Post on 07-Mar-2018
Richard D. JonesSenior Consultant
email: rdj@nycap.rr.com
IInternational Center for Leadership in Education1587 Route 146, Rexford, NY 12148
(518) 399 2776http://www.LeaderEd.com
Planning forRigorous and Relevant
Instruction
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International Center for Leadership in Education
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INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN EDUCATION
RIGOR AND RELEVANCE HANDBOOK
KNOWLEDGE TAXONOMY VERB LIST
ADVANCE
CALCULATE
CHANGE
CONVERT
CONTEMPLATE
DEFINE
EXPLAIN
EXTRAPOLATE
INFER
INTERPRET
OUTLINE
PROJECT
PROPOSE
REWORD
SUBMIT
TRANSFORM
TRANSLATE
VARY
2COMPREHENSION
ARRANGE
CHECK
CHOOSE
FIND
GROUP
IDENTIFY
LABEL
LIST
LOCATE
1KNOWLEDGE
MATCH
NAME
POINT TO
RECALL
RECITE
REPEAT
S A Y
SELECT
WRITE
3APPLICATION
ADOPT
CONSUME
CAPITALIZE ON
DEVOTE
EMPLOY
EXERCISE
HANDLE
MAINTAIN
MAKE USE OF
MANIPULATE
MOBILIZE
OPERATE
PUT TO USE
RELATE
SOLVE
START
TAKE UP
UTILIZE
ACCEPT
APPRAISE
ARBITRATE
ASSESS
AWARD
CLASSIFY
CRITICIZE
DECIDE
DETERMINE
6EVALUATION
GRADE
JUDGE
PRIORITIZE
RANK
RATE
REJECT
RULE ON
SETTLE
WEIGH
BLEND
BUILD
CAUSE
COMBINE
COMPILE
COMPOSE
CONCEIVE
CONSTRUCT
CREATE
5SYNTHESIS
DEVELOP
EVOLVE
FORM
GENERATE
MAKE UP
ORIGINATE
PRODUCE
REORDER
STRUCTURE
ASSAY
AUDIT
BREAKDOWN
CANVASS
CHECK OUT
DISSECT
DEDUCE
DIVIDE
EXAMINE
4ANALYSIS
INCLUDE
INSPECT
LOOK AT
SCRUTINIZE
SIFT
SURVEY
STUDY
TEST FOR
UNCOVER
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INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN EDUCATION
RIGOR AND RELEVANCE HANDBOOK
Application Model Decision Tree
Is theoutcome
unpredictable?
Isit
application?
Is more thanone school
subjectinvolved?
Level 4Real-worldpredictableapplication
Level 5Real-world
unpredictableapplication
Level 1Knowledge inone discipline
Is theapplicationreal world?
Directions: Select a task, application, or activity and then answer thefollowing questions. See next page for clarification of the questions.
YES
YES
Level 2Application inone discipline
Level 3Interdisciplinary
application
NO
NO NO
NO
YES
YES
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INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN EDUCATION
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5
4
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1 2 3 4 5
Quadrant B Application
• Develop a food list for a space trip.• Create a class book about the animal
and plant life in local rivers.• Take photographs of insects to describe
characteristics and behaviors.• Study examples of paper airplanes and
then create one.• Keep a field journal about the insects that
live near your school.• Develop an acid test and sample rainwater
for acidity.• Create electric circuits of various materials
and determine properties of conductivityand insulation.
• Analyze characteristics of different soil types.
Quadrant A Acquisition
• Memorize names of planets in solarsystem.
• Demonstrate phases of the moon.• Participate in simple hands-on
activities that demonstrate Bernoulli’sprinciple of air pressure and air flight.
• Match pictures of insects with theirnames.
• Illustrate parts of a cell.• Make a model of the layers of Earth’s
atmosphere.• Make daily observations of the life
cycle of a selected species.• Create a mural showing various kinds
of creatures that live in the ocean.
Quadrant C Assimilation
• Write and illustrate biographies ofinventors.
• Make diagrams of animal life cycles.• Classify a group of similar objects to
create a dichotomous key.• Conduct experiments to show
photosynthesis.• Research an endangered species.• Make observations of similarities and
differences of fish heads and predictfood sources.
• Research characteristics and habitsof insects.
• Write a story describing the movementof water through municipal watersystems.
Quadrant D Adaptation
• Design a candy dispenser that workswithout gravity.
• Invent a musical instrument.• Design a zoo.• Study bread chemistry, purpose of
ingredients, and how changes affectfinal product.
• Set up experiments to test life lengthof batteries.
• Research and write a field guide foridentifying local trees.
• Build a simple robotic device with string,tape, and rubber bands.
