Link to class site here.
As a department, we have been working on making the Technology Achievement Objectives more accessible and understandable for the Y7-Y10 students. We have worked on Level 1 to level 5 so we can show a clear pathway from our intermediates who come in for their Technology lessons through to our Year 9 and 10 students at the college.
This has been a really useful exercise for me as it made it really clear where the gaps are in my planning and make sure all the curriculum requirements are covered over a project.
As a school, we are moving towards "Visible Learning", where it is made really clear for the students why they are doing activities and what they are linked to.
Here is the sheet for the Year 10 product design project
Link here for the doc...
Achievement Objectives for Year 10 Mobile Phone Project - DVC
Level 5
- Brief Development : Levels 1-5
- Planning for Practice : Levels 1-5
- Outcome Development and Evaluation : Levels 1-5
- Technological Modelling : Levels 1-5
Achievement Objectives
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Learning Activity
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Evidence
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Resources
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SOLO
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Brief Development
Justify the nature of an intended outcome in relation to the need or opportunity. Describe specifications that reflect key stakeholder feedback and that will inform the development of an outcome and its evaluation.
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Design brief written up on a Google Doc.
Work in groups to decide what would be good questions to ask the client / customer. Put ideas onto a shared Google Drawing. This is then posted in the community for all to see and use ideas from.
Google form used to collect questionnaire information from client base. Students put form onto the class community to receive input.
It can also be emailed out to targeted clients if needed.
This form can be individual or in pairs.
Analyse the results of the questionnaire ( use the graphing function of the spreadsheet ? )
Pick out the key points / most popular attributes that need to be included in the design work.
List these key points / specifications with the design brief.
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Questions / writing frame structured around SOLO progression, building depth from unistructural to relational.
Group work can be based around 3 levels of SOLO.
Multistructural when listing attributes etc.
(Combine, describe, enumerate, list
Perform serial skills)
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Planning for Practice
Analyse their own and others’ planning practices to inform the selection and use of planning tools. Use these to support and justify planning decisions (including those relating to the management of resources) that will see the development of an outcome through to completion.
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Make and post examples of project breakdown / timelines / planning sheets.
Students to make their own.
Use a spreadsheet for tracking of class work as they do it, and make it available for all students to see it all the time.
Google calendar embedded on class site for reference to timescale for tasks.
Student project planning - to include tasks / materials / equipment / timescale / changes / next steps
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Multistructural when listing jobs to be completed / tools needed etc..
(Combine, describe, enumerate, list
Perform serial skills)
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Outcome Development and Evaluation
Analyse their own and others’ outcomes to inform the development of ideas for feasible outcomes. Undertake ongoing functional modelling and evaluation that takes account of key stakeholder feedback and trialling in the physical and social environments. Use the information gained to select and develop the outcome that best addresses the specifications. Evaluate the final outcome’s fitness for purpose against the brief.
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Create a timeline of mobile phones through time to be able to see the changes that have happened - they can use google drawing / presentation / doc or any other means.
Group discussion question in the community about how changes have occurred in phone design. They can all see each others answers on the community post.
Analysis of a mobile phone of choice, using the SOLO question structure. This can be done on doc, presentation or drawing.
Produce sketches / concepts and models based on results of questionnaire and research. These are then scanned and photographed.
All design work, models and development work posted on the Google Plus class community for feedback from other members of the class. (scans, photos and screenshots)
Use TinkerCad to develop a 3D model to print - take screenshots of development work as they go.
3D print a final phone design drawn on TinkerCad
Photographs of final design to be posted in the community for feedback from the whole class based on a given feedback structure. These photographs can be posted with the original specification points so comparisons can be made by the class.
Write an evaluation of the final phone design / model based on the feedback received from the rest of the class.
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Compare and contrast / timeline work is Relational.
(Analyse, apply, argue, compare/contrast, criticise, explain causes, relate, justify)
Presentation template structured to take the students through from unistructural to extended abstract in terms of their types of analysis questions.
Using research work for own ideas is Extended Abstract.
(Create, formulate, generate, hypothesise, reflect, theorise)
This is structured to take students from sketches to models and back to sketches with analysis notes based on SOLO structure.
Relational - when comparing shapes against each other and making judgements for design decisions.
(Analyse, apply, argue, compare/contrast, criticise, explain causes, relate, justify)
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Technological Modelling
Understand how evidence, reasoning, and decision making in functional modelling contribute to the development of design concepts and how prototyping can be used to justify ongoing refinement of technological outcomes.
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Class discuss / draw and make comfortable shapes - what makes a comfortable shape, why does it have to be a comfortable shape?
The work from the comfortable shapes exercise is then used to start creating concept ideas.
Ideas developed on TinkerCad to think about them in virtual 3D modelling - screen shots taken and analysis done.
Work to be posted in the class community for all to comment on and make suggestions for improvements. Reasons must be given for the suggestions.
Final design to be printed on the 3D printer for a final prototype.
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Relational - when comparing shapes against each other and making judgements for design decisions.
(Analyse, apply, argue, compare/contrast, criticise, explain causes, relate, justify)
Relational when giving feedback and critiquing the work of others
(Analyse, apply, argue, compare/contrast, criticise, explain causes, relate, justify)
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When I tried to apply this to my NCEA standards for my seniors, I did not find it as easy.
The achievement objectives go up to Level 8 of the curriculum, but it is not explicit anywhere how these link to the actual standards that we work on.
Our Year 10 groups have been collapsed and these students have started NCEA Level 1 earl this year. This is a new thing for us and our DP asked us to make sure the students understood the LANGUAGE of NCEA. This gave me an idea of how to approach visible learning with them.
I have altered the sheet so we worked together on the meanings of the first standard :-
Achieved, Merit, Excellence
This was done really easily on Google Drawings.
Here is the sheet that we are going to use..
Link to where it is on the class site
What I need to add yet, is the SOLO taxonomy structure that is built into the planning of the project so it is obvious to the students where it fits in.
Architect Poster
AS91069
Promote an organised body of design work to an audience using visual communication techniques
4 credits - Internal
Standard
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What does it mean?
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What will you do?
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Resources
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Achieved
Promote an organised body of design work to an audience using visual communication techniques.
selecting and presenting the features of an organised body of work to an audience.
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Promote - present the work in some way
Organised - different parts working together as a whole
Body of work - more than one piece of design work by your chosen designer
Visual communication techniques - effective presentation of ideas using a range of methods - sketching, use of colour and tone, analysis … both drawn by hand and on the computer
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Merit
Clearly promote an organised body of design work to an audience using visual communication techniques.
purposefully selecting and applying techniques to ensure layout, composition and visual impact are appropriate to the context of the brief and audience.
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Clearly - easily seen and understood
Purposefully - with thought, not by accident
Select - choose from a number of options of techniques
Layout - how things are arranged
Composition - how the design is made from separate parts and how they work together.
Visual Impact - how the design looks and the effect it has
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Achieved plus :-
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This level also depends on the quality of your work and on you showing your understanding of your Architect. |
Excellence
Effectively promote an organised body of design work to an audience using visual communication techniques.
communicating a high quality presentation that is convincing, shows accuracy of layout, visual impact, and precise execution of techniques.
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effectively - does the intended job very well
convincing - the evidence is there that your architect’s work has been taken into account in the layout of your poster.
accuracy - correctly laid out, with no errors.
execution - the method you chose to produce your poster
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Achieved and Merit plus :-
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This level also depends on the quality of your work and on you showing your understanding of your Architect. |
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