5 Components
5 Components
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July 27, 2022
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9 min
ONLINE EXCLUSIVE
PREMIUM RESOURCE
CURRICULUM
2. Deep Thinking
Deep thinking occurs when thinking moves from a general understanding of content
and concepts to the application, extension, and creation of new ideas. A curriculum
that addresses deep thinking will include curriculum-embedded performance
assessments like project-based learning, place-based learning, and service learning.
These all involve multistep, complex tasks that take place over time, involve individual
and group work, and provide opportunities for feedback and revision.
Students use different types of thinking as they progress through these tasks. They
build and refine their knowledge as they work to plan, apply and create, and revise
their work based on additional learning. As they go through this process, students
benefit from classroom lessons that target specific types of thinking. For example,
students might analyze data to determine how people spend their time in the park
using a “Here’s What, So What, Now What” protocol. The thinking demand of the
lesson—analyze—is paired with an appropriate protocol. Students can use the
protocol with any set of data or information (see Figure 1).
When students engage in tasks that allow them to make decisions about their
learning (“What structure would you like to design?”) regarding matters that concern
them (“Who in your community would benefit from your design?”), they are more
likely to engage and persist through the productive struggle necessary for deep
thinking to occur.
SEL includes the skills and strategies for understanding and managing oneself,
appreciating and developing relationships with others, and making responsible
decisions. Often these competencies are taught separate from the core curriculum. In
the Curriculum That Matters Framework, they are integrated into content curriculum
and instruction where they are needed most.
When students become aware of their own learning strategies and recognize
when meaning-making is breaking down...they develop as self-regulated,
independent learners.
Angela Lalor
In curriculum, units of study can be organized around essential questions and big
ideas that examine the SEL competencies. For example, in a high school English
language arts classroom, students could examine an essential question (What makes
a person’s identity?) and a big idea (Students understand that there are many factors
that impact one’s identity and that certain aspects may feel more central to one
person than others) to learn more about self-awareness and social awareness. As
students read texts on identity, they can discuss characters’ identity characteristics
and how those characteristics impact the character’s life—and then make
connections to how their own identity characteristics affect their experiences.
In addition, students develop metacognitive skills when they are routinely asked to
reflect on their learning during daily instruction through questions such as:
When students become aware of their own learning strategies and recognize when
meaning-making is breaking down and what they can do about it, they develop as
self-regulated, independent learners.
4. Civic Engagement
5. Equity
Students are able to answer these questions when they study the contributions of
people of different cultures, races, ethnicities, religions, abilities, sexual orientation,
and gender identities in these fields; when they develop a growth mindset to face
challenges in subjects they may have found difficult or not have identified with in the
past; and when they authentically apply what they are learning to their lives.
In daily instruction, students can also work with texts and resources that include
characters and people of different cultures, races, ethnicities, religions, abilities,
classes, sexual orientation, and gender identities—and that are written by authors
from these diverse groups. These materials and related learning activities represent
characters, people, and events in accurate and appropriate cultural and historical
contexts, dispel stereotypes, present multiple points of views, and center the lives
and experiences of historically underrepresented and marginalized peoples (Bryan-
Gooden, 2019).
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Bryan-Gooden, J., Hester, M. & Peoples, L. Q. (2019). Culturally responsive
curriculum scorecard. New York: Metropolitan Center for Research on Equity and the
Transformation of Schools, New York University
•
Style, E. (1996, Fall). Curriculum as window and mirror . Social Science Record,
33(2), 21–28.