6. Evaluation Student Page Title Introduction Task Process Evaluation Conclusion Credits [ Teacher Page ] Process Excellent 4 Good 3 OK 2 Poor 1 Score Research Outlines current, interesting, and important information into text and images. Information is abundant, current and interesting; All images are helpful and used in relation to the text Information is adequate and current; Some images are helpful and used in relation to the text Information is inadequate; Few images are used and are disconnected from the topic and the text Information is sparse, inadequate, incorrect or outdated; No images are used Research Internet sources used for research (at least 3) are current, professional, trustworthy and verifiable. All websites and internet sources contain adequate, current and interesting information; The minimum requirement for sources was met or exceeded Most websites and internet sources contain adequate and current information; The minimum requirement for sources was met Some websites and internet sources used are outdated, contain incorrect information or are not verifiable by professional source, author or research; The minimum requirement for sources was not met All websites and internet sources used are outdated, contain incorrect information or are not verifiable by professional source, author or research; The minimum requirement for sources was not met Research Credit was given properly to sources. Annotated bibliography was complete. Credit is given properly to sources; Annotated bibliography is complete and detailed Credit is given properly to sources; Annotated bibliography is minimally complete Credit is rarely given properly to sources; Annotated bibliography partially complete Credit is not given properly to sources; Annotated bibliography is incomplete Project PowerPoint or poster-board is complete. PowerPoint or poster-board is complete, creative, organized, visually appealing and contains several useful images PowerPoint or poster-board is complete, organized, visually appealing, and contains some images PowerPoint or poster-board is unorganized, not visually appealing and contains few images PowerPoint or poster-board is incomplete unorganized, not visually appealing and does not contain images; The audience is not informed or persuaded Presentation Presentation of Public Awareness Campaign using PowerPoint or poster-board was informative and persuasive. Presentation is interesting, helpful, informative and persuasive; Presentation does meet the minimum time requirement Presentation is informative and persuasive; Presentation does meet the minimum time requirement Presentation is dull and somewhat informative; Presentation does not meet the minimum time requirement Presentation is dull and uninformative; Presentation does not meet the minimum time requirement
7. Conclusion Student Page Title Introduction Task Process Evaluation Conclusion Credits [ Teacher Page ] How do you want to contribute to society? What issues are important to you? What concerns do you have about our society that you would like to learn more about? Through the exploration of these public awareness issues, I hope that you will gain a greater understanding of the issues that surround our society today. As you recognize the problems that we face in our society, you should also approach problem-solving with a creative and open mind. Through your own research and through the presentations, you will learn many great things about people and organizations that are working today to make a better tomorrow. Process
8. Credits and References Student Page Title Introduction Task Process Evaluation Conclusion Credits [ Teacher Page ] Books: Burke, Jim, Ron Klemp, and Wendell Schwartz. Readers Handbook: a Student Guide for Reading and Learning . Wilmington: Great Souce Education Group, a Houghton Mifflin Company, 2002. 512-537. Images: http://flickr.com http://images.google.com/imghp?hl=en&tab=wi Thanks to the WebQuest Page and The WebQuest Slideshare Group Process
10. Introduction (Teacher) [ Student Page ] Title Introduction Learners Standards Process Resources Credits Teacher Page This lesson was developed as part of a Fundamentals of American Democracy course. In this class, we discuss the idea of “civic virtue” – that is, giving of your time, money or resources to help others. The students have been asked to research their public awareness campaign from the viewpoint of a volunteer for an organization that deals with their specific public awareness issue. By understanding one of these issues from the perspective of a volunteer, I hope that the students will gain a passion for the information that they learn – both in their own research and through the presentation of other public awareness campaigns in class. “ As a volunteer, you give your time and your service to support a cause that you think is important and valuable. By serving your community in any way, you are engaging in civic duty – an essential contribution and service to your country. How do you want to contribute to society? What issues are important to you? What concerns do you have about our society that you would like to learn more about and also inform a public audience about?” The real “point” of the assignment is to get students to start thinking about these essential questions and to start to understand and recognize the messages about public awareness campaigns that we both see and are oblivious to on a daily basis. Evaluation Teacher Script Conclusion
