Plug for dropbox: I could pull up my outline for the year and my daily notebook files on my phone, which made it easy to figure out exactly how many days I spent on each unit this year.
There are topics on there I don't expect to get to this year. There are topics on there I can't imagine getting to next year. Sadly the topics will be dictated in part by the PARCC exam (and the emphasis of the exam may also flip some of the last 3 units because we don't end until late June and exams are in mid-May). Perhaps since the middle school is now focusing on middle school topics rather than Algebra 1, students will arrive with more geometry skills and Law of Sines will be within the realm of possibility. I am trying to keep an open mind, but I enjoyed taking the time to deeply explore those topics in PreCalculus so I really hope PARCC doesn't force it earlier.
There are topics on there I don't expect to get to this year. There are topics on there I can't imagine getting to next year. Sadly the topics will be dictated in part by the PARCC exam (and the emphasis of the exam may also flip some of the last 3 units because we don't end until late June and exams are in mid-May). Perhaps since the middle school is now focusing on middle school topics rather than Algebra 1, students will arrive with more geometry skills and Law of Sines will be within the realm of possibility. I am trying to keep an open mind, but I enjoyed taking the time to deeply explore those topics in PreCalculus so I really hope PARCC doesn't force it earlier.
Time is measured in class periods. We see kids for 90 minutes every other day. 180 day school year, every other day means 90 class meetings, 4 days stolen entirely by testing, 86 days to work with. 3 flex days each semester for review and performance tasks. The time for the unit includes regular assessments and needs to absorb the near constant interruptions of shortened days (every Wednesday next year, state testing, parent conferences...)
Our next step is essential questions and enduring understandings. What do you think are the most important aspects of each unit? Would you reorganize the units to better highlight something we're missing? Share in the comments or the google doc.
Our next step is essential questions and enduring understandings. What do you think are the most important aspects of each unit? Would you reorganize the units to better highlight something we're missing? Share in the comments or the google doc.
For what it's worth, I think you should move polygons (at least area) after trig and right before solids because you need trig into order to find the area of regular polygons. It also seems to flow a little better going from plane area to volume and surface area.
ReplyDeletei forgot to tell you that one of my fundamentals students had an 8th grade shadow today from the middle school and we were doing volume. and the shadow knew more than my students about it sooo possible good sign??
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