====== THE DIFFERENTIATED CURRICULUM MODEL ====== A curriculum model and program for diverse learners living in local communities in a rapidly changing world. **Pam Hook and Julie Mills** with - Paula Hancock and Helen McGrath (Waikowhai Primary School), Emma Watts (Tahunanui School,Nelson), Mike Boon (Maungawhau Primary School), Christina Edwards (English Department Rutherford College), Emma Watts and Melissa Julian (Edendale School, Auckland), Carol Rowe-Mitchell Totara Team and students (Vauxhall School Devonport), Amy Roworth and Sue Roberts (Vauxhall School Devonport), Belinda Bennett (Glen Eden Intermediate School, West Auckland) Cate Green (Glen Eden Intermediate School, West Auckland) Rachel Saxton and Georgina (George)Barrett (Lincoln High School), Edith Cross (Meadowbank Primary School), Catherine Kelsey (Stanley Bay School), Jennie Adlam, Zara Jackson, Taryn Monks and Shelley Quinlivan (Epsom Normal Primary School). Onehunga Primary School teachers, Newmarket Primary School teachers, St Leos School teachers, Balmoral School teachers, Janet Yelas (St Mary's School), Jason Irvine (Wainui Primary School), Craig Perry and students at (Social Sciences Department Lincoln High School, Stephanie Eliot (Waikowhai Intermediate School), Fiona Bamford (Languages Department Lincoln High School), Lindsay McPherson (Blockhouse Bay Intermediate School), Adele Griffin (Blockhouse Bay Intermediate School), Tamsyn Chan (Blockhouse Bay Intermediate School), Kim Vaigalu (Blockhouse Bay Intermediate School), Matt Brunton (Blockhouse Bay Intermediate School), Murray Piper (Blockhouse Bay Intermediate School), Christina Pinny (Meadowbank Primary School), Cheryl Davies Crook (Halsey Drive School), Lucy Naylor and Jenny Armitage (Belmont Intermediate School, Devonport), Margaret Palmer and teachers from Waterlea School, Peta Lindstrom and Jane McKay (Our Lady Star of the Sea), Faber Edwards (student) (Rutherford College), Namrata Ghadiyar (Onehunga Primary School), Gareth Cunliffe (Otonga School, Rotorua), Nadine McLaughlin (Otonga School Rotorua), Lorraine Taylor (Mamaku School Rotorua), Peter Brailsford (Unlimited Paenga Tawhiti), Lorraine Sauvarin (Halsey Drive School), teachers from Stanhope Road School, Edith Cross (Meadowbank Primary School), Lida Mansilla (Jean Batten Primary School) . - //insert names of contributing schools and teachers here// ===== Abstract: ===== This article describes a responsive curriculum model designed to discover and develop the potential of all learners, including gifted and talented learners. The Differentiated Curriculum Model is built upon a framework of “learning to learn”, knowledge building for identified local and community needs, differentiating student learning outcomes, teacher and/or student implementation and alignment with The New Zealand Curriculum. It focuses on the complexity of student learning outcomes through a common language of learning, and coding of learning experience against the Structure of Observed Learning Outcomes (SOLO Taxonomy). The curriculum model has been translated into programs for learning and knowledge building in inclusive classrooms in schools over the past three years. The authors include screenshots from a beta version of the curriculum model built using C# language and the Microsoft .NET Framework. The article concludes by highlighting the need for longitudinal studies to assess the effectiveness and influence of 21st century curriculum models on learners and their local communities. ===== Tags: ===== Differentiated Curriculum Model, The New Zealand Curriculum, SOLO Taxonomy, John Biggs, knowledge building, teaching, learning, Hooked-on-Thinking,constructive alignment, planning, assessment, thinking skills, ict, HOT Maps, self-assessment rubrics ===== Introduction ===== An effective 21st century curriculum must be responsive to the learning needs of diverse students living in local communities in a rapidly changing world. The Differentiated Curriculum Model and program is designed to discover and develop the knowledge building potential and domain expertise of all students. The flexibility of the model allows it to be used to meet the learning needs of diverse learners including identified and emerging gifted and talented learners. The model is built upon a framework of the principle “learning to learn”, knowledge building for identified local and community needs, differentiating student learning outcomes, teacher and/or student implementation and alignment with the New Zealand Curriculum. The Differentiated Curriculum Model meets Van Tassel-Baska and Brown’s operational definition of a curriculum model in gifted education, in that it is a framework for curriculum design and development, transferable and usable in all learning areas