Interdisciplinary Unit Planning Template
Use this step-by-step planning template when planning a unit of study collaboratively or on your own to effectively teach children and to also meet the MA Evaluation Standards.
You can easily make a copy of this document on a Google doc and share the document with all collaborators so all can add/revise information as identified and developed. Decide on a collaborative process for revision so that individual’s work is protected. Note that it is easy to add or delete table rows and columns if needed.
1. Determine Unite Rationale, Standards, and Title:
Pose the title as a question:
2. Keep a list of materials and resources that will be added to the unit website after the initial planning stage.
3. Use common core, state, and local documents to Identify the standards that you want to embed in the unit design:
4. Discuss and chart how this unit will appeal to students’ interests, passions, and developmental level.
Helpful Resource: Yardsticks by Chip Wood
5. Learning today points to a need for skills thought of as 21st century skills or life long learning skills. These skills prepare students well for the world they will be live in. Discuss ways that the unit will develop these skills in student learners.
.
6. Students respond to learning that is meaningful and relevant, learning that they can connect to and develop with engagement. Also, substantial learning exists when students synthesize and apply their learning as well as teach others. Discuss ways that this unit will have meaning, relevance, engagement, enrichment, connectivity, synthesis, application, and opportunities to present to, teach, and coach others.
7. What skills, concept, and knowledge do you hope students will learn as they engage in this unit. Define the “success criteria” related to this unit. Since most units are presented to a diverse group of learners, educators may want to design the success criteria that responds to three levels including review (meets standards prior to grade level and lays a foundation for grade-level learning), grade-level, and enrichment.
8. How will you know what students know before starting this unit study? How will you incorporate this information into the unit design and execution.
Unit Pre-Assessment Design, Analysis, and Use.
9. Design the overall roll-out of the unit in general with a step-by-step unit map.
(Leave space in the unit design for student choice and voice whenever possible)
10. Create a Unit Website that includes the following:
I like to use Google Sites, but there are multiple website tools available. Here’s an example of a unit website.
Unit Title
Unit Rationale: (research, student interest/passion, developmental appropriateness)
Unit Standards
Success Criteria
Plan (the schedule of learning experiences and expectations)
Resources
Enrichment (Extras)
11. Design unit specifically using this lesson design template for each lesson or group of lessons, activities, and events. Add specific lesson information to website as desired.
Consider students’ ages, unit depth and breadth and desired effect when making the decisions about what specific lesson information and links to add the website.
What website information will support students’, colleagues’, and families’ learning review, efforts, enrichment, and celebration?
Note that lesson design today can be considered lesson choreography. See related links: http://teachwellnow.blogspot.com/2013/02/todays-lesson-plan-ma-educator.html , http://teachwellnow.blogspot.com/2011/11/lesson-choreography.html
12. Review unit design, website, lesson plans.
13. Collect necessary materials and adapt learning space design to meet unit requirements.
14. Share the unit plans and website with the learning community: students, families, educators, leaders.
15. Execute unit roll out.
16. Analyze summative assessment and unit execution. Make decisions about unit revision and growth related to future us.