Full description not available
R**Y
Great textbook for my curriculum theory course!
I'm using this textbook for my curriculum theory course in the School of Education. Even though it is an older publication, it is still valuable! Another professor in my department used it over the summer and felt the same way!
S**R
What every teacher should know.
This is a valuable resource for any educator. I have been teaching for over 30 years and I reference my copy all of the time. My son is early in his teaching career and is taking some graduate education courses. I bought it for him. He has already begun to use it as a part of his graduate studies and as a resource in his classroom.
A**S
Every educator needs this book!
Definitely a must have for any educator. Wiggins and McTighe are almost the pioneers in this field and thought of backwards design (Robert Tyler first thought of the concept in his published work from 1947) and their concepts are easy to implement and are what I would call a no-brainer. As in it should be something that all teachers are already implementing in their lesson and unit planning already. However, we all know that it is not already in the forefront of every educators mind or else there would not be a need for this book. This book will definitely teach the educator or potential educator how to start to think about the goals of a lesson and then to plan the lessons on how to get each student to those specific goals (backwards design). It is an easy concept and once understood and fully grasped by the educator he/she can start to educate their students in a way in which the students will benefit by truly gaining meaningful knowledge from the course they are taking with the educator and be able to apply the knowledge and demonstrate understanding.
P**1
Solid Resource.
This is not the newest edition, but it works for my intention. I am an adjunct professor looking toward administration and wanted to get some foundational learning in curriculum and overall program design.
K**.
Game changer
I read this in conjunction with a class. Both together were definitely helpful. But the book provides a lot of insight into how to be deliberate about doing things that matter. I’ve been teaching well for thirty years, but I’m about to get better. :)
V**H
Excellent Resource about Learner-Centered Teaching
This book was recommended to me by people I consider to be excellent teachers. It really opened my eyes to a different way of approaching my teaching. This is a comprehensive resource for those that want to focus on ensuring that learning goes on in the minds of students, instead of a simple transfer of substantive knowledge from teacher to student. It is aimed at all grades, from elementary to college. The book is written in a way that makes it engaging to read, and reassures that you don't have to do every suggestion right away. I am looking forward to re-reading it and perhaps getting the companion workbook.
A**R
good information, just not reader friendly.
Way too long. The repeated themselves so many times and made things sound more complicated than it needed to be. I also think splitting it up into an elementary targeted book and a middle/high school level book would be more helpful and be able to better help the reader apply what was learned.
D**S
One of the most enlightening - yet straightforward - education texts I have ever read.
I had to read this book for a graduate course, and it is, quite possibly, one of the most enlightening education texts I have ever read. I bought the kindle version for the course, but I'm planning on buying the print edition so that I can re-read it, with more notes. It's that good. I wish I had read it years ago, and I have found it's impacted my teaching from chapter one. I'm encouraging my principal to offer it as a book study.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
2 days ago