Curriculum critique1

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Curriculum Plan Critique Instructions

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The purpose of this assignment is for you to critique a curriculum plan based upon what you have learned each module/week through describing the strengths or weaknesses of the curriculum plan. You will evaluate and critique 1 curriculum plan 3 separate times using 3 different articles or e-chapters. Each article or e-chapter focuses on a single topic or portion of a lesson. You will only need to critique that topic or portion of the lesson through the assigned article or e-chapter.

The paper will include the following:

a. A title page

b. A first section a 225-word summary of the assigned article or e-chapter.

c. A second section, the critique, a 125-words comparing the article/e-chapter to the curriculum plan and 100-words contrasting the article/e-chapter to the curriculum plan.

In your critique, you should provide suggestions to improve the curriculum plan based upon what’s been learned in this course. This assignment must include a title page, have a 500-word limit, and adhere to current APA format. Title page and citations are NOT included in the word limit.

For each Curriculum Plan Critique assignment, please use the following curriculum plan provided by the Virginia Department of Education.

· Sample Curriculum Plan:

Grade 6-8: Understanding Connotation

Below you will find the critique topic and link to the corresponding article or e-chapter assigned. You will only need to critique the portion of the sample curriculum plan based upon the assigned topic:

· Topic: Standards

· Chapter 2: Alignment to Standards (Lalor, 2016)

Running head: TITLE OF PAPER 1

TITLE OF PAPER 3

Title of Paper

Author

EDUC 872 Research in Curriculum Design and Development

Title of Paper

Use this space to give a short introduction to the article and the purpose of the paper. This should be a minimum of five sentences. Make sure when you list the author’s name, you place the year of publication in parenthesis after the author’s name. You will need to follow all APA guidelines for citations. Citations should include the author’s last name, comma, and the year of publication. Example: (Smith, 2010). Citations with direct quotes should include the author’s name, comma, year of publication, comma, and the page number. Example: (Smith, 2010, p.23). You do not need the page number unless you have a direct quote from the work in the sentence.

Summary

Use this section to summarize the assigned article or e-chapter. This should include the main points of the article/chapter. Make sure you properly cite within this section. APA states that you must credit the source when “paraphrasing, quoting an author directly, or describing an idea that influenced your work” (p. 170). All paragraphs must be at least five sentences and this section should be between 225 words.

Compare

Use this section to analyze the comparisons between the assigned article or e-chapter and the curriculum plan. This means you will need to think critically through the main points of the article/chapter and the curriculum plan. This section should be between 125 words.

Contrast

Use this section to analyze the differences between the assigned article or e-chapter and the curriculum plan. This means you will need to think critically through the main points of the article/chapter and the curriculum plan. This section should be between 125 words

References

You will only include references that you cited within the Curriculum Plan Critiques. If you integrate a Biblical worldview by quoting from the Bible, you do not include the Bible in this section. Make sure all references utilize a hanging indent and remove any hyperlinks.

EnglishEnhanced Scope and Sequence

  • Lesson
  • Skill: Understanding connotation

    Strand Reading–vocabulary

    SOL 6.4
    7.4
    8.4

  • Materials
  • • Copies of Lincoln’s “The Gettysburg Address,” available online

    Lesson

    1. Have students read through “The Gettysburg Address” for broad comprehension. Then,
    have them reread the first paragraph carefully and identify all words with positive
    connotations and all words with negative connotations. Have them list the words on a T
    chart, like this:

    Negative Positive

    new nation
    dedicated
    equal

    2. Have students continue with the remaining paragraphs. After paragraph two, their charts
    might include the following:

    Negative Positive

    battlefield new nation
    dedicated
    equal
    dedicated
    Proper

    3. Be sure students include repeated uses of the same word (e.g., dedicated). After
    paragraph three, their charts might resemble this:

    English Enhanced Scope and Sequence

    Negative Positive

    testing new nation
    battlefield dedicated

    not equal
    struggled dedicated

    Poor power proper
    unfinished work brave

    dead consecrate
    (shall not)died in dedicated

    vain great task
    honored dead
    nobly advanced

    4. Once students have finished the re-reading and word analysis, have them identify the
    column of words that contains greater emotion, greater meaning, and therefore greater
    impact.

    5. Discuss ways the use of other words (synonyms) for the words in the positive column
    might have affected the impact of Lincoln’s speech (e.g., leaders for fathers or goal for
    great task).

    6. Have students write a summary of their reactions to the word choices Lincoln made for
    this famous speech.

      Materials
      Lesson

    24

    2
    CONSIDERATION 2

    Alignment to Standards

    Students sit in small groups reading diff erent versions of the story Stone
    Soup

    .

    At one table students are examining the 1947 version of Stone Soup
    by Marcia Brown. In this story, three hungry soldiers enter a village look-
    ing for something to eat. The villagers hide their food until the soldiers
    slowly convince them to share it as they create a soup from stones. At
    another table, students are examining the later version by Jon J. Muth,
    which tells the story of three monks in China who face a similar situation
    when passing through a small village. Simultaneously, students at the
    remaining tables work with other versions of the same tale. Regardless of
    the version, all the students are identifying and discussing key details of
    the text as those details unfold, and the lesson they learned as a result, in
    preparation for a class discussion on the central message of the story.

    Why are the students doing this? Their teacher has designed a learning
    experience to align to the Common Core standard for 3rd grade: RL.3.2
    Recount stories, including fables, folktales, and myths from diverse cul-
    tures; determine the central message, lesson, or moral and explain how it is
    conveyed through key details in the text. Is the task, however, truly aligned
    to the standard?

