Goals and Objectives
Prior Knowledge
Engagement
Scaffolds and Supports
Probes & Feedback
100

Rewrite this objective so it is measurable: “Students will understand fractions by looking at a pie.

TSW write a fraction for a given portion of a whole pie.

100

Name one strategy to activate background knowledge.

Read a book/story, look at an artifact,KWL chart, quickwrite, brainstorm, connection question, etc.

100

Convert this activity to high engagement: Teacher reads a paragraph to students about making lemonade.

Students make lemonade.

100

Name a scaffold for developing language learners.

Sentence frames, word banks, visuals, modeling.

100

Why isn't “Does everyone understand?” effective?

t produces no evidence of student thinking.

200

What is one key difference between a goal and an objective?

Goals are broad; objectives are specific, measurable steps.

200

What is schema?

Mental structures or prior knowledge used to make sense of new information.

200

What are some ways that you have engaged students during lessons?

varied

200

What is the purpose of scaffolding?

To provide temporary support toward independent mastery.

200

What makes feedback actionable?

It tells the student what to do next.

300

What is missing in this objective? “Students will learn to multiply numbers." 

A measurable verb

300

Why activate background knowledge before teaching new vocabulary?


It helps students connect new learning to prior learning.

300

Why do we want to think about levels of student involvement in learning.

Student engagement facilitates deeper understanding.

300

Student understands concepts but struggles to write them in formal sentences. What scaffold might you use?

Sentence frames, graphic organizer, oral/signed rehearsal.

300

Convert this to actionable feedback: “Nice job on your writing!”

“Your claim is clear; add another evidence piece to strengthen it.”

400

Turn this goal into a measurable objective: Students will learn vocabulary.

Students will match words to definitions.

400

Tell why this teacher probe is probably not appropriate for most classrooms: “Who has visited the Amazon rainforest?”


Relies on niche/exclusive experiences; not equitable.

400

Which elevates learner engagement - A. Have the students watch a video about how memes are made B. Have the students work in pairs to create a meme.

B. Have the students work in pairs to create a meme.

400

Which is a stronger scaffold? A. “Do your best.” B. Model how to solve the problem.

B. Model how to solve the problem.

400

What is a lower level cognitive probe?

Recall, remember.

500

Which objective has higher cognitive demand?
A. List three causes of the Civil War
B. Evaluate which cause had the greatest impact

B — Evaluate.

500

It's almost Halloween!  How can a teacher find out what students know about the holiday?

various answers

500

True or not true - Learning must be fun in order for it to be engaging. 

Not true. Learning can be enjoyable. But fun alone doesn’t define engagement.  Flashy visuals, entertaining videos, and amusing graphics capture learners’ attention. However, real engagement comes from the desire to learn and apply knowledge. 

500

Why remove scaffolds gradually?

To ensure independent mastery of skills.

500
What is a higher level cognitive probe?

Analize, apply.

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