of the New Zealand Curriculum, applicable across all age groups from pre-school to upper secondary school, applicable across schools and group settings, and incorporates differentiated features for the gifted and talented learner (Van Tassel-Baska and Brown 2007). In addition, the elements of the Differentiated Curriculum Model are purposely designed to support inclusive classroom environments through flexible approaches to providing cognitive challenge when differentiating learning outcomes. When learning communities are achievement oriented, differentiation means that even the needs of gifted and talented students can be met in “inclusive and cohesive learning communities” (Riley, Bevan-Brown, Bicknell, Carrol-Lind, & Kearney 2005, p31). Our experience shows the Differentiated Curriculum Model to be both responsive and effective in primary, intermediate and secondary school settings. It is easily translated by teachers and students into practical programs where there is clear alignment between the model and the learning experiences. Furthermore, programs based upon the model have been easily implemented, allowing teachers to keep a sense of purpose and a sense of humour in inclusive classroom environments. The Differentiated Curriculum Model values Wiske’s framework for the logic of “teaching for understanding” rather than “teaching for knowing” (Wiske 1998), knowledge building through identifying local and community needs (Bigum 2004), and integrates the Structure of Observed Learning Outcomes (the SOLO Taxonomy) (Biggs and Collis 1982). Designing a curriculum model that values Wiske’s framework encourages the introduction of design elements that explore the following questions: - What is worthy of understanding? - What should students know, understand, and be able to do? - How can we enhance understanding? - How can we determine what students understand? The integration of the SOLO Taxonomy throughout the curriculum model helps schools and teachers evaluate the effectiveness of the curriculum model and program on enhancing student learning outcomes in knowledge building. A beta version of the Differentiated Curriculum Model is being trialled with teachers and students in New Zealand schools. The digital curriculum model and program planner has been developed using C# language and the Microsoft .NET Framework. It includes the design elements described below and digitised HOT language of learning maps and self-assessment rubrics. ===== A Common Language of Learning ===== The Differentiated Curriculum Model uses SOLO Taxonomy to create a common language of learning when knowledge building. SOLO Taxonomy provides criteria for assessing the cognitive complexity of students’ understanding when mastering new learning. SOLO is content independent and thus is useful as a generic measure of understanding across different disciplines. Teachers using SOLO criteria can validly and reliably identify ascending cognitive complexity in individual and collective student learning outcomes. For example, the asTTLE assessment tool for teaching and learning used in New Zealand schools is based upon SOLO taxonomy. We use SOLO with teachers and students in both secondary and primary schools to identify the cognitive complexity of a student’s understanding and from this determine their future learning needs. We believe that SOLO can play a pivotal role in teacher and student design of cognitively differentiated learning environments and experiences. SOLO describes five levels of student understanding when encountering new learning. At the prestructural level of understanding, the task is inappropriately attacked, and the student has missed the point. At the unistructural level, one aspect of the task is picked up, and student understanding is disconnected and limited. At the multistructural level, several aspects of the task are known but their relationships to each other and the whole are missed. At the relational level, the aspects are integrated, and contribute to a coherent understanding of the whole. At the extended abstract level, the new understanding at the relational level is re-thought at another level, and used as the basis for prediction, generalisation, reflection, or creation of new understanding. SOLO provides a simple systematic way of describing how a learner's performance grows in complexity when mastering any academic task (Biggs 1999, p37). It can be used by educators and students to define curriculum achievement objectives, learning intentions and learning experiences that describe different levels of cognitive complexity, and for evaluating individual and collective student learning outcomes. So with SOLO it is possible for teacher and student to determine the cognitive complexity of individual