    After determining whether the curriculum is structured using orga-
    nizing centers that refl ect school values or focuses (the topic of Chapter
    1), the next step in evaluating or creating a curriculum is to ensure that it

    EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 24EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 24 10/4/16 2:46 PM10/4/16 2:46 PM

    Lalor, A. D. M. (2016). Ensuring high-quality curriculum : How to design, revise, or adopt curriculum aligned to student success. Retrieved from
    http://ebookcentral.proquest.com
    Created from liberty on 2020-01-13 18:36:44.

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    Alignment to Standards 25

    is strongly aligned to the standards the district uses to communicate its
    values and focuses and to guide instruction. In the classroom described
    here, if the students were simply asked to identify the main characters in
    the story, we could easily say that the task was not aligned to the standard.
    In most cases, examples and nonexamples of alignment are readily distin-
    guishable from each other, making it easy to spot a curriculum that is not
    aligned. However, the evaluation of alignment is often not about whether
    a task is aligned or not but rather to what degree. In this case the question
    is, to what degree did the students’ examination of the text align to the
    standard related to recounting key details from stories to determine the
    central message of the story? The answer is that the learning experience
    is strongly aligned to the standard. Students are completing work using
    the skills embedded in the standard. The focus of this chapter is to explore
    alignment and how to evaluate or create a curriculum that is strongly
    aligned to standards.

    Degrees of Alignment
    When examining a task that sits inside a learning experience or an assess-
    ment for degree of alignment, I suggest using a scale of weak, moderate,
    and strong. Weak alignment is evident when a task addresses only part of
    a standard or the underlying skills subsumed by the standard. For exam-
    ple, consider the following Common Core standard for 7th grade:

    RL.7.5 Analyze how a drama’s or poem’s form or structure
    (e.g., soliloquy, sonnet) contributes to its meaning.

    An example of a weakly aligned task would be one in which the students
    are asked to identify the pattern for the sonnet “How do I love thee? Let
    me count the ways” by Elizabeth Barrett Browning. One could argue that
    knowing that a sonnet is a 14-line poem divided into two sections—an
    8-line stanza (octave) rhyming ABBAABBA, and a 6-line stanza (sestet)
    rhyming CDCDCD or CDEEDE—is helpful in identifying one. However,

    EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 25EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 25 10/4/16 2:46 PM10/4/16 2:46 PM

    Lalor, A. D. M. (2016). Ensuring high-quality curriculum : How to design, revise, or adopt curriculum aligned to student success. Retrieved from
    http://ebookcentral.proquest.com
    Created from liberty on 2020-01-13 18:36:44.
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    26 Ensuring High-Quality Curriculum

    the task certainly does not get to the heart of the standard, which is to
    analyze how structure contributes to meaning. It may serve as a stepping
    stone to arriving at the standard, but as a task by itself it does not accom-
    plish its goal.

    Consider a task in which students are asked to write the message of the
    sonnet in one sentence. In this case, the task moves closer to the standard
    because students are analyzing the poem for its meaning. The teacher
    who designed the task considered structure, in that a sonnet focuses on
    one thought or idea, hence the request that students write a sentence.
    However, the task only moderately aligns to the standard because the
    students are not asked to make the connection between the structure of
    a sonnet and its meaning. The teacher has done that for them. The task
    may be used as a learning experience to reinforce the idea that a sonnet
    focuses on one idea, but again, left as an isolated task it cannot be consid-
    ered strongly aligned to the standard.

    In a strongly aligned task, students are asked to examine several son-
    nets for their structure and uncover what distinguishes a sonnet from
    other types of poems. Their examination of the sonnets leads to the under-
    standing that a sonnet is a 14-line poem that focuses on a single thought
    or sentiment, and sonnets vary in that some are structured in two stanzas
    versus one and they may have diff erent rhyming patterns. Students use
    their criteria to then analyze “How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.”
    They work in groups to discuss how the structure aff ects the poem’s
    message. Students consolidate their thinking in a written response that
    analyzes the impact of the structure on the meaning of the poem. In this
    example, the task is strongly aligned; it is diffi cult to separate the task
    from the standard itself.

    The following scale can be used to determine the degree of alignment
    between a task and a standard:

    Strong Alignment: The task clearly aligns to the standard; the
    task and the standard are almost one and the same; the task
    addresses all parts and honors the intent of the standard.

    EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 26EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 26 10/4/16 2:46 PM10/4/16 2:46 PM

    Lalor, A. D. M. (2016). Ensuring high-quality curriculum : How to design, revise, or adopt curriculum aligned to student success. Retrieved from
    http://ebookcentral.proquest.com
    Created from liberty on 2020-01-13 18:36:44.
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    Alignment to Standards 27

    Moderate Alignment: The task addresses the standard; the stan-
    dard is part of the task but is not the primary focus.

    Weak Alignment: The task touches on the standard; the standard
    may occur but is not guaranteed to be part of the task.

    A helpful activity, one that is useful in unpacking the scale and under-
    standing alignment, is to rate the alignment of diff erent tasks to a selected
    standard. Use the preceding scale to rate the degree of alignment between
    each task in Figure 2.1 and the following standard:

    RI.11-12.7 Integrate and evaluate multiple sources of information
    presented in diverse formats and media (e.g., visually,
    quantitatively) as well as in words in order to address
    a question or solve a problem.

    The fi rst example in Figure 2.1, watching a video explaining the his-
    tory of fi lm, is weakly aligned to the standard; students are only viewing
    one source, without a specifi c purpose. The second example is a strongly

    Figure 2.1

    DEGREE OF ALIGNMENT

    Task Description Degree of Alignment

    Students watch a video explaining the history of fi lm.

