This document provides an overview of a workshop on lesson planning and the use of technology in lessons. It was collaboratively developed by Ms. Diane Sidoroff, an online curriculum specialist, and Dr. Dotti Shelton, a pedagogy expert. The workshop objectives are to deepen understanding of TEKS, curriculum and instruction connections, lesson planning, and technology integration. Various aspects of the lesson planning process are discussed, including determining objectives based on TEKS, assessments, prerequisites, and activities to introduce, practice, deepen understanding of, and assess the material. Taxonomies and frameworks to analyze standards and objectives are presented.
The document provides information about the Rocky Mountain Early Childhood Conference, including the location, schedule, keynote speakers, and a list of Friday workshop descriptions. Specifically, the conference will be held February 19-20 at the Colorado Convention Center in Denver. The schedule includes workshops on various topics from 9:15am to 4:45pm each day, as well as keynote speakers Bob Sornson on Friday and Douglas Clements and Julie Sarama on Saturday. Friday workshops include topics like the CLASS assessment tool, child development practices, protective factors for children, program-wide inclusion implementation, conscious discipline, and STEAM education.
UDL & Technology Teams = Success for All Students 9/2011Christopher Bugaj
油
Here are some recommendations for places to go for help:
- Your district's assistive technology team - They can evaluate students, recommend solutions, train staff and families.
- State assistive technology project - Most states have projects that can evaluate, demo solutions, and connect you to funding.
- Vendors and companies - Many will demo solutions or connect you to resources. Don't feel pressured to buy.
- Professional organizations - Groups like RESNA, ASHA, CEC have conferences and online communities.
- Other teachers - Colleagues may have tried solutions you can learn from.
- Students' families - They know the student best and may have ideas or resources to share.
An enabling environment is one that meets individual needs, fosters independent learning, and provides opportunities both indoors and outdoors for holistic development. Creating such an environment requires considering the physical space, emotional support, relationships between children and adults, and adaptations to teaching to meet diverse needs through differentiation. Measuring quality requires assessing elements like interactions, resources, and inclusive practices to ensure all children's needs and abilities are addressed.
A course on Learning Theory and Implications for Instruction.
These slides: Try to explain how teachers raise learners' motivation. By discussing some important theories, and using different instructional techniques.
The document discusses strategies for effectively teaching non-traditional students from different generations in online courses. It provides tips like understanding students' backgrounds and expectations, making materials relevant, incorporating interactive elements, providing prompt feedback, and emphasizing mastery of concepts over grades. It also shares strengths of FCCJ like keeping students informed and offering online options that support military students.
During a recent future of SEN webinar, a lot of great discussion was opened up among both the panel of SEN experts and the diverse audience of teachers, SEN leaders and senior managers. Raising interesting points about access to technology, engaging parents, key challenges for the future and supporting students emotional & mental well being. Find out the panels thoughts on the most commonly asked audience questions from the day.
The document discusses creating a positive learning environment for children. It emphasizes the importance of observation, planning, and adapting the physical environment, activities, and teaching approaches to meet the diverse needs of all children in an inclusive setting. High-quality early education is said to help children achieve better long-term outcomes by providing warm, responsive relationships and continuously challenging learning experiences both indoors and outdoors.
Dr.Martin obrien & Carol Allen - Evidence Based Practice methods and ideas i...IEFE
油
Presenters:
1- Martin OBrien
Assistant Director Maryland School for the Deaf / USA
Coordinator of International Education Programs
2- Carol Allen
Advisory Teacher for ICT and SEN, North Tyneside Local Authority (UK)
Topic:
Evidence Based Practice
methods and ideas in planning and teaching deaf students
IEFE Forum 2014
This document discusses engaging STEM students in study abroad opportunities. It outlines several benefits of study abroad for STEM students, including developing scientific reasoning, effective use of technology, understanding diverse cultures, communication skills, and preparation for life after college. The document also discusses strategies that institutions can use to better integrate study abroad into STEM curricula, such as curriculum integration, partnerships with other departments, establishing advisory councils and ambassador programs, emphasizing relevance of courses taken abroad over simple equivalency, and creating clear pathways for STEM students to study abroad. Common barriers to STEM student mobility are addressed, and incremental steps are advocated to increase STEM study abroad participation.
Mrs. Rachel Plybon-Beach is a native of West Virginia with 23 years of experience in interior design. She has a degree from the University of Charleston and has worked on various commercial and residential design projects. Rachel is married with twin sons, one who was diagnosed with severe asthma and the other with POD-NOS. She herself has auditory processing disorder. As an interior design instructor, Rachel has become interested in sensory design and how interior environments can address sensory issues. She has given workshops on this topic.