student understanding and where to target the differentiation of new learning experiences and learning intervention. SOLO has several advantages over the Bloom’s cognitive taxonomy (Bloom 1965), the traditional taxonomy for differentiating learning experiences for cognitive complexity. One advantage is that SOLO is a theory about teaching and learning rather than a theory about knowledge. A second advantage lies in SOLO’s facility in enabling both student and educator to understand and evaluate learning experiences and learning outcomes in terms of ascending cognitive complexity (Hattie and Brown 2004). Thus, if SOLO is used to design the learning experience and its assessment, then it is possible to design the follow up learning experience at an appropriate level of cognitive complexity in order to challenge yet not overwhelm. In the Differentiated Curriculum Model we used SOLO Taxonomy to develop a language of learning through visual mapping. We identified the language of learning most commonly used in New Zealand schools by analysing the task descriptors used in Level One NCEA papers. The most commonly occurring terms were developed into the HOT Language of Learning Maps, ten visual maps coded against student learning outcomes in SOLO Taxonomy, with associated SOLO coded self-assessment rubrics (refer Making Learning Visible: HOT Maps and SOLO Taxonomy Slideshow and Table 1).
{{:table_1_496_x_600_.jpg|}} These HOT Language of Learning maps help students understand the process of (or how to) define, describe, sequence, classify, compare and contrast, causal explanation, part whole analysis, analogy, generalise, predict and evaluate. These maps make the language of learning visible to students whether they are five years old or eighteen years old. For example, the HOT Define Map and self-assessment rubric, in Figure 1, is at SOLO Multistructural level because the process of definition requires students to bring in relevant ideas. The student definition statement formed from the map can itself be coded against SOLO Taxonomy. Definition asks students to sort for relevance and they can do this by listing (SOLO multistructural learning outcome), listing and linking ideas (SOLO relational learning outcome), and by listing, linking and looking at the linked ideas in another way, (SOLO extended abstract learning outcome). {{:figure_1_413_x_600_.jpg|}} Identifying the cognitive complexity of the learning experience means that teachers can also support the desired learning outcome with specific learning interventions. Thinking interventions can be targeted at different SOLO Taxonomy coded learning outcomes. Examples of SOLO relational level thinking interventions include: * Mindmaps, Tree Diagrams, Concept maps, Venn diagrams, Double Bubble maps, Matrix diagrams, Force Field Analysis, SWOT analysis, Bridge maps, Continuum lines, Priorities grids, Ranking order, Time lines, Flow charts, Cycles, Story boards, GANTT charts, De Bono’s yellow and black hats, and CoRT thinking Plus, Minus and Interesting. Compare Contrast maps, Classify maps, Part-whole maps, Sequence maps, Cause effect maps, Analogy maps. In a similar way ICT learning interventions can be aligned with different SOLO Taxonomy coded learning outcomes at an application level or in the way that individual ICT applications are used. Examples of SOLO relational level ICT interventions include: sequencing with MS Photostory 3 and online collaborative timelines like XTimeline, classifying, comparison, causal explanation and analogy which can be supported through concept mapping, graphic organisers, Viewzi (The Timeline visual search engine), CenSEARCH (Censorship search tool comparing search results for topics in different countries), Grokker (search engine that clusters/links related information), Quintura (Visual Search Engine that clusters/classifies/groups and links related topics), Kids Quintura (Visual Search Engine for kids that clusters and links information), simulations, domain specific modelling software, microworlds and spreadsheets. [[Link here]] to learn about teachers' experiences when developing a common language of learning and their students reaction. ===== Key Design Elements ===== The Differentiated Curriculum Model is designed to align with the New Zealand Curriculum vision of “young people who will be confident, connected, actively involved, lifelong learners.” (The New Zealand Curriculum, p7) (refer Appendix 1). To help young people to become “confident, connected, actively involved, lifelong learners”, the Differentiated Curriculum Model puts the learner at the centre of teaching and learning. The model is designed to respect individual abilities and interests, encourage the individual to identify their own learning needs