (1-2 pages)................................................................................................................................................ 23 Instructional Decision-Making Rubric .................................................................................................................................................. 24 Report of Student Learning (3 pages total) ............................................................................................................................................... 25 Whole class (1 page)....................................................................................................................................................................... 25 Subgroup (1 page) .......................................................................................................................................................................... 25 Two individuals (1 page) ................................................................................................................. Error! Bookmark not defined. Report of Student Learning Rubric ...................................................................................................................................................... 26 Reflection and Self-Evaluation (2-4 pages) ............................................................................................................................................... 27 Interpretation of Student Learning................................................................................................................................................. 27 Insights on Effective Instruction and Assessment ......................................................................................................................... 27 Implications for Future Teaching .................................................................................................................................................... 27 Implications for Personal Professional Improvement .................................................................................................................. 27 Reflection and Self-Evaluation Rubric ................................................................................................................................................ 28 Quality of Presentation ................................................................................................................................................................................... 29 Formatting .......................................................................................................................................................................................... 29 Charts, Graphs, & Attachments ..................................................................................................................................................... 29 References & Credits ........................................................................................................................................................................ 29 Anonymity .......................................................................................................................................................................................... 29 Quality of Presentation Rubric.............................................................................................................................................................. 30 Upload .............................................................................................................................................................................................................. 31 Teacher Work Sample Template 2009 Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery Contextual Factors (2-3 pages) Community, school, & classroom factors that may affect learning (supports and challenges) Community o o o o Description of community (size, economy, amenities, etc.) Community population (average household income, education, race/ethnicity) Role of school in community Community/parent support for education Characteristics of School & Student Body Location of the school (rural/suburban/urban) Physical features of the school Enrollment School population (race/ethnicity, socioeconomic profile, students who qualify for free/reduced lunch, special needs, English Language Learners, migrants, etc.) o Attendance, school mobility rate, dropout rate o NCLB status of the school, test scores, etc. o Teacher education, teacher quality, student-teacher ratio o o o o Characteristics of Your Particular Classroom & Students o o o o o Scheduling Classroom rules and relevant routines Any unique physical features of your classroom Availability of technology, equipment, and other resources Differences in individual students (age, gender, grade levels, native speakers, race/ethnicity, ESL, special needs, achievement/developmental levels, culture/religion, language, interests, skill levels, etc.) Instructional Implications o Based on the contextual factors you listed, identify at least 3 implications for teaching and assessment o Interpret the instructional implications you have identified 1) Name of Implication: What this implication means for your teaching 2) Name of Implication: What this implication means for your teaching 3) Name of Implication: What this implication means for your teaching Teacher Work Sample Template 2009 Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery Contextual Factors Rubric TWS Standard: The teacher uses information about the learning-teaching context and student individual differences to set the learning goal and objectives and plan instruction and assessment. Rating Indicator A. Community, School & Classroom Factors B. Student Characteristics C. Instructional Implications 5 Exceeds Expectation Candidate displays a thorough understanding of the characteristics of the community, school, and classroom that may affect