The document discusses strategies for inclusion of children with special needs in early childhood education settings. It defines special needs and exceptional children. It provides guidelines for identifying children who may need additional support and for communicating respectfully about disabilities. The document also discusses laws requiring inclusion, preparing for inclusion through collaboration and modifying instruction, and applying principles of universal design for learning to meet diverse needs.
The document discusses using technology effectively within a Response to Intervention (RTI) model. It describes RTI as having three tiers or levels of intervention from universal supports for all students to more intensive individualized interventions. Examples of technology that can be used for productivity, assessment tracking, communication and documentation within the RTI process are provided. The document also gives examples of free online remediation programs and assistive technologies that can be used as interventions within the different RTI tiers.
This document discusses the key aspects of establishing and sustaining powerful professional learning communities (PLCs) in schools. It defines a PLC as when school staff collaborate intentionally to support student learning. Benefits of PLCs include decreased teacher isolation, increased commitment to mission and student achievement. Sustaining a PLC requires building relationships, a collaborative culture with shared norms and values, and a focus on continuous learning and improvement.
The document provides suggestions for implementing effective inquiry learning by shifting the focus from inquiry to learning. It recommends clarifying what good learning entails, identifying the core skills and attitudes to develop learners, establishing a task-based learning model around key learning elements, and cultivating independence through negotiation and modeling lifelong learning attitudes.
The document discusses implementing the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) within a Multi-Tiered System of Supports (MTSS) framework. It outlines learner outcomes related to understanding CCSS and MTSS and using a problem-solving process. It then provides details on CCSS, MTSS tiers, assessment, and essential questions for aligning instruction across tiers to support all students in meeting higher standards. The document emphasizes aligning supplemental and intensive instruction with core instruction to ensure coordinated support across tiers.
Unprecedented educational changes led to efforts to fundamentally change teaching practices to better serve diverse learners. PGMS adopted school-wide goals focused on interdisciplinary instruction, critical thinking, writing, engagement, vocabulary, and technology integration. Implementing these goals and UDL principles required balancing initiatives while raising standards and closing achievement gaps. Some teachers resisted changes, seeing them as extra work, but advocates shared successes to increase buy-in for inclusive practices to meet all students' needs.
The document discusses the creation of a shared vision for Stanley Avenue School. It outlines the process of gathering input from staff, students, past pupils, and parents to identify what is important for students to learn before leaving the school. This included whole-class discussions and feedback sessions. The collated input was grouped under common headings and helped inform the school's learner dimensions, which focus on students striving to succeed, being team players, thinkers, inquirers, and ensuring their well-being.
This document provides an overview of blended learning presented by Rob Darrow at an ISTE conference in June 2014. It defines blended learning as a formal education program where students learn through both online and in-person instruction, with some flexibility over time, place, path, and pace of their learning. The document discusses leadership tools for blended learning implementation, including continuums, rubrics, checklists and case studies. It also covers research on blended learning, implementation stages based on Rogers' diffusion of innovations theory, and tools for supporting teachers, with examples of observation rubrics and checklists.
Teaching To Students With Learning DisabilitesPatq
油
This document discusses teaching students with learning disabilities. It defines learning disabilities according to IDEA 2004 and discusses specific disabilities like dyslexia, dysgraphia, and dyscalculia. It also covers intervention strategies like Response to Intervention and the use of assistive technology to help students with learning disabilities succeed.
1. The document discusses the achievements and development plan of a middle school. It outlines the school's goals of ensuring students are prepared for their future and developing important academic behaviors.
2. The school's achievements include accreditations earned in recent years. The development plan focuses on providing a creative learning environment, high-quality teaching, and monitoring student performance.
3. The plan also outlines strategies for various subjects including project-based learning, global projects, and integrating technology into lessons. Teachers provide details on their approaches for the current academic year.
The assessment evaluated the effectiveness of a day-long conference organized by Adult, Veteran and Commuter Student Affairs for students with children at DePaul University. Pre- and post-conference surveys measured increases in students' knowledge of resources for parents and students, comfort with self-advocacy, and awareness of other students with children. The results showed large increases across all measured areas, especially in knowledge of DePaul resources supporting students' role as parents, which increased over 100%. Students also connected with each other, as 83% reported networking opportunities at the conference. Overall, the assessment supports that the conference successfully delivered information on resources, self-advocacy, and networking to student parents.
Reflections on Participatory Science for TELSci2.0Rose Luckin
油
The document discusses participatory science (p-science) and how the Ecology of Resources model was used to involve teachers in the design process. The model represents a learner's context through interactions between resources like people, tools, knowledge and environment. Workshops were held with teachers to develop p-science activities. Teachers engaged with developing activities but more limited in shaping the p-science concept. The model can help understand learners' contexts and identify support needed. Ways to broaden participation in technology-enhanced learning research are discussed.