with support from the institution, and connect students with their local community. This is achieved in practice through flexible provision where content, process, product and learning environment are supported by the educational system but can be determined by the learner. Thus, the Differentiated Curriculum Model program can be used by the teacher and by the student to plan learning experiences and learning interventions that encourage students to become knowledge builders, and to contribute knowledge to their local communities rather than merely to gather knowledge (Bigum 2004). The Differentiated Curriculum Model planning framework makes learning explicit. It is designed to be available online and on classroom walls so that students, their families and the local community can see what they are learning, why they are learning, and how this knowledge building activity aligns to the New Zealand Curriculum. From the ability of schools and communities to identify authentic contexts for learning about concepts, to the differentiation of learning experiences against student learning outcomes (SOLO Taxonomy), all elements in the model enhance the responsiveness to the learner. A model predicated on responsiveness to the learner by default builds a student sense of self efficacy and engagement in learning. Engagement develops when students see a task as something to be mastered, and can be actively involved in designing and assessing their own learning. Thus, engagement starts when students make decisions about why, what and how they are learning. When students know why and what they are learning, and can also reliably and validly determine how well they are learning, they can also decide what they need to do next. The Differentiated Curriculum Model allows students to do this when students plan their own knowledge building learning experiences using the HOT SOLO coded integrated planning template, and the HOT language of learning and SOLO coded HOT self-assessment rubrics. The key elements of the model are purposefully designed to provide a practical response to each of principles in the New Zealand Curriculum: placing the learner at the centre of teaching and learning, high expectations, Treaty of Waitangi, cultural diversity, inclusion, learning to learn, community engagement, coherence, and future focus (refer Table 2 below and Appendix 2). Table 2: The New Zealand Curriculum Principles and how they are addressed in the key design elements of the Differentiated Curriculum Model. ^Beliefs about the New Zealand Curriculum ^Principles to inform these beliefs ^Differentiated Curriculum Model Elements to achieve the Principles ^ |Why do we have a curriculum?|What does that mean?|How do we achieve this?| | “Young people who will be confident, connected, actively involved, lifelong learners.” (The New Zealand Curriculum p7). |“Principles put students at the centre of teaching and learning, asserting that they should experience a curriculum that engages and challenges them, is forward-looking and inclusive, and affirms New Zealand’s unique identity.” (The New Zealand Curriculum p9).|Differentiated Curriculum Model and Programme including HOT Concept Library, HOT Language of learning visual maps and HOT student self-assessment rubrics coded against student learning outcomes.| | |**Put the learner at the centre of teaching and learning:** Be responsive to the learner by respecting individual abilities and interests. The individual identifies their learning needs with support from the institution. |Flexible provision where content, process, product and learning environment are supported by the system but determined by the user. Authentic contexts for learning. Knowledge building for local and community needs. Differentiating learning experiences against student learning outcomes (SOLO Taxonomy).| | |**Experience engagement when learning:**Become actively involved in designing and assessing their learning. |HOT SOLO coded self-assessment rubrics. HOT SOLO coded integrated planning template. Knowledge building for local and community needs.| | |**High expectations:**Achieve personal excellence.Experience challenge when learning. |Recognition of prior learning. Integrated multilevel achievement objectives from The New Zealand Curriculum. Learning intentions aligned to achievement objectives. Cognitively differentiated SOLO coded learning experiences.HOT SOLO coded self-assessment rubrics. | | |**Treaty of Waitangi:**Acquire knowledge of te reo Maori me ona tikanga. |Concepts, macro and micro. Authentic contexts aligned to concepts Differentiating learning experiences against student learning outcomes (SOLO Taxonomy).| | |**Cultural diversity:** Valuing the histories and traditions of all its people |HOT Concept Library Authentic contexts for learning. Knowledge building for local and community needs.