    Students read, watch, and analyze information and
    data to identify reasons for Latino immigration,
    challenges immigrants face, and immigrants’ quality
    of life after arrival in the United States. They critique
    the origin of their sources to determine their reliability.
    Students use this information to write the introduction
    to a student-selected collection of memoirs, short sto-
    ries, and poetry that illustrates the life of immigrants
    and answers the question Can history be told through
    a story?

    Students use nonfi ction text, videos, and quantitative
    data as part of their research to complete a paper on
    an event recounted in a historical novel of their choice.

    EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 27EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 27 10/4/16 2:46 PM10/4/16 2:46 PM

    Lalor, A. D. M. (2016). Ensuring high-quality curriculum : How to design, revise, or adopt curriculum aligned to student success. Retrieved from
    http://ebookcentral.proquest.com
    Created from liberty on 2020-01-13 18:36:44.
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    28 Ensuring High-Quality Curriculum

    aligned task. Here students are reading, watching, and analyzing data,
    indicating the use of diverse media and formats—text, video, and charts
    and graphs. They evaluate the credibility of their sources as a means of
    determining the accuracy of their information. Students then use the
    information to answer the question Can history be told through a story?
    The last example is moderately aligned to the standard. It focuses on using
    a variety of sources, but it is unclear as to whether students are respond-
    ing to a specifi c question or problem.

    The goal is to ensure that the curriculum contains strongly aligned
    tasks. If we rely on the use of weakly aligned or moderately aligned tasks,
    students may not have the opportunity to engage in meaningful, relevant,
    and cognitively demanding tasks required by the school or district stan-
    dards. A recent study by the Education Trust illustrates this situation.
    The study found that only 4 in 10 assignments (38 percent) were aligned
    with a grade-appropriate Common Core standard. As a result, students
    were often given short, less challenging tasks with a great deal of support
    that undermined the intention of the standards and lessened the required
    thinking (Brookins, Santelises, & Dabrowski, 2015). All students should
    have the opportunity to engage in cognitively demanding texts with scaf-
    folds and supports dependent on need. A curriculum designed with this
    belief in mind allows teachers to make instructional decisions based on
    the needs of the students they are teaching. A quality curriculum designed
    with high-quality, strongly aligned tasks takes the fi rst step in ensuring
    that this happens.

    A task that is strongly aligned to a standard meets the following criteria:

    1. The standard and the task are diffi cult to separate from each other.

    2. The task requires students to fully engage in activities that
    align to all the skills embedded within the standard, usually requiring
    multiple steps.

    3. The task refl ects the intent of the standard.

    Examine the standards and corresponding tasks in Figure 2.2. As you read
    through the tasks in Column 2, underline the part of the task description

    EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 28EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 28 10/4/16 2:46 PM10/4/16 2:46 PM

    Lalor, A. D. M. (2016). Ensuring high-quality curriculum : How to design, revise, or adopt curriculum aligned to student success. Retrieved from
    http://ebookcentral.proquest.com
    Created from liberty on 2020-01-13 18:36:44.
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    Alignment to Standards 29

    Figure 2.2

    TASK ALIGNMENT

    Standard Task

    Disposition of Practice: Commitment to
    Refl ection

    • Willingness to devote time and energy
    to think about decisions, learning, and
    work in ways that promote thoughtful-
    ness (Martin-Kniep, 2008).

    Students investigate different ways in which
    young people can “make a difference.” They
    fi nd examples of community service, fundrais-
    ers, and organizations that have been led by
    young people and have made a difference in
    the lives of others. Students write a summary
    of each example they fi nd and record their
    thoughts, questions, and connections. They
    work in small groups to determine a way they
    can make a difference. Students implement
    their plan and collect data during implemen-
    tation, altering their plan as necessary. Stu-
    dents write a refl ection on their experience
    and modify their plan in order to implement it
    again in the future.

    • Students make connections by relating
    ideas within the content or among
    content areas and select or devise one
    approach among many alternatives on
    how a situation can be solved (Webb’s
    Depth of Knowledge; Webb et al.,
    2005).

    Students pursue the questi on How healthy
    is the United States? by documenting their
    own nutrition and exercise habits over a
    six-week period using a health-journal app.
    After documenting their own health, they
    conduct research that pursues questions such
    as these:

    • What are the nutritional and exercise hab-
    its of Americans in different age groups?

    • Are all the research fi ndings regarding
    American health habits the same? How do
    they compare?

    • How does society refl ect these health
    habits?

    • How do American health habits affect
    other areas of American life, such as
    economics and government?

    Students use their own experience to analyze
    the current state of American health. They
    write an evaluation of their own health in light
    of their fi ndings, and prepare an action plan
    for pursuing a healthy life.

    EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 29EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 29 10/4/16 2:46 PM10/4/16 2:46 PM

    Lalor, A. D. M. (2016). Ensuring high-quality curriculum : How to design, revise, or adopt curriculum aligned to student success. Retrieved from
    http://ebookcentral.proquest.com
    Created from liberty on 2020-01-13 18:36:44.
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    30 Ensuring High-Quality Curriculum

    that refl ects the standard in Column 1. By underlining the task in the exam-
    ples, you can determine if the task meets the criteria for strong alignment.

    In the fi rst example, the multistep process of fi nding examples of
    community service, fundraisers, and organizations; writing a summary
    and recording thoughts, ideas, and questions; and creating, implement-
    ing, revising, and refl ecting on a plan is evidence of the willingness to
    devote time and energy to thinking about decisions, learning, and work
    in ways that promote thoughtfulness. The alignment can therefore be
    considered strong.