An enabling environment is one that meets individual needs, fosters independent learning, and provides opportunities both indoors and outdoors for holistic development. Creating such an environment requires considering the physical space, emotional support, relationships between children and adults, and adaptations to teaching to meet diverse needs through differentiation. Measuring quality requires assessing elements like interactions, resources, and inclusive practices to ensure all children's needs and abilities are addressed.
A course on Learning Theory and Implications for Instruction.
These slides: Try to explain how teachers raise learners' motivation. By discussing some important theories, and using different instructional techniques.
The document discusses strategies for effectively teaching non-traditional students from different generations in online courses. It provides tips like understanding students' backgrounds and expectations, making materials relevant, incorporating interactive elements, providing prompt feedback, and emphasizing mastery of concepts over grades. It also shares strengths of FCCJ like keeping students informed and offering online options that support military students.
During a recent future of SEN webinar, a lot of great discussion was opened up among both the panel of SEN experts and the diverse audience of teachers, SEN leaders and senior managers. Raising interesting points about access to technology, engaging parents, key challenges for the future and supporting students emotional & mental well being. Find out the panels thoughts on the most commonly asked audience questions from the day.
The document discusses creating a positive learning environment for children. It emphasizes the importance of observation, planning, and adapting the physical environment, activities, and teaching approaches to meet the diverse needs of all children in an inclusive setting. High-quality early education is said to help children achieve better long-term outcomes by providing warm, responsive relationships and continuously challenging learning experiences both indoors and outdoors.
Dr.Martin obrien & Carol Allen - Evidence Based Practice methods and ideas i...IEFE
油
Presenters:
1- Martin OBrien
Assistant Director Maryland School for the Deaf / USA
Coordinator of International Education Programs
2- Carol Allen
Advisory Teacher for ICT and SEN, North Tyneside Local Authority (UK)
Topic:
Evidence Based Practice
methods and ideas in planning and teaching deaf students
IEFE Forum 2014
This document discusses engaging STEM students in study abroad opportunities. It outlines several benefits of study abroad for STEM students, including developing scientific reasoning, effective use of technology, understanding diverse cultures, communication skills, and preparation for life after college. The document also discusses strategies that institutions can use to better integrate study abroad into STEM curricula, such as curriculum integration, partnerships with other departments, establishing advisory councils and ambassador programs, emphasizing relevance of courses taken abroad over simple equivalency, and creating clear pathways for STEM students to study abroad. Common barriers to STEM student mobility are addressed, and incremental steps are advocated to increase STEM study abroad participation.
Mrs. Rachel Plybon-Beach is a native of West Virginia with 23 years of experience in interior design. She has a degree from the University of Charleston and has worked on various commercial and residential design projects. Rachel is married with twin sons, one who was diagnosed with severe asthma and the other with POD-NOS. She herself has auditory processing disorder. As an interior design instructor, Rachel has become interested in sensory design and how interior environments can address sensory issues. She has given workshops on this topic.
The document discusses strategies for inclusion of children with special needs in early childhood education settings. It defines special needs and exceptional children. It provides guidelines for identifying children who may need additional support and for communicating respectfully about disabilities. The document also discusses laws requiring inclusion, preparing for inclusion through collaboration and modifying instruction, and applying principles of universal design for learning to meet diverse needs.
The document discusses using technology effectively within a Response to Intervention (RTI) model. It describes RTI as having three tiers or levels of intervention from universal supports for all students to more intensive individualized interventions. Examples of technology that can be used for productivity, assessment tracking, communication and documentation within the RTI process are provided. The document also gives examples of free online remediation programs and assistive technologies that can be used as interventions within the different RTI tiers.
This document discusses the key aspects of establishing and sustaining powerful professional learning communities (PLCs) in schools. It defines a PLC as when school staff collaborate intentionally to support student learning. Benefits of PLCs include decreased teacher isolation, increased commitment to mission and student achievement. Sustaining a PLC requires building relationships, a collaborative culture with shared norms and values, and a focus on continuous learning and improvement.
The document provides suggestions for implementing effective inquiry learning by shifting the focus from inquiry to learning. It recommends clarifying what good learning entails, identifying the core skills and attitudes to develop learners, establishing a task-based learning model around key learning elements, and cultivating independence through negotiation and modeling lifelong learning attitudes.
The document discusses implementing the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) within a Multi-Tiered System of Supports (MTSS) framework. It outlines learner outcomes related to understanding CCSS and MTSS and using a problem-solving process. It then provides details on CCSS, MTSS tiers, assessment, and essential questions for aligning instruction across tiers to support all students in meeting higher standards. The document emphasizes aligning supplemental and intensive instruction with core instruction to ensure coordinated support across tiers.
Unprecedented educational changes led to efforts to fundamentally change teaching practices to better serve diverse learners. PGMS adopted school-wide goals focused on interdisciplinary instruction, critical thinking, writing, engagement, vocabulary, and technology integration. Implementing these goals and UDL principles required balancing initiatives while raising standards and closing achievement gaps. Some teachers resisted changes, seeing them as extra work, but advocates shared successes to increase buy-in for inclusive practices to meet all students' needs.
