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Curriculum Planning

Planning the Best Curriculum Unit Ever

July 31, 2014

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Teaching is not natural.

The public believes, incorrectly, that classroom instruction is as natural as showing your child how to fish or helping a nephew play Ms. Pac-Man. But those comparisons don鈥檛 take into account the profoundly specialized discourse of K鈥12 instruction.

Answering a learner鈥檚 question with a question, creating a holistic rubric, or (take a deep breath) facilitating a high-level discussion of new content on the Thursday before prom with 35 diverse students (two of whom present ADHD behaviors) while an administrator evaluates you鈥攁ll of this requires a ridiculous constellation of specialized, unnatural skills.

That alien skill set means that even the most brilliant teachers cannot just wing it. They have to plan.

While the public has no idea how much mental muscle curriculum planning requires, corporations that sell education materials do know. Unfortunately, their support is often in the form of selling a 鈥渟ure-fire鈥 scripted curriculum that 鈥済uarantees鈥 growth (if teachers will just follow directions). There are, however, several reasons why scripted curricula-in-a-box don鈥檛 work:

  • What works in one classroom often won鈥檛 work the next period, so flexibility, intuition, and judgment calls by instructors are needed.
  • Values and motivations vary by classroom.
  • Prepackaged curricula undermine聽teachers鈥 professionalism and agency.
  • Cultural sensitivity does not come in a package.
  • All students are not at the same level of development.
  • Scripted lessons interfere with the all-important teacher-student relationship.

Finally, prepackaged programs are overwhelmingly used with poor minority populations, according to Jonathan Kozol, who that this practice is characteristic of a 鈥渄eeply segregated system in which more experienced instructors teach the children of the privileged.鈥 In other words, the rich get quality instruction, and the poor get drill-and-kill worksheets and laminated platitudes. For all these reasons, it is imperative that teachers develop their own unit plans.

Unit Planning

Fortunately, a unit plan can help us master specialized classroom discourse. Don鈥檛 think of units as just curriculum artifacts. They鈥檙e also a mapping process that enables teachers to think carefully about research-supported聽teacher-learner-content interactions that help kids meet standards and grow up to save the world.

Within a unifying theme, a unit guides the sequence and pace of skills and knowledge acquisition described in more granular detail by lesson plans. Its importance should not be underestimated, says education consultant Max Thompson, who identifies bad curriculum design as the cause of widespread achievement gaps. Tangentially, Thompson emphatically states that because it raises achievement and is connected to how people organize their thinking, the 鈥渇ocal point of learning, especially for students impacted by poverty,鈥 should be vocabulary.

To assess the quality of an existing unit plan, the four most important questions to ask are:

  1. Is the unit aligned with standards, objectives, and guidelines?
  2. Is there a balance of teaching strategies, learning strategies, and authentic tasks that engage and meet the needs of diverse learners?
  3. Have I sequenced the activities clearly?
  4. Do the formative and summative assessments measure the knowledge and skills identified in the objectives?

The next section will help with the necessary, unnatural, invisible, and painstaking process of writing unit plans.

How to Use the Downloadable Unit Plan Document

To help you develop a new unit, overhaul curriculum, or just tweak an existing plan, I created a printable checklist of potential unit elements, broken into eight sequential planning steps:

  1. Describe your vision, focus, objectives, and student needs.
  2. Identify resources.
  3. Develop experiences that meet your objectives.
  4. Collect and devise materials.
  5. Lock down the specifics of your task.
  6. Develop plans, methods, and processes.
  7. Create your students' experience.
  8. Go!

You may be tempted to save time by skipping steps 1鈥5 and immediately begin writing your lesson plans, but that will cost you more time and limit the effectiveness of curriculum. Those first five steps will help you map out the learning journey and destination. You鈥檙e not supposed to do everything on this checklist鈥攖hink of it as a menu of聽different formats, features, models, and sequences that you might consider as you develop curriculum.

If some of the terms are unfamiliar (we鈥檙e dealing with an unnatural discourse, after all), look them up in .

A universal unit-planning checklist might not support your curriculum development style or suit your grade and content. I hope, however, that the list of possibilities encourages further professional exploration.

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