learning Candidate displays a thorough and specific understanding of student differences (e.g., abilities/disabiliti es, culture, development, interests) that may affect learning Candidate provides an unusually insightful discussion of three specific implications for instruction and assessment based on contextual factors 4-3 Meets Expectation Candidate displays knowledge of some characteristics of the community, school, and classroom that may affect learning Candidate displays general understandings of student differences (e.g., abilities/disabiliti es, culture, development, interests) that may affect learning 2-1 Partially Meets Expectation Candidate displays biased knowledge of the characteristics of the community, school, and classroom that may affect learning Candidate discusses three specific implications for instruction and assessment based on contextual factors Candidate provides general implications for instruction and assessment based on contextual factors Candidate displays stereotypical understandings of student differences (e.g., abilities/disabiliti es, culture, development, interests) that may affect learning 0 Not Met/ Missing Evidence Candidate displays irrelevant or no knowledge of the characteristics of the community, school, and classroom that may affect learning Candidate displays irrelevant or no knowledge of student differences (e.g., abilities/disabiliti es, culture, development, interests) that may affect learning Candidate provides inappropriate or no implications for instruction and assessment based on contextual factors Teacher Work Sample Template 2009 Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery (To use this template, replace the prompts in the gray boxes with your own text and then delete any text that appears in red.) Unit Overview (1 page) Unit Title: (Name of Unit) Unit Overview: (What information would a colleague need to decide whether or not to use the unit?) This (number) -week, (number) lesson unit is based on Chapter (number) of (Name of Textbook) . It engages (beginning/intermediate/advanced) (middle school/high school/university) Spanish (level of class such as I, II, III, IV, AP, 101, 102, 105, 106, 205, 206) students in exploring the theme of (theme of unit) . During the unit, students will learn to (communicative task/s) using the (grammatical structures) . The unit will revolve around (#) primary topics: (list of major cultural and vocabulary topics covered during the unit) . Major activities include: (titles of major activities from the unit) . The unit culminates in a (name of final project or special activity) . Additional assessments of student progress include: (list of major assessments) . The unit assumes that students already know (list of key topics) . Unit Rationale: (What are the pedagogical purposes of the unit & why will they matter to students?) This unit is designed to help students understand the importance that (social issue and/or cultural topic) plays in (name of country or cultural group) life. It engages students in exploring how and why (name of cultural product/practice) (shapes/reflects/relates to) (name of targeted cultural perspective) . This unit gives students opportunities to (list why this unit will matter to STUDENTS) . Students will develop communicative proficiency by exploring the guiding question: (list the essential question students will explore during this unit) Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery (To use this template, replace the prompts in the gray boxes with your own text and then delete any text that appears in red.) To craft your guiding question, write a statement that explains the main goal of the unit—the one key thing you want students to know and be able to do by the end of the unit. Next, write a statement that answers the question, “Why should this matter to students?” Now, try to write a single statement that combines the two sentences you wrote above. Finally, flip the resulting sentence into a question. (Sometimes, it is easier to craft a set of questions and then pull out the key elements of each one to form your guiding question. The other questions will usually become sub-questions that guide individual lessons as opposed to the entire unit.) Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery Unit At-a-Glance (You may either use the grid below, the web on the next page, or both) Essential (Guiding) Question for the Unit: Lesson Title Targeted Grammatical Structure Lesson 1: Lesson 2: Lesson 3: Lesson 4: Targeted Vocabulary (No more than 7 words) TOPIC: Conceptual Issue or Social Situation (Context) TEXT: Culturally Authentic Materials or Realia TASK: Lesson Objective & Assessment TALK: Communicative, Interactive Activities (Interpersonal, interpretive, or presentational activities that get students moving & talking in preparation for the assessment) TECHNIQUES, TEMPLATES, & TECH: (Instructional Strategies, Scaffolding, & Student Use of Tech) Adaptations for Individual Students Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery Lesson 5: Unit At-a-Glance Unit Planning Web: (How will you provide colleagues with a visual overview of the unit’s key concepts and activities?) As you brainstorm, don’t forget to think about how you will provide meaningful, varied learning activities that give students structured opportunities to move and talk). Essential (Guiding) Question for the Unit: Presentational Mode Social Context Interpersonal Mode Culturally Authentic Realia/Materia ls Language Functions Interpretive Mode Communicative Tasks Unit Topic Grammatical Structures Student Use of Technology Vocabulary Assessments I recommend that you use an online concept mapping tool to create your web, then insert your finished product into this document as a .jpg (image). You can find a list of tools here: http://teensntech.wikispaces.com/Cool+Tech+Tools For ideas, see the curriculum framework developed by Granite, Jordan, & Murray school districts in Utah: http://tinyurl.com/ddf6z5 For an example of how you might get