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Classroom Technology

What Should We Teach? 5 Steps for Keeping Kids on Track This Fall

By Sarah Schwartz 鈥 August 05, 2020 8 min read
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Prepping curriculum during a pandemic doesn鈥檛 require the logistical gymnastics of organizing socially distanced school buildings or designing hybrid schedules. Still, instruction this fall will have to look different, experts say.

And though adjustments to a scope and sequence may feel less dramatic than some of the other changes to school this year, they鈥檙e no less urgent.

Less time in the classroom means instructional leaders will have to streamline curricula, focusing on just the essential standards. And then there鈥檚 the big question of unfinished learning. Some researchers have predicted that learning loss from spring鈥檚 school closures will be much greater than what usually occurs after a normal summer. How can districts make sure students stay on track?

Even if students had little access to instruction in the spring, experts say schools should fight the impulse to go back and reteach whole units from last year.

BRIC ARCHIVE

District and school leaders are confronting difficult, high-stakes decisions as they plan for how to reopen schools amid a global pandemic. Through eight installments, 91制片厂视频 Week journalists explore the big challenges education leaders must address, including running a socially distanced school, rethinking how to get students to and from school, and making up for learning losses. We present a broad spectrum of options endorsed by public health officials, explain strategies that some districts will adopt, and provide estimated costs.

Part 1: The Socially Distanced School Day
Part 2: Scheduling the School Year
Part 3: Tackling the Transportation Problem
Part 4: How to Make Remote Learning Work
Part 5: Teaching and Learning
Full Report: How We Go Back to School

鈥淭here鈥檚 an opportunity cost to time that is not spent moving students forward,鈥 said Emily Freitag, the co-founder and CEO of Instruction Partners, a nonprofit consulting organization that works with districts on teaching and learning. If students who are already struggling start the year in remediation, while students who thrived during the closures are given grade-level work, that widens equity gaps, she said.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 want people to go back and say, 鈥業 have to teach quarter four from last year,鈥 because then those students are going to be farther behind,鈥 said Danielle Neves, the deputy chief of academics for the Tulsa district in Oklahoma.

Now more than ever, schools need to give all students access to grade-level work, experts say. At the same time, they need to create a range of entry points into the curriculum鈥攕caffolds for students, and places where teachers can refresh or reteach concepts from last spring that students need in order to succeed this fall.

How to do this? 91制片厂视频 Week distilled advice from curriculum experts, district leaders, and teachers into this five-step process for getting started:

1. Focus on the most important work of the grade.

Faced with the possibility of rolling school closures or hybrid schedules, students and teachers may have less time together this year than in the past. Daviess County Schools, in Kentucky, is starting the year later than usual, and will have fewer instructional days as a result, said Jana Beth Francis, the assistant superintendent of teaching and learning for the district.

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to change the flow of instruction quite a bit, because any curriculum map that we had that says 鈥楽pend seven days on this unit, 15 days on that unit鈥 has to be revisited and really examined. We鈥檙e going to have to really think about how to be tight with what we鈥檙e teaching,鈥 she said.

To make the best use of limited time, experts suggest streamlining the curriculum to cover only the essential standards. Some state departments have put out lists of these priority standards, while organizations including , the , and have released guides designed to help schools and districts adjust their curricular maps.

These guidelines advise focusing on skills and understandings that are going to be most important to students鈥 future success鈥攁nd prioritizing depth rather than breadth.

For example, the say that 1st graders should learn how to tell time to the hour and the half-hour in math lessons. 鈥淲e鈥檙e probably not going to do that this year,鈥 said Bailey Cato Czupryk, a partner for practices and impact at TNTP.

Getting rid of lessons on analog clocks frees up time to make sure that students have a deep understanding of foundational concepts鈥攍ike adding and subtracting within 20, another 1st grade math standard, Czupryk said.