The document discusses the creation of a shared vision for Stanley Avenue School. It outlines the process of gathering input from staff, students, past pupils, and parents to identify what is important for students to learn before leaving the school. This included whole-class discussions and feedback sessions. The collated input was grouped under common headings and helped inform the school's learner dimensions, which focus on students striving to succeed, being team players, thinkers, inquirers, and ensuring their well-being.
This document provides an overview of blended learning presented by Rob Darrow at an ISTE conference in June 2014. It defines blended learning as a formal education program where students learn through both online and in-person instruction, with some flexibility over time, place, path, and pace of their learning. The document discusses leadership tools for blended learning implementation, including continuums, rubrics, checklists and case studies. It also covers research on blended learning, implementation stages based on Rogers' diffusion of innovations theory, and tools for supporting teachers, with examples of observation rubrics and checklists.
Teaching To Students With Learning DisabilitesPatq
油
This document discusses teaching students with learning disabilities. It defines learning disabilities according to IDEA 2004 and discusses specific disabilities like dyslexia, dysgraphia, and dyscalculia. It also covers intervention strategies like Response to Intervention and the use of assistive technology to help students with learning disabilities succeed.
1. The document discusses the achievements and development plan of a middle school. It outlines the school's goals of ensuring students are prepared for their future and developing important academic behaviors.
2. The school's achievements include accreditations earned in recent years. The development plan focuses on providing a creative learning environment, high-quality teaching, and monitoring student performance.
3. The plan also outlines strategies for various subjects including project-based learning, global projects, and integrating technology into lessons. Teachers provide details on their approaches for the current academic year.
The assessment evaluated the effectiveness of a day-long conference organized by Adult, Veteran and Commuter Student Affairs for students with children at DePaul University. Pre- and post-conference surveys measured increases in students' knowledge of resources for parents and students, comfort with self-advocacy, and awareness of other students with children. The results showed large increases across all measured areas, especially in knowledge of DePaul resources supporting students' role as parents, which increased over 100%. Students also connected with each other, as 83% reported networking opportunities at the conference. Overall, the assessment supports that the conference successfully delivered information on resources, self-advocacy, and networking to student parents.
Reflections on Participatory Science for TELSci2.0Rose Luckin
油
The document discusses participatory science (p-science) and how the Ecology of Resources model was used to involve teachers in the design process. The model represents a learner's context through interactions between resources like people, tools, knowledge and environment. Workshops were held with teachers to develop p-science activities. Teachers engaged with developing activities but more limited in shaping the p-science concept. The model can help understand learners' contexts and identify support needed. Ways to broaden participation in technology-enhanced learning research are discussed.
Database population in Odoo 18 - Odoo slidesCeline George
油
In this slide, well discuss the database population in Odoo 18. In Odoo, performance analysis of the source code is more important. Database population is one of the methods used to analyze the performance of our code.
APM event hosted by the South Wales and West of England Network (SWWE Network)
Speaker: Aalok Sonawala
The SWWE Regional Network were very pleased to welcome Aalok Sonawala, Head of PMO, National Programmes, Rider Levett Bucknall on 26 February, to BAWA for our first face to face event of 2025. Aalok is a member of APMs Thames Valley Regional Network and also speaks to members of APMs PMO Interest Network, which aims to facilitate collaboration and learning, offer unbiased advice and guidance.
Tonight, Aalok planned to discuss the importance of a PMO within project-based organisations, the different types of PMO and their key elements, PMO governance and centres of excellence.
PMOs within an organisation can be centralised, hub and spoke with a central PMO with satellite PMOs globally, or embedded within projects. The appropriate structure will be determined by the specific business needs of the organisation. The PMO sits above PM delivery and the supply chain delivery teams.
For further information about the event please click here.
How to Configure Flexible Working Schedule in Odoo 18 EmployeeCeline George
油
In this slide, well discuss on how to configure flexible working schedule in Odoo 18 Employee module. In Odoo 18, the Employee module offers powerful tools to configure and manage flexible working schedules tailored to your organization's needs.
Prelims of Kaun TALHA : a Travel, Architecture, Lifestyle, Heritage and Activism quiz, organized by Conquiztadors, the Quiz society of Sri Venkateswara College under their annual quizzing fest El Dorado 2025.
Research & Research Methods: Basic Concepts and Types.pptxDr. Sarita Anand
油
This ppt has been made for the students pursuing PG in social science and humanities like M.Ed., M.A. (Education), Ph.D. Scholars. It will be also beneficial for the teachers and other faculty members interested in research and teaching research concepts.