started, see pages 10, 12, 16, and 19 of: http://tinyurl.com/cyauvz Communication Cultures Connections Comparisons Communities Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery Unit Objectives (1 page) ___ 6) Standards-based Unit Objectives: (What 5 to 7 meaningful, measurable, standards-based objectives will you use to guide students’ efforts to make incremental, step-by-step progress toward the overarching unit goal?) a) Students will (standards-based communicative function/task) about (cultural context/vocabulary topic) using (grammatical structure/process) + (performance parameters - accuracy, frequency, quantity, or time). b) Students will (standards-based communicative function/task) about (cultural context/vocabulary topic) using (grammatical structure/process) + (performance parameters - accuracy, frequency, quantity, or time). c) Students will (standards-based communicative function/task) about (cultural context/vocabulary topic) using (grammatical structure/process) + (performance parameters - accuracy, frequency, quantity, or time). d) Students will (standards-based communicative function/task) about (cultural context/vocabulary topic) using (grammatical structure/process) + (performance parameters - accuracy, frequency, quantity, or time). e) Students will (standards-based communicative function/task) about (cultural context/vocabulary topic) using (grammatical structure/process) + (performance parameters - accuracy, frequency, quantity, or time). See the next two pages for instructions and examples. Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery Unit Objectives Objectives should specify (in observable, measurable terms) the: Audience (students) Behavior (standards-based communicative function – stated as an observable, measurable verb) Conditions (cultural context, grammatical structure, or vocabulary) Degree of performance (performance parameters – accuracy, frequency, quantity, time). Students will + (standards-based, communicative function/task) NOT know learn practice understand about (cultural context/vocabulary topic) using + (grammatical structure) + (performance parameters - accuracy, frequency, quantity, time) . Note: Consider taking your verbs directly from the National Standards, the Utah Common Core for World Languages, Bloom’s Taxonomy, and the National Technology Standards for Students. Steps for Writing Objectives a) Goals: Make a bulleted list of your goals for students—the things you want them to learn. Grammar: Use the preterit v. imperfect correctly Vocabulary: Clothing, natural disasters, news, and weather Culture: Journalism in Latin America Social Issues: Effects of natural disasters on Latin America’s economy Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery Unit Objectives b) Tasks: Using the National Standards for Foreign Language Learning, generate communicative tasks (and conditions for accomplishing them) that would provide evidence that students have met the items on your bulleted list. Grammar: Students will report on natural disasters that occurred in the past using the preterit and imperfect tenses. Vocabulary: Students will describe people who are missing after a natural disaster using clothing, news, and weather vocabulary. Culture: Students will compare and contrast the journalistic content and style of news reports about natural disasters in Latin America with those of the United States. Social Issues: Students will explain the effects of natural disasters on the economy of Latin America. c) Performance Parameters: Identify the parameters for performance that would constitute convincing evidence that students have mastered the objectives. (See the next page for several examples.) Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery Unit Objectives Examples of Objectives: Students will (standards-based communicative function/task) about (cultural context/vocabulary topic) using (grammatical structure) + (performance parameters - accuracy, frequency, quantity, or time). Presentational Mode: Students will present 1-minute news reports about natural disasters in Latin America using at least 5 targeted preterit and imperfect verbs. Interpersonal Mode: Students will describe 3 missing children after a natural disaster using clothing vocabulary and adjectives in response to a relief worker’s questions. Interpretive Mode: Students will identify 5 safety recommendations from a newspaper article about disaster preparedness using the present subjunctive and crisis vocabulary. Presentational Mode: Students will explain similarities and differences in how natural disasters affect people in the U.S. and Latin America using tan/tanto + como in a 10-sentence newspaper article. Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery (To use this template, replace the prompts in the gray boxes with your own text and then delete any text that appears in red.) National Standards: (How will your UNIT address each of the National Standards?) Complete the chart below: Standards-based Essential (Guiding) Question: Standard 1.1, Communication (Interpersonal): Students (engage in conversations/provide and obtain information/express feelings and emotions/exchange opinions) about (name of topic/s) Standard 1.2, Communication (Interpretive): Students understand and interpret (written/spoken) language on (name of topic) by (reading/listening to/viewing) (type of texts) Standard 1.3, Communication (Presentational) Students present (information/concepts/ideas) to an audience of (listeners/readers/viewers) about (name of topic/s) Standard 2.1, Cultures: Students demonstrate an understanding of the relationship between the practices and perspectives of the culture studied by (explain how) Standard 2.1, Cultures: Students demonstrate an understanding of the relationship between the products and perspectives of the culture studied by (explain how) Standard 3.1, Connections: Students reinforce and further their knowledge of (list one or more disciplines besides Spanish) through the foreign language