We believe that students need a base of knowledge, often referred to by scholars and education experts as “core knowledge,” to learn and explore topics at a more sophisticated level. For example, if you do not know anything about the Bible or Greek Mythology, it is nearly impossible to understand anything about the history of Western Art.
An increasing number of kids today have extreme deficits in core knowledge which impede their further acquisition of knowledge and understanding. They do not know anything about the Founding Fathers and the key debates of the Revolutionary War period; therefore, it is very difficult for them to understand the Civil War.
We address the challenges of core knowledge deficits primarily through reading (which is why it is so imperative that your kids read voraciously at home and at school), but we also address it through deliberate efforts to give our scholars quick hits of background knowledge, through what we call core knowledge units.
Inventions are a fascinating lens through which scholars can study history. Our scholars are always curious to hear about how people have lived in the past. Examining the creation of various inventions allows scholars to imagine and understand the past more concretely.
Scholars will learn about how several key inventions (including the telephone, electricity, and cars) changed and revolutionized Americans’ lives. Scholars will also investigate the negative effects of inventions, such as pollution and waste.
If you do your job well, your scholars will understand:
As in all reading units, your job as a teacher is to ensure that your students are reading at home and at school. Meet with the parents of scholars who are falling short on their at-home reading. If you cannot convince parents to ensure that their children are keeping up with their homework, you need to manage up to leadership.
It is your responsibility to ensure that ALL of your scholars are reading 6 days a week at home!
Scholars will explore and learn about inventions through two exciting projects.
Every day you will have 2 hours for your scholars to become investigators of inventions.
Some days the focus is investigating and studying to learn more, while other days center around project work.
Your day might include:
Facilitating meaningful learning through a core knowledge unit is challenging, because there are materials to manage and the work is open-ended. But this is the very reason why it is valuable and engaging for our scholars.
Your level of preparation and your clarity of purpose make all the difference. You also need a North Star. You need to know what excellent fourth-grade work for this unit looks like. Fortunately, we have many samples. Study them and know what you are shooting for. You need to know what the work should look like, and you need to be striving to get ALL your kids’ work there!
Guard against exploration without rigor! Scholars’ experiences should spark questions and further investigation about the topic.
Museum: The study culminates with an exhibition, or museum, showcasing scholars’ work, and most importantly, all that they’ve learned about inventions. This is a great opportunity to get parents invested in their scholars’ academic work.
Effective Materials Management: Scholars will work with a variety of materials as they create their projects. Plan how you will manage the materials, but keep the focus on the content! Ask your art teacher for advice on managing the materials and when working with any unfamiliar medium.
What makes for a successful invention?
How have inventions changed people’s everyday lives?
How can we teach others what we’ve learned?
Below is a list of additional resources not included in the lessons, which you can use to build scholars’ content knowledge.
Read Aloud:
What Does Success Look Like?
What makes for a successful invention?
Success is when scholars are able to describe why some inventions failed while others thrived.
Day 1
Engage — 1 minute
Read to Learn — 15 minutes
Writing/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
Read to Learn — 20 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
What makes for a successful invention?
Success is when scholars are able to describe why some inventions failed while others thrived.
Day 2
Engage — 1 minute
Launch — 5–7 minutes
Virtual Field Study — 20 minutes
Read to Learn — 30 minutes
Writing/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
What makes for a successful invention?
Success is when scholars are able to describe why some inventions failed while others thrived.
Day 3
Engage — 1 minute
Launch — 5–7 minutes
Read to Learn — 30 minutes
Writing/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
How have inventions changed people’s everyday lives?
Success is when scholars are able to articulate what electricity is and how it has changed people’s lives.
Day 4
Engage — 1 minute
Read to Learn — 15 minutes
Writing/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
Read to Learn — 20 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
How have inventions changed people’s everyday lives?
Success is when scholars are able to articulate what electricity is and how it has changed people’s lives.