How to Configure Restaurants in Odoo 17 Point of SaleCeline George
油
Odoo, a versatile and integrated business management software, excels with its robust Point of Sale (POS) module. This guide delves into the intricacies of configuring restaurants in Odoo 17 POS, unlocking numerous possibilities for streamlined operations and enhanced customer experiences.
Computer Network Unit IV - Lecture Notes - Network LayerMurugan146644
油
Title:
Lecture Notes - Unit IV - The Network Layer
Description:
Welcome to the comprehensive guide on Computer Network concepts, tailored for final year B.Sc. Computer Science students affiliated with Alagappa University. This document covers fundamental principles and advanced topics in Computer Network. PDF content is prepared from the text book Computer Network by Andrew S. Tenanbaum
Key Topics Covered:
Main Topic : The Network Layer
Sub-Topic : Network Layer Design Issues (Store and forward packet switching , service provided to the transport layer, implementation of connection less service, implementation of connection oriented service, Comparision of virtual circuit and datagram subnet), Routing algorithms (Shortest path routing, Flooding , Distance Vector routing algorithm, Link state routing algorithm , hierarchical routing algorithm, broadcast routing, multicast routing algorithm)
Other Link :
1.Introduction to computer network - /slideshow/lecture-notes-introduction-to-computer-network/274183454
2. Physical Layer - /slideshow/lecture-notes-unit-ii-the-physical-layer/274747125
3. Data Link Layer Part 1 : /slideshow/lecture-notes-unit-iii-the-datalink-layer/275288798
Target Audience:
Final year B.Sc. Computer Science students at Alagappa University seeking a solid foundation in Computer Network principles for academic.
About the Author:
Dr. S. Murugan is Associate Professor at Alagappa Government Arts College, Karaikudi. With 23 years of teaching experience in the field of Computer Science, Dr. S. Murugan has a passion for simplifying complex concepts in Computer Network
Disclaimer:
This document is intended for educational purposes only. The content presented here reflects the authors understanding in the field of Computer Network
10. Workshop Objectives
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
Participants will have opportunities to deepen their
understanding about the TEKS.
Participants will have opportunities to deepen their
understanding about the connections between curriculum and
instruction.
Participants will have opportunities to deepen their
understanding about how to effectively plan meaningful &
relevant lessons.
Participants will have opportunities to learn about electronic
resources to use in their lessons.
Participants will have opportunities to deepen their
understanding of how to effectively implement technology into
their lesson plans.
11. Table of Contents
Date Page #
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
06-14-
13
06-14-
13
Take One; Share One
06-14-
13
Taxonomy of TEKS
Resources and Workshop Objectives
12. Taxonomy of the
TEKS
A N
B O
C P
D Q
E R
F S
G T
H U
I V
J W
K X
L Y
M Z
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
13. Taxonomy of the
TEKS
A N
B O
C P
D Q
E R
F S specifics
G generalities T thinking
H U
I V
J W
K knowledge X
L Y
M Z
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
18. Table of Contents
Date Page #
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
06-14-
13
06-14-
13
Take One; Share One
06-14-
13
Taxonomy of TEKS
Resources and Workshop Objectives
06-14-
13
TEKS and Blooms Revised Taxonomy
06-14-
13
The Lesson Cycle Planning Process and Model
19. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
Steps in
planning a
lesson
20. What does
the state say
students
need to know
and be able
to do?
What teaching
and learning
activities/
resources will I
use to help
students learn
those
knowledge &
skills?
How will I
check for and
deepen
understanding
s?
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction Specialist
Before
getting them ready
After
retaining information
During
processing
information
The Lesson Cycle Planning
Process
21. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
(12) Reading/Media Literacy. Students use
comprehension skills to analyze how words,
images, graphics, and sounds work together in
various forms to impact meaning.
(A) compare and contrast how events are
presented and/or information is communicated by
visual images (e.g., graphic art, illustrations, news
photographs) versus non-visual texts
則110.31. English Language Arts
and Reading, English I (One
Credit)
(b) Knowledge and skills
What does
the state say
students
need to know
and be able
to do?
23. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
What teaching
and learning
activities/
resources will I
use to help
students learn
those
knowledge &
skills?
24. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction Specialist
They're is a shortened version of 'they are'. (The apostrophe
replaces the letter a.) Only use they're if you can substitute
it with 'they are'.
Their is used to show possession. It is just like my, your,
his, her, its and our. (These are called 'possessive
adjectives'.) Here is a little trick: use the word 'our'
instead of 'their'. If the sentence still makes sense, then
'their' is almost certainly correct. This trick works
because 'our' and 'their' are both possessive adjectives
used for plurals.
The word there is similar to the word 'here' in that it
represents a place. It has two main uses: It is a
specified place (like in the first example below) and an
unspecified place (like in the second example). Also,
like in the second and third examples, the word 'there'
can be used to show that something exists.
25. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
They're is a contraction of they are.
Their is possessive and has the word,
heir, as the possessor of an inheritance or
ownership.
A place, there, has the place, here, in it.
Example: They're here, but their things
are there.
26. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
Write one sentence
using all three forms
in that sentence correctly.
Orally practice using the
three forms correctly. (Groups)
Write several sentences
using each form.
27. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
theyre
define
their
define
there
define
Theyre excited
about living in a
big house where
friends and family
can stay.
The family wants
to live close by
their childrens
school .
There is a
neighborhood
school right down
the block from the
house.
28. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
Make a slide/poster/picture of your
sentence that demonstrates the sentence
correctly.
My sentence: Theyre living in a house in
a neighborhood close by their school and
where there is plenty of room for family to
visit.
School
House with
entire family
School
Family
How will I
check for and
deepen
understanding
s?
29. What does
the state say
students
need to know
and be able
to do?
What teaching
and learning
activities/
resources will I
use to help
students learn
those
knowledge &
skills?
How will I
check for and
deepen
understanding
s?
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction Specialist
Before
getting them ready
After
retaining information
During
processing information
The Lesson Cycle Planning
Process
30. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
Words that are Commonly Misspelled and
Misused
were, were,
where
to, two, too weather
,whether
accept, except effect, affect allusion, illusion
cite, sight, site conscious,
conscience
conscience
a part, apart
elicit, illicit proceed,
precede
passed, past
lose, loose all ready, already supposed to,
suppose suppose
principle,
principal
lead, led than, then
know, no through, threw thorough, throughout
throughout
won, one lie, lay council, counsel
breath, breathe altogther, all
together
its, its
eminent, imminent,
immanent
stationary, stationery dessert, desert
31. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
(12) Reading/Media Literacy. Students use
comprehension skills to analyze how words,
images, graphics, and sounds work together in
various forms to impact meaning.
(A) compare and contrast how events are
presented and information is communicated by
visual images (e.g., graphic art, illustrations, news
photographs) versus non-visual texts
則110.31. English Language Arts
and Reading, English I (One
Credit)
(b) Knowledge and skills
32. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
則110.31. English Language Arts
and Reading, English I (One
Credit)
(13) Writing/Writing Process. Students use
elements of the writing process (planning,
drafting, revising, editing, and publishing)
to compose text. Students are expected to:
(D) edit drafts for grammar, mechanics,
and spelling;
(C) use a variety of correctly structured
sentences (e.g., compound, complex,
compound-complex).
33. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
則110.31. English Language Arts
and Reading, English I (One
Credit)
Students will continue to apply earlier standards with
greater complexity. Students are expected to:
(A) listen responsively to a speaker by taking notes
that summarize, synthesize, or highlight the speaker's
ideas for critical reflection and by asking questions
related to the content for clarification and elaboration;
(B) follow and give complex oral instructions to
perform specific tasks, answer questions, solve
problems, and complete processes
34. Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
則110.31. English Language Arts
and Reading, English I (One
Credit) (25) Listening and Speaking/Speaking. Students speak clearly and
to the point, using the conventions of language. Students will
continue to apply earlier standards with greater complexity. Students
are expected to give presentations using informal, formal, and
technical language effectively to meet the needs of audience,
purpose, and occasion, employing eye contact, speaking rate (e.g.,
pauses for effect), volume, enunciation, purposeful gestures, and
conventions of language to communicate ideas effectively.
(26) Listening and Speaking/Teamwork. Students work productively
with others in teams. Students will continue to apply earlier
standards with greater complexity. Students are expected to
participate productively in teams, building on the ideas of others,
contributing relevant information, developing a plan for consensus-
building, and setting ground rules for decision-making.
37. Table of Contents
Date Page #
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
06-14-
13
06-14-
13
Take One; Share One
06-14-
13
Taxonomy of TEKS
Resources and Workshop Objectives
06-14-
13
TEKS and Blooms Revised Taxonomy
06-14-
13
The Lesson Cycle Planning Process and Model
06-14-
13
Steps in the Planning Process - Questions
38. Steps in the Planning Process
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
1) Determine Lesson Concept/Topic-TEKS/Resources
2) Determine Formative/Summative Assessments
3) Determine Prerequisites to Learning/Tools
4) Prepare Students to Learn/Tools
5) Provide Opportunities to Process Information-Guided
Practice/Tools
6) Provide Opportunities to Deepen Understandings/Tools
7) Provide Opportunities for Retention/Tools
8) Assess (formative and summative)
39. Steps in the Planning Process
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction Specialist
1) Determine Lesson Concept/Topic-TEKS/Resources
2) Determine Formative/Summative Assessments
3) Determine Prerequisites to Learning/Tools
4) Prepare Students to Learn/Tools
5) Provide Opportunities to Process Information-Guided
Practice/Tools
What activity/tool/strategy will I have students use to practice
and
demonstrate they understand and can correctly do what it is
they are
expected to do after this lesson?