In English/language arts, this prioritizing looks slightly different, as the standards spiral more. Students develop many of the same reading, writing, and speaking skills in greater complexity and sophistication as they progress through grade levels. It鈥檚 important that students get lots of time to work with complex text, practicing these skills in context rather than in isolated activities or worksheets. This might look like choosing fewer texts for close reading and analysis, so that students can spend more time thinking about, writing about, and discussing the ones that are selected.

There鈥檚 one area where the traditional scope and sequence shouldn鈥檛 be pared down, though: foundational reading skills in the early grades. Research has shown that explicitly teaching students which sounds match up with which letters, in a systematic sequence, is the most effective way to teach them how to decode words. Skipping sounds or skills in the sequence can lead to gaps in students鈥 knowledge that hinder fluent reading.

2. Figure out what students will need to know and be able to do in order to successfully complete grade-level work. Then, identify places where teachers might need guidance on how to revisit these prerequisite skills and content from last spring.

The goal is to deliver 鈥渏ust-in-time鈥 support, equipping students to tackle grade-level content while avoiding re-teaching whole units from the spring.

What might this look like? An example from the Student Achievement Partners guidance demonstrates:

In 7th grade math, students are supposed to learn how to find the area, volume, and surface area of two- and three-dimensional objects. This work builds on concepts that are in the 6th grade standards鈥攗nderstanding how to find the area of polygons and the volume of right rectangular prisms.

A 7th grade teacher would first need to assess whether her students know how to find the area of polygons. If they don鈥檛, she might have to revisit this 6th grade skill as part of her lesson. But that doesn鈥檛 mean that she has to review every single 6th grade math skill before she can start with 7th grade content鈥攕he鈥檚 paying attention to the connections between grades as she goes, so she only has to review when necessary.

In English/language arts, students may need scaffolds to engage with grade-level text. For example, if a 6th grader is having trouble following the main points in a reading, her teacher may need to pre-teach relevant vocabulary or concepts, so students can build background knowledge about an unfamiliar topic.

It鈥檚 easier to plan where students might need just-in-time support if all teachers within a school or a district are using the same, high-quality materials, said Mike Magee, the CEO of Chiefs for Change, a national network of district leaders and state education chiefs. In the spring, he said, these districts were at an advantage. 鈥淎t a minimum, their teachers, their students, and their parents were speaking one language when it came to content,鈥 Magee said.

Some curriculum providers, too, have outlined where teachers should check for students鈥 understanding of previous content, and embed review if necessary.

3. Have teachers play a major role in curriculum mapping for the fall.

Even if schools are using districtwide curricula, teachers are still the people in the school system who are most likely to know what students did or didn鈥檛 get to this past spring, said Robin McClellan, the supervisor of curriculum and instruction for elementary schools in Sullivan County public schools in Blountville, Tenn.

In her district, teachers were paid a stipend to be part of the team streamlining the districtwide curriculum this summer, she said.

Teachers in consecutive grade levels should be having conversations about how content builds, said Dale Winkler, the vice president for school improvement at the Southern Regional 91制片厂视频 Board.

That鈥檚 what teachers did in Daviess County, said Francis. At the end of the school year, the district used the remaining teacher contract days to conduct a 鈥済ap analysis.鈥 Sixth grade teachers, for example, could meet with 7th grade teachers and outline what they didn鈥檛 cover. The 7th grade teachers could then evaluate what of that content would be a necessary 鈥渂uilding block鈥 for the coming year, she said.

In Holmen, Wis., 5th grade teacher Cathy Burge participated in a similar session with the 4th and 6th grade teams at her school, going over the multi-grade map her district鈥檚 instructional leadership created.

Last year鈥檚 4th graders missed their geometry unit, so the teachers talked about setting up a station in the 5th grade classroom this year where students could learn how to use compasses and protractors to measure angles. The skills come up again in middle school, Burge said, 鈥渟o they need to get it.鈥

4. Understand that just-in-time support should be determined by students鈥 needs.

Even with all this planning ahead, teachers won鈥檛 know exactly which students will need what support until they鈥檙e in the (physical or virtual) classroom. For more on how to determine students鈥 prior knowledge, and what this process of formative assessment should look like, see this article in our series.