Day 5
Engage — 1 minute
Read to Learn — 15 minutes
Virtual Field Study — 20 minutes
Writing/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
Read to Learn — 20 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
How have inventions changed people’s everyday lives?
Success is when scholars are able to articulate what electricity is and how it has changed people’s lives.
Day 6
Engage — 1 minute
Read to Learn — 15 minutes
Virtual Field Study — 20 minutes
Writing/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
Read to Learn — 20 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
How have inventions changed people’s everyday lives?
Success is when scholars are able to articulate why the car was invented and how it changed people’s lives.
Day 7
Engage — 1 minute
Virtual Field Study — 20 minutes
Read to Learn — 15 minutes
Writing/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
Read to Learn — 20 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
How have inventions changed people’s everyday lives?
Success is when scholars are able to articulate why the car was invented and how it changed people’s lives.
Day 8
Engage — 1 minute
Virtual Field Study — 20 minutes
Read to Learn — 15 minutes
Writing/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
Read to Learn — 20 minutes
Independent Reading/Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
How have inventions changed people’s everyday lives?
Success is when scholars are able to articulate why the car was invented and how it changed people’s lives.
Day 9
Engage — 1 minute
Launch — 10 minutes
Read to Learn — 20 minutes
Project Work — 60 minutes
Independent Reading/Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
How have inventions changed people’s everyday lives?
Success is when scholars can articulate why the telephone was invented and how it changed people’s lives.
Day 10
Engage — 1 minute
Virtual Field Study — 20 minutes
Read to Learn — 15 minutes
Writing/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
Read to Learn — 20 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
How have inventions changed people’s everyday lives?
Success is when scholars can generate an innovative idea for a new product that solves a problem facing today’s population.
Day 11
Engage — 1 minute
Read to Learn — 20 minutes
Launch — 10 minutes
Project Work — 60 minutes
Read to Learn — 20 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
How have inventions changed people’s everyday lives?
Success is when scholars can sell an innovative new product to today’s population.
Day 12
Engage — 1 minute
Virtual Field Study — 20 minutes
Launch — 10 minutes
Project Work — 60 minutes
Read to Learn — 20 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minutes
What Does Success Look Like?
How can we teach others what we’ve learned? You’ll know you’ve been successful when scholars are able to teach others key information about inventions.
Days 13-15
Project Work — 60 minutes
Read to Learn — 30 minutes
Independent Reading/ Targeted Teaching Time — 30 minute
Congratulations! You’ve reached the end of Inventions! As a result of teaching this unit, you, as the teacher, have:
Your scholars can:
Celebrate your scholars by acknowledging the expertise they now have about inventions and explaining what they can now do as readers and writers as a result of the study. For example, scholars know how to read nonfiction texts, using the author’s choices—such as text features, imagery, or word choice—to understand the big idea.
Invite scholars to share what was most intriguing to them over the course of the study––and what they’re going to keep investigating on their own!
Reflect on your successes and stretches, as well as those of your scholars. Look at your informal F&P results. Have your scholars grown as readers over the last month?
Scholars must read at home, as well as in school. Are 100% of your kids reading 6 days a week at home? Make sure at-home reading is happening, and meet with families who are falling short to recommit them to this team effort.
Are 100% of your kids reading fluently? Are they using all of the tools at their disposal to figure out the meaning of what they are reading?
Are 100% doing their literacy homework?
Going into the summer, make specific reading goals for scholars. Set a goal for children who are not reading at home. Who will you get to consistently read at home? Set a goal for moving any scholars who are stuck. Why are they stuck? Do they read most or all words correctly? What is their struggle with decoding? Do they understand what they’re reading? Do they understand the big idea? How will you partner with parents to support their growth?
If you are having trouble meeting your goals, do not wait until you have NOT succeeded. Consult your colleagues. Consult your leaders. ASK FOR HELP so you can meet your goals!
resources
Access a wide array of articles, webinars, and more, designed to help you help children reach their potential.
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