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Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students achieve the overarching goals or not

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Page 1: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals

How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students achieve the overarching goals or not

Page 2: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Approaching existing content differently

Carol DiFilippo’s Course Audition and Spoken Language

For pre-service teachers who will have hearing-impaired students in class

Goals: students will be able to analyze pupil characteristics, classroom performance, and learning environments to design, implement, and assess lesson plans that will enhance spoken language learning.

Page 3: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Goals: Analyze pupil characteristics, classroom performance, and learning environments to

design, implement, and assess lesson plans that will enhance spoken language learning

Previous approach focused on content background Around topics such as nature and physiology

of hearing loss, interpreting audiograms, troubleshooting hearing aids, designing lesson plans

New approach focused on goals Moderately hearing-impaired child Severely hearing-impaired child Profoundly deaf child

Provides repeated practice with increasing complexity

Page 4: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals

New environmental geo courseOverarching goal: students will be

able to research and evaluate news reports of a natural disaster and communicate their analyses to someone else

What content to choose?

Page 5: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Be able to research and evaluate news reports of a natural disaster and

communicate analyses to someone else

Instructor #1 chose four specific disasters as content topics1973 Susquehanna floodLandsliding in coastal CaliforniaMt. St. HelensArmenia earthquake

Page 6: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Be able to research and evaluate news reports of a natural disaster and

communicate analyses to someone else

Instructor #2 chose four themes as content topics Impact of hurricanes on building codes

and insurance Perception and reality of fire damage on

the environment Mitigating the effects of volcanic

eruptions Geologic and sociologic realities of

earthquake prediction

Page 7: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Be able to research and evaluate news reports of a natural disaster and

communicate analyses to someone else

Instructor #3 chose to focus on a historical survey of natural disasters in Vermont Historical record of flooding in NW

Vermont 1983 landsliding 2-3 other places in Vermont that have

had natural disasters of different types.

Page 8: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Goals and content topics uniteto provide course framework

Previous example Same overarching goal. Different content topics mean that each

course will be different. Choice of content topics drives how the

instructor will implement the course. Students will receive different kinds of

practice during the course even though the overall goals are the same.

Page 9: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Goals and content topics unite to provide course framework

How about a different overarching goal for the same hazards course? Students should be able to evaluate and

predict the influence of climate, hydrology, biology, and geology on the severity of a natural disaster.

Could we use the same content topics? Yes!

How would the courses be different? In the activities developed and the type of practice students receive!!

Page 10: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Intersection of context,goals, and content

Research & evaluate news report or evaluate and predict influence of climate, hydro, geo, bio on the severity of a natural hazard?

Which one makes most sense for who your students are and what they need?

Which content topics make the most sense for your students, your setting, your experience, your students’ futures?

Page 11: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Key is threading the goals throughout the course

Don’t think about an overarching goal as a final assignment.

Less valuable if the overarching goals are addressed only in a final assignment

How will you thread progress on the goal(s) throughout your course?

Page 12: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Strategies for picking broad content topics content topics

Reorganize existing content (e.g., Audition course)

Choosing new content

Page 13: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Test out a number of broad topics to see what’s “in them”

Higher order thinking skills outcomes have imbedded in them lower order thinking skills outcomes

Broad content topics have imbedded in them many concepts and content items that would be covered in a standard survey course

Page 14: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Test out a number of broad topics to see what’s “in them”

Geology and Development of Modern Africa

Not a “Geology of Africa” courseOverarching goal: students will be

able to analyze the underlying influence of geology on human events

Context is Africa, although goal is more general

Page 15: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Goal: students will be able to analyze the underlying influence of geology on human

events

Content topic #1: influence of climate change on prehistoric settlement patterns in North Africa

Imbedded content items Geologic content knowledge: 14C dating,

fossils, lacustrine sedimentation, stratigraphic columns, using sedimentary rocks to interpret paleoenvironments, geologic time scale,….

