By Megan Davenport, Rubicon International
Sitting down to begin mapping your curriculum is a daunting task—where do you even begin? There are many entry points, but here I walk you through one way that the process can look in order to help you begin your own work!

Pre-Work:

Assess Your Curriculum Beliefs: What do the teachers and administrators at your school believe about curriculum? At my school, we outlined the following beliefs:

  • Good curriculum is spiraled and continuously reviewed.
  • Good curriculum is research-based and standards-aligned.
  • Good curriculum is focused and provides clear instruction.

Why does this matter? I need to make sure that my curriculum is meeting these beliefs. It doesn’t really matter how I begin to outline my year as long as I am staying true to these core principles.

Gather Your Materials:  In my case, I will be using the Common Core State Standards and my ELA textbook as a foundation for my curriculum. To begin, I need a print out of my standards, a highlighter, and a pen. Additionally, I need my teacher’s manual to use as a reference.

Why not just follow the textbook exactly? The textbook was a great resource for me, but I found that it moved too quickly for me and my students, and I didn’t like the order in which they introduced new concepts and skills. As such, I plan to restructure my course to move at my own pace, while building in the use of resources from the textbook and other resources that I find on my own.

Determine Your Structure: Mapping ELA at the elementary level is hard! Though reading, writing, and grammar are always difficult to capture, elementary can be especially tricky when thinking about all of the direct instruction that needs to happen around phonics, vocabulary, spelling, speaking, and more. This blog post explores a few options. In my example, I have separate instructional blocks for reading and writing, so I will choose to have separate reading and writing units.

Getting Started:

Things to Consider:

How many standards? I chose to only align the standards to each unit that will be a major focus of my direct instruction. This does not mean that I am not continuing to spiral additional standards throughout my units for review. I find that my teaching is best when I focus on the new concepts that my students will be learning. We will review our past learning as we discuss and interact with the text, but I chose not to align to those standards so that I can intentionally focus on my direct instruction. I will include references to the additional standards in my learning activities, and I can also align them to assessments for additional tracking.

Didn’t you skip some standards? Yes. Because I am just starting my units, I ensured that I am covering all of the Literature, Informational Text, and Writing standards for the structure of my course. The Speaking & Listening and Language standards will be added later as I outline my activities.

How should I structure my Content and Skills? As you consider the phonics, vocabulary, grammar, spelling, and any other components that are a part of your language instruction, you may want to think about adding subheadings to your Content and Skills sections so that you can explicitly address all of these topics. As we are starting to outline our course, we will not get into this depth of detail, but it is something to consider as a next step.

What are some other ways to structure my units?

Thematic units: some teachers start with a topic or theme, and then add the standards & concepts to fit within that theme. For example, you may have several stories and resources about animals, and thus create a unit that is “All About Animals.” Within that unit, you can choose which standards to group together as you read stories with animals as characters, and informational text about animals. We might also recommend adding a bit more detail about the focus of the unit, such as “All About Animals: Summarize.”

Integrated units: Especially as students get older, teachers may choose to having reading, writing, grammar, and all language topics within the same unit. If this is the case, you can go through a similar process to that outlined above. However, you will also want to consider the reading and writing standards in the grouping stage.

Want more PD on mapping ELA aligned to the Common Core? Email us at [email protected]! And, see the other posts in our “Where to start” series here!

Share This