Checklist
| Checklists Preliminary Checklist Exemplary Checklist Unit of Practice Checklist |
Introduction The Career Connection to Teaching with Technology (CCTT) Challenge Grant Project seeks to develop world-class, K-12, curriculum content—extended unit of practice plans and lessons—for 21st Century schools. Teachers from CCTT's six geographically diverse hub sites work with a panel of content specialists appointed by some of the nation's most influential educational organizations to help them align their web-based content with national content and technology/information literacy standards as well as learning principles and school-to-work competencies, and to address the most timely and important topics of each discipline. Each hub site has a particular core subject focus. e.g., Mainland High School's focus is mathematics, but each site may develop products in any of the other core subjects. Five of the hub sites are high schools; one is K-8. The following two checklists provide a framework for developing 21st Century content. Preliminary ChecklistThis Preliminary Checklist helps teachers define their proposed plan or idea for an extended unit of practice. The checklist is completed by hub site teachers, sent by e-mail or hard copy to the hub site manager, and forwarded to the content specialists. 1. Extended Unit of Practice Title/Grade Level: 2. What do you want the students to know and be able to do (the fundamental understandings)? 3. Which national standards (content, technology, and information literacy standards) do the fundamental under-standings align with, and how? 4. What is the relevance and significance of these fundamental understandings? 5. What is the context for this learning? (Prior and future understandings as well as developmental appropriateness.) 6. Assessment—how will you know that the students have learned? 7. What are the components of your extended unit of practice and how will each component contribute to the learning of all students? 8. URL where currently located. 9. Workforce competencies. 10. Cross-curricular connections. 11. Acknowledgments. Exemplary Products Checklist The Exemplary Products Checklist helps teachers strive for excellence as they continue to develop their extended unit of practice plans. The checklist is the basis for determining the potential value of the materials to classroom teachers nationwide, and for deter-mining whether products should be included in CCTT's "national collection" as judged by CCTT's Expert Panel (content specialists). Introduction (written to teachers) Your proposed content project can help move classrooms from traditional learning environments to technology-based, career-related, 21st Century learning centers. Millennium schools will have student learning front and center, and a broad array of rich technologies that foster new and seemingly inexhaustible resources for information, data gathering, synthesis, analysis, interpretation and evaluation. "New" schools will emphasize collaborative and inquiry-based learning where student projects and products proliferate; there is frequent discussion and debate about issues and concerns; students teach and learn from one another; and, teachers are guides and facilitators of learning. The focus will be on what students are learning rather than on what teachers are teaching; on using effectively, the technologies that dominate the greater society; on information; on cutting-edge content; and, on customized curriculum extended units of practice.The "new" curriculum will reflect the multiple forces of educational reform: standards; multiple assessment approaches; technology infusion; what we know about learning—about how students think, learn, and use what they learn; and, global and career connections. It follows, then, that what you plan and do in the development of your content project, must be accomplished within the context of this massive, ongoing, educational reform and change, and must respond to, and help lead, these many and varied forces of educational reform. The Checklist The "exemplary products" checklist that follows is directed at fostering the development of standards-based, technology-rich content for 21st Century learning centers. It is directed at ensuring that essential concepts of the core disciplines—what students should know and be able to do—form the basis for what you do. The checklist is organized around several components: general considerations; student learning, assessment, and technology. This "guide" has two important purposes: a) to consider the full range of educational attributes that are desirable in an exemplary content product for the 21st Century; and b) to decide whether or not a proposed product should be included in CCTT's national collection. Much of what you will find in the checklist may be what you already do. It may not be dramatically new or different for you and other leaders in educational reform. Its use will provide a more substantive and consistent context within which to develop new content and within which to influence the behavior and direction of those using the materials. The checklist has been deliberately made more comprehensive in order to ensure that high-quality classroom extended units of practice and lessons are developed that respond to, and reflect, the multiple forces of educational reform. As you continue to develop your project, see how many items included in the checklist you can address. Try to infuse most, or all of these items, as you proceed in the full-scale development of your product. Hub site managers, colleagues, teachers from other hub sites, and the content specialists are available to help you, along the way. |
