The structure and features of the Curriculum Cooperative and its Curriculum Library are derived from educational research and the psychology, neurology, and philosophy associated with the teaching and learning of higher-order thinking. Such resources as well as action research in classrooms by Cooperative members are made available here.
What Does Higher-Order Thinking Look Like?
This is a detailed description of higher-order thinking, how such a goal relates to other educational goals, and how higher-order thinking can be defined in a way useful for classroom teaching and learning.
Achieving Higher-Order Thinking – A 3-D classroom model
This five page summary of a 3-D model of classroom practice focused on higher-order thinking begins with the need for such learning. It proposes an operational definition and a corresponding model for classroom practice focused on such learning. It ends with the rationale for the Curriculum Cooperative Library as a tool for implementing such teaching and learning in the reality of today’s public classrooms.
How The Curriculum Library Is A Tool For Teaching Higher-Order Thinking
This short essay describes how the structure and design of the Curriculum Library are focused on teaching and learning higher order thinking. Also explained is how the Library’s structure can be used as a tool to enhance any on-going effort or program focused on increasing students’ higher-order thinking. It ends by describing how the Library can be used in place of a textbook as the backbone of a rigorous course of study, regardless of the particular subject area or topic.
What are Generalizations or Enduring Understandings?
Here is a practical yet detailed description of what generalizations are, how they are the foundation for defining transferable knowledge, and how they are the connection to objective assessment of higher-order thinking.
Inquiry Learning at the High School Level: A Possible Answer to the Depth-Coverage Trade-Off
This 11-page paper describes how inquiry learning at the high school level could be focused on higher-order thinking. Such an alignment would also make it possible to have both increased depth and increased breadth of learning, one reinforcing rather than fighting the other for classroom time.
Structure of Transferable Concepts – Science
This summary chart is a working document of about 200 transferable scientific concepts organized according to the three parameters derived from cognitive and developmental psychology: Generality, Complexity, and Abstractness. Enduring understandings for each concept are available under the Help icon for each concept in the Curriculum Library tree of options.
Structure of Transferable Concepts – Math
This summary chart is a working document of about 70 transferable mathematical concepts organized according to the three parameters derived from cognitive and developmental psychology: Generality, Complexity, and Abstractness.
Structure of Transferable Concepts – History and Social Studies
This summary chart is a working document of about 80 transferable scientific concepts organized according to the three parameters derived from cognitive and developmental psychology: Generality, Complexity, and Abstractness.
Summary of Doctoral Dissertation: An Investigation Of Children's Ideas About Conservation Of Energy within A Concept-Based Model.
(1994, University of Massachusetts Amherst)
A six year doctoral study, encompassing both academic and classroom research, initially mapped out what was to become The Curriculum Cooperative as a practical model for public classrooms to teach and learn higher-order thinking.
Annotated Bibliography for Concept-Based Education focused on Higher Order Thinking
These brief descriptions emphasize what some of the seminal publications in the theory of intellectual learning say about higher-order thinking.
Glossary of Terms
Definitions of some terms commonly found in the programs and literature of many school-based programs focused on student learning, higher-order thinking and concept-based education.