I. PLANNING INSTRUCTION
1 2 3 4 5 6
StudentActivities
in theRigor/
RelevanceFramework
SCIENCE ELEMENTARY
EXAMPLES
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INTERNATIONA L CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN EDUCATIO N
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5
4
3
2
1
1 2 3 4 5
Quadrant B Application
• Make a scale drawing of the classroom.• Calculate percents of daily requirements
met through a typical school lunch.• Calculate potential combinations of a
group of variables, such as wardrobecomponents, and estimate the probabilityof any one combination being picked atrandom.
• Calculate percentages of advertising in anewspaper.
• Play a simulated baseball game andcalculate statistics.
• Calculate paint needed for a summerbusiness painting houses.
Quadrant A Acquisition
• Select computational operation to solveword problems
• Calculate volume of regular solids.• Measure angles with a protractor.• Find and measure the sides and angles
of a right triangle using the Pythagoreantheorem and trigonometric ratios.
• Organize and display collected data,using tables, charts, or graphs.
• Use basic properties of equality tosolving equations with one variable.
• Plot the coordinates for quadrilateralson a grid.
Quadrant D Adaptation
• Hold a competition to determine whenusing a calculator or doing mental math ismost efficient.
• Obtain historical data about local weatherto estimate amount of snow, rain, or sunduring a given season of the current year.
• Use graphing calculators and computerspreadsheets to organize and analyzedata.
• Test consumer products such asabsorbency of the paper towels, devisea scale, and illustrate data graphically.
• Plan a large school event and calculateresources (food, decorations, etc.)needed and costs.
Quadrant C Assimilation
• Measure interior angles of polygons anddiscover the relationship betweennumber of sides and sum of angles.
• Graph the perimeters and areas ofsquares of different sizes.
• Express probabilities as fractions,percents, or decimals.
• Evaluate equivalency and relationshipof decimal and fractions.
• Determine the largest area for a fixedperimeter.
• Fill in missing numbers for ordered pairsfor an algebraic function.
• Evaluate objects for similarity andcongruence.
• Estimate sums of complex fractions.
I. PLANNING INSTRUCTION
1 2 3 4 5 6
StudentActivities
in theRigor/
RelevanceFramework
MATHEMATICS MIDDLE LEVEL
EXAMPLES
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INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN EDUCATION
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5
4
3
2
1
1 2 3 4 5
Quadrant C Assimilation
• Compare and contrast literarystyles of different authors.
• Relate literature to historicalcontext.
• Discuss role of media in ademocracy.
• Research limits of First Amendmentfreedoms.
• Analyze characters from a novel.• Create a storyboard.• Analyze and improve typical
student writing.• Role-play characters from literature
in new situations.
Quadrant D Adaptation
• Write and perform a radio play.• Simulate a presidential debate.• Write a legal brief defending a
school policy.• Prepare a demonstration video.• Review newspaper editorials for a
week and write a letter to the editorexpressing an opinion in responseto one of them.
• Develop guidelines for publishingcontent on Internet pages.
• Develop a reading list of historicalbiographies for a middle level socialstudies course.
Quadrant A Acquisition
• Practice SAT vocabulary words.• Select books and read to younger
children.• Read important works of
literature.• Give an extemporaneous speech.• Learn several graphic organizers.• Use word processing outlining
and table tools.• Write an essay on an historical
topic.
Quadrant B Application
• Participate in a debate on a currentpolitical issue.
• Write a research report on a nationalproblem.
• Identify and analyze typical bodylanguage traits.
• Create a personal or class Website.• Research a career field.• Use word processing software to
write a business letter.• Prepare a multimedia presentation.
I. PLANNING INSTRUCTION
1 2 3 4 5 6
StudentActivities
in theRigor/
RelevanceFramework
ENGLISH
LANGUAGE
ARTS
HIGH SCHOOL
EXAMPLES
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Rigor/Relevance FrameworkWorksheet
Knowledgein one discipline
Applyacrossdiscipline
Applyin one discipline
Apply toreal-worldpredictablesituations
Apply toreal-worldunpredictablesituations
Awareness
Comprehension
Application
Analysis
Synthesis
Evaluation
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2
3
4
5
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1 2 3 4 5
KN
OW
LE
DG
E T
AX
ON
OM
Y
APPLICATION MODEL
International Center for Leadership in Education
A - Acquisition
C - Assimilation D - Adaptation
B - Application
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Planning Rigorous and Relevant Instruction
StudentPerformance
Rigor/Relevance
Assessment LearningExperiences
Alignment withPerformance
Alignment withAssessment
Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4
Focus ofLearning
DataStandards
Student
Best Practices
Reading
Questions
Step 1 - Focus - What defines or drives the learning experience?
Step 2 - Student Performance - What are studentsexpected to know, do or be like and at what levelof rigor and relevance?
Step 3 - Assessment - How will you assess desiredstudent performance?
Step 4 - Learning Experience - What activities will enable students to achieve student performance?