Page 16: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Goal: students will be able to analyze the underlying influence of geology on human

events

Content topic #2: influence of development of East African Rift on hominid evolution

Imbedded content items Geologic content knowledge: formation and

evolution of continental rifts, radiometirc dating, rift volcanisms, stratigraphic columns, fossils, using sedimentary rocks to interpret paleoenvironments, geologic time scale, fluvial and alluvial processes, faulting, geologic history of East Africa, evolution

Page 17: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Test out a number of broad topics to see what’s “in them”

Will all of the topics “work”Do you have (know of) resources in

all the topics?Can they be sequenced to give

students increasing background and increasing complexity of goals-related practice?

Can you “cover” what you need to, recognizing that depth over breadth is a viable alternative? Can you live with the holes?

Page 18: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Use a case study approach

Persa Batra’s course on the Human Dimensions of Climate Change at Mt. Holyoke College

Goals: students will be able to analyze the characteristics of past societies that made them vulnerable to climate change; predict what modern regions are most vulnerable to future climate change; formulate strategies to reduce these vulnerabilities.

Page 19: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Goals: students will be able to analyze the characteristics of past societies that made them

vulnerable to climate change; predict what modern regions are most vulnerable to future climate change;

formulate strategies to reduce these vulnerabilities.

Case study approach: analysis of archaeological and historical reconstructions of societies impacted by climate change, and comparison to those more able to adapt Neolithic Kebaran people of southwest

Asia Akkadians of ancient Mesopotamia Classic Maya Iceland, France, England and Ireland

during the Little Ice Age India during the 1876-78 famine.

Page 20: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Use case studies to increase relevance

If your students are local, what problems/cases can you use?

Can you tie this to practice in “professional tasks?

Is there an opportunity for integrating service learning? Not just one ene-of-semester event, but threaded throughout?

Page 21: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Connect to your own expertise

Wendy Panero’s Course Mineralogy at SUNY Oswego

Required course for geo majorsGoals: Students will be able to

synthesize mineralogical data (visual inspection, petrographic microscopy, XRD and SEM/EDS) to address specific geological problems.

Page 22: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Goals: synthesize mineralogical data (visual inspection, petrographic microscopy, XRD and

SEM/EDS) to address specific geological problems.

Previous organization Around topics such as crystal chemistry,

Miller indices, systematic mineralogy, lattice structures, space groups, etc.

New organization Core Mantle Crust

Page 23: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Implement a “just in time” approach

Linda Reinen’s course on Tectonics at Pomona College

Goals: Read and interpret the scientific literature in order to

identify, list, and synthesize information relating to a specific topic and/or question

Collect and analyze data to address a scientific question. This includes: formulating a data-collection plan, collecting data, graphing data, identifying patterns within the data, and quantifying results)

Synthesize data collected from a variety of sources to test current tectonic models for the southern California region.

Page 24: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Goals: synthesize info from literature, collect & analyze data, carry out project a project

Initial thoughts on organization Long intro background section Then wrap-up project

Revised organization: ditch the long background section and integrate it “just in time” Have students chip away at parts of the project

over the semester Don’t fee compelled to “teach them everything

before they can do something”

Page 25: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Focusing on a “kind of thinking”

Brad Hubeny’s course on Historical Geology at Salem State College

Goals: When faced with a new piece of geologic

information, students will be able to determine HOW we know this information and what the assumptions are in the analysis

And some “Historical Geology” goals as well

Page 26: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Goals: Analyze how we know “pieces of information”, plus historical geo topics

Initial thoughts on organization March through time using traditional stratigraphic sequences in

N. America to make sure that students have a chronological perspective

Talk to them about “how we know” - show them examples Revised organization: take systems approach and focus on

topics that address change over time, hang an updatable timeline in the classroom Sea level changes Mass extinctions Climate change Chemical cycles

Give students personal practice in the “how we know” part for each of the topics

Page 27: Step 3: Choosing content topics in context of overarching goals  How you choose and organize content topics can have profound influence on whether students

Homework for the week

Complete the daily road check by 3:30 today. Revise your reviewed assignment

Revise and resubmit. In the comments box on your “activity” page, indicate

what changes you made and what you expect the impact(s) to be.

Write a draft content outline in context of goals Use the workspace page Final course poster next

to your name on the participant list for your draft.

Explore other teaching strategies Start/respond to discussion threads Sign up for optional consultations