Monday, March 23, 2009
FIAE Chapter 14: Responsive Report Card Formats
FIAE Chapter 13: Gradebook Formats for the Differentiated Classroom
FIAE Chapter 12: Grading Scales
FIAE Chapter 11: Six Burning Grading Issues
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
FIAE Chapter 10: Conditions for Redoing Work for Full Credit
FIAE Chapter 9: Ten Approaches to AVoid When Differentiating Assessment and Grading
FIAE Chapter 8: Why do we Grade, and What About Effort, Attendance, and Behavior?
FIAE Chapter 7: The Relative Definitions of Grades and Their Definitions
Synthesis of Chapter 14 of MI
The class agreed that it is worth thinking about incorporating Howard Gardner’s ninth intelligence into their lessons whether or not it has been made officially. Many of us thought that it would not be long before it was added to the list of intelligences and were willing to accept it as such. The class thought that it would be fairly easy to incorporate into classes because its nature involves looking for deeper meaning which is what teachers should be asking their students to do. Many of us linked it to science because so many scientists have been inspired by life questions in their research and experiments. There were also connections made to history and literature because both of those subjects deal with why things happen.
Abstract-
The last chapter of the MI book is about a possible ninth intelligence. It is called the existential intelligence and it deals with the big philosophical questions that all humans ask. This intelligence is often controversial though because many cultures answer these big life questions with religious beliefs. However, this intelligence isn’t about being extremely religious but rather about looking for meaning in life, looking for similarities in beliefs between cultures, and in the capability to see the big picture. It does meet many of Gardner’s criteria for being an intelligence but there has yet to be enough evidence to support this idea.
Monday, February 23, 2009
MI Chapter 12: MI and Cognitive Skills
MI Chapter 11: MI and Special Education
MI Chapter 8: MI and Classroom Management
UbD/DI Chapter 8: Grading and Reporting Achievment
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
UbD/DI Chapter 9: Bringing it all Together: Curriculum and Instruction Through the Lens of UbD and DI
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
MI Chapter 14: MI and Existential Intelligence
MI Chapter 13: Other Applications of MI Theory
MI Chapter 7: MI and the Classroom Environment
MI Chapter 10: MI and Assessment
Monday, February 9, 2009
MI Chapter 6: MI and Teaching Strategies
MI Chapter 5: MI and Curriculum Development
UbD/DI Chapter 7: Theaching for Understanding in Academically Diverse Classrooms
UbD/DI Chapter 6: Responsive Teaching With UbD in Academically Diverse Classrooms
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
FIAE Chapter 6: Creating Good Test Questions
FIAE Chapter 5: Tiering Assignments
FIAE Chapter 4: Three Important Types of Assessment
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
Synthesis of Chapter 3 of UbD/DI
This chapter introduces the backwards design model. In this chapter stage one was described as establishing the goals for the unit, stage two was defined as deciding what evidence will be used to figure out if the students have learned the material and stage three was defined as where the day to day activities that will help students learn and meet the goals from stage one are created. The backwards design model’s purpose is to keep teachers focused on the desired end. In this way teachers are working towards something and not just trying to cover a textbook. This way both students and teachers know where everything is heading.
Synthesis:
Overall the class found the model helpful in planning lessons especially in subjects where there was a lot of material. We all agreed that the model would both help us plan our lessons and help our students learn because having a clear focus makes it easier to differentiate in order to reach all learners, we have a clear goal so it is easier to assess how the students are doing in reaching that goal and because the students won’t just be doing activities or busy work but working towards learning something specific. The class thought that the backwards design model also addresses the gaps in state standards making it easy to meet them while engaging students.
Monday, February 2, 2009
FIAE Chapter 3: Principles of Successful Assessment in the Differentiated Classroom
FIAE Chapter 1: The Differentiated Instruction Mind-set: Rationale and Definition
FIAE Chapter 2: Mastery
UbD/DI Chapter 5: Considering Evidence of Learning in Diverse Classrooms
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
UbD/DI Chapter 4: What Really Matters in Planning for Student Success?
UbD/DI Chapter 3: What Really Matters in Learning? (Content)
MI Chapter 4: Teaching Students About MI Theory
MI Chapter 3: Describing Intelligences in Students
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
MI Chapter 2: MI and Personal Development
MI Chapter 1: The Foundations of the Theory of Multiple Intelligences
UbD/DI Chapter 2: What Really Matters In Teaching? (The Students)
Chapter 2 of UbD/Di emphasizes on how important the students are when it comes to being an effective teacher. By reading this chapter I learned that there are sometimes outsides factors affecting a students learning and that the best way to help these students to respond to them when they seem to have a problem. By allowing them to shape the way I teach I can more effectively help them learn and hopefully get past their difficulties. This is going to be very important in my classroom because this means that my teaching will have to change with every new group of students. If all students are different than I can’t just create a curriculum and reuse it every year as is because the students will be different. They will learn differently. It is better to change it up to match the students, thus helping more of them be successful in my class.
UbD/DI Chapter 1: An Essential Partnership
In chapter 1 of Ubd/Di I learned that Understanding by design is a model that focuses on what and how teachers teach while Differentiated Instruction is more focused on who, where and how. When put together, the two complement each other in a way that helps teachers be effective. This is important for me to know because I will probably be using them in conjunction when I start creating my own curriculum. If I want to be an effective teacher I need to keep in mind all the different factors that affect learning. The chapter describes these factors as “elements” and lists them as who I teach, where I teach, what I teach and how I teach. It does kind of make sense that all four would make a difference. I have had teachers who had one or two but because they missed the other two were not helpful in teaching me the material.