Pre-requisites

None.

Co-requisites

None.

Learning Outcomes

On successful completion of this unit, the student will be able to:

Unit Description

This unit covers the Business learning area of State and National Curriculum Years 7-10. The unit engages with current knowledge and understanding about best practice and about the various needs of students in the middle years, applying these to the Business discipline. This incorporates various strategies and features for developing effective lessons and assessments (both formative and summative) to engage and progress a diverse range of students in Business. Understanding of how to meaningfully integrate ICT for Business processes and for enhancing learning experiences will be cultivated. Pre-service teachers will engage in providing grading and feedback on various assessment tasks in line with content knowledge of the discipline, proficient teaching, and current research in order to maximise effectiveness and quality of student learning in the learning area. Pre-service teachers will foster a critical understanding from a Christian perspective of the various frameworks that have driven and shaped the teaching of Business.

Topics

  1. The Curriculum, its Frameworks and a Christian Perspective
  2. Students Learning the Curriculum
  3. Key features of planning and sequencing tasks and lessons that include progression and curriculum aligned learning objectives that allow students to show evidence of mastery.
    - Developing worked examples
    - Problem solving activities
    - Spacing and Retrieval practice: consolidation of long-term memory
  4. Techniques and Strategies for teaching business, including ICT and other resources.
    - Explicit instruction: modelling and scaffolding.
  5. Feedback and Assessment
  6. Data and Differentiation for Improvement
    - Including using diagnostic data and beginning instruction where the students are at and limiting cognitive overload.
  7. Research on Teacher Effectiveness

Learning Experience

Topic 3 Designing for Progression: Curriculum-Aligned Planning and Sequencing (cc 2.1.1, 2.1.2)

As a class, dissect a unit of work (provided by the lecturer).
Key things to look for:
- Progression from concrete to abstract understandings of the content
- Learning objectives
- Mastery criteria
- Spacing and retrieval practice

As individuals, Reflective Discussion prompt (in Canvas):

Think about a lesson or sequence you have observed or taught. How was it structured? Was it coherent and developmentally appropriate? What evidence did students use to show understanding or mastery?

(cc 2.1.3) In Groups: Design 3 lessons that include:
- Deliberate planning and sequencing of tasks
- Spacing and Retrieval practice (including challenging recall practice)
- Progression of learning
- Clear learning objectives towards mastery

Skills assessed: lesson sequencing, goal setting, understanding the brain, analysis and reflection

Topic 4 cc 1.3.3

PSTs choose a learning objective from an existing unit plan or from the general discipline area curriculum. They are to create 2 worked examples to meet that objective

Discussion: How could you use these examples in a sequence of lessons? How might you phase them out to promote independent learning (eg developing problem-solving)?2)

Skills assessed: worked example development, lesson sequencing and understanding of novice to expert learning.

Topic 6 Starting points and managing cognitive overload (cc2.2.2)

Think-Pair-Share: “What do you remember about a time when a teacher gave you unclear instructions? What was the impact on your learning?

In Groups: Choose a learning task from your discipline area and a year level: - Consider the expected prior knowldedge of the cohort
- Choose a starting place for the learning and clearly articulate what your expectations are regarding the students and their starting point.
- Write a learning intention and success criteria
- Break task into 3-5 manageable chunks
- Assign a clear instructional step and goal to each chunk.

Reflection Idea

“ How will I use clearity and chunking to support future students?


Unit offerings

Face to face: (Demand based)

Please note

The Unit Offerings listed above are a guide only and the timetable for any year is the final authority. The College may vary offerings based on demand, regulatory requirements, continual improvement processes or other conditions.

This unit may be available in different modes of delivery i.e. online and face-to-face as listed above. The unit content will not differ between these modes of delivery. There will possibly be a difference in the schedule and/or the prescribed assessment tasks, however both will cover and assess the same content.