6) Provide Opportunities to Deepen Understandings/Tools
7) Provide Opportunities for Retention/Tools
41. Steps in the Planning Process
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction Specialist
1) What are the lesson concepts/topics my students need to know based
upon the TEKS?
2) What will be my formative and summative assessments? How will I know
students got it as they practice and at the end of the lesson/unit?
3) What do my students need to know in order to be successful when
beginning this lesson?
4) What activities/tools/activities/resources do I have at my disposal, and do
I need to teach/show them to my students?
5) What will my students do to practice the skill?
6) What can I have my students do to more deeply understand the
concept/topic/skill(s)?
7) What will my students do independently to demonstrate their level of
understanding and retain the information/skills?
8) How well did my students learn the concept/topic/skill?
42. Refining the Lesson
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
Prioritize
Lesson
Elements
Differentiation
of Activities
ESL/LEP
SPED
GT/Pre-AP/AP
43. Creating a Timeline
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
Class
Starts
Getting them
ready
Before
Class Ends
Closure
Modeling
Processing
Independen
t Practice
&
Retention
Maximizing Instructional Time
Managing the Classroom
Guided
Practice
Processing
Independen
t Practice
Processing
Formative/Summative Assessment
44. Table of Contents
Date Page #
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
06-14-
13
06-14-
13
Take One; Share One
06-14-
13
Taxonomy of TEKS
Resources and Workshop Objectives
06-14-
13
TEKS and Blooms Revised Taxonomy
06-14-
13
The Lesson Cycle Planning Process and Model
06-14-
13
Steps in the Planning Process - Questions
06-14-
13
Delivering the Lesson/Instruction - Discussion
45. Delivering the Lesson/Instruction
Let your students know what they will be learning
and doing and why it is important
Brief Agenda on Board
Outline on Board
Handout to Students
Provide a meaningful organization of the class
time
Flow Map (https://www.lucidchart.com/)
Timer (http://www.online-stopwatch.com/countdown-timer/)
Explanation (Chunks)
46. Table of Contents
Date Page #
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
06-14-
13
06-14-
13
Take One; Share One
06-14-
13
Taxonomy of TEKS
Resources and Workshop Objectives
06-14-
13
TEKS and Blooms Revised Taxonomy
06-14-
13
The Lesson Cycle Planning Process and Model
06-14-
13
Steps in the Planning Process - Questions
06-14-
13
Delivering the Lesson/Instruction - Discussion
06-14-
13
Reflecting on the Lesson/Instruction - Discussion
47. Reflecting on your Lesson
Were all students active participants?
If so, why?
If not, why not?
Tweakings for next time?
Reason for tweakings?
Did all students get it?
If so, why?
If not, why not?
Tweakings for next time?
Reason for tweakings?
48. Table of Contents
Date Page #
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
06-14-
13
06-14-
13
Take One; Share One
06-14-
13
Taxonomy of TEKS
Resources and Workshop Objectives
06-14-
13
TEKS and Blooms Revised Taxonomy
06-14-
13
The Lesson Cycle Planning Process and Model
06-14-
13
Steps in the Planning Process - Questions
06-14-
13
Delivering the Lesson/Instruction - Discussion
06-14-
13
Reflecting on the Lesson/Instruction - Discussion
06-15-
13
Group Task Guidelines/Checklist
49. Table of Contents
Date Page #
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
06-14-
13
06-14-
13
Take One; Share One
06-14-
13
Taxonomy of TEKS
Resources and Workshop Objectives
06-14-
13
TEKS and Blooms Revised Taxonomy
06-14-
13
The Lesson Cycle Planning Process and Model
06-14-
13
Steps in the Planning Process - Questions
06-14-
13
Delivering the Lesson/Instruction - Discussion
06-14-
13
Reflecting on the Lesson/Instruction - Discussion
06-15-
13
Group Task Guidelines/Checklist
06-15-
13
Web Tools
51. Web Tools
Ms. Diane Sidoroff-Austin ISD Online Curriculum Specialist
Dr. Dotti Shelton-Pedagogy Expert & Curriculum & Instruction
Name of Tool Use for
52. Web 2.0 Tools that help
communicate, collaborate, & create
Collaborate,
Communicate, Create
PBWorks
Edmodo
Wallwisher / Linoit
Diigo/Delicious
Google Drive
Dropbox
Box
Moodle
Weebly
VoiceThrea
d
PhotoPeac
h
際際滷share
Glogster
Big Huge
Labs
Kerpoof
Animoto
Scriblink
Timetoast
Storybird
iTunesU
Geogebra
54. PBWorks
Class Resources - Publish class notes, PowerPoint
lectures, schedules and policies; show off examples
of great student work.
