Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Changing Everything, Using Blueprints

My Algebra 2 classes have been textbook-free since 2007. It started when my school purchased a textbook that I eventually came to hate. I started changing the order that things were taught, customizing lessons, re-doing units, adding activities, and so on. Over time I developed an "Amy Gruen" version of Algebra 2.

All was well and good until Common Core. I read the standards and I tweaked things regularly and added a few new units here and there, but I couldn't shake that "re-arranging chairs on a sinking ship" kind of feeling.

The problem is that I was planning for Common Core in the way that I think a lot of teachers are planning.  I started with the hodgepodge that was Amy Gruen's Algebra 2 curriculum on the left, and over there on the right was the pile of CCSSM. I tried to file those in where they fit, but I had some left over. And there were things in my curriculum on the left with no matches in the CCSSM.


So here I am. I am ready to pitch everything in my Algebra 2 classes and start fresh. After much thought and reading about lots of approaches, I keep coming back to a great session I attended at TMC14 . . . Blueprints*.

Blueprints are a joint project by Kate Nowak, Mathalicious, Illustrative Mathematics, and others. The Blueprints include a sequence of CCSSM that makes sense, justification for decisions, and links to activities that coincide with each standard. What draws me here above other approaches is that they have STARTED with the common core standards. None of this taking a thing that's already done and stamping it up with the words "common core".

Now I can reverse the planning process . . . starting with the CCSSM on the left and a pile of resources on the right and filing those in where they fit.


I've decided to go all in. Start from scratch. Possibly planning just a few days ahead. I am the kind of person who usually shows up August 11 with the year (somewhat) planned out, so this is a bit of a stretch for me. But it feels good and right to start each lesson plan with a standard rather than matching the standard to an already-existing lesson.

I am excited for this new adventure.

Update since I started writing this post: So far I've used the Blueprints to plan a few weeks and I am already seeing a lot of positives. I will write about those soon I hope.

*I got a sneak peak at the "almost final" version at TMC14, and I'm using that to get started. The final version is to be published this fall.

5 comments:

  1. Are the Blueprints available to the public? Are there Blueprints for Geometry in addition to Algebra 2?

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    1. Hi Michelle, It is my understanding that the Blueprints will be available to the public. When I asked a month or so ago, the estimated publish date was October 1. The progression includes all the high school standards, so geometry is included!

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  2. I had to do the same last year… start with the standards and go from there. It feels overwhelming at first, but taking it one unit at a time with an overall estimate of how long you want each unit to last worked best for me. Another resource that I really liked incorporating was formative assessment lessons (FALs). Here's the link: http://map.mathshell.org/materials/lessons.php Good luck this year!

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  3. Where can I find the blueprints for Geometry? I am hoping that since it is after October 1st, they have been published! Thanks!

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    1. Jennifer, I don't think they have been published yet . . . My understanding is that October 1st was just an estimate. I will definitely post when I know more!

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