| | |**Inclusion:**Ensure that all students’ learning needs are addressed. |Cognitively differentiated SOLO coded learning experiences. HOT SOLO coded self-assessment rubrics.| | |**Learn how to learn:**Being able to answer:What am I doing? How am I doing? What do I do next? | A common understanding of the learning process based upon differentiated learning outcomes (SOLO Taxonomy) and The New Zealand Curriculum Key Competencies. A common language of learning aligned to differentiated learning outcomes (SOLO Taxonomy). Common learning interventions (ICT and Thinking) aligned to differentiated learning outcomes (SOLO Taxonomy). Common classroom practice aligned to differentiated learning outcomes (SOLO Taxonomy). This includes learning experiences, learning intentions, and assessment for learning.Inquiry and problem based learning| | |**Community engagement:** Connects with wider lives. Engaging the support of their families, whanau, and communities.| Authentic contexts for learning. Knowledge building for local and community needs. | | |**Coherence:**Master disciplinary knowledge and skills across all learning areas in The New Zealand Curriculum. | Achievement objectives selected across learning areas and levels in The New Zealand Curriculum. Learning intentions aligned to achievement objectives. Driving Question aligned to learning intentions. Three questions for understanding aligned to differentiated learning outcomes. Learning experiences aligned to differentiated learning outcomes. Learning interventions (ICT and Thinking) aligned to differentiated learning experiences.| | |**Future focus:** Prepare for living in a rapidly changing world. Understand complex issues. |Concepts, macro and micro to explore universals. Authentic contexts aligned to concepts. Knowledge building for local and community needs.| Each element in the Differentiated Curriculum Model values responsive learning environments in inclusive classrooms, (refer Figure 2. The curriculum model supports learning across all learning areas and levels of the New Zealand Curriculum. The individual elements help all students including gifted and talented students to learn how to learn, be actively involved in designing and assessing their own learning, experience appropriate cognitive challenge across all learning areas, understand complex issues, integrate information communication technologies (ICTs), and prepare for adulthood in a rapidly changing world. {{:figure_2_600_x_489_.jpg|}} ==== Element 1: ==== === Concepts and contexts === A concept approach allows students to engage with universals, those timeless, abstract ideas that help develop enduring understandings of complex issues in the past, present and future worlds. Concepts help learners understand complex issues and the Differentiated Curriculum Model supports teachers and students with an extensive library of macro and micro concepts, accessed through a drop down menu, for use during planning. The concepts selected are explored using Wiske’s “What is worth understanding?” questions (Wiske 1998), to develop Key Concept Understandings, generalisations that underpin the concept and help students understand their world. This element also requires the identification of local and community needs and interests, authentic contexts for student learning and knowledge building based upon the concept selected. This element is essential if students are to become knowledge builders and contribute genuinely new knowledge as a result of their learning. These authentic contexts may be aligned to cultural and community understandings and to understanding the disciplines. Thus, the curriculum model requires generalisations formed from the concepts to be developed through a variety of authentic contexts which can then be aligned to many different learning areas, all of which encourage student engagement, knowledge building, and an integrated curriculum approach. The choice of concepts and contexts in Differentiated Curriculum Model Element 1 address the New Zealand Curriculum Principles of **Future focus, Treaty of Waitangi, Cultural diversity,** and **Community engagement.