Foreword by H. Lynn Erickson Preface Acknowledgments Part I. Preparing for Curriculum Design 1. Curriculum Matters in Teaching and Learning Curriculum as the Master Plan What Is Concept-Based Curriculum? 2. The Components of a Concept-Based English Language Arts Curriculum Traditional Curriculum, Traditional Teaching From Traditionally Designed Curriculum to Concept-Based Curriculum Design The Relationship Between Knowledge and Process Understanding the Two Structures Support for These Structures Providing a Road Map for Instruction 3. Getting Started: Doing the Preliminary Work Leading Curriculum Change Assembling the Curriculum Leadership Team Review of Concept-Based Curriculum Summary Part II. An Introduction to the Design Process Assembling the Curriculum Writing Team The Role of the Leadership Team Unit Planning Pages 4. Designing the Curriculum: Steps 1 and 2 Step 1: Creating a Unit Title Step 2: Identifying a Conceptual Lens Summary 5. Designing the Curriculum: Step 3 Step 3: Creating the Unit Web Summary 6. Designing the Curriculum: Steps 4 and 5 Thinking and Understanding Step 4: Writing Generalizations Step 5: Writing Guiding Questions 7. Designing the Curriculum: Steps 6 and 7 Step 6: Determining Critical Content Step 7: Determining Key Skills Summary of Steps 6 and 7 8. Designing the Curriculum: Steps 8, 9, and 10 Step 8: Designing the Culminating Assessment Step 9: Suggesting Learning Experiences Step 10: Writing the Unit Overview Part III. What a Concept-Based Curriculum Looks Like 9. What Concept-Based English Language Arts Units Look Like A Sample Elementary English Language Arts Unit A Sample Middle School English Language Arts Unit A Sample High School English Language Arts Unit Summary 10. Voices From the Field References Index