and its cultures by (list tasks) Standard 3.2, Connections: Students acquire information and recognize the distinctive viewpoints that are only available through the foreign language and its cultures by (list tasks or explain how) Standard 4.1/4.2, Comparisons: Students demonstrate understanding of the (nature of language/concept of culture) through comparisons of the (language/cultures) studied and their own by (list tasks) Standard 5.1, Communities: Students use the language within and beyond the school setting by (list tasks or explain how) Standard 5.2, Communities: Students use the language for personal enjoyment and enrichment when (list tasks or explain how) Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery (To use this template, replace the prompts in the gray boxes with your own text and then delete any text that appears in red.) TWS Standard: The teacher sets significant, challenging, varied and appropriate the learning goal and objectives based on state/district content standards. Rating Indicator A. Unit Overview B. Unit Planning Grid C. Quality and Clarity of Objectives D. Number and Variety of Objectives E. Alignment of Objectives with Standards 5 Exceeds Expectation 4-3 Meets Expectation 2-1 Partially Meets Expectation 0 Not Met/ Missing Evidence Overview gives the reader an exceptionally good understanding of how major unit activities prepare students to discuss a cultural context, social issue, or conceptual theme Overview gives the reader an good understanding of how major unit activities connect to a central cultural topic Overview gives the reader a basic idea of how the major unit activities connect to a central grammar or vocabulary topic Overview is missing or fails to identify major activities in the unit; No evidence of any thematic organization All aspects of the Unit Planning Grid/Web are thoughtfully addressed; a variety of meaningful activities is included. All aspects of the Unit Planning Grid/Web are addressed; sufficient variety of activities included Objectives represent appropriate learning outcomes, and are adequately stated in terms of measurable outcomes Most aspects of the Unit Planning Grid/Web are addressed, but may be lacking in detail or number of activities Objectives represent appropriate learning outcomes, but may lack clarity or are not stated in terms of measurable outcomes Unit Planning Grid/Web is missing or incomplete Number of objectives may be too few (less than 5) or too many; objectives reflect at least one communicative, linguistic, and cultural goal Objectives lack attention to one or more areas (communicative, linguistic, cultural) No objectives are listed More than 50% of objectives are aligned with the National Standards; explanation is adequate At least one objective aligns with the National Standards; textual explanation may be incomplete Objectives do not align with National Standards, or alignment with standards is not explained Objectives represent exceptionally meaningful and developmentally appropriate learning outcomes, clearly stated as measurable outcomes (e.g., what students will be able to do) An appropriate number of objectives are listed; objectives represent a variety of communicative, linguistic, and cultural goals All objectives align with National Standards; textual explanation is unusually informative & succinct Objectives are inappropriate or missing, or represent activities rather than learning outcomes Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery (To use this template, replace the prompts in the gray boxes with your own text and then delete any text that appears in red.) Assessment Plan (1-page chart, plus copies of assessments, keys, and student work) Unit Assessments: (What assessments will you use to evaluate students’ performance and provide them with feedback on their progress?) Students progress toward unit objectives will be assessed by (title of formal speaking assessment activity) , and (title of listening, reading, or writing assessment activity) . The culminating assessment for this unit will be (title of project or other culminating assessment activity) in which students will (BRIEF description of what the assessment activity or project will require students to do) . Assessments o Copies of assessments o Copies of scoring instruments (e.g., answer keys, observation checklists, rating scales, scoring rubrics o Multiple forms of assessment (e.g., comprehension checks, quizzes, observation, projects, tests, ticket out, worksheets, etc.) o At least one formal assessment of students’ speaking skills o At least one other language modality (listening, reading, or writing) also assessed o Assessments appropriate for chosen communicative, linguistic, cultural objectives o Matched pre- and post-assessment (for at least one objective) Quality of Assessments o Correct Spanish o Clear instructions and procedures o Real-life language use For M.A. students only: Discuss the construct and content validity of your assessments – e.g., the extent to which they represent the construct they purport to measure (listening comprehension, cultural knowledge, mastery of a grammar concept, etc.), and the extent to which they accurately represent the content taught in your unit. Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery (To use this template, replace the prompts in the gray boxes with your own text and then delete any text that appears in red.) Assessment Plan Chart OBJECTIVE ASSESSMENT(S) PRE-, FORMATIVE, OR POST? MODALITY (listening, speaking, reading, writing, etc.) Objective 1: Objective 2: Objective 3: Assessment Adaptations: 1) Students who are ________________________________ will ________________________________. (gifted, learning disabled, native speakers, etc.) (state accommodation or adapation) 2) Students who are ________________________________ will ________________________________. (gifted, learning disabled, native speakers, etc.) (state accommodation or adapation) 3) Students who are ________________________________ will ________________________________. (gifted, learning disabled, native speakers, etc.) (state accommodation or adapation) *Note: You must pre- AND post-assess at least one of your unit objectives. The pre-assessment must be similar enough to the post-assessment to allow you to do pre-post comparisons at the end of the unit. [Insert copies of all assessments (i.e., quizzes, tests, project assignment sheets, and rubrics here, along with sample student work where appropriate] Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery (To use this template, replace the prompts in the gray boxes with your own text and then delete any text that appears in red.) Assessment Plan Rubric TWS Standard: The teacher uses multiple assessment modes and approaches aligned with the learning goal to assess student learning before, during and after instruction. Rating Indicator A. Alignment of Assessments with Unit Objectives B. Quality of Assessments 5 Exceeds Expectation The plan includes multiple forms of assessment (including speaking and at least one other modality) that align with unit objectives and provide exceptional insight into students’ attainment of the objectives Few if any errors in Spanish; directions and procedures are clear and wellscaffolded for students; assessments represent reallife language use 4-3 Meets Expectation The plan includes multiple forms of assessment (including speaking) that align with unit objectives Infrequent, minor errors in Spanish; 75% of the directions and procedures are clear and wellscaffolded for students 2-1 Partially Meets Expectation The plan includes only one form of assessment; may be lacking an assessment of speaking skills or other language modalities; assessments may not always align with unit objectives 0 Not Met/ Missing Evidence No assessments Frequent, but minor errors in Spanish; 50% of the directions and procedures are clear to students Frequent, major errors in Spanish create confusion for students; directions and procedures are unclear Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE Name: _________________ Date: ___________________________ Lesson Topic: ________________________ Grade Level(s): 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 University _____ Course: Intro. I II III IV V AP SNS Textbook: ____________________________ Time Required: ______________________ Design for Instruction (1 page for pre-assessment data and description) Administer and analyze pre-assessment (1 page) o Administer a pre-assessment for at least one objective o Analyze student performance o Graph results to highlight patterns of student performance o Identify changes needed in your lesson plans based on your analysis of the pre-assessment AND contextual factors I pre-assessed the objective ______________________________________ using (briefly describe the assessment). [Insert graph of pre-assessment results.] As the graph indicates, (describe the pre-assessment results—i.e., 75% of the class scored less than 50/100 on the preterit section of the assessment). These results suggest that students need (explain what you learned from the pre-assessment). Consequently, I will modify my lesson plans by (explain how). Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery LESSON PLAN TEMPLATE Name: _________________ Date: ___________________________ Lesson Topic: ________________________ Grade Level(s): 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 University _____ Course: Intro. I II III IV V AP SNS Textbook: ____________________________ Time Required: ______________________ Unit Lesson Plans: (What lessons will you plan to prepare students to successfully complete the culminating assessment(s) you listed above?) Lesson Plan Template (Complete a new one for each day of your unit) You must include a minimum of 5 lesson plans (not counting your assessments) The unit should be thematic and standards-based Each lesson plan should consist of a variety of activities (including all 3 modes of communication, culture, and at least one opportunity for students to use critical thinking skills and technology tools) Each activity in the lesson plan should connect to the previous one Each lesson should progressively build students’ skills so students can accomplish the unit objectives by the end of the unit Insert all relevant worksheets and samples of student work following each lesson plan You may also include photos as long as you have written parental and student permission from any students who appear in them. Lesson Timeline (Replace the text in red with information from your own unit) Instructions: 1) 2) 3) 4) Title – Write the activity title in the blank. Time – Note how many minutes you will allot. Teacher - Write one sentence telling what you will do. Task Instructions - Write step-by-step instructions for students in Spanish (1 line per step, 7 words per step, no more than 5 steps). 5) Task – Include the questions, worksheet, or prompts for each task. Teacher Work Sample Template ♦ Revised 2010 ♦ Adapted from Dr. Blair Bateman by Dr. Cherice Montgomery Lesson Plan for ____________, Chapter ___: _______________ (Textbook) (#) (Lesson Topic) Standards-based Objective: (What will students DO with their language in “real life” after this lesson that they could not do before?) [Ask for directions, compare, complain, describe, express emotions, exchange info., flirt, make excuses, persuade] Students will (standards-based communicative function) about (context/vocabulary topic) using + (grammatical structure) + (performance parameters - accuracy, frequency, quantity, time). Assessment Task: (What will students PRODUCE or PERFORM as evidence that they have achieved the objective?) Context for the Lesson: (How will the Cultures, Connections, Comparisons, & Communities standards provide an authentic audience, purpose, setting, and resources for communication?) Social Issue Culturally Authentic Materials (Communities) Content from Other Disciplines (Cultures & Comparisons) (Connections) Targeted Grammatical Structure: Key Vocabulary Words: 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) PRE-ACTIVITY 1 Warm-up: ____________________________________________________ ______ TOPIC: Capture Attention ♦ Activate & Build Prior Knowledge DURING ACTIVITIES: [TEXT: An audio recording, comic strip, interview, newspaper or magazine article, poem, song, story, textbook reading, TV show, video clip, etc.] 2 Contextualized Experience: _____________________________________________ ______ 3 Focus on Meaning: _______________________________________________________ ______ 4 Focus on Form: ___________________________________________________________ ______ 5 Focus on Communication: ________________________________________________ ______ Shared experience with an experiment, simulation, story, video) TASK: Explore the meaning of the content for self & society TASK: Identify patterns in the language (grammar & vocabulary) TALK: Interpersonal communication about the content POST-ACTIVITIES 6 Closure: __________________________________________________________________ 7 Homework: _______________________________________________________________ = ______ TECHNIQUES, TEMPLATES, & TECH: Summarize ♦ Reflect ♦ Connect ♦ Extend ♦ Preview “Real Life” product for authentic audiences & purposes Assessment Task Lesson Plan Template ♦ 2012 ♦ Cherice Montgomery, Ph.D. & Span 378 Students ♦ cherice_montgomery@byu.edu ______ Complete this page for EACH activity you listed above. The teacher will (One simple sentence telling what the teacher will do.) Instrucciones: (For students, in Spanish, no more than 5 steps, 7-10 words per step) Paso 1: Paso 2: Paso 3: Paso 4: Paso 5: Actividad: Adaptations: (For students who are gifted, heritage/native speakers, learning disabled, or who have other special needs) 1) Students who are __________________________________ will ________________________. (gifted, learning disabled, native speakers, etc.) (accommodation or adapation) 2) Students who are __________________________________ will ________________________. (gifted, learning disabled, native speakers, etc.) (accommodation or adapation) 3) Students who are __________________________________ will ________________________. (gifted, learning disabled, native speakers, etc.) (accommodation or adaptation) Back-up/Sponge Activities: (Additional activities for extra time, “fast finishers,” or re-teaching) 1) ____________________________________________________________________________________ 2) ____________________________________________________________________________________ 3) ____________________________________________________________________________________ Materials: Please attach a copy of the materials and worksheets you will use. Lesson Plan Template ♦ 2012 ♦ Cherice Montgomery, Ph.D. & Span 378 Students ♦ cherice_montgomery@byu.edu Design for Instruction Rubric TWS Standard: The teacher designs instruction for the specific the learning goal and objectives that address characteristics and needs of students, and the learning context. Rating Indicator A. Use of Contextual Information and PreAssessment Results B. Instructional Strategies C. Technology D. Adaptations for special needs learners 5 Exceeds Expectation 4-3 Meets Expectation 2-1 Partially Meets Expectation 0 Not Met / Missing Evidence Instruction has been carefully designed with reference to contextual factors; pre-assessment data are charted, analyzed, and insightfully used to fine tune instructional design Complete, detailed lesson plans include a variety of interactive, student-centered activities that reflect best teaching practices Students use technology frequently throughout the entire unit in ways that promote critical thinking More than one contextual factor used to design instruction; preassessment results charted, analyzed, and used in planning instruction At least one contextual factors used to design instruction; preassessment results charted and analyzed Instruction not designed with reference to contextual factors; pre-assessment results not charted and analyzed Complete, detailed lesson plans include a variety of activities Lesson plans are incomplete, lack detail and/or variety; some activities do not reflect best teaching practices Lesson plans not included Students use technology occasionally as a tool for communication OR a strong rationale for not using technology is given Technology is inappropriately used OR not used. Rationale for not using technology is weak Needs of all individuals have been considered and appropriate adaptations incorporated A variety of specific adaptations are identified to meet some students’ individual needs Teacher uses technology only in the production or presentation of learning activities OR a limited rationale for not using technology is given Relies on the same one or two general adaptations to meet the needs of students with special needs No adaptations are identified that address students’ needs, or the adaptations are inappropriate Lesson Plan Template ♦ 2012 ♦ Cherice Montgomery, Ph.D. & Span 378 Students ♦ cherice_montgomery@byu.edu Instructional Decision-Making (1-2 pages) Teach the unit Describe an instance when a student’s learning or response caused you to modify your original lesson plan “midstream” o Description of incident o Description of modification of instruction or assessment o Explanation of why the modification should have improved student progress based on: Contextual factors Analysis of student learning Principles of sound professional practice o Description of outcome o Tell this like a little mini-story, don’t just write bullet points. Describe another time when you modified your instruction, including the same elements listed above. o Incident #1 Title (e.g. Listening Activity Too Difficult, Inattentive Students, Low Scores, Lost Assignments etc.) o Modifications Based on Analysis of Student Learning What happened? How did you modify your instruction/assessment? o Sound Professional Practice Why did you make the modification (based on contextual factors, analysis