    In the second example, students document their own nutrition and
    exercise habits, conduct research, analyze the current state of American
    health, write an evaluation of their own health, and prepare an action plan
    for pursuing a healthy life. The task seamlessly intertwines health content
    with literacy skills, and it provides students with a personalized problem
    that could be solved in multiple ways, once again showing that when the
    task and standard are the same, alignment is strong.

    Once you can recognize the degree of alignment between a task and
    a standard, it becomes possible to revise a task so it strongly aligns to a
    standard. Returning to Figure 2.1, we can revise the weakly aligned task
    (students watch a video explaining the history of fi lm) to make it strong
    by expanding on the resources and focusing the research on a specifi c
    question. Now instead of watching a video explaining the history of fi lm,
    students read and analyze multimedia resources, articles, and commen-
    taries on the role of fi lm in society, and they examine data regarding fi lm
    development and usage. They consider the origin of the materials, not-
    ing the authors and website creators to determine the credibility of their
    sources. Students use this information to create a multimedia presenta-
    tion in which they analyze a fi lm of their choice and answer the question
    Does fi lm form or follow the norms and values of a society?

    We can also revise the moderately aligned task from Figure 2.1 for
    stronger alignment by adding a question to guide the reading of the diff er-
    ent sources. In the original task, students are using nonfi ction text, vid-
    eos, and quantitative data to complete a paper on an event recounted in

    EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 30EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 30 10/4/16 2:46 PM10/4/16 2:46 PM

    Lalor, A. D. M. (2016). Ensuring high-quality curriculum : How to design, revise, or adopt curriculum aligned to student success. Retrieved from
    http://ebookcentral.proquest.com
    Created from liberty on 2020-01-13 18:36:44.
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    Alignment to Standards 31

    a historical novel of their choice. By adding the question Does literature
    refl ect life? the research and the resulting paper have a specifi c purpose.

    Content-Area Alignment
    The same criteria apply to alignment in the content areas. However, align-
    ment in the content areas often includes alignment to standards with dif-
    ferent focuses. For example, consider the following task. Students read
    three articles to learn about diff erent explanations of climate change, how
    it is caused, and the resulting impact of climate change on biodiversity.
    Students are asked to engage in this task in order to understand content
    identifi ed in the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) and apply lit-
    eracy skills to access the content, including those identifi ed in Common
    Core standard RST.9-10.6:

    Analyze the author’s purpose in providing an explanation,
    describing a procedure, or discussing an experiment in a text,
    defi ning the question the author seeks to address.

    The task strongly aligns to the reading standard because it requires stu-
    dents to analyze the author’s explanation of climate change. However,
    when we examine the task for alignment to the science standard, we see
    that it is actually weakly aligned.

    The Next Generation Science Standards contain information about
    performance, science and engineering practices, disciplinary core ideas,
    and crosscutting concepts. For the sake of this example, let’s work with one
    of the NGSS’s performance expectations and a corresponding core idea
    related to the topic of Interdependent Relationships in the Ecosystem.

    HS-LS4-6

    Create or revise a simulation to test a solution to mitigate
    adverse impacts of human activity on biodiversity. [Clarifi cation
    Statement: Emphasis is on designing solutions for a proposed
    problem related to threatened or endangered species, or to
    genetic variation of organisms for multiple species.]

    EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 31EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 31 10/4/16 2:46 PM10/4/16 2:46 PM

    Lalor, A. D. M. (2016). Ensuring high-quality curriculum : How to design, revise, or adopt curriculum aligned to student success. Retrieved from
    http://ebookcentral.proquest.com
    Created from liberty on 2020-01-13 18:36:44.
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    32 Ensuring High-Quality Curriculum

    LS4.D: Biodiversity and Humans

    Humans depend on the living world for the resources and other
    benefi ts provided by biodiversity. But human activity is also
    having adverse impacts on biodiversity through overpopulation,
    overexploitation, habitat destruction, pollution, introduction of
    invasive species, and climate change. . . . Thus sustaining bio-
    diversity so that ecosystem functioning and productivity are
    maintained is essential to supporting and enhancing life on
    Earth. Sustaining biodiversity also aids humanity by preserving
    landscapes of recreational or inspirational value.

    Exploring the diff erent views on climate change is only one part of
    the core idea LS4.D: Biodiversity and Humans, which is why the task is
    weakly aligned. To strongly align to the core idea, students would also
    need to examine

    • Speciation and extinction.
    • Adverse impacts of human behavior, including overpopulation,

    overexploitation, habitat destruction, pollution, introduction of invasive
    species, and climate change.

    • Biological extinction, because many species are unable to sur-
    vive in changed environments and die out.

    • The eff ects of biological extinction.
    • The importance of sustaining biodiversity.
    • Ways to sustain biodiversity.

    One of the challenges related to strong alignment to content stan-
    dards is making sure that all of the content included in the standard is
    also included in the curriculum, which may require more than one task.
    Addressing only one aspect of the content does not constitute alignment.
    For strong alignment to occur, the curriculum must include all the con-
    tent in the standards.

    By itself, the science core idea does not communicate how the students
    will acquire the information. This is why content standards are paired
    with literacy standards, as shown in the original example. Students are

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    Alignment to Standards 33

    learning about climate change through reading. Their next learning expe-
    rience may include a task that has them listening to a multimedia presen-
    tation to learn about the eff ects of biological distinction.

    Alignment becomes even more complex as more standards are added.
    In this extension of the example, the core idea is presented with a perfor-
    mance expectation. Now for strong alignment to occur, students would
    need to formulate and test a possible solution for addressing the negative
    human impact on biodiversity. This undertaking could include

    • Choosing an area of focus.
    • Creating or revising a simulation that includes mathematical

    and computational thinking.
    • Developing or evaluating a solution, taking into consideration

    cost, safety, reliability, and social, cultural, and environmental impacts.
    • Using physical models and computers.
    • Using empirical evidence to diff erentiate between cause and

    correlation and to make claims about specifi c causes and eff ects.