5. Curriculum and instruction must support students鈥 social-emotional health.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we鈥檙e going to be able to accelerate learning if we don鈥檛 engage kids,鈥 said Cato Czupryk of TNTP. Even 鈥渢he most beautiful scope and sequence鈥 falls short if students don鈥檛 feel safe and supported, she said.

Creating this kind of environment presents special challenges this year, as teachers may have to build relationships and create classroom culture virtually鈥攐r in a socially distanced classroom that doesn鈥檛 allow for the same kind of student collaboration as years past.

Schools should think about developing these relationships as deeply connected to teaching and learning, not as a separate goal, said Freitag of Instruction Partners. In practice, that might mean starting the first day with an exciting, tricky problem that teachers and students can dive into together, rather than a formal diagnostic test, she said.

It also means making space to talk about the realities of students鈥 lives right now, shaped both by the pandemic and the movement for racial justice. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way to engage students authentically right now that doesn鈥檛 include both of those topics,鈥 Freitag said.

Making time for students to have authentic conversations with each other鈥攚hether that鈥檚 through synchronous classes, message boards, or even phone calls with classmates and teachers鈥攊s more important than ever.

鈥淟earning should be fun, and it should be a challenge,鈥 said Francis, of Daviess County. 鈥淎nd if we take away all that time for inquiry, and how you think about something, and how you鈥檙e creating something, and we take away the experiments in science, then we are taking a group of students who have experienced a major trauma, and not reviving their joy of learning.鈥

91制片厂视频 Week spoke to many experts for this story. In alphabetical order, they are: Kenya Bradshaw, vice president for policy and community coalitions, TNTP (New York); Cathy Burge, 5th grade teacher, School District of Holmen (Wisconsin); Bailey Cato Czupryk, partner for practices and impact, TNTP (New York); Jill Diniz, chief academic officer for math, Great Minds (Washington D.C.); Bree Dusseault, practitioner-in-residence, Center on Reinventing Public 91制片厂视频 (Washington); Jana Beth Francis, assistant superintendent of teaching and learning, Daviess County public schools (Kentucky); Emily Freitag, co-founder and CEO, Instruction Partners (Tennessee); Mike Magee, CEO, Chiefs for Change (Washington D.C.); Robin McClellan, supervisor of curriculum and instruction for elementary schools, Sullivan County public schools (Tennessee); Scott Muri, superintendent, Ector County independent school district (Texas); Danielle Neves, deputy chief of academics, Tulsa public schools (Oklahoma); Dale Winkler, vice president for school improvement, Southern Regional 91制片厂视频 Board (Georgia).

Documents: 鈥2020-2021 Priority Instructional Content in ELA/Literacy and Mathematics鈥 (June 2020) Student Achievement Partners; 鈥淎ddressing Unfinished Learning After COVID-19 School Closures鈥 (June 2020) Council of the Great City Schools; 鈥淏road-Based Academic Support for All Students鈥 (July 2020) Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University and Results for America; 鈥淓LA Guidelines for Distance Learning Modules,鈥 Instruction Partners; 鈥淕uidance for Accelerating Student Learning,鈥 Instruction Partners; 鈥淟earning Acceleration Guide: Planning for Acceleration in the 2020-2021 School Year鈥 (April 2020) TNTP; 鈥淩estart and Recovery: Considerations for Teaching and Learning,鈥 Council of Chief State School Officers; 鈥淪ample Pacing Guide for Tier 1 Instruction,鈥 Instruction Partners; 鈥淭he Return: How Should 91制片厂视频 Leaders Prepare for Reentry and Beyond?鈥 (May 2020), Chiefs for Change and the Institute for 91制片厂视频 Policy at the Johns Hopkins School of 91制片厂视频.

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