wednesday, april 24 th, 2013 st. basil-the-great math and english catherine moynihan tobin walsh...

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Wednesday, April 24 th , 2013 St. Basil-the-Great Math and English Catherine Moynihan Tobin Walsh Vince Bellissimo CONTEXTUALIZED LEARNING ACTIVITIES

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Wednesday, April 24 th, 2013St. Basil-the-GreatMath and English

Catherine MoynihanTobin WalshVince Bellissimo

CONTEXTUALIZED

LEARNING ACTIVITIES

In a world which ignores the human thirst for God…we are called to share the living waters of faith.

In a time when there is little reverence for the image of God in the human person…we are summoned to care for human life with ultimate respect.

In a culture where communication is increasingly commercialized…we are invited to prayer and worship.

In a world marked by personality cults…we are called to bear witness to Jesus Christ, our Saviour and Lord and to reverence Him in the poor, the lowly and the marginalized.

In a time which often seems to be without goals or ennobling aspirations…we are called to declare goals and values to dedicate lives to their achievement.  ~Amen

PRAYER OF RESPONSE

Welcome; IntroductionsThe role of CLAs within an SHSM program“Other required courses” in your SHSM programActivity #1: Sector-Related Skills & Careers BreakActivity #2: Creating CLAs Using Existing

LessonsLunchActivity #3: Use of the OERBIntroduction to the CLA Writing GuideWrap-up: Evaluation

AGENDA

Halton District School Board and Halton Catholic District School Board collaborated on the development of this definition so all teachers would have a common understanding of Contextualized Learning:

Contextualized Learning is an instructional approach that helps to relate curriculum content to real world situations.

It incorporates a learning process that helps students to make sense of information by connecting what they are learning to real world situations in which that learning could be used.

It enables students to receive feedback on their ability to relate and apply their learning to real world situations.

DEFINING CONTEXTUALIZED LEARNING

A required element of a Specialist High Skills MajorDelivered in the “other required courses” A minimum of 6 hours of learning that

contextualizes the subjects’ curriculum expectations to the SHSM sector

Health and Wellness – MBF 3CGraphing the relationship between population

growth and infectious diseasesArts and Culture– ENG 4U

The mask of tragedy through ritual: a deconstruction of Act IV, Scene I of Shakespeare’s Macbeth

CONTEXTUALIZED LEARNING ACTIVITIES

The “other required courses” vary from sector to sector, typically there are 3 other required courses:

MathEnglishOther Required in either grade 11 or grade 12 (i.e. Business, Science, Social Science & Humanities)

Refer to the sector guide (www.ontario.ca/SHSM or SHSM binder) to determine which grade level each of the other required courses are in (example on next slide)

OTHER REQUIRED COURSES

OTHER REQUIRED COURSESEXAMPLE

Class list (but not on attendance sheet!) i.e. BUS beside a student’s name indicates they

are in a Business SHSM program

Credit Counselling Summary – two pages for SHSM students

Possible absences due to certifications, reach ahead and experiential learning opportunities

HOW DO I IDENTIFY AN SHSM STUDENT IN MY CLASS?

CLAs enable instruction to be differentiated using sector-specific content, to meet one or more curriculum expectations.

CLAs in the other required credits make the course content authentic, relevant, and enable students to connect their learning to their SHSM sector.

HOW DO CLAS BENEFIT STUDENTS?

There are a variety of delivery models, including:

To an entire class, some of which are SHSM students (recommended – necessary for some, good for all)

To an entire class, all of which are SHSM students

To individual or small groups of SHSM students within an existing class

To individual SHSM students, through e-learning or independent study.

HOW ARE CLAS DELIVERED?

…they must be evaluated …they need to be a big project …if you fail the CLA you fail the course …you must do the CLA exactly as it was written …you cannot use a CLA unless it was “approved” …must use expectations from the SHSM major credit

courses …it must be from the OERB …can only be done by the SHSM students …I cannot make up my own CLA …I have to make up my own CLA …are “extra” work the SHSM kids have to do

CLA MYTHS…

Using www.ontario.ca/SHSM, or the hard copies provided, read through the SHSM policy guide for your sector Determine the grade level of the “other required courses” in

your SHSM Examine the list of possible occupations related to your SHSM

sector

Using the Ontario Skills Passport , www.ontario.ca/skillspassport, look up one of the possible occupations listed in the SHSM policy guide

Select a course in your subject area of expertise and use http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/curriculum/secondary/ to skim through the curriculum expectations for that course

Using the documents you’ve examined, complete Activity #1

ACTIVITY #1

ACTIVITY #1 EXAMPLE

BREAK!

Using an existing lesson, culminating task, independent study unit, or other activity, how could you tweak an assignment in order to contextualize it for your SHSM students?

English CLA’s Made EASYMathematics CLA’s Made EASY

CLA Authenticity Checklist

ACTIVITY #2

LUNCH!

As of May 2012, there were 1329 CLAs posted to the OERB

http://resources.elearningontario.caUser id: tcdsbteacherPassword: oerbt

ONTARIO EDUCATIONAL RESOURCE BANK (OERB)

OERB Exploration and Independent Inquiry

http://resources.elearningontario.caUser id: tcdsbteacherPassword: oerbt

ACTIVITY #3

MOE CLA Writing Guide is availablewww.ontario.ca/SHSM CLA Templatewww.ontario.ca/SHSM Rubric for Exemplary

CLAs

INTERESTED IN WRITING A CLA?

Was introduced by the Ministry in JanuarySHSM lead teachers and other SHSM team

members completed the following questionnaire in March:

1. Using the Ministry-created rubric, what level of CLA implementation is your school at?

2. What is going well?

3. What will you do differently this semester to improve CLA implementation at your school?

MINISTRY CLA REPORT: INTERIM

Level Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Level 4

Criteria The CLA Is viewed as an "over and above" activity so both the students and the teachers see it as extra work.

Teacher prints CLAs from OERB and they are assigned as homework/independent work. Often the student doesn't see connection with their "in-school" assignments and their interest in the sector

The CLAs are delivered, but very little collaboration between major subject teachers and other required subject teachers to ensure authenticity of the activity, student begins to see connection with subject and sector.

Contextualized instruction is embedded so students see the connection in English, Math, Science, etc. to their sector. Teachers see this as part of Differentiated Instruction and not something “over and above” from what is already occurring as part of good teaching practice.

CLA MINISTRY REPORT RUBRIC

A follow-up from the Interim CLA Report

Will be completed in June by the lead teacher and/or other members of each SHSM team

1. What level of CLA implementation is your school at now? (using the same rubric from the Interim CLA Report)

2. Identify one or two key strategies that helped improve CLA implementation at your school.

MINISTRY CLA REPORT: FINAL

On a Post-it note, jot down a couple of points to respond to the following question:

Identify one or two key strategies that will help your school SHSM program in implementing CLAs into the curriculum.

WRAP-UP ACTIVITY

Before you leave, please complete the

CLA Professional Learning Evaluation included in your package

Don’t forget to pick up your SHSM mug and memory stick as you

leave!

IN-SERVICE EVALUATION

Catherine Moynihan [email protected]

416.222.8282 x2739

Tobin Walsh [email protected] x2731

Vince [email protected]

416.222.8282 x2735

CONTACT INFORMATION