    Now the original reading task serves a small role in a big picture.
    Regardless of scope, however, the concept of alignment remains the same.
    In the content areas, it means examining alignment in terms of content to
    be taught, content-specifi ed skills such as the performance expectation,
    and the role of literacy in accessing and communicating the content.

    Implications for Evaluating, Creating,
    or Revising Curriculum
    Understanding that alignment occurs by degree rather than extremes is
    important to ensuring that students have opportunities to truly learn and
    practice the skills embedded in the standards. When evaluating curricu-
    lum, one way to check for strong alignment is to choose sample tasks from
    various units and determine the degree of alignment between the task and
    the standard identifi ed using the scale of weak, moderate, and strong, as
    previously described. The tasks you choose to evaluate should represent

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    34 Ensuring High-Quality Curriculum

    those found in daily lessons, extended activities, and assessments. The
    chart in Figure 2.3 is a helpful tool for gathering and evaluating this infor-
    mation. An example at the top of the chart illustrates the process.

    You can add additional rows to the chart based on the number of
    tasks you are examining. It is advantageous to analyze multiple tasks of
    diff erent lengths and purposes. Determining the degree of alignment
    is particularly important when examining published curriculum and
    instructional materials. A report from the Brown Center on Education

    Figure 2.3

    DETERMINING ALIGNMENT IN A CURRICULUM

    Task Description Standard Degree of
    Alignment

    Notes for Revision

    Students read several
    documents related to the
    events that occurred in
    Birmingham, Alabama, in
    1963, including Dr. Martin
    Luther King’s “Letter from
    Birmingham Jail” and
    a reprinted newspaper
    article from the New York
    Times in 1963. As they
    read the texts, they work
    with different-colored
    highlighters to show how
    the texts address the
    event in a similar fashion
    and any disconnect among
    the texts.

    RI.9-10.9 Analyze
    seminal U.S. docu-
    ments of historical
    and literary signifi –
    cance (e.g., Wash-
    ington’s Farewell
    Address, the Gettys-
    burg Address, Roos-
    evelt’s Four Freedoms
    speech, King’s “Letter
    from Birmingham
    Jail”), including how
    they address related
    themes and concepts.

    Moderate • Include an
    additional reading
    such as “Ballad of
    Birmingham” by
    Dudley Randall.

    • Provide opportu-
    nity for discussion
    on the ways the
    texts describe
    the same event,
    the reasons for
    the differences in
    their descriptions,
    and the impact on
    student under-
    standing of the
    events of Birming-
    ham as a result
    of reading the
    different accounts.

    Task 1:

    Task 2:

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    Alignment to Standards 35

    Policy at Brookings included this observation about publishing compa-
    nies’ initial responses to the Common Core State Standards: “Publishers
    of instructional materials are lining up to declare the alignment of their
    materials with the Common Core standards using the most superfi cial
    of defi nitions” (Chingos & Whitehurst, 2012, p. 1). Although publishers
    have made some improvements, those have not been enough; nor have
    they been consistent. Some companies have simply done a better job than
    others of aligning their materials, and with such inconsistencies, checking
    the degree of alignment is important.

    Addressed, Taught, and Assessed:
    Three Ways to Look at Standards
    When examining curriculum, we are looking for tasks that are strongly
    aligned to the standards. What will help or hamper this determination is
    the way in which the curriculum communicates information about the
    standards and their value or emphasis.

    We can view standards in diff erent ways: those that are addressed,
    those that are taught, and those that are taught and assessed. Standards
    that are addressed are those that are touched upon but not necessarily the
    primary focus of a unit within a curriculum. Standards that are taught are
    those that involve students engaging in activities that practice the skills
    embedded within the standards. Standards that are taught and assessed
    are the standards that are the focus of instruction and are evaluated
    during the unit of study.

    Let’s examine a 4th grade unit to determine the diff erence between
    standards that are addressed and those that are taught and assessed. In
    this unit, students are examining the essential question Is there more
    than one way to tell a story? They are reading collections of texts that are
    connected by theme and that include stories from cultures other than
    the United States, nonfi ction text, and dramas and stories that have been
    made into fi lms. As they read, they take note of how the texts approach
    similar themes, and the similarities and diff erences between texts and

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    36 Ensuring High-Quality Curriculum

    their visual presentations. As a result of their examination, students write
    a proposal for a new movie based on a book of their choice.

    The Common Core reading literature standards for this unit include
    the following:

    RL.4.1 Refer to details and examples in a text when explaining
    what the text says explicitly and when drawing infer-
    ences from the text.

    RL.4.2 Determine a theme of a story, drama, or poem from
    details in the text; summarize the text.

    RL.4.3 Describe in depth a character, setting, or event in a story
    or drama, drawing on specifi c details in the text (e.g., a
    character’s thoughts, words, or actions).

    RL.4.5 Explain major differences between poems, drama, and
    prose, and refer to the structural elements of poems
    (e.g., verse, rhythm, meter) and drama (e.g., casts of
    characters, settings, descriptions, dialogue, stage direc-
    tions) when writing or speaking about a text.

    RL.4.6 Compare and contrast the point of view from which
    different stories are narrated, including the difference
    between fi rst- and third-person narrations.

    RL.4.7 Make connections between the text of a story or drama
    and a visual or oral presentation of the text, identifying
    where each version refl ects specifi c descriptions and
    directions in the text.

    RL.4.9 Compare and contrast the treatment of similar themes
    and topics (e.g., opposition of good and evil) and pat-
    terns of events (e.g., the quest) in stories, myths, and
    traditional literature from different cultures.

    At fi rst glance, it is easy to see why these standards were chosen; it is
    possible for students to use the skills that are embedded in all of these
    standards. However, potential does not mean the task is aligned, nor that
    the standard should be listed as a unit outcome. The question goes back to

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    Alignment to Standards 37

    alignment and to what degree the tasks within the unit align to the stan-
    dards. Based on this understanding, some of these standards are really
    just being addressed in the unit. The students are using the skills, but
    those skills are not the central focus of the unit. Further examination will
    reveal which standards are being addressed and which are being taught
    and assessed.

    Throughout the unit, students read a variety of diff erent text and fi lm
    collections that may include the following:

    • The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick, the fi lm of the
    same title, and Toys! Amazing Stories Behind Some Great Inventions by
    Don Wulff son

    • The Lorax by Dr. Seuss, the fi lm of the same title, a nonfi ction
    text on protecting the environment, and a folktale

    • The poem “Little Red Riding Hood and the Wolf” by Roald Dahl,
    a picture book of Little Red Riding Hood, and Lon Po Po: A Red-Riding
    Hood Story from China by Ed Young

    Students complete various activities and participate in discussions about
    the texts and fi lms, referring to details and examples that support their
    thinking. These activities allow students to identify and examine com-
    mon themes within the collections of texts, and to examine the unique
    structures of the diff erent types of texts. They also provide students with
    the opportunity to generate criteria to use when comparing texts and
    their fi lm versions.

    At diff erent points in the unit, students complete written responses in
    which they summarize the text and respond to the following questions,
    using specifi c evidence from the text:

    • What is the theme of the story? How do the details in the text
    reveal the theme?

    • How is the text structured? How does the structure aff ect the story?
    • In what ways does the fi lm refl ect the descriptions and direc-

    tions in the text?

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    38 Ensuring High-Quality Curriculum

    • How do the text and the fi lm diff er? How do these diff erences
    aff ect the story?

    • How do the texts and fi lms treat the same theme?

    Given what we know about strong alignment, we can identify the stan-
    dards that are taught and assessed when the task directions and the stan-
    dards are placed next to each other, as in Figure 2.4. The standards that
    strongly align with the tasks—meaning the tasks and standard are diffi –
    cult to separate from each other, and the intent of the standard remains
    intact—fall into either the category of “taught” or “taught and assessed.”
    What is the diff erence? When a standard is taught, the task occurs during
    instruction. We see this in the 4th grade unit when students complete
    activities and participate in discussions. Students have the opportunity
    to practice the skills embedded in the standard with teacher guidance and
    feedback. When standards are taught and assessed, this still occurs, but
    there is also an assessment opportunity that allows the teacher to check
    and monitor student understanding. The reader-response journals serve
    this purpose in the 4th grade example.

    Figure 2.4 shows which tasks and standards are aligned and also
    reveals that two of the standards identifi ed are not aligned to a specifi c
    task in the unit:

    • RL.4.3 Describe in depth a character, setting, or event in a
    story or drama, drawing on specifi c details in the text (e.g., a character’s
    thoughts, words, or actions).

    • RL.4.6 Compare and contrast the point of view from which
    diff erent stories are narrated, including the diff erence between fi rst- and
    third-person narrations.

    Some may argue that students will need to describe the characters, set-
    ting, and events of the story when they use key details from the text to
    identify the theme. It is also possible for students to compare and contrast
    the point of view from which diff erent stories are narrated by examining
    point of view in the diff erent collections of stories. However, although
    these things may occur, the unit has not been designed with the explicit
    intent to allow students to practice these skills and the teacher to assess

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    Alignment to Standards 39

    Figure 2.4

    ANALYZING TASKS

    Standard Tasks

    RL.4.1 Refer to details and examples in a text
    when explaining what the text says explicitly
    and when drawing inferences from the text.

    Students complete activities, participate in
    discussions, and respond to questions using
    details, examples, and evidence from text.

    RL.4.2 Determine a theme of a story, drama,
    or poem from details in the text; summarize
    the text.

    Students identify common themes.

    Students summarize the text.

    Reader Response: What is the theme of the
    story? How do the details in the text reveal
    the theme?

    RL.4.3 Describe in depth a character, setting,
    or event in a story or drama, drawing on
    specifi c details in the text (e.g., a character’s
    thoughts, words, or actions).

    RL.4.5 Explain major differences between
    poems, drama, and prose, and refer to the
    structural elements of poems (e.g., verse,
    rhythm, meter) and drama (e.g., casts of
    characters, settings, descriptions, dialogue,
    stage directions) when writing or speaking
    about a text.

    Students examine the unique structure of the
    different type of texts.

    Reader Response: How is the text structured?
    How does the structure affect the story?

    RL.4.6 Compare and contrast the point
    of view from which different stories are
    narrated, including the difference between
    fi rst- and third-person narrations.

    RL.4.7 Make connections between the text
    of a story or drama and a visual or oral
    presentation of the text, identifying where
    each version refl ects specifi c descriptions
    and directions in the text.

    Students identify criteria to use when com-
    paring text and fi lm.

    Reader Response: In what ways does the
    fi lm refl ect the descriptions and directions in
    the text? How does it differ? How do these
    differences affect the story?

    RL.4.9 Compare and contrast the treatment
    of similar themes and topics (e.g., opposition
    of good and evil) and patterns of events (e.g.,
    the quest) in stories, myths, and traditional
    literature from different cultures.

    Students identify and examine common
    themes within the collections of texts.

    Reader Response: How do the texts in the
    collection treat the same theme?

