So, your administrator is asking about the rigor in your class? And Marzano asks that students “engage in cognitively complex tasks”. And those ISM walk-throughs are checking for the “level of rigor” on their walk through forms.
And, honestly, you know as well as I do that nobody cares if kids know a whole lot of lower-level facts when they grow up. We all know that kids using those facts, information, and skills is a more frequently used part of academics.
I recently had a colleague tell me about lesson plan and ask me how I would increase the rigor of it.
OMG!!! WHAT A FABULOUS QUESTION!!!!
For a long time, I hadn’t found a solid, consistent definition of rigor. And then I found this: Rigor is the higher level thinking a student can do on his or her own.
Now, rigor can ABSOLUTELY include scaffolding. (pleasepleaseplease use scaffolding! Don’t skip the scaffolding!!!!)
But then, the kids need to be doing higher level thinking without the teacher doing it for them.
Check out this visual to help it make sense -->
Meaning, lead them up to the higher order thinking but then take off their training wheels and let them try it on their own.
(Actually, HOT thinking is likely to fall apart into disaster if you DON’T lead them up and give them scaffolding. But that’s another conversation for another day.
Do you know my friend, the DOK Wheel? The DOK Wheel isn’t actually my favorite, but it’s the one the FLDOE uses to describe benchmarks and EOC questions, so we can go with it.
So let’s back that up. How can we increase higher level thinking without making kids’ (and teachers’) brains explode?
- Don’t let kids off the hook. They will pretend to be stupid. They will pretend to “only” be able to give you the “right there” answer. Use wait time and probing questions to get them to think at higher levels. Don’t accept “I can’t” (or “I don’t know”) for an answer.
- Then, we raise the questioning up to level three and sometimes 4 of DOK. Here are some quick and easy HOT (Higher Order Thinking) question stems. Choose ones that match what you’re teaching. https://www.saydel.k12.ia.us/cms_files/resources/general%20hots%20question%20stems%20and%20processing%20activities.pdf
Ok, Tracy, I think I’ve got WHAT Higher Order Thinking actually IS. But what does that actually look like? What does rigorous learning look like?
Here are a few quick ideas to start to introduce more rigor in small, manageable ways in your classroom.
- HOT Question Turn and Talks: The quickest and easiest (and most natural-feeling) way to incorporate rigor is to incorporate it into quick turn and talks. Talk/read/watch about some lower-level stuff and the ask the kids to turn and talk about it with higher-level stuff. That’s a quick and easy way to include rigor.
- HOT quickwrites: Not feeling the turn and talk ideas? Use the same questions as above but pose one or two as a quick write. Bam. Kids are thinking and you have both blissful peace and quiet AND evidence of their rigorous thinking (or what you need to work on tomorrow...)
- HOT Plickers: Don’t have a lot of time? Throw a HOT multiple choice question up on the board and use Plickers (Paper+Clickers) to have kids answer a quick higher-level multiple choice question in less than a minute. Bonus -- now you have DATA on that rigor stuff...
- HOT Focused Notes: Taking Focused Notes? When students make connections (not YOU making the connections for them, but them making their OWN connections), that’s more rigorous. When students take notes and reflect on them and add some Higher Order THinking
- HOT Benchmark Reflection: Don’t have anything prepared -- but you DO have your Learning Goal (aka Benchmark) posted on the board? Turn it into a question and ask the kids to reflect on it. Here are a few examples ...
- SS.6.W.2.5 “Summarize important achievements of Egyptian civilization.”
SS.7.C.2.11 “Examine the impact of media, individuals, and interest groups on- monitoring and influencing the government”
- How do the media, individuals and interest groups (pick one or two) monitor the government?How does that work? Give an example.
- SS.912.A.3.4 “Compare the first and second Industrial Revolutions in the United States.”
- What’s the same between the first and second Industrial Revolution? What’s different? Why are they more same or more different?
There are hundreds of ways to increase your rigor in the classroom. But there’s no reason you can’t start small.
Let’s start small and grow from there! Questions? Email me at newmantr@pcsb.org
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