of student learning, and principles of sound professional practice)? How well did the modification work? Did you get the result you anticipated? o Incident #2 Title o Modifications Based on Analysis of Student Learning What happened? How did you modify your instruction/assessment? o Sound Professional Practice Why did you make the modification (based on contextual factors, analysis of student learning, and principles of sound professional practice)? How well did the modification work? Did you get the result you anticipated? Lesson Plan Template ♦ 2012 ♦ Cherice Montgomery, Ph.D. & Span 378 Students ♦ cherice_montgomery@byu.edu Instructional Decision-Making Rubric TWS Standard: The teacher uses on-going analysis of student learning to make instructional decisions. Rating Indicator 5 Exceeds Expectation A. Modifications Based on Analysis of Student Learning B. Sound Professional Practice 4-3 Meets Expectation 2-1 Partially Meets Expectation Thoughtful modifications of the instructional plan are related to contextual factors and an analysis of student learning Many appropriate modifications of the instructional plan address individual student needs Modifications of the instructional plan address general issues that arise in class Extended explanations are provided for instructional decisions and modifications are based on best practices Instructional decisions are pedagogically sound (i.e., likely to lead to student learning) Some instructional decisions not pedagogically sound 0 Not Met/ Missing Evidence Modifications are inappropriate or missing Instructional decisions are inappropriate Lesson Plan Template ♦ 2012 ♦ Cherice Montgomery, Ph.D. & Span 378 Students ♦ cherice_montgomery@byu.edu Report of Student Learning (Approximately 2 pages total) Whole class (1 page) o Create a graph or table of the performance of every student on postassessments for EACH learning objective o Pre-/post- comparisons for the one objective you pre-assessed o Summarize what these data show about student learning in the whole class (How many students met the objectives? How many did not? What does this tell you about what students did or did not learn?) Subgroup (1 page) o Select a subgroup by choosing a group characteristic (gender, performance level, language proficiency, etc.) o Rationale for selection of this subgroup o Create a graph or table that shows the performance of each student in this subgroup on pre-/post- assessments for the one objective you pre-assessed o What do these data show you about student learning in this subgroup? Lesson Plan Template ♦ 2012 ♦ Cherice Montgomery, Ph.D. & Span 378 Students ♦ cherice_montgomery@byu.edu Report of Student Learning Rubric TWS Standard: The teacher uses assessment data to profile student learning and communicate information about student progress and achievement. Rating Indicator 5 Exceeds Expectation Profile Clarity Provides a clear and thorough Data profile of student Summary learning A. Whole Class Summary is meaningful and many appropriate conclusions are supported by the data Impact on Student Learning Substantial evidence provided on who achieved or made progress toward each objective Profile Clarity Provides a clear and thorough Data profile of student Summary learning B. Subgroup Summary is meaningful and many appropriate conclusions are supported by the data Impact on Student Learning Substantial evidence provided on who achieved or made progress toward each objective 4-3 Meets Expectation 2-1 Partially Meets Expectation Provides a clear profile Some parts of the of student learning profile are unclear Summary is accurate and some appropriate conclusions are drawn. Adequate evidence provided on who achieved or made progress toward most objectives Adequate evidence provided on who achieved or made progress toward most objectives No evidence provided Summary is inaccurate or conclusions are missing or not supported by data Inadequate evidence provided on who achieved or made progress toward some objectives Provides a clear profile Some parts of the of student learning profile are unclear Summary is accurate and some appropriate conclusions are drawn. 0 Not Met/ Missing Evidence No evidence provided No evidence provided Summary is inaccurate or conclusions are missing or not supported by data Inadequate evidence provided on who achieved or made progress toward some objectives No evidence provided Lesson Plan Template ♦ 2012 ♦ Cherice Montgomery, Ph.D. & Span 378 Students ♦ cherice_montgomery@byu.edu Reflection and Self-Evaluation (2-4 pages) Evaluate your performance as a teacher, linking it to student learning results and future professional action that could for improve your teaching. Interpretation of Student Learning (based on assessment results, student characteristics, objectives, instruction, materials, assessment, contextual factors) o At least 3 possible reasons for student success o At least 3 possible reasons for students’ lack of success Insights on Effective Instruction and Assessment o At least 3 successful learning activities and/or assessments o At least 2 plausible reasons for the success or failure of each one o At least 3 unsuccessful learning activities and/or assessments o At least 2 plausible reasons for the success or failure of each one Implications for Future Teaching o List of multiple ideas for redesigning your instruction and assessment to improve student performance in the future o Rationale for why these changes would improve student learning Implications for Personal Professional Improvement o Area 1 you will improve o List of professional activities in which you will engage to help you do so o Description of each professional activity/resource o Area 2 you will improve o List of professional activities in which you will engage to help you do so o Description of each professional activity/resource o Area 3 you will improve o List of professional activities in which you will engage to help you do so o Description of each professional activity/resource Lesson Plan