Teaching / Learning Strategies:
Since the over-riding aim of this course is to help students use language skillfully, confidently and flexibly, a wide variety of instructional strategies are used to provide learning opportunities to accommodate a variety of learning styles, interests and ability levels. These include:
| Investigations |
Independent Research |
Directed Reading Activities |
| Visuals |
Direct Instruction |
Independent Reading |
| Issue Based Analysis |
Writing Processes |
Multimedia Productions |
| Laboratory Activities |
Manipulative Activities |
Self-Assessments |
| Model Analysis |
Guided Self-Demonstrations |
Animations |
| Powerpoint Analysis |
Guided Internet Research |
Image Analysis |
| Molecular Model Construction |
Independent Reading |
Terms / Definitions |
| Visualizations |
Paper and Pencil Labs |
Research Projects |
| |
Problem Solving |
Dissections |
Assessment and Evaluation Strategies of Student Performance:
Assessment is a systematic process of collecting information or evidence about student learning. Evaluation is the judgment we make about the assessments of student learning based on established criteria. The purpose of assessment is to improve student learning. This means that judgments of student performance must be criterion-referenced so that feedback can be given that includes clearly expressed next steps for improvement. Tools of varying complexity are used by the teacher to facilitate this. For the more complex evaluations, the criteria are incorporated into a rubric where levels of performance for each criterion are stated in language that can be understood by students.
The Final Grade:
The evaluation for this course is based on the student's achievement of curriculum expectations and the demonstrated skills required for effective learning.
The percentage grade represents the quality of the student's overall achievement of the expectations for the course and reflects the corresponding level of achievement as described in the achievement chart for the discipline.
A credit is granted and recorded for this course if the student's grade is 50% or higher. The final grade for this course will be determined as follows:
- 70% of the grade will be based upon evaluations conducted throughout the course. This portion of the grade will reflect the student's most consistent level of achievement throughout the course, although special consideration will be given to more recent evidence of achievement (that being the exam).
- 30% of the grade will be based on a final evaluation of a final exam administered at the end of the course. This exam is the summary of information from the course and the student's reports, using a test format. This will be evaluated using a checklist.
The report card will focus on two distinct but related aspects of student achievement; the achievement of curriculum expectations and the development of learning skills. The report card will contain separate sections for the reporting of these two aspects.
Reference Materials:
- Nelson Biology 12; Dr. Robert Ritter, Maurice Di Giuseppe, Doug Fraser, Angela Vavitsas, Anu Arora, Beth Lisser; Nelson Thomson Learning, 2003
Comments (0)
You don't have permission to comment on this page.