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International Center for Leadership in Education
Examples of Student Work for Real World Instruction
• Advertisement • Audiotape • Brochure • Business • Chart • Community
service • Construction • Contract • Correspondence • Debate • Demonstration • Design • Diagram • Discussion • Display • Dramatization • Drawing • Editorial • Exhibit • Experiment • Field guide • Graph • Interview • Invention
• Journal • Letter • Log • Machine • Magazine • Manufacturing
process • Map • Memo • Mnemonic • Model • Mural • News report • Newspaper • Oral history • Oral report • Painting • Petition • Photo album • Play • Poster • Production
process • Proposal • Questionnaire
• Questions • Rap • Relief map • Research report • Resume • Rules • Scale model • Scrapbook • Script • Sculpture • Sketch • Skit • Slide show • Software
application • Solution • Song • Speech • Story • Survey • Taxonomy • Teach a lesson • Test • Videotape
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Aligning Standards, Tests and Essential Skills to Improve Instruction
© International Center for Leadership in Education, Inc.54
Directions: For each of the standards, list student work that would enable studentsto learn that standard. Start with a generic type of student work and complete theitem with a specific task related to that area of learning.
Example:Standard/Topic Student Work
Apply in writing the rules ofgrammar, punctuation andspelling
Gather information from a varietyof sources and summarize andanalyze
Follow oral directions
Know how to decipher unfamiliarwords
Perform operations with numbersincluding decimals, ratios, per-cents, and fractions
Understand characteristics ofparallel lines
Understand best procedures forstatistical data collection, organi-zation, and display
Understand how and why rotationand revolution of Earth affect day,seasons, and weather
Understand systems of humanbody
Make observation of the localenvironment using senses andinstruments
Practice Linking Standards and Student Work
Standard/Topic Student Work
use maps and scale drawings torepresent real objects or places
construct a scale model of a house
Worksheet
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Rigor and Relevance of Test Questions
Identify the level of knowledge (K), application (A) an d Rigor/Relevancequadrant (RR) for each of the following questions.
1. The phrase “x to the fifth power” is represented by which mathematicalexpression?
A. x5 B. 5x C. 5x D. 5+x
2. In a diesel bus or truck, two 12V batteries are often connected in series,creating how much voltage to the engine?
3. If books bought at prices ranging from $2.00 to $3.50 are sold at pricesranging from $3.00 to $4.25, what is the greatest possible profit that maybe made selling 8 books?
4. Which of these substances is found in every living cell?
A. protein B. chlorophyll C. cellulose D. starch E.hemoglobin
5. As shown in the accompanying diagram, thelength, width, and height of Richard’s fish tankare 24 inches, 16 inches, and 18 inches,respectively. Richard is filling his fish tankwith water from a hose at the rate of 500 cubicinches per minute. How long will it take, to thenearest minute, to fill the tank to a depth of 15inches?
6. Students will read, discuss, and interpret Chaucer’s “Prologue” to TheCanterbury Tales. Students will then select two characters they findintriguing, gain a thorough knowledge of these two characters from the“Prologue,” and create a written dialog between them. Students shouldstress both the differences and commonalties so that the dialog revealstwo distinct personalities.
7. Select a local issue or controversy of interest to you. Gather data from avariety of sources and form a hypothesis on aspects of the topic based onyour data. Relate its importance to your community.
8. After examining and comprehending the Bill of Rights, each group ofstudents will rewrite an amendment or create a new one for the 21stcentury. Groups will present their “right,” and the class will debate it andthen vote on its inclusion in a “new Bill of Rights.” Each student willcomplete a portfolio containing research, summaries of and reactions toproposals by other groups, and notecards for oral presentation.
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© International Center for Leadership in Education, Inc.
Planning Rigorous and Relevant Instruction
Test Question Development
Directions: In the first box, develop a test question. Use the second box to revise the question at a higher level of knowledge and/or application.
Test Question
Revised Question
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INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN EDUCATION
RIGOR AND RELEVANCE HANDBOOK
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5
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Quadrant C Assimilation
Primary• Extended Response• Product Performance
Secondary• Process Performance• Constructed Response• Portfolio• Self-reflection• Multiple Choice
Quadrant A Acquisition
Primary• Multiple Choice• Constructed Response
Secondary• Process Performance• Extended Response• Self-reflection
Quadrant D Adaptation
Primary• Portfolio• Product Performance• Interview• Self-reflection
Secondary• Extended Response• Process Performance
Quadrant B Application
Primary• Process Performance• Product Performance
Secondary• Interview• Constructed Response• Multiple Choice• Portfolio• Self-reflection
Relationship of Assessments to the Rigor/Relevance Framework
Primary = Best Match Secondary = Also Appropriate
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Ways to Increase Rigor and Relevance
Challenging Assessments Interdisciplinary Instruction Reading in the Content Area Relationships Use of Technology New Teaching Ideas Peer Teaching Observations Peer Learning Experience Review Action Research Continuous Professional Development
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