Template ♦ 2012 ♦ Cherice Montgomery, Ph.D. & Span 378 Students ♦ cherice_montgomery@byu.edu Reflection and Self-Evaluation Rubric TWS Standard: The teacher analyzes the relationship between his or her instruction and student learning in order to improve teaching practice. Rating Indicator A. Interpretation of Student Learning B. Insights on Effective Instruction and Assessment C. Implications for Future Teaching D. Implications for Personal Professional Improvement 5 Exceeds Expectation Insightfully explores multiple reasons for why students met or did not meet the learning objectives Identifies multiple successful and unsuccessful activities and assessments and provides plausible reasons for their success or failure Provides many insightful ideas for redesigning instruction and assessment and offers a thorough explanation of why these changes would improve student learning Identifies three or more areas for improvement; professional activities show unusual insight into teaching and teaching resources 4-3 Meets Expectation 2-1 Partially Meets Expectation Provides one reason for why students met or did not meet the learning objectives 0 Not Met/ Missing Evidence No evidence or reasons provided to explain student performance Identifies the most and the least successful activities and assessments and provides plausible reasons for their success or failure Identifies at least one un/successful activity, but provides little rationale for why it was more or less successful than others Provides no rationale for why some activities or assessments were more successful than others Some appropriate ideas for redesigning instruction and assessment with adequate explanation of why these changes would improve student learning Inappropriate ideas for redesigning instruction and assessment or inadequate explanation of why these changes would improve student learning No ideas for redesigning instruction and assessment Identifies two areas for improvement and describes specific professional activities to improve in these areas Identifies at least one area for improvement and lists general activities to improve in this area No areas for improvement identified or no plan provided to improve in these areas Provides more than one plausible reason for why students met or did not meet the learning objectives Lesson Plan Template ♦ 2012 ♦ Cherice Montgomery, Ph.D. & Span 378 Students ♦ cherice_montgomery@byu.edu Quality of Presentation Formatting 1-inch margins 12 point font Double spaced Charts, Graphs, & Attachments Be sure to include: o Charts o Graphs o Links to resources, worksheets, or sample slides from PowerPoints and other teaching materials you used (Google Docs is a great way to accomplish this) o A few samples of student work that provide clear evidence of your performance o A few samples of student work that provide clear evidence of student learning Anonymity No student names in any part (unless they are fictional) Obtain permission from parents and students for all samples of student work that you include Include a copy of the relevant permission forms at the end of your TWS References & Credits Separate section at the end of the document Cite ideas and materials that belong to another person APA format File Name: Please save your TWS with a name that follows this format: LastName FirstName Teacher Work Sample W12.doc Lesson Plan Template ♦ 2012 ♦ Cherice Montgomery, Ph.D. & Span 378 Students ♦ cherice_montgomery@byu.edu Quality of Presentation Rubric Rating Indicator Mechanics of Writing 5 Exceeds Expectation Few if any errors in spelling, grammar, capitalization, punctuation, sentence structure, and other mechanics of writing Organization All information is clearly presented, well-organized, and easy to find Overall TWS Quality TWS exceeds the typical professional thought and effort expected in a culminating assignment 4-3 Meets Expectation 2-1 Partially Meets Expectation Occasional, non-distracting errors in spelling, grammar, capitalization, punctuation, sentence structure, and other mechanics of writing More than 75% of the information is clearly presented, well-organized and easy to find TWS reflects the typical professional thought and effort expected in a culminating assignment Frequent errors in spelling, grammar, capitalization, punctuation, sentence structure, and other mechanics of writing Approximately 50% of the information is clearly presented, well-organized, and easy to find TWS has sections that should be revised and improved before serving as a culminating assignment 0 Not Met/ Missing Evidence Distracting accumulation of errors in spelling, grammar, capitalization, punctuation, sentence structure, and other mechanics of writing Only about 25% of the information is clearly presented, well-organized, and easy to find TWS does not reflect the typical professional thought and effort expected in a culminating teacher education assignment Score Lesson Plan Template ♦ 2012 ♦ Cherice Montgomery, Ph.D. & Span 378 Students ♦ cherice_montgomery@byu.edu Instructions for Uploading Your TWS to LiveText Log into LiveText From your dashboard on the homepage of LiveText, click the Submit Assignment button in the Spanish Teacher Work Sample section. When the new screen loads, click on the gray tab that says File Attachment. When the new window loads, look for the words Current Label. Click on the Upload New button. Browse for the new file on your computer. Once you find it, click the Upload File button. Wait until the status says Completed in green. Check the checkbox in front of the document. Click on the Insert Selected Documents button/link. Once you see a paperclip icon under the Artifacts heading, click the green Submit Assignment arrow to officially submit your uploaded TWS to LiveText. If you did it correctly, you should see a paperclip with your file name next to it, followed by an orange clock icon that says “Awaiting Assessment.” Lesson Plan Template ♦ 2012 ♦ Cherice Montgomery, Ph.D. & Span 378 Students ♦ cherice_montgomery@byu.edu