n a Nutshell
Teaching for Understanding
is an educational pedagogy that uses the following four questions
as a foundation for its framework:
The Teaching for
Understanding Framework includes four key ideas--based on the four
questions: generative topics, understanding goals, performances of understanding, and ongoing
assessment. (Although the framework parts are usually presented in this order, the ordering is
somewhat arbitrary. You can begin your discussions or planning sessions with any part--as
you'll see demonstrated in various parts of the site.)
Framework parts:
Generative Topics : These topics of exploration have multiple connections to students' interests
and experiences and can be learned in a wide variety of ways. They are central to the discipline,
engaging to both students and teachers, and build on previous topics.
Understanding Goals : Statements or questions that express what is most important for
students to understand during the period of a unit, a course (Understanding Goals), or over a long
duration, such as a schoolyear (Throughlines).
Performances of Understanding : Activities that both develop and demonstrate students'
understanding of the understanding goals by requiring them to use what they know in new ways.
Ongoing Assessment : The process by which students get continual feedback about their
performances of understanding in order to improve them.
Course Resources:
Course Themes: