Chapter 6 (Instructional Planning and Development)
CHAPTER 6
Instructional Planning and
Development
Maricel H. Magbanua BSEd
II – ENGLISH
The Process of Instructional Planning FrameworK
Select a topic from
the curriculum
Design and give
assessment
Give grade or
feedback
Move on to new topic
|
Select standards
Design an assessment
Decide learning opportunities
Use data
|
Outcomes – Based Education (OBE)
ü One of the features of OBE is “design down”. This means
that in OBE you determine first the targets of the learning outcomes before you
design instruction.
Understanding by Design
ü Backward design
ü Like OBE, the first step in UbD is “identifying results”
The Understanding by Design (UbD) Framework
Stage 1: Desired Results
·
Content standard
·
Understanding(s)/goal
·
Essential question
·
Students objectives (outcomes)
Stage 2: Assessment Evidence
·
Performance Task
·
Other Evidences
Stage 3: Learning Plan
·
Materials and Resources
·
Timeline
·
Introductory Activities
·
Developmental Activities
Important Points to Remember in Planning and
Organizing Instruction, Closing Activities\
1. teaching-learning is supposed to contribute to the
realization of the vision statement of the DepEd.
2. If you belong in a private institution, bear in mind the
vision-mission statement of your school in addition to that of DepEd’s vision
and mission statement.
3. Consider too the Philippine Qualifications Framework (PQF),
the framework issued through Executive Order No. 83 by the office of the
president on October 1, 2012.
4. These Grade 10 and 12 qualifications laid down in the PQF
flow into the standards that are contained in the Curriculum Guide for K to 12.
5. Our instructional planning is supposed to begin with a
study of the K to 12 Curriculum Guide.
6. Which instructional plan you are going to prepare depends
on what your school requires.
7. Apply all the principles of teaching and learning that you
have learned in Principles of Teaching 1 and the research—based instructional
strategies discussed in Chapter 4.
8. Always begin with end in mind.
9. Do assessments to ensure learning (assessment for learning)
10. Give your students opportunity to assess themselves.
11. You teach two knowledge: declarative and procedural
knowledge.
12. Don’t forget that part of instructional planning is
utilization of assessment results.
Academic Prompts – are
structured performance task that elicits the student’s creation of controlled
performance or product.
Culminating Assessments
– are tasks that ask students to apply and demonstrate knowledge and skills
they acquired.
Elements of Lesson Plan/
Instructional Plan/ Learning Plan
ü A lesson plan is also called an instructional plan or a
learning plan.
1.
Dr. Madeline Hunter’s research indicates that effective
teacher usually include the following elements in their lessons.
Ø Anticipatory set
Ø Purpose
Ø Input
Ø Modelling
Ø Guided Practice
Ø Checking for
Understanding
Ø Independent practice
Ø Closure
2.
For UbD, the parts of an instructional plan follow the
acronym W.H.E.R.E.T.O.
Ø W- Where and Why
Ø H- Hook and Hold
Ø E- Explore and
Experience, Enable and Equip
Ø R- Reflect, Rethink,
Revise
Ø E- Self-Evaluation
Ø T- Tailor and
Personalize the Work
Ø O- Organize for Optimal
Effectiveness
Lesson Development in
Direct (Deductive) and Indirect (Inductive) Instruction
ü In direct (deductive) instruction, teaching begins with the
rule, generalization, abstraction or principle and ends with examples and
details.
Illustration in Hunter's
sample lesson
1. Input
2. Modeling
3. Checking for Understanding
4. Questioning strategies
5. Guided practice
6. Closure
7. Independent practice
ü In indirect (inductive) instruction, you begin your lesson
with concrete experiences, details, examples and assists students to discover
and give the real generalization and abstraction.
4 A’s in the andragogy advocated by Malcolm Knowles (1984) that proceeds
inductively
§ activity
§ analysis
§ abstraction
§ application
REFLECTION
In the future,
I hope I can improve on what was done that did not allow my students to fully
succeed in this unit. I have learned from experience that it is very important
to have an effective classroom management plan from the first day of school. It
must be followed by every student and it must be practiced daily. I have
provided some effective classroom management procedures in the Classroom
Management section.
I have also
learned when to take the time to make modifications for students or even an
entire class even if it is more work on me. It does not benefit anyone if the
students do poor on the test because the teacher did not take the proper time
and effort to prepare lessons to meet their needs. I will take the time to read
with the students in class or to use the companion CD-ROM with the textbook so
the students are able to get a sense of understanding of the material. I will
also spend more than one day before the test reviewing with these students. It
will take them more time than the advanced students and it will help me see
what else I need to emphasize for them.
Thank you po Ma’am for your input.
ReplyDeleteGod bless and stay safe!