Standards-Based Lessons
Ask yourself: What do you think are the most significant
parts of a standards-based lesson?
Steps for Standards-Based Lessons
- Identify the standards and key elements
- Which standards have your students mastered,
are working on, need?
- Personally evaluate or assess your students'
needs (district tests, classroom work, observations,
etc.)
- Review the specific underlying components that
are needed to allow you to say the student has mastered
the standard.
- Combine and connect
- Look for and begin to recognize the areas where
standards overlap. There are natural connections between
subjects and you can work on more than one standard
at a time.
- Design assessments
- Assessments are designed at the beginning of
a lesson or unit, not at the end.
- Create rubrics, scoring guides, and activities
that help make understanding and mastery of the
standard more clear.
- Collect models of exemplary work by students of
the same age that show acceptable performance.
- Expand instructional practices
- Use the best available research on ways to reach
all students. (See Best
Practices)
- Consider culminating tasks and instructional units
- Create units when the standards can naturally combine
to answer a driving question, when different subjects
(math, social studies, science, geography) are unified
naturally, or when a large topic is motivating to
the students (age-appropriate, local resources are
available, etc.)
- Begin, starting now, to use standards-based lessons.
- Do you already have lessons that are standards-based?
Review your own practices and files of lessons.
Ask yourself every time you look at a lesson (from
your own files, a textbook, or from the web): Can
this lesson be saved?
- Discard lessons that do not:
- Clearly match important standards that your
students need
- Provide introduction, instruction or reinforcement
to an identifiable standard
- Have student activities that produce measurable
outcomes
- Have appropriate resources readily available
- Save and rewrite borderline lessons.
Rewrite lessons to include:
- Standards: Align the lesson to address an
important standard that is needed by your students
- Time: Amount of time reflects the importance
of the learning being accomplished
- Activities: include a wider variety of approaches
that address all learning types
- Assessments: understandable scoring guides
or other ways to measure achievement that reflects
progress toward mastering the standard being
worked on
- Integration: work with colleagues in other
subject areas to share the teaching, reinforcement
and re-teaching of concepts that have natural
connections
For more information:
Reeves, Douglas. Making Standards Work: How to Implement
Standards-Based Assessments in the Classroom, School,
and District. Denver, Co.: Center for Performance
Assessment, 2002.
|
 |