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    40 Ensuring High-Quality Curriculum

    them. We can consider these standards to be addressed only. The teacher
    may ask students to draw upon these skills or the skills may inadvertently
    occur, but they are not explicitly at the center of instruction and assess-
    ment in this unit.

    Why is it important to distinguish between standards that are
    addressed, taught, and taught and assessed? Why not just include all
    the standards? One reason is practicality. The 4th grade example just
    presented describes in depth the reading literature portion of the unit.
    Students are also reading informational texts, writing, and speaking and
    listening within the unit. Including all standards from all areas would
    create a massive and unmanageable unit that could potentially go on for
    several months, therefore defeating the intent of organizing curriculum
    into units.

    The other reason is focus. Educational researchers such as Rick Stig-
    gins, W. James Popham, Robert Marzano, and Susan Brookhart have
    repeatedly discussed the impact of clear learning targets on students
    (Marzano, Pickering, & Pollock, 2001; Moss & Brookhart, 2012; Popham,
    1999; Stiggins, 1997). Prioritizing the standards within units will help
    teachers to identify learning targets, share those targets with their stu-
    dents, and develop and use appropriate learning activities. Students
    will be aware of what they need to know and be able to do, have plenty
    of opportunities to practice the skills within the standards, and receive
    appropriate feedback and guidance from their teachers.

    Prioritizing a set of standards in one unit is not done at the expense of
    other standards. When standards are carefully organized throughout the
    year, students will have the opportunity to practice the skills related to all
    standards, which is the focus of Chapter 3.

    Taught and Assessed Standards
    in the Content Areas
    The same concept of taught and assessed standards applies to the content
    areas as well. The diff erence, however, will depend on the specifi city of the

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    Alignment to Standards 41

    content-area standards or content understandings. In many cases, these
    standards or content understandings are vague and open to interpretation.

    For example, consider the following content understandings from
    across the United States. According to the Texas Essential Knowledge
    and Skills for Social Studies, the student is expected to understand “the
    domestic and international impact of U.S. participation in World War II.
    The student is expected to identify reasons for U.S. involvement in World
    War II, including Italian, German, and Japanese dictatorships and their
    aggression, especially the attack on Pearl Harbor” (Texas Education
    Agency, 2010). In California, students are expected to “analyze Ameri-
    ca’s participation in World War II. They examine the origins of American
    involvement in the war, with an emphasis on the events that precipitated
    the attack on Pearl Harbor” (California Academic Content Standards
    Commission [CACSC], 2000). In New York State, the following concep-
    tual understandings describe what students need to know:

    11.10 The United States participated in World War II as part of
    an Allied force to prevent military conquests by Ger-
    many, Italy, and Japan. United States policies during and
    immediately after World War II had a signifi cant impact
    on American political, economic, and social life.

    11.10.a Multiple factors contributed to a rise in authoritarian
    forms of government and ideologies such as fascism,
    communism, and socialism after World War I.

    11.10.b The United States and the international community did
    not respond with force to aggressive German and Japa-
    nese actions that violated international treaties agreed to
    following World War I.

    11.10.c In the 1930s, public opinion slowly moved toward
    supporting a more active United States involvement in
    world affairs.

    11.10.d United States involvement moved from a policy of neu-
    trality at the beginning of World War II and evolved into
    a pro-Allied position, culminating in direct and active
    United States involvement. (New York State, 2013)

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    42 Ensuring High-Quality Curriculum

    Each of these documents provides information about what students
    should know about the United States entry into World War II, but none
    of them—regardless of the length of the description—off er specifi cs as to
    exactly what needs to be taught, what students need to be able to do with
    that knowledge, or how they can demonstrate that knowledge.

    For the concept of taught and assessed to apply to these content stan-
    dards, teachers fi rst have to identify the “nonnegotiable.” What exactly
    will students need to know, for example, about German, Italian, and Japa-
    nese aggression before the start of World War II? What should they know
    about the attack on Pearl Harbor? I have sat through many conversations
    in which teachers have discussed what they teach and what they do not
    teach in a unit of study, and there is rarely unanimous agreement. It is
    through these conversations, however, that teachers unpack the curric-
    ulum documents and identify the specifi cs about what needs to be taught
    and assessed.

    Additional Implications for Evaluating,
    Creating, or Revising Curriculum
    Certain indicators show that all the standards identifi ed within the unit
    have been given equal weight. One is when all or most of the standards
    have been listed in a unit, as in the 4th grade example. Possibility does not
    indicate alignment. There need to be suffi cient and focused practice and
    assessment opportunities within the unit for a standard to be considered
    taught and assessed. Including all standards in one unit does not allow for
    the necessary time to practice the embedded skills. Even with the identi-
    fi cation of taught and assessed standards, standards will need to be revis-
    ited throughout the year to provide opportunities for reinforcement and
    attainment.

    A second indication that careful thought has not been given to the iden-
    tifi cation of standards is when the standards identifi ed in the overview or
    introduction to the unit are not the same as those identifi ed in individual
    lessons. This mismatch suggests that the standards being taught are not

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    Lalor, A. D. M. (2016). Ensuring high-quality curriculum : How to design, revise, or adopt curriculum aligned to student success. Retrieved from
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    Alignment to Standards 43

    necessarily those being assessed. Unfortunately, I have found this to be a
    common problem with textbooks and other learning materials.

    So the following question arises: What do you do if you are working
    with a curriculum in which it is diffi cult to determine the focus standards?
    The task then becomes to prioritize the standards by clearly identifying
    and labeling those that are taught and assessed, and distinguishing them
    from those that are addressed. For existing or published curriculums,
    this may mean reviewing existing tasks to determine which standards are
    truly being taught and assessed. Although this eff ort may take some time,
    it is time well spent. Without such distinction, the unit will not be cohe-
    sive, and it will be very diffi cult to ensure that all users of the curriculum
    will understand the focus of instruction and assessment.

    An additional strategy for ensuring that the standards identifi ed are
    those that are taught and assessed is to actually code the standard into
    the document and create a unit blueprint. For example, if the original 4th
    grade document were coded with the standards, it would look like this:

    Throughout the unit, students read a variety of different text and
    fi lm collections [RL.4.5, RL.4.9]. They complete different activities
    and participate in discussions about the texts and fi lms, refer-
    ring to details and examples that support their thinking [RL.4.1].
    These activities allow students to identify and examine common
    themes [RL.4.2, RL.4.9] within the collections of texts, and exam-
    ine the unique structures of the different types of texts, including
    folktales, stories, nonfi ction, drama, and poems [RL.4.5]. They
    also provide students with the opportunity to identify criteria to
    use when comparing texts and their fi lm versions [RL.4.7].

    At different points in the unit, students complete written
    responses in which they summarize the text [RL.4.2] and respond
    to the following questions, using specifi c evidence from the
    text [RL.4.1]:

    • What is the theme of the story? How do the details in the
    text reveal the theme? [RL.4.2]

    • How is the text structured? How does the structure affect the
    story? [RL.4.5]

    EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 43EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 43 10/4/16 2:46 PM10/4/16 2:46 PM

    Lalor, A. D. M. (2016). Ensuring high-quality curriculum : How to design, revise, or adopt curriculum aligned to student success. Retrieved from
    http://ebookcentral.proquest.com
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    44 Ensuring High-Quality Curriculum

    • In what ways does the fi lm refl ect the descriptions and direc-
    tions in the text? [RL.4.7]

    • How do the text and the fi lm differ? How do these differences
    affect the story? [RL.4.7]

    • How do the texts or fi lms treat the same theme? [RL.4.9]

    A benefi t to coding the standards as the unit is created is that it ensures
    that the tasks within the unit are strongly aligned and can be taught and
    assessed. Teachers can make decisions about the type of texts, activities,
    and assessments as they draft the unit. The process also reveals areas where
    alignment between a task and a standard is weak so that that area can be
    revised and made stronger, or when a standard selected for a unit early in the
    design process no longer makes sense and should be removed from the unit.

    Summary: Alignment to Standards
    Two critical areas to examine when evaluating or designing curriculum
    for standards alignment are (1) degree of alignment and (2) communi-
    cation of standards that are taught and assessed. Although curriculum
    documents may claim alignment, the degree to which the curriculum is
    aligned may vary. Tasks can be weakly, moderately, or strongly aligned to
    standards. A quality curriculum will ensure strong alignment, meaning
    the tasks and standard are diffi cult to distinguish from each other and the
    intent of the standard remains intact.

    Listing a standard in a unit of study is not enough to claim that it
    is suffi ciently emphasized throughout the unit. Standards that are
    addressed, taught, and taught and assessed may all be included in one
    unit. A high-quality curriculum document will communicate the diff er-
    ence between these standards or include only those that are taught and
    assessed, allowing teachers to make purposeful decisions about what to
    teach and how to teach it and to share learning targets with their students.
    Students should be given the opportunity to practice the skills embedded
    in the standards and receive guidance and feedback from their teachers
    before being assessed.

    EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 44EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 44 10/4/16 2:46 PM10/4/16 2:46 PM

    Lalor, A. D. M. (2016). Ensuring high-quality curriculum : How to design, revise, or adopt curriculum aligned to student success. Retrieved from
    http://ebookcentral.proquest.com
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    Alignment to Standards 45

    Understanding degree of alignment can help educators identify those
    tasks in need of revision and revise them to increase the degree of align-
    ment between the task and the standards. In addition, it can help them
    to analyze the standards to reveal those that are taught and assessed,
    as well as those that are simply addressed. The coding of standards will
    ensure both alignment and the inclusion of standards that are taught and
    assessed in a unit of study.

    Tools and Activities for Evaluation, Design, and Revision
    • Degree of Alignment—This activity is helpful in establishing

    a common understanding of the degree of alignment between tasks and
    standards (see Figure 2.1 for an example). With this understanding, edu-
    cators can evaluate tasks in an existing curriculum to determine their
    degree of alignment and, when necessary, revise them so they strongly
    align to the standards. Educators can also use this understanding to
    design strongly aligned tasks.

    • Analyzing Tasks for Strong Alignment—This activity allows
    educators to see the connection between what students are asked to do
    and the standard itself (see Figure 2.2 for an example). It is helpful in
    clarifying the criteria for a strongly aligned task.

    • Determining Alignment in a Curriculum—A chart like the
    one in Figure 2.3 can be used for sampling tasks within a curriculum to
    ensure that they are strongly aligned and revise those that are not.

    • Coding Standards—Coding of standards into tasks ensures
    strong alignment and identifi es weakly or moderately aligned tasks in
    need of revision (see example on pp. 43–44).

    Checklist for Evaluation, Design, and Revision

     The tasks are strongly aligned to the standards. It is diffi cult to
    distinguish between the task and the standard, all skills identifi ed
    in the standard are included in the task, and the task honors the
    intent of the standard.

     The standards that are taught and assessed are clearly identifi ed
    and distinguished from those that are addressed.

    EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 45EnsuringHighQualityCurr.indd 45 10/4/16 2:46 PM10/4/16 2:46 PM

    Lalor, A. D. M. (2016). Ensuring high-quality curriculum : How to design, revise, or adopt curriculum aligned to student success. Retrieved from
    http://ebookcentral.proquest.com
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