1. PLANNING FOR THE
APPLY AND EVALUATE
LESSON
Understanding Indicators and Analyzing
Instruction
2. Objectives
I can review Presenting Instructional Content
descriptors
I can review Thinking descriptors
I can understand the expectations for the A
and E assignment
3. Materials Needed:
Please print a TAP rubric
Please print a PIC note sheet
Please print a Thinking note sheet
4. Presenting Instructional
Content:
Using the HO of the TAP that you have, look
under the category of 3. Starting at the
descriptor of “support the lesson objectives”,
highlight key words.
Paraphrase each descriptor on the note
sheet.
5. What Does TAP Say About
PIC?
5
Priority TAP
order
Descriptor for Presenting Instructional Content
1 Visuals that establish:
a) the purpose of the lesson,
b) preview of the organization of the lesson
c) include internal summaries of the lesson
2 Examples, illustrations, analogies, and labels for new
concepts
and ideas.
3 Modeling by the teacher to demonstrate his or her
performance expectations.
4 Concise communication
5 Logical sequencing and segmenting all essential
information
6 No irrelevant, confusing or non-essential information
6. YOUR TURN: Prioritize
There are 6 bullets and 3 sub-bullets listed
under Presenting Instructional Content.
Prioritize the bullets based on what you
think are most important.
Be ready to explain your choices.
6
7. MY ANSWERS:
Prioritize
7
Priority TAP
order
Descriptor for Presenting Instructional Content
3-2 1 Visuals that establish:
a) the purpose of the lesson,
b) preview of the organization of the lesson
c) include internal summaries of the lesson
4 2 Examples, illustrations, analogies, and labels for new
concepts and ideas.
2-3 3 Modeling by the teacher to demonstrate his or her
performance expectations.
sympto
m
4 Concise communication
1 5 Logical sequencing and segmenting all essential
information
sympto
m
6 No irrelevant, confusing or non-essential information
8. Modeling
Why is it important for the teacher to model
his/her expectations for students?
How do you plan for effective modeling during
a lesson?
How do students clearly know your
expectations for their assignments and for
what they are to learn?
9. SOME CRITICAL ATTRIBUTES
OF MODELING:
1. Break tasks to be learned into clearly defined
steps or processes that are visually organized
or ordered.
2. Make the steps easy to understand and easy
to see.
3. Align steps to actions and visuals.
9
10. INFORMAL ASSESSMENT: Find the example
that probably includes effective modeling and why
1. Teacher passes out worksheet and goes
over the first problem.
2. Teacher teaches the ‘3 steps’ needed to
solve problems while she solves the
problem.
3. Teacher solves a problem on the overhead
then asks students to solve the next
problem.
11. INFORMAL ASSESSMENT: Find the example
that probably includes effective modeling and why
1. Teacher passes out worksheet and goes
over the first problem.
2. Teacher teaches the ‘3 steps’ needed to
solve problems while she solves the
problem.
3. Teacher solves a problem on the overhead
then asks students to solve the next
problem.
12. Visuals
Visuals are anything seen by students as content:
on the board
on the walls
on the overhead
on the document camera
in a book
what you gesture
what you demonstrate
12
13. Regarding Instruction…..
Telling when used alone, results in 70% recall
three hours later and 10% recall three days
later.
Showing when used alone, results in 72%
recall three hours later, and 20% recall three
days later.
A blend of telling and showing results in 85%
recall three hours later and 65% recall three
days later.
15. What does TAP say about
Thinking?Thinking The teacher thoroughly
teaches two or more types of
thinking:
• analy cal thinking, where students
analyze, compare and contrast, and
evaluate and explain informa on;
• prac cal thinking, where students
use, apply, and implement what they
learn in real-life scenarios;
• crea ve thinking, where students
create, design, imagine, and
suppose; and
• research-based thinking, where
students explore and review a variety
of ideas, models, and solu ons to
problems.
The teacher provides opportuni es
where students:
• generate a variety of ideas and
alterna ves;
• analyze problems from mul ple
perspec ves and
viewpoints; and
• monitor their thinking to ensure
that they understand
what they are learning, are a ending
to cri cal
informa on, and are aware of the
learning strategies
The teacher thoroughly teaches one
type of thinking:
• analy cal thinking, where
students analyze, compare and
contrast, and evaluate and explain
informa on;
• prac cal thinking, where students
use, apply, and implement what
they learn in real-life scenarios;
• crea ve thinking, where students
create, design, imagine, and
suppose; and
• research-based thinking, where
students explore and review a
variety of ideas, models, and
solu ons to problems.
The teacher provides opportuni es
where students:
• generate a variety of ideas and
alterna ves; and
• analyze problems from mul ple
perspec ves and viewpoints.
The teacher implements no
learning experiences that
thoroughly teach any type of
thinking.
The teacher provides no
opportuni es where
students:
• generate a variety of ideas
and alterna ves; or
• analyze problems from
mul ple perspec ves and
viewpoints.
16. The teacher thoroughly teaches
one type of thinking:
Analytical
Practical
Creative
Research
17. What is practical thinking?
use and apply to real life situations
How can we use the ABC punctuation to apply
to real life?
By connecting this activity to REAL reading
and paying attention to punctuation to change
our voices.
18. What is creative thinking?
create, design, imagine and suppose
How can this Graphic Organizer be modified to encourage
creative thinking?
19. What is creative thinking?
create, design, imagine and suppose
Maybe the students will create the layers of the
rain forest through drawing? OR Imagine they
live in the RF. What layer would they live on and
why?
20. What is research based
thinking?
explore and review a variety of ideas, models
and solutions to problems
21. Thinking also says…
The teachers also provides opportunities where
students generate ideas and analyze problems
from multiple perspectives.
22. Modeling for your A and E
lesson:
TEK from Guided Reading lesson:
(B) identify important facts or details in text,
heard or read;
Objective from Guided Reading lesson:
The student will read and identify facts and
details found in their guided reading book.
23. In the guided reading portion, I will:
Question before and after the reading with
What if you had a pet lion? What would this
lion need to survive in Lubbock?
(generating ideas AND multiple perspectives!)
24. After guided reading, we would use our
objective of facts and details to determine:
Big 5/Vocabulary lesson:
Semantic Web of lions (what they look like, where they live, other)
Lives: Looks like:
Other interesting facts:
Here I would be MODELING. Also, I would go back to the objective
(internal summary). This would include a visual AND because we
are working on facts and details my thinking would be RESEARCH!
Finally, because this is together, we are GENERATING IDEAS.
Lions
25. After the vocabulary chart..
Writing:
Write one fact that you learned about
lions/tigers using one of the words from the
index of the book or from the web. Try to
include a detail with this fact.
I could model this first. And again, because I
want them to go to the index or web, we are
researching.
26. Remember:
1. 2 indicators for this A and E assignment.
2. One is Presenting Instructional Content and
the other is Thinking.
3. To get a 3 in PIC, you need to model, provide
internal summaries, and include visuals that
establish the purpose.
4. To get a 3 in Thinking, you need to teach one
type of thinking thoroughly AND analyze from
different perspectives AND generate a variety of
ideas.
27. Why are we doing this A and E
assignment?
“Learning deepens when students (and
teachers!) engage in reading, talking and writing
across many different instructional contexts.”
Fountas and Pinnell, 2007
For more information about the A
and E assignment, please reference
the attachments.
28. Objectives
I can review Presenting Instructional Content
descriptors
I can review Thinking descriptors
I can understand the expectations for the A
and E assignment