Backwards Design
Understanding Understanding
Clarity and Goals
Six Facets of Understanding
Chapter 5 (& MISC)
100

This concept emphasizes beginning with a goal and following up by guiding students in finding the best route to achieve it.

What is backwards design?

100

The two different but related ideas that this chapter covers.

What are design and understanding?

100

This provides a focus for curriculum, assessment, and instruction.

What is a standard?

100

How many facets of understanding are there?

What is six?

100

The title of Chapter 5.

What is Essential Questions: Doorways to Understanding?

200

Identifying desired results, determining acceptable evidence, and planning learning experiences and instruction are parts of this concept.

What are the stages of Backwards Design?

200

The facts, verifiable claims, and the "right or wrong" are examples of what?

What is knowledge?

200

To identify the big ideas and core tasks contained within.

What is the reason teachers "unpack" standards?

200

In the chapter, this facet is referred to as "critical and insightful points of view". 

What is perspective?

200

A question that pushes us to the heart of things--the essence.

What is an essential question?

300

True or False: There is a UBD Design Matrix on the last page of this chapter.

What is true?

300

The meaning of facts, the theory that provides coherence and meaning to those facts, and a matter of degree or sophistication are examples of what?

What is understanding?

300

The numerical amount of transfer demand/degree of cue tasks.

What is four?

300

In the chapter, this facet is referred to as the ability to gain insight into a person's feelings and worldview.

What is empathy?

300

An example of this type of essential question is as follows: What are common factors in the rise and fall of powerful nations?

What is an overarching question?

400

This tangible guide helps teachers to internalize the backward design process.

What is the UbD Template?

400

A man who questioned knowledge claims by asking things like, "Why is that so?", "Why do we think that?", and "What justifies such a view?"

Who is Socrates?

400

Examples of these include "ecosystem", "graph", "story", and "experiment". 

What are basic terms?

400

The branch of philosophy that addresses what it means to know and understand knowledge and understanding, and how knowledge differs from belief and opinion.

What is "epistemology"?

400

Important questions that recur throughout all our lives, core ideas and inquiries within a discipline, help students effectively inquire and make sense, and will most engage a specific and diverse set of learners are parts of this concept.

What are the four connotations regarding essential questions?

500

An overall view of backward design, without appearing overwhelming.

What is a gestalt?

500

The author of Taxonomy of Educational Objectives: Cognitive Domain.

Who is Benjamin Bloom?

500

Examples of these include "natural selection", "best fit curve of the data", "meaning as projected onto the story", and "inherent error and fallibility of experimental methods and results". 

What are core ideas?
500

The six facets of understanding.

What are explanation, interpretation, application, perspective, empathy, and self-knowledge?

500

The authors of "Understanding by Design".

Who are Grant Wiggins and Jay McTighe?

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