Understanding the Need

Systemic Change

  (C) 2000 Joy Rousseau

"A good curriculum is much more than a syllabus, arranging knowledge into manageable chunks; it addresses multiple objectives simultaneously and envisions student experiences that provoke curiosity, fire the imagination, and deepen understanding.

The very best curriculum can become quality instruction only if those who teach it are well qualified and trained, and if they have the time and resources to prepare carefully and do the necessary follow-up. Otherwise they have no choice but to stick to the routines by which most teachers get through the day—what Ted Sizer called "Horace's Compromise."1

To summarize, if students are to achieve the higher standards soon to be proclaimed, they will need a strong curriculum. That means we must have the finest possible materials and plans on paper—but also that teachers must be in a position to turn those plans into reality."

Adapted from: Educational Leadership, Volume 50, Number 8, May 1993, The Changing Curriculum, Overview / The Curriculum Connection, By Ron Brandt

1T. Sizer, (1984), Horace's Compromise: The Dilemma of the American High School, (Boston: Houghton Mifflin).

Components For Systemic Change

The Texas Professional Development and Assessment System (PDAS) as an evaluation tool, does not afford concrete accountability for levels of expertise and utilization of technology in any of the domains.  

Exercise:  Create a rubric that would award from 1 to 4 points to teachers facilitating the use of technology for student progress.

Exercise:  Create an Accountability Rubric for PDAS:
Level 1 (1 point) Teacher demonstrates the use of technology (i.e. projects a PowerPoint presentation for students to gain understanding over course content.)
Level 2 (2 points) (fill in)

 

Level 3 (3 points) (fill in)

 

Level 4 (4 points) Student selects topic, devises question or defines problem, conducts research, analyzes information, organizes & interprets data, communicates, and defends position using technology to enhance each step of the project.

See Arp Independent School District's 3 Levels of Competency

Resources:  Creating an Interactive  Web Project

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