Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Massachusetts Model Curriculum Units and the Middleborough Public Schools Secondary Humanities Curriculum Redesign

“As part of a Race to the Top Grant, the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (ESE) developed over 100 Model Curriculum Units (MCUs.) These units are intended to help educators with implementation of the Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks.  These MCUs were created by teams of teachers from across the Commonwealth with guidance and support from ESE curriculum and content specialist. All MCUs use the Understanding by Design process developed by Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe.  Massachusetts’ educators are encouraged to adopt the units as they are, adapt the units to meet their curriculum needs, and/or use the units as models for developing their own curriculum units.”  (Source: http://www.doe.mass.edu/candi/model/)

All of the Model Curriculum Units that have been developed through Race to the Top Grant funds are currently available for viewing and download as a Word document or PDF from the MA DESE website at: http://www.doe.mass.edu/candi/model/download_form.aspx Eventually the MCUs will no longer be available on the website, so it is recommended that you save any that you might want to reference or use in the future. 
The Middleborough Public Schools Secondary Humanities teachers began working to design units of study using the Understanding by Design curriculum unit template.  The work began in 2012-2013 when ELA and Social Studies teachers worked with Mary Ellen Caesar and Fine Arts teachers worked with Lurline Bennett-Munoz to become familiar with the MA Model Curriculum units that were available at the time.  Throughout the 2013-2014 school year, ELA and HSS teachers worked to design Stage 1 of UbD curriculum units that are aligned with the 2011 Massachusetts ELA Curriculum Framework, the Common Core State Standard for Literacy, and the PARCC ELA/Literacy Framework.  Fine Arts teachers worked to incorporate the MA Literacy Standards into their curriculum.  All teachers referenced the Model Curriculum Units that were available, but there were limited numbers at that time.  

The MPS Humanities teachers are currently working with the Massachusetts MCUs in their own classrooms.  Middleborough High School English Teachers are piloting four of the Model Curriculum Units: Nostalgia, Hamlet & Psychological Criticism, Satire: The Nose, and The Art of Persuasion and the Craft of Argument.  Nichols Middle School was awarded the Building Aligned Curriculum Grant.  English Language Arts and History Social Studies teachers in grades 6, 7, and 8 will use one of the Model Curriculum Units and provide feedback for the ESE about what refinements they made, which parts of the unit worked well, which parts were not useful, and suggest changes to the MCUs based on their own classroom data.  Teachers-Leaders will attend three workshops that center on the Model Curriculum Units and the work their districts are doing with them.  The Teacher-Leaders will share their work and expertise with the NMS Humanities teachers during department and Professional Learning Community Time.  The proposed MCUs that will be implemented at Nichols Middle School include Travels with Charley (refined), Starting Complex Text Mini-Unit, Research to Make a Point, Geography: The Countries of South America, and Ancient Roman Technology: Footsteps to the Future.

For more information visit the Massachusetts DESE Curriculum and Instruction page at http://www.doe.mass.edu/candi/model/ the page includes Testimonials, access to the Model Curriculum Units, MCU Videos, an interactive guide to creating MCUs, MCU resources from past presentations and workshops, MCU Quality Review Rubrics, MCU Templates, FAQs, Massachusetts Transfer Goals, and Model Curriculum Maps.  The page is comprehensive and the resources are easy to access and useful.  It is always helpful to have examples and samples as we are working on the redesign of our curriculum.  Although the Model Curriculum Units were not designed to be a school district’s curriculum, the units are comprehensive and offer a lot of options that can be refined to meet our needs as part of the Middleborough School district and preparing our students for college and career in the 21st Century. 

Saying good-bye to 2014...

As we approach the end of 2014, it is a time for us to reflect on where we have been this last year, and where we are going in 2015 with our professional learning.  The Secondary Humanities Team worked with Teachers 21 and began the design of Stage 1 of our curriculum units for English, Foreign Language, Music, Social Studies, Theater, and Visual Arts for the first few months of 2014.  Since August, our Humanities Team has been working on three main focus areas or strands for our Professional Development throughout the 2014-2015 school year: Common Formative Assessment, Data, and Performance Assessments of Stage 2 as well as revising Stage 1.  Training and implementation support in each area has been provided by Deb Merriam from Teachers21, department leaders, teacher leaders, Principals, the Humanities Director and the Director of Curriculum and Instruction.  Each educator selected a primary focus area of interest in August and in December will reflect on our professional learning thus far.  Each teacher will have the opportunity to choose another primary focus area of interest based on individual needs, interests, and readiness or we could continue to work in the area that we chose to delve deeper into the topic.  Teachers have worked hard throughout 2014 to grow as teachers and as learners, which is evident throughout our Professional Learning Communities and our classrooms.  Enjoy your holiday break.  Take time to reflect on the work that you have done on behalf of our students and how much you have grown as an educator in the past 12 months.  In January, we will chart the next steps of our professional learning as we continue to move our students closer to college and career readiness.  Thank you for all your work and commitment, and Happy New Year!

#MassCUE2014

MassCUE is the Massachusetts Computer Using Educators.  Their fall TECHNOLOGY conference is HUGE!  It happens every year at Gillette Stadium-this year is October 22nd and 23rd.  There are vendors EVERYWHERE, sessions that happen in box seats, common areas, and conference rooms.  Any and all technology topics are included, and the worst part of the day is trying to decide where to go because there are so many great choices and so many members of the Tech PLC presenting!  The keynote speaker on day 1 this year is the CEO of Life is Good, which sounds really great!  You can check out the MassCUE/M.A.S.S. Fall Tech Conference Website at http://www.masscue.org/pages/MassCUE/Conferences/2014_MassCUE_M_A_S_S_fall_conf

Fun Fact: There is more bandwith use at the MassCUE conference in one day than on Patriots' Game Day with a sold-out crowd and the COMPLETE press corps working!



More to come on Wednesday when I finally do decide which sessions to attend!...

Office of Curriculum and Instruction Newsletter February 2015





Office of Curriculum and Instruction Newsletter January 2015








Office of Curriculum and Instruction Newsletter December 2014






Office of Curriculum and Instruction Newsletter November 2014