The Safety Net Curriculum
The Safety Net Curriculum
The Safety Net Curriculum
necessary for all students. The Safety Net specifically provides an emphasis on student learning of a few objectives rather than student exposure to many objectives.
How Did You Choose the Learning Objectives in the Safety Net?
Three questions guide the selection of Safety Net learning objectives: (1) What endures? In other words, what skills and knowledge will students gain that last from one academic year to the next? For example, the skill of constructing an informative essay is something that students need throughout their academic career. It is a skill that endures over time. The same cannot be said, for example, of the requirement that a student memorize the formula for the area of a trapezoid. (2) What is essential for progress to the next level of instruction? In a continuing dialog with teachers at all grade levels, we much determine what is essential for future success. For example, when 11th grade history teachers are asked what is essential for success in their classes, they rarely respond with items of historical knowledge that should have been memorized in middle school. Rather, they typically respond that students should have skills in reading and writing, knowledge of map reading, and an understanding of the difference between democracy and authoritarianism. (3) What contributes to understanding of other standards? The safety net should comprise power standards that is, those standards that, once mastered, give a student the ability to use reasoning and thinking skills to learn and understand other curriculum objectives outside of the safety net. For example, in a middle school mathematics class, the properties of a triangle and rectangle might be in the safety net, because this understanding will allow students to comprehend information about other shapes rhombus, trapezoid, parallelogram that are outside of the safety net.
If Students Know the Safety Net Objectives, Can We Ignore All the Other Standards?
No. The state standards and district curriculum remain important guides for teachers in planning their instruction. However, few if any teachers will actually cover every element of every portion of state standards and district curriculum. To the extent that a teacher, by virtue of a careful analysis of the needs of students, covers less than the entire curriculum and state standards, the Safety Net provides a guide on the essential core curriculum that must not only be covered, but that the students must learn.
from The Safety Net Curriculum by Douglas B. Reeves, Ph.D., in Power Standards: Identifying the Standards that Matter the Most, Larry Ainsworth, Advanced Learning Press, 2003.