EDU/692 EDU692 EDU 692 WEEK 6 FINAL PROJECT
- ashford university / EDU 692
- 06 Apr 2018
- Price: $40
- Other / Other
EDU 692 WEEK 6 FINAL PROJECT
Final Project
Creative
Teaching: Designing Creative and Culturally Relevant Instruction
For this final
project, you will be a classroom teacher developing a creative and culturally
relevant idea, concept, or movement for your school. Think about everything you
have seen, heard, discussed, shared, and viewed over the past five weeks. What
information stuck out as something you would want to implement in your school
or classroom? Was there an idea that you wished you could share with your
colleagues? What ideas did you discover that will help your students with being
creative while also being culturally relevant? You are going to create a
proposal for an idea that you would like to implement in your school. Think
about to whom you would need to propose this idea? Your administrator?
Colleague? PLC team? For a few more ideas to brainstorm, view this Association of School and
Curriculum Development (Links to an external
site.)Links to an external site. (ASCD) video.
Your presentation can be formatted in a way that is appropriate
to your style of presentation. You can write an essay, create a PPT with a
voiceover, record a presentation with an accompanying outline (with citations
and resources), or use one of the other ideas presented during this course.
Included in your presentation/proposal should be the following:
Content Expectations
Part I: Audience and Rationale (2 points):
Write an overview of the class/school/target population, including age ranges,
grade(s), subject area(s), and relevant micro and macro cultural components. If
you are not currently teaching, you may use a prior class, a colleague’s class,
or invent demographic information.
Part II: Outcomes (3 points): List the objectives of the instructional
experience/idea/concept being proposed.
·
Content or Classroom Objectives
·
21st Century skills (emphasis on creativity)
·
Cultural competencies to be explicitly addressed with the
experience/idea/concept
Part III: Context/Instructional Description (3 points):
Describe more specifically how the instructional experience/idea/or concept
will be used in order to meet the Outcomes (listed above). Will it include:
·
Creativity – How will creativity be encouraged?
·
Problem solving – Will the activity focus on solving a problem?
·
AND/OR
·
Simulation – Will the students be involved with performing tasks
that related to a real-world experience or activity?
Part IV: Culturally Relevant Pedagogy (8 points). Describe
how and which four (at least) of these will be included in the
experience/idea/concept?
·
Maximizing academic success through relevant instructional
experiences
·
Addressing cultural competence through reinforcing students’
cultural integrity
·
Involving students in the construction of knowledge
·
Building on students’ interests and linguistic resources
·
Tapping home and community resources
·
Understanding students’ cultural knowledge
·
Using interactive and constructivist teaching strategies
·
Examining the experience/idea/concept from multiple perspectives
·
Promoting critical consciousness through opportunities to
challenge predominant elements of students’ social norms
Part V: Creativity/Innovation Strategies (8 points). Describe
how and which four (at least) of these will be included in the
experience/idea/concept?
·
Encouraging students to believe in their culture-influenced
creative potential
·
Nurturing the confidence to try
·
Helping learners find their creative strengths
·
Promoting experiment and inquiry and a willingness to make
mistakes
·
Encouraging generative thought, free from immediate criticism
·
Encouraging the expression of personal ideas and feelings
·
Conveying an understanding of phases in creative work and the
need for time
·
Developing an awareness of the roles of intuition and aesthetic
processes
·
Encouraging students to play with ideas and conjecture about
possibilities
·
Facilitating critical evaluation of ideas
Written Communication Expectations
·
Page Requirement (.25 points): The length of
the final project will depend on the medium you choose; however, some general
guidelines would be 8-10 pages (for a paper) or 8-10 slides (for a presentation),
not including the title and reference pages.
·
APA Formatting (.25 points): Format your
paper according to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.
·
Syntax and Mechanics (.25 points): Display meticulous
comprehension and organization of syntax and mechanics, such as spelling and
grammar.
·
Resource Requirement (.25 points): Reference three
scholarly sources in addition to the course textbooks, providing compelling
evidence to support ideas. All sources on the references page need to be used
and cited correctly within the body of the assignment.
Next Steps: Review and Submit the Final Project
Review your assignment with the Grading Rubric to be sure you
have achieved the distinguished levels of performance for each criterion. Next,
submit the assignment for evaluation no later than Day 7.
If you are enrolled in the MAED Program, it is imperative that
you keep copies of all assignments completed in this course. You will return to
them for the portfolio that you will create in your final MAED course. This
portfolio is a culminating project that will demonstrate that you have met
program outcomes.