Understanding Science Project
Classroom Observation Protocol
Force and Motion 2007-08
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IMPORTANT:
In order to keep teacher’s data confidential, this cover sheet with the teacher’s name will be removed upon receipt by the research staff, leaving only their ID number on the next page of the protocol. This cover sheet will be stored in a locked cabinet, separate from the completed classroom observation protocol.
Enter Site Number and Teacher ID Number here and on the next page.
Site Number:
Teacher ID Number: T
Before Lesson Begins (via email communication with teacher)
Audio Recording? no teacher only teacher and classroom
digital cassette
Video? yes no
Class period and/or time of class:
Topic or topics to be covered:
Placement of class within the force and motion sequence:
Description of the classroom and seating arrangement [draw/describe/take pictures if possible], posters, centers, charts, vocabulary posted, student projects displayed?
Approximate numbers of boys and girls; ethnic diversity of students
During Observation
Introduction to the Lesson
Student grouping: _________________ Start time: ___________
How does teacher begin or introduce the lesson?
What are the students doing?
Does teacher state the purpose of the lesson? yes no
Stated purpose:
Does teacher provide an overview of the lesson? yes no
Does teacher explain how lesson relates to previous lessons? yes no
How does teacher elicit or assess prior knowledge, and how do students share what they know?
Activity/Task Number [take as many activity sheets as needed] ________
Student grouping: _________________ Start time: ___________
Describe science content, nature of activity, artifacts, what students are doing, what teacher is doing, how the lesson is being structured, accommodations of ELs, and examples of interactions if possible.
Materials used
List/describe materials here
Conclusion of Lesson
Student grouping: _________________ Start time: ___________
End time: ____________
How does teacher conclude the lesson?
Do teachers or students summarize or synthesize observations or topics covered in activities?
yes no
How does teacher frame the lesson, or relate it to scientific principles?
Post-observation questions for the teacher (if not in person, then via email)
What were your objectives for today’s lesson?
How did the lesson go? [What went well? What were you less happy with? What do you look for to see if a lesson is working?]
How well do the students seem to understand the force and motion materials and today’s lesson generally?
What do you think the students had difficulty with? What do you think they’ll still have questions about?
Did you adapt the lesson for the ELs in your class in any way?
Check type of curriculum materials and identified ELs if necessary
After Observation
Overall, what were the strengths of the lesson?
Overall, what were the weaknesses of the lesson?
Important things observed not covered in protocol
Exemplars, overall comments on observed
Explicit eliciting of student understanding or prior knowledge:
Structured opportunities for talk:
Collaborative sense-making discussions, students building on each other’s ideas:
Analyzing or interpreting evidence; basing scientific claims on evidence:
Teacher and student statements or questions in response to student errors and questions: [Evaluation, correction, probe, elicit other ideas?]
Modification of activity in response to student difficulties or ideas:
Activities focused on the academic language of science:
Support for the diversity of student language abilities and contributions:
Curriculum: Coherent Scope and Sequencing
Organization of lesson around a coherent set of related science concepts
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Introduces activities and lessons in terms of fundamental concepts. Demonstrates how student observations and thinking relates to larger patterns. Explores the relationships between concepts. Discusses further applications and implications with students. Concludes lessons or activities with references to more general concepts. Students: Understand the scientific purpose of activities. Mention or discuss fundamental concepts. Talk about science while doing. |
Comments:
Opportunities to collect evidence and make sense of patterns
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Designs activities that are exploratory, open-ended, investigations. Gives students opportunities to summarize, compare, and theorize. Asks students to take a position on different explanations being discussed. Solicits or identifies questions that need to be answered to resolve contradictions or disagreements. Students: Collect and report their observations or findings. Are given opportunities to try variations on the same principle and compare. Are asked to hypothesize about their findings, make guesses about scientific principles. Actively work with models and representations, e.g. enacting, building, illustrating. |
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Instruction designed to reach explicit, grade-appropriate learning goals
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Implements instructional activities to pursue explicitly-stated, grade-appropriate learning goals. Relationship of activities to learning goals is clear and explicit. Assesses student understanding, checking if students are achieving learning goals and ready for new materials or activities. Activities within a lesson explore different aspects of the topic and/or build in complexity in order to reach learning goals. Students: Carry out instructions and start activities with minimal delay. Use and refer to concepts and ideas from previous activities and lessons in solving new problems. |
Comments (too challenging? not challenging enough?):
Classroom activities, assignments, and interactions incorporate accurate and precise science content
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Explains science accurately. Explains and uses concepts with precision. Maintains clear distinctions between different concepts and processes. Wall postings and written materials are clear and accurate. Activities and assignments are clear and scientific ideas represented are accurate. |
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Support for student learning of academic science talk
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Uses language that is appropriate for elementary students. Announces clearly defined language objectives, e.g. new science words. Highlights, discusses and reinforces new and familiar science words. Makes regular use of scientific terms in appropriate contexts. Introduces and practice science-specific discourse forms and structures. Discusses and practices a variety of academic literacy skills (analyzing, comparing, summarizing). Cites evidence to support claims, modeling evidence-based reasoning. Coordinates activities that create meaning with activities to practice language (reading, writing, listening, and/or speaking). Students: Use appropriate and precise science vocabulary. Practice and apply science discourse forms. Use discourse forms and vocabulary with increasing precision. |
Comments:
Instruction anticipates and addresses difficulties students at that grade level often encounter
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Poses questions or assigns tasks that target common misconceptions. Poses questions or assigns tasks that create cognitive conflict with misconceptions. Lesson content addresses common misconceptions identified in PD or literature. Students: Have opportunities to discuss misconceptions and reasoning behind errors. |
Common difficulties:
Uses a variety of models, metaphors, and representations to support students’ conceptual understanding
