Teacher Education Unit 2025

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the Teacher Education Unit in the editor.
  2. Begin with the 'Context for Teaching & Student Learning' section. Fill out the Contextual Information Form by providing details about your community, school, and classroom dynamics.
  3. Move on to 'Planning for Teaching & Student Learning'. Complete the Instructional Unit Template by identifying big ideas, essential questions, and learning targets. Ensure you conduct a pre-assessment and analyze data accordingly.
  4. In the 'Instructional Cycle' section, outline your teaching strategies and formative assessments. Document how you will engage students cognitively and provide feedback.
  5. For 'Analyzing Teaching & Student Learning', evaluate student performance using visual displays like charts or graphs to illustrate learning outcomes.
  6. Finally, reflect on your teaching practices in the last section. Discuss what worked well and what could be improved based on student performance data.

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Educational unit means a component of a training program, including, without limitation, a course, subject, topic, module or block.
The Teaching and Learning Units are educational paths that focus on one complex issue through a transdisciplinary approach using a number of learning tools. Such learning experiences can stimulate scholastic knowledge as well as skills to help students and teachers deal with everyday life or big, complex issues.
A unit represents approximately three hours of work per week. Thus a 3 unit course will probably require 9 hours of work per week, a 5 unit course will require 15 hours per week, and so forth. Of course, the actual hours may vary somewhat from class to class and student to student.
A unit is a component of study which forms part of your course. Units are normally worth 6 credit points and involve 150 hours of student workload (12-15 hours per week).