This MYP unit planner outlines an 8-week unit on discrimination for Year 8 students. The unit will focus on how discrimination can be overcome through studying the environments area of interaction. Students will respond to the unit question "How do we overcome discrimination?" through an exam consisting of a text response essay and reading comprehension on the films Rabbit Proof Fence and Persepolis. Students will develop skills in film analysis, visual text analysis, and expository essay writing. Teaching strategies will include lectures, discussions, group work and teacher conferences, with formative assessments and rubrics provided. Resources will include the films, essay structure handouts, and contextual readings.
This module, part of the NYU Partnership for Teacher Excellence Curriculum Development Project, offers methods and strategies for math and science teachers to adapt their teaching to better serve ELL students in their classes.
Literacy Based Intervention: From Theory to PracticeBilinguistics
Identify research regarding literacy-based intervention, design literacy-based intervention to address a variety of goals, and create a literacy-based intervention kit
NYU's Partnership for Teacher Excellence Curriculum Development Project created this module to offer strategies and methods for content area teachers to better serve ELL students within their classrooms.
The presenters elaborated on the effectiveness of teaching with thematic units, and of making connections with other disciplines such as art, science, social studies, and physical education. Two real-world examples — Chinese ceramic art and silk-making — were presented; one is for K-8 while the other is at the college level.
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This module, part of the NYU Partnership for Teacher Excellence Curriculum Development Project, offers methods and strategies for math and science teachers to adapt their teaching to better serve ELL students in their classes.
Literacy Based Intervention: From Theory to PracticeBilinguistics
Identify research regarding literacy-based intervention, design literacy-based intervention to address a variety of goals, and create a literacy-based intervention kit
NYU's Partnership for Teacher Excellence Curriculum Development Project created this module to offer strategies and methods for content area teachers to better serve ELL students within their classrooms.
The presenters elaborated on the effectiveness of teaching with thematic units, and of making connections with other disciplines such as art, science, social studies, and physical education. Two real-world examples — Chinese ceramic art and silk-making — were presented; one is for K-8 while the other is at the college level.
If you happen to like this powerpoint, you may contact me at flippedchannel@gmail.com
I offer some educational services like:
-powerpoint presentation maker
-grammarian
-content creator
-layout designer
Subscribe to our online platforms:
FlippED Channel (Youtube)
http://bit.ly/FlippEDChannel
LET in the NET (facebook)
http://bit.ly/LETndNET
A presentation given at the collaborative conference of the Open Courseware consortium and the Support Centre for Open Resources in Education. Cambridge 2012: Innovation and Impact - Openly Collaborating to Enhance Education (16-18 April)
1. MYP unit planner
Unit title Discrimination
Teacher(s) Lachlan Pye
Subject and grade level Year 8 LB
Time frame and duration 8 weeks * 5 periods
Stage 1: Integrate significant concept, area of interaction and
unit question
Area of interaction focus Significant concept(s)
Which area of interaction will be our focus? What are the big ideas? What do we want our
Why have we chosen this? students to retain for years into the future?
Environments Discrimination can be overecome
MYP unit question
How do we overcome discrimination?
Assessment
What task(s) will allow students the opportunity to respond to the unit question?
What will constitute acceptable evidence of understanding? How will students show what they have understood?
Exam – Text response Essay and Reading Comprehension
Essay
Which specific MYP objectives will be addressed during this unit?
• communicate information, ideas and opinions
• demonstrate comprehension of specific factual information and attitudes, expressed in spoken and
written contexts
• identify main ideas and supporting details and draw conclusions from spoken and written texts
• understand and appropriately use structures and vocabulary
Which MYP assessment criteria will be used?
C,D,E
2. Stage 2: Backward planning: from the assessment to the
learning activities through inquiry
Content
What knowledge and/or skills (from the course overview) are going to be used to enable the student to respond to the unit
question?
What (if any) state, provincial, district, or local standards/skills are to be addressed? How can they be unpacked to develop the
significant concept(s) for stage 1?
Film analysis
Visual text analysis
Essay writing
Structures necessary for exposition writing
Vocabulary acquisition
Cinematic metalanguage
Approaches to learning
How will this unit contribute to the overall development of subject-specific and general approaches to learning skills?
Learning experiences Teaching strategies
How will we use formative assessment to give students feedback
How will students know what is expected of them? Will during the unit?
they see examples, rubrics, templates?
What different teaching methodologies will we employ?
How will students acquire the knowledge and practise
the skills required? How will they practise applying How are we differentiating teaching and learning for all? How have
these? we made provision for those learning in a language other than their
mother tongue? How have we considered those with special
Do the students have enough prior knowledge? How will educational needs?
we know?
1.Rabbit Proof Fence context
2. Viewing of the movie Formative assessments will be provided rubrics. As well
anecdotal comments will be written on student work.
3. Analysis of directorial intention and
positioning of audience If it is an oral assignment written comment s will be
handed back to the student.
4. Essay Structure
Many different teaching methodologies will be
5. Exam
employed: lecture, class discussion, pair and share,
6. Iranian Persepolis context group work, partner work, teacher conferences…
7. Guided reading of Persepolis Assignments are broad enough that each student can
perform at their own level
8. Essay comparing the two texts
3. Resources
What resources are available to us?
How will our classroom environment, local environment and/or the community be used to facilitate students’ experiences during
the unit?
Rabbit Proof Fence
Persepolis
Essay structure and plan handouts
Readings that contextualise the texts
Ongoing reflections and evaluation
In keeping an ongoing record, consider the following questions. There are
further stimulus questions at the end of the “Planning for teaching and learning”
section of MYP: From principles into practice.
Students and teachers
What did we find compelling? Were our disciplinary knowledge/skills challenged in any way?
What inquiries arose during the learning? What, if any, extension activities arose?
How did we reflect—both on the unit and on our own learning?
Which attributes of the learner profile were encouraged through this unit? What opportunities were there for student-initiated
action?
Possible connections
How successful was the collaboration with other teachers within my subject group and from other subject groups?
What interdisciplinary understandings were or could be forged through collaboration with other subjects?
Assessment
Were students able to demonstrate their learning?
How did the assessment tasks allow students to demonstrate the learning objectives identified for this unit? How did I make
sure students were invited to achieve at all levels of the criteria descriptors?
Are we prepared for the next stage?
Data collection
How did we decide on the data to collect? Was it useful?
It was a successful unit. During the unit, the majority of students demonstrated a good deal of progress in
terms of vocabulary acquisition, paragraphing and expository writing. The study of Rabbit Proof Fence
enabled students to consider many of the ways in which films attempt to position an audience. Ideally
Persepolis would be studied by an older cohort, as much of the content is quite adult and it is extremely rich
and deep in ideas.