Everett Public Schools
DOK to Unit Planning
LMS Department
August 28, 2014
• How does Depth of Knowledge (DOK) fit within engaging students and having them think through content in different ways?
• How is the “Depth of Knowledge” a foundation for the construction of a proficiency scale to “unpack” clusters/ standards?
Initial Session Overview
Norman Webb’s Depth of Knowledge
Adapted from the model used by Norman Webb, University of Wisconsin, to align standards with curriculum and assessments.
• The degree of depth or complexity of knowledge reflected in the content standards and assessments
• How deeply a student needs to understand the content for a given response/assessment
Created based on work of Webb, Norman L. and others. “Web Alignment Tool” 24 July 2005. Wisconsin Center of Educational Research. University of Wisconsin-Madison. 2 Feb. 2006
Depth of Knowledge depends on more than the verb. The complexity also depends on what the verb is acting on. For example, “draw” is in the DOK level 1 sector. But a student who draws a blueprint of a new building is doing more than recall of information.
Explain also can be at different levels--explain by repeating a definition (DOK level 1), explain by putting a paragraph into your own words (DOK level 2), or explain by describing an analysis of the factors contributing to the economic down turn of the US (DOK level 3).
Depth of thinking required
Context in which the verb is used
DOK Level
What comes after the verb is more important than the verb itself.
“Analyze this sentence to decide if the commas have been used correctly” does not meet the criteria for high cognitive processing.
Rationale: The student who has been taught the rule for using commas is merely using the rule
DOK Snapshot• DOK is a scale of cognitive demand• DOK is not an exact science• DOK is about the item/standard not the student• The context of the item/standard must be considered to
determine the DOK level not just a look at what verb was chosen.
• DOK is lowered when too much information is given• DOK is not about difficulty but how much thinking is required
for the student to complete the prompt/task
Bloom’s and Webb’s
Different models to describe cognitive rigor• Bloom – What type of thinking are needed to
complete the task?
• Webb – How deeply do you have to understand the content to successfully interact at a given depth? How complex is the content?
Cognitive Rigor MatrixThis matrix from the Smarter Balanced Content Specifications for Mathematics draws from both
Bloom’s (revised) Taxonomy of Educational Objectives and Webb’s Depth-of-Knowledge Levels below.
VisualizationSpend time as a table coming up with a visual analogy or a graphic representation of the differences or relationship between Webb’s model and Bloom’s model.
Please add necessary labels and if you have time add a slogan to help remember the difference.
Remember: Both are of value.
Share VisualizationJoin one other table and share your visual.
(2 minutes) Table A: Share and explain your model(2 minutes) Table B: Ask clarifying questions to make
certain you fully understand the other table’s visual.
(2 minutes) Table B: Share and explain your model(2 minutes) Table A: Ask clarifying questions to make
certain you fully understand the other table’s visual.
• Addresses the content being assessed and the depth to which we expect students to demonstrate understanding of a particular content area
• Is a reference to the complexity of mental processing that must occur to answer a question, perform a task or generate a product
• Is not grade contextualized- all about the expertise in a content area
DOK Further Clarification
Determining DOK• How would you describe the progression from 1st
grade to 4th grade?• As a small group discuss and have one member
record what each standard’s DOK level might be and provide a rationale for your thinking.• Include any questions your discussion raised or
disagreements you encountered.
Learning Targets and Unit Plans
Session Goals
1. Teachers will learn how to write student-friendly, measurable, observable learning targets that are appropriate for a day’s instruction.
2. Teachers will learn how to create unit plans that contain information that is relevant to students.
Criteria for Making Targets1. States an Observable and
Measurable Outcome.2. States special conditions.3. Specifies performance level.4. Clear to students5. Appropriate for the Day
1. Is it measurable AND observable?
Simple test: Would two observers agree that the student had demonstrated the outcome?• By the end of the semester, the student will
identify pictures of words that sound alike.• The student is familiar with the law.• The student understands the process of
osmosis.• The student can solve linear equations with
80% accuracy.
Observables• List• Recite• Build• Draw
Unobservables• Value• Appreciate• Know• Understand
For Discussion
Learning Outcome vs.
Learning Activity
Learning Activities vs. OutcomesOutcomeIdentifyRecall
ListWrite
ActivityStudyWatchListenRead
1. Reciting the four components of a good essay.2. Practicing the violin.3. Recite the alphabet.4. Outlining the main theme in House of Seven
Gables.
2. States special conditions3. Specifies performance levels.
– Special supplies necessary: map, calculator, typed list, specific lab equipment, etc.
– Do you need to specify the performance level?
CLEAR AND SIMPLE