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Employs a range of models or metaphors to explain different aspects of the same concept. Encourages students to create representations that demonstrate their understanding. Discusses the strengths and limitations of particular models or metaphors. Encourages students to create and test models with real data. Students: Use metaphors in their own explanations. Test and create representations and models. Ask questions about models and representations and their limitations. |
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Assessment: Monitor and Diagnose Student Understanding
Eliciting and paying close attention to details of student reasoning and understanding during lesson
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Elicits, probes, and assesses student reasoning. Cites student reasoning, recognizing alternative approaches without immediately evaluating. Recognizes the logic of students’ science ideas even when they contain errors. Compares different student approaches and reasoning, highlighting different aspects of the problem and different student insights. Takes opportunities to observe students and pose probing questions during small group or individual time. Students: Explain their thinking to teacher and to each other. Ask each other about reasoning in group activities. |
Comments:
Activities and questions reveal students’ understanding in depth and detail
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Require students to explain or demonstrate their reasoning during activities and discussions in order to assess their conceptual understanding. Uses assessments as opportunities to explore the logic behind errors. Designs activities to require students to make choices in their approach to problems and to make their choices and reasons explicit. Students: Approach assessments as challenging activities rather than as ‘tests’. |
Comments:
Multiple, varied opportunities to demonstrate understanding and explain thinking
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Provides opportunities for students to demonstrate what they know in multiple ways and formats (showing, telling, drawing, building), including in L1. Differences in styles and abilities are accommodated. Students: Have opportunities to take the role of self- or peer assessors, establishing or discussing criteria, evaluating work, and revising the product based on feedback. |
Comments:
Focus is on reasoning underlying students’ answers, rather than correctness
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Respects and accommodates the variety of correct and incorrect contributions that students make to sense making discussions. Doesn’t immediately evaluate student responses as right or wrong but examines (or asks other students to examine) the means by which the student arrived at the answer. Recognizes the logic of students’ science ideas even when they contain errors. Does not accept explanations with only cursory evidence or attestation, but explores alternative explanations and questions before making initial conclusions. Students: Develop understanding in an ongoing process of understanding—not simply by responding with answers. Present multiple ideas and perspectives, without immediately evaluating each other. |
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Instruction: Adapt Teaching to Support Student Science Learning
Instructional plans modified during instruction to adapt to emergent conditions
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Modifies instructional plans as needed to address factors that emerge in the course of teaching. Will ‘deviate from the script’ based on what arises, using alternate examples, taking up student ideas and exploring misconceptions. Uses alternate activities to address specific misconceptions as they arise. Bases instructional decisions on several considerations including learning goals, students’ prior and current knowledge and difficulties, available classroom resources, as well as strengths and limitations of instructional activities, models, metaphors, and representations. Students: Suggest activities to teacher. Ask complex (how or why) questions of teacher and each other. Express confusion as a conversational opener rather than as an embarrassment, complaint, or problem. |
Comments:
Opportunities for sense-making discussion and reasoning in depth
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Encourages students to work out patterns from the evidence and discuss and compare findings. Provides guidelines and guidance for interaction in inquiry groups, e.g. roles, scaffolding, informal check-ins. Grants intellectual authority to the reasoning process, rather than own status as teacher or that of written materials. Allows questions to develop and solutions to unfold. Students: Take advantage of a variety of opportunities to talk about the science (pairs, groups, whole class). Discuss ideas without expecting or waiting for teacher evaluation after each contribution. Collaborate to work out problems, difficulties, and confusion. Discussion leads to a more general understanding of how and why. Explore real world applications and implications of classroom science. |
Comments:
Adaptation of instruction based on students’ prior and current knowledge and reasoning
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Elicits and assesses student understanding and prior knowledge. Frequently checks for understanding and adapts activities as necessary. Tailors instruction and provides alternatives for different student interests. Students: Make few requests for clarification. Are comfortable sharing what they understand and explaining what is difficult or unclear. Seem to understand what they are supposed to do. Carry out instructions and start activities with minimal delay. |
Comments:
Close attention to student difficulties
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Uses misconceptions as a way to talk about tricky aspects of the science. Encourages students to think about misconceptions and talk about confusing aspects as part of the discussion. Asks probing questions to help make conceptual misconceptions explicit. Students: Confidently ask questions when they are confused, raising difficulties as conversational openers. |
Comments:
Support for student interpretation of evidence, hypothesizing and predicting
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Introduces and discusses investigative questions with students or works with students to generate investigative questions. Solicits predictions and explanations for observed results. Asks students to take a position on different explanations being discussed. Clarifies student positions, assumptions, and beliefs about science. Encourages students to use the language and discourse of the scientific method. Students: Report their observations or findings. Hypothesize about their findings, make guesses about scientific principles. Compare and evaluate models and representations, based on own observations and experiences. Actively work with models and representations, e.g. enacting, building, illustrating. |
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Accessibility of instruction and support for the variety of learners
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Evidence of accomplishment: Teacher: Uses diversity as a resource, incorporating language and culture in activities, active accommodation. Links concepts to students’ linguistic and cultural backgrounds. Uses a variety of techniques to reach all kinds of learners (modeling, visual, hands on activities, demonstrations. Conducts checks for understanding in real time. Consistently provides sufficient wait time for student responses. Students: Active participation by speakers of other languages, equitable participation by all ethnic groups. Respect and attend to each other’s reasoning. Help each other reason and articulate, voluntarily and when directed. |
Comments:
File Type | application/msword |
File Title | A water balloon is thrown straight up and falls straight down as shown |
Author | Room 3 |
Last Modified By | Katrina Ingalls |
File Modified | 2008-01-04 |
File Created | 2008-01-04 |