Capella University Collaborating and Modeling Best Practices Paper

Capella University Collaborating and Modeling Best Practices Paper

Description

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Instructions

This assessment will be done in two parts. First, you will create four lesson plans that support innovation in educational technology. Then, you will write a narrative that analyzes and evaluates your lesson plans. You will submit both the lesson plans and the narrative as your artifact for assessment. Refer to the scoring guide to ensure that you meet the grading criteria for this assignment.

Preparation

  • Select a technology or set of technologies you would like to propose for implementation in your school to improve teaching and learning. This could mean bringing a new technology into the classroom or utilizing an existing technology in new ways.
  • Select at least six peer-reviewed articles to cite in your assignment.
  • Identify the subject areas or grade levels that you will want to address in your exemplar lessons.
    • Meet with colleagues from these areas to gain a perspective on the needs of teachers and students. In your assessment of student and teacher needs, consider diversity factors such as cultural background, experience level, developmental and readiness levels, and so on.
    • Explore what professional communities say about your chosen technology and its implementation in a school.
  • Consider some of these questions before you begin to craft your exemplar lessons.
    • What subjects and grades are taught in your educational setting?
    • How will you differentiate instruction to address the needs of diverse students?
      • Consider cultural background, developmental and readiness levels, language differences, speed of learning, experiential knowledge, and so on.
    • To what extent and in what specific ways have your collaborations with other educators impacted your design decisions?
    • What information would other decision makers, such as administrators, want to know?
    • How will you show your technology as valuable for teachers?
    • How will you show a variety of integration possibilities for your technology?
    • How can you show that your lesson teaches safe, legal, and ethical use of digital information and technology?
    • What concerns will your fellow teachers raise? How can you address those in your exemplar lessons?
    • How will you balance the need to provide detail so that teachers understand your technology implementation without overwhelming them with too much information?

Part 1: Lesson Plans

Create four exemplar lesson plans that explicitly demonstrate how implementing the technologies you have chosen will look in practice. Your lesson plans should apply across content areas and across grade levels.

  • This will likely require you to engage in professional collaboration with individuals with different areas of expertise. Consider using online professional organizations and social media to further these collaborations.
  • Use the questions above to help guide your content.

The lesson plans do not need to be articulated using Understanding by Design or other formal lesson presentation formats. Rather, you are designing vignettes that provide sufficient information for other teachers and stakeholders to see how your technology could be implemented in a variety of classrooms.

Part 2: Analysis and Evaluation

In a 4–6-page narrative, address the following:

  • Evaluate the impact of your professional collaborations on the design of the lessons.
  • Evaluate how the technology integrated into each lesson plan aligns to both content and technology standards.
  • Explain how each lesson plan will promote the safe, legal, and ethical use of digital information and technology.
  • Analyze how the technology integrated into each lesson plan will support diversity and equity.
    • Think about the variety of student needs that exist within your educational setting. Specifically consider cultural background, developmental and readiness levels, language differences, speed of learning, experiential knowledge, and so on.
    • In your lessons, demonstrate how the technology can be used to meet those needs.
  • Analyze some of the struggles and questions teachers may have in implementing the technology. These concerns may have emerged from your professional collaborations.
    • Address those common concerns within your lessons, demonstrating how the technology can be successfully implemented to meet the needs of diverse learners.
  • Explain how you would use each lesson plan to promote educational innovation to decision makers and other stakeholders, such as parents and community members.