Group Projects - Build collaborative pages, start
discussions and encourage comments.
Parent Outreach - Keep parents involved. Post
assignments, key dates and volunteer lists. All
available at home, from work, or anywhere.
Student Portfolios - Give students their own page
to post content, upload homework, and share their
work.
55. Edmodo
Edmodo provides teachers and students with a
secure and easy way to post classroom materials,
share links and videos, and access homework,
grades, and school notices.
56. Wallwisher
What is wallwisher?
Wallwisher is an Internet
application that allows
people to express their
thoughts about a common
topic easily.
What is a wall?
A wall is basically the 'web
page' where people
actually post messages.
http://www.wallwisher.com/
58. Social Bookmarking
a social bookmarking website which allows
signed-up users to bookmark and tag web-
pages
http://www.diigo.com/
http://www.delicious.com/
63. Moodle
http://moodle.org/
Moodle is a Course Management System (CMS),
also known as a Learning Management System
(LMS) or a Virtual Learning Environment (VLE). It
is a Free web application that educators can use
to create effective online learning sites.
64. Weebly
What can I do with Weebly?
Easily create a classroom website
& blog
Manage your students' accounts
Accept homework assignments
online
Keep your parents up to date
http://education.weebly.com
65. Shutterfly
Notices and comments posted on the site are automatically
sent to parents (including handouts, newsletters and
homework assignments). Calendars help recruit and
manage parent volunteers. Wish lists allow teachers to
request classroom needs. Pictures capture all the memories
of classroom activities and field trips in one place.
http://www.shutterfly.com/share-photos/classroom-websites.jsp
69. Glogster
A web 2.0 platform that easily allows users to
upload photos, videos, text, audio ,and more to
create a unique online, interactive poster.
http://edu.glogster.com
70. Big Huge Labs
http://bighugelabs.com/education.php
Do fun stuff with your
digital photos. Create
and print personalized
motivational posters,
calendars, movie
posters, magazine
covers, badges,
mosaics, etc.
71. Kerpoof
http://www.kerpoof.com/
Kerpoof's multimedia software is used by kids worldwide to create
original artwork, animated movies, stories, greeting cards ,and more.
Elementary and middle school teachers can use Kerpoof in many
ways to enhance classroom activities while meeting a range of
educational standards.
72. Animoto
http://animoto.com/education
Enhance your digital
classroom with Animoto, the
perfect tool for creating
videos and presentations. It
takes just minutes to create
a video which can bring your
lessons to life.
Educators apply for a free
Animoto Plus account
74. Timetoast
Create timelines, share them on the web
Timetoast is a great way to share the past, or
even the future...
Creating a timeline takes minutes,; it's as simple
as can be.
75. Storybird
http://storybird.com/
Storybird is a service that uses collaborative storytelling to
connect kids. Two (or more) people create a Storybird in a
round robin fashion by writing their own text and inserting
pictures. They then have the option of sharing their Storybird
on the network. The final product can be watched on screen
or shared through a worldwide library.
76. Evaluating Technology Projects
A rubric is an assessment tool that provides the
criteria for evaluating a piece of student work.
Specific levels of performance are listed along
with a rating system such as need improvement,
acceptable, or excellent. Rubrics can be used by
both students and teachers.
Rubistar
Sample Rubric
77. iTunesU
Texas Association of School Administrators
English I, II, III, IV
Algebra I, Geometry, Math Models, Algebra II,
PreCalc
IPC, Biology, Chemistry, Physics
World Geography, Economics, Government, World
History, US History
79. http://geogebraweb.appspot.com/app.html
What is GeoGebra?
GeoGebra is free and multi-platform dynamic
mathematics software for all levels of education
that joins geometry, algebra, tables, graphing,
statistics and calculus in one easy-to-use
package.
Quick Facts
Easy-to-use interface, yet many powerful features
Authoring tool to create interactive learning
materials as web pages
Free and open source software
81. Livescribe Smartpen
Record and play back everything you write and
hear. Then, using a USB cable, transfer your
notes and audio to your computer
82. Additional Tools
Keepvid.com
Save YouTube videos to your desktop
zamzar.com, online-convert.com
Convert files
PDF Split and Merge
Combine or separate PDF documents
84. Group Task=Final Product: A Lesson Plan
Use the TEKS to decide on a lesson based upon thinking processes
and skills
Identify Grade Level and Content Area(s)
Use the questions to guide your planning
Create a realistic timeline for a week (Monday-Friday) 45 minutes
Identify Blooms Levels of Thinking
Identify your differentiation for the following: Auditory Learners
Visual Learners
Tactile Learners
Kinesthetic
Learners
Special Needs Students
ELL/ESL/LEP Students
GT /PRE-AP/AP
Effectively incorporate a minimum of two tech tools