** Effective curriculum models recognise the importance of a Future focus principle in preparing students for living in a rapidly changing world. One way to prepare for an uncertain future is to explore universals, the constants from our past and in our present which will most likely continue into our future, for example language, communication, culture, superstition, religion, magic, stories, tools, art, play, games, differences/similarities, and pattern recognition. The Differentiated Curriculum Model encourages exploration of universals by identifying concepts against which to align achievement objectives and learning experiences. These authentic contexts enable a future focus, helping students to learn how to think like a novice or problem solve like an expert within a field of knowledge or a discipline. **The Treaty of Waitangi** principle of acquiring knowledge of te reo Maori me ona tikanga is facilitated through the HOT concept library with concepts like kaitiakitanga, taonga, Tino rangatiratanga, turangawaewae and whakatauki. The principle of **Cultural diversity**, the valuing the histories and traditions of all people, is facilitated through the HOT concept library and the creation of authentic contexts for learning against these concepts. The principle of **Community engagement**, connecting students’ learning experiences with wider lives and engaging the support of their families, whanau, and communities, is accomplished through the provision for authentic contexts for learning in the Differentiated Curriculum Model. {{:hotcm_1_600_x_531_.jpg|}} **Screen shot Element 1: Concepts and contexts** [[Link here_Element_1]] to learn about about teachers' experiences with concepts and contexts. ==== Element 2: ==== === Learning Areas, Essence Statements and the New Zealand Curriculum Achievement Objectives === The Differentiated Curriculum Model is aligned to the New Zealand Curriculum Learning areas, Essence statements, and Achievement Objectives. This element ensures that student learning experiences align to disciplinary knowledge and skills across all learning areas in the New Zealand Curriculum that will provide the key ideas, processes to help build coherent understanding of the concept and authentic contexts identified in Element 1. We note that this element by focussing on the essential disciplinary understandings could be replaced by the national content standards from any national curriculum. This element addresses the New Zealand Curriculum Principles of **Coherence** and **High Expectations**. If students are to achieve personal excellence and experience challenge when learning, their learning experiences need to recognise prior learning and integrate the appropriate integrated multilevel achievement objectives from The New Zealand Curriculum. The database in the Differentiated Curriculum Model digital planner enables the appropriate achievement objectives for principles of coherence and high expectations to be flexibly and effortlessly selected from across all learning areas and levels in The New Zealand Curriculum. In addition, the alignment of achievement objectives to authentic contexts and concepts ensures the principles of **Future Focus, Treaty of Waitangi, Cultural diversity** and **Community engagement** continue to be supported. {{:hotcm_2_600_x_531_.jpg|}} **Screen shot Element 2** [[Link here_Element_2]] to learn about teachers' experiences with NZC learning areas and achievement objectives. ==== Element 3: ==== === Learning Intentions or Intended Learning Outcomes === Element 3 identifies specific learning intentions for learning outcomes that support the New Zealand Curriculum learning areas and achievement objectives selected previously in Elements 2. The learning intentions are written against the different achievement objectives using the HOT language of learning developed from SOLO Taxonomy. This helps ensure that all students’ learning needs are considered, there are scaffolds for deep learning outcomes, and that students can more clearly understand the learning process. This element, where cognitively differentiated SOLO coded learning intentions are aligned to diverse achievement objects and authentic contexts and concepts, helps the Differentiated Curriculum Model meet the New Zealand Curriculum Principle expectations of Inclusion, in that it frames learning intentions to address all students’ learning needs. Scaffolding learning intentions against SOLO Taxonomy for deep learning outcomes meets expectations within The New Zealand Curriculum Principle of **High expectations**. Students are unlikely to achieve personal excellence or experience challenge when learning if this has not been purposively designed for in the learning intentions. Introducing a common language of learning based upon the SOLO Taxonomy meets expectations within the New Zealand Curriculum Principle of **Learning to Learn**. When common classroom practice is aligned to differentiated learning outcomes (SOLO Taxonomy), and this includes learning intentions, learning experiences, and assessment for learning, then students can know themselves as learners. When students know themselves as learners they are more likely to experience **engagement while learning**. {{:hotcm_3_600_x_528_.jpg|}} ** Screenshot Element 3**