11. Learners (Teacher) [ Student Page ] Title Introduction Learners Standards Process Resources Credits Teacher Page While this assignment was developed for an 11 th grade Fundamentals of American Democracy course during the “civic duty” unit, I believe that this assignment could be tailored for any grade in high school and could probably be relevant in an English or language arts class as well. Before this lesson, students will need to have been taught (briefly) about the importance of using verifiable and trustworthy websites and internet sources for serious research. See credits section under “books” for my source on how to teach kids how to use the internet. Evaluation Teacher Script Conclusion
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15. Evaluation (Teacher) [ Student Page ] Title Introduction Learners Standards Process Resources Credits Teacher Page How will you know that this lesson was successful? Describe what student products or performances you'll be looking at and how they'll be evaluated. This, of course, should be tightly related to the standards and objectives you cited above. You may want to just copy and paste the evaluation section of the student page ( Evaluation ) into this space and add any clarifications needed for another teacher to make use of this lesson. Evaluation Teacher Script Conclusion Excellent 4 Good 3 OK 2 Poor 1 Score Research Outlines current, interesting, and important information into text and images. Information is abundant, current and interesting; All images are helpful and used in relation to the text Information is adequate and current; Some images are helpful and used in relation to the text Information is inadequate; Few images are used and are disconnected from the topic and the text Information is sparse, inadequate, incorrect or outdated; No images are used Research Internet sources used for research (at least 3) are current, professional, trustworthy and verifiable. All websites and internet sources contain adequate, current and interesting information; The minimum requirement for sources was met or exceeded Most websites and internet sources contain adequate and current information; The minimum requirement for sources was met Some websites and internet sources used are outdated, contain incorrect information or are not verifiable by professional source, author or research; The minimum requirement for sources was not met All websites and internet sources used are outdated, contain incorrect information or are not verifiable by professional source, author or research; The minimum requirement for sources was not met Research Credit was given properly to sources. Annotated bibliography was complete. Credit is given properly to sources; Annotated bibliography is complete and detailed Credit is given properly to sources; Annotated bibliography is minimally complete Credit is rarely given properly to sources; Annotated bibliography partially complete Credit is not given properly to sources; Annotated bibliography is incomplete Project PowerPoint or poster-board is complete. PowerPoint or poster-board is complete, creative, organized, visually appealing and contains several useful images PowerPoint or poster-board is complete, organized, visually appealing, and contains some images PowerPoint or poster-board is unorganized, not visually appealing and contains few images PowerPoint or poster-board is incomplete unorganized, not visually appealing and does not contain images; The audience is not informed or persuaded Presentation Presentation of Public Awareness Campaign using PowerPoint or poster-board was informative and persuasive. Presentation is interesting, helpful, informative and persuasive; Presentation does meet the minimum time requirement Presentation is informative and persuasive; Presentation does meet the minimum time requirement Presentation is dull and somewhat informative; Presentation does not meet the minimum time requirement Presentation is dull and uninformative; Presentation does not meet the minimum time requirement
16. Teacher Script (Teacher) [ Student Page ] Title Introduction Learners Standards Process Resources Credits Teacher Page I don’t think that a “teacher script” is necessary for this assignment. I think that this could be tailored to any specific need of a teacher – all that you need is essentially laid out for you in the “process” section of the assignment. Process segment Evaluation Teacher Script Conclusion
17. Conclusion (Teacher) [ Student Page ] Title Introduction Learners Standards Process Resources Credits Teacher Page Through the exploration of these public awareness issues, I hope that students will gain a greater understanding of the issues that surround our society today. As they recognize the problems that we face in our society, they should also approach problem-solving with a creative and open mind. Through their own research and through the presentations of other students, they will learn many great things about people and organizations that are working today to make a better tomorrow. Evaluation Teacher Script Conclusion
18. Credits & References (Teacher) [ Student Page ] Title Introduction Learners Standards Process Resources Credits Teacher Page Books: Burke, Jim, Ron Klemp, and Wendell Schwartz. Readers Handbook: a Student Guide for Reading and Learning . Wilmington: Great Souce Education Group, a Houghton Mifflin Company, 2002. 512-537. Images: http://flickr.com http://images.google.com/imghp?hl=en&tab=wi Thanks to the WebQuest Page and The WebQuest Slideshare Group Evaluation Teacher Script Conclusion