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Unwrapping the Standards: A Simple

Way to Deconstruct Learning Outcomes


By Peter DeWitt on March 25, 2015 4:00 PM

Today's guest blog is written by Larry Ainsworth, author of "Unwrapping" the


Common Core: A Practical Process to Manage Rigorous Standards (2014).

To "unwrap" or not to "unwrap"? - Actually, there is no question.

In addition to the voluminous numbers of standards teachers must impart to their


students each year, there is the added challenge of really understanding what the
standards means. It's one thing to read a standard and get a general sense of what it's
about. It's another thing to thoroughly understand what it explicitly and implicitly
indicates. What is it that students must know and be able to do as stated in each of
these learning outcomes?

"Unwrapping" is a simple method that all teachers in all grade levels can use to
deconstruct the wording of any standard in order to know its meaning inside and out.

Why is this important? If teachers aren't crystal clear about the full and precise intent of
a given standard, how can they accurately teach it? How can they accurately assess
student understanding of it? How can they clearly communicate to students the specific
learning intentions for a unit of study? Answer: Without first analyzing the standard,
they can't.

"Unwrapping" the Priority Standards (those standards pre-determined by teachers to


require the greatest emphasis) is the very first step in planning effective instruction and
assessment.

How to "Unwrap"

Working alone or with colleagues, teachers examine each Priority Standard within a
particular unit of study. They underline the teachable concepts (important nouns and
noun phrases) and circle or CAPITALIZE the skills (verbs) that students are to
demonstrate. Some of these concepts and skills represent surface or concrete learning
(lower-level foundational knowledge and procedures); others represent deeper or
abstract understanding (higher-level insights and applications). Together, these
"unwrapped" concepts and skills represent what students are to know and be able to do
by the end of the unit of study.

ELA and Math Examples

Here's an example of an "unwrapped" sixth grade Priority Standard in the strand of


Reading Informational Text:

RI.6.6: DETERMINE an author's point of view or purpose in a text and EXPLAIN how it
is conveyed in the text.

And here's an example of an "unwrapped" second grade math Priority Standard in the
domain of Number and Operations in Base Ten:

2.NBT.9: EXPLAIN WHY addition and subtraction strategies work, USING place
value and the properties of operations.

In both of these examples, the key concepts (nouns and noun phrases) that students
must learn have been underlined, and the specific skills (verbs) that student must
demonstrate appear in CAPS.

This same process would then be repeated with the three or four other Priority
Standards assigned to these ELA and math units of study, respectively.

Create a Graphic Organizer

After the "unwrapping" step is completed, teachers next prepare a graphic organizer
(outline, bulleted list, concept map, or chart) as a visual display of the "unwrapped"
concepts and skills. They then determine each skill's approximate levels of Bloom's
Taxonomy and Webb's Depth of Knowledge. This reveals each skill's level of cognitive
rigor. (Note: Both taxonomies are used to assist educators in accurately matching the
identified levels of cognitive rigor to selected- and constructed-response questions when
they later write their unit assessment.)
The majority of educators I've worked with prefer using a three-column chart in which
the concepts are listed in the first column, the skills in the second column, and the levels
of rigor in the third. In this way, they can see "at a glance" all of the learning targets and
corresponding levels of cognitive rigor that will be the focus for instruction and
assessment during the unit. In addition, the concepts listed in the first column provide
many of the unit's vocabulary terms.

ELA and Math Examples

Here are two abbreviated examples of ELA and math graphic organizers that contain
the same "unwrapped" concepts and skills as shown above. (Note: A completed
graphic organizer would also include the other "unwrapped" Priority Standards for the
unit.)

Not Just "Word Shuffling"

Transferring the underlined concepts and capitalized skills from the standards document
to the graphic organizer may appear to be mere "word shuffling," but it is much more
than that. Even though the first task is to separate concepts from skills, the two remain
tightly connected. It is the reorganization of the concepts and skills into this visual
format that enables teachers to grasp a standard's precise meaning and to determine its
degree of cognitive challenge.
The assigning of approximate Bloom's and DOK levels to the concept-skill pairs on the
graphic organizer is a mentally stimulating (and sometimes challenging!) exercise, but
one that teachers find extremely valuable. While working through the process, trust
your professional judgment, and let yourself practice deciding these levels. Collaborate
with grade-level or course-level colleagues whenever possible, and "agree to disagree"
while you are deciding the levels. Keep in mind that you can always revisit and revise
your initial decisions later--usually during the drafting of assessment items. You are then
zeroing in on what the "unwrapped" concept and skill are calling for so you can write an
assessment question that closely matches.

Your Turn

The power of this professional practice reveals itself in the doing of it! Here's a simple
way to get started:

1. Identify three or four Priority Standards as the focus for an upcoming unit of study.

2. "Unwrap" each Priority Standard by underlining its key concepts (nouns and noun
phrases representing what students need to know) and circling or CAPITALIZING the
skills (verbs representing what students need to demonstrate).

3. Create a graphic organizer that includes all of the "unwrapped" concepts and skills.
Assign an approximate Bloom's and DOK skill level to each concept-skill pair. A highly
recommended resource for this step is a set of matrices created by Karin Hess (click
here). Whereas this document applies specifically to math and social studies, a
separate document is available that applies to math and science.

4. When finished, double check that every concept and skill in the "unwrapped" Priority
Standards appears on your graphic organizer. In this way, you can confidently set aside
the standards documents and plan your unit of study directly aligned to your targeted
Priority Standards.

[Where to Next?
In addition to the two initial "unwrapping" steps presented here, the full process also
includes the identification of Big Ideas and Essential Questions. Derived from the
"unwrapped" Priority Standards, Big Ideas are the key understandings, the "aha's" or
"take aways" you want the students to discover on their own by the end of the unit of
study. Teachers pose open-ended Essential Questions at the beginning of the unit to
engage students to discover for themselves the related Big Ideas. In a subsequent blog
post, I will describe and illustrate how to derive the Big Ideas and Essential Questions
from the "unwrapped" Priority Standards.]

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