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VERTICAL AND HORIZONTAL ARTICULATION FOR TOK IBMA Summer Academy 2010

IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

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Page 1: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

VERTICAL AND HORIZONTAL ARTICULATION FOR TOK

IBMA Summer Academy 2010

Page 2: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

http://home.comcast.net/~cphenlymbk2006All handouts and other materials available at:

Page 3: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

What is TOK?

Page 4: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

Ways of Knowing

ReasonEmotionSense PerceptionLanguage

Page 5: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

Areas of Knowledge

ArtsNatural ScienceHuman ScienceHistoryMathematicsEthics

Page 6: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

An investigation into the limits and capabilities, the liabilities and assets of our Ways of Knowing

AND

An investigation into the mechanisms, both technological and procedural, within each of the Areas of Knowledge that allow us to maximize the assets and minimize the liabilities of our Ways of Knowing.

What is TOK?

Page 7: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

The TOK Curriculum

Ways of Know-ing

Areas ofKnowledge

Page 8: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

Potential Knowers:

Arts• Artist• Receiver• Student

Natural Science• Scientist• Student

Human Science• Scientist• Student

Page 9: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

Potential Knowers:

History• Historian• Receiver• Student

Math• Mathematician• User of math to

solve problems• Student

Ethics• Ethicist• Practitioner of a

field with formal ethical principles

• Student

Page 10: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

Central Focus

What are the obstacles to making knowledge within this subject area?

What are the mechanisms by which we endeavor to overcome those obstacles?

ProceduralTechnological

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Other Considerations:

What are the parameters of the “area” of knowledge? (What IS the content?)

Is the content of the Area of Knowledge invented or discovered?

What constitutes a fact within the Area of Knowledge?

What are the primary means by which truth is established?

To what degree is certainty attainable?

Page 12: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

The Foundation for Critical Thinking

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Elements of Critical Thought

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Involving The Rest of the Staff

Align the elements of critical thought with the scoring criteria for your IB assessments.

Teach students the vocabulary and framework of the elements of critical thought.

Evaluate student work in terms of the elements of critical thought.

Page 15: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

“The Logic of…” Framework

Purpose Question Information Inference Concepts Assumptions Implications Point of View

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Involving The Rest of the Staff

Consider their own subject in TOK terms (as students will have to do)

Compare the framework for their subject with those of other subjects

Convey to students basic information about the framework—content, values, formal practices.

Page 17: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

A Revised Framework for TOK

M eadowbrook High School Carolyn P . Henly I B Theory of Knowledge

Framework for Making Knowledge Directions: Choose any Area of Knowledge, and fill out the chart, identifying the key features of each element described in column one. You can type right into the chart; it will expand to accommodate your typing.

Questions:

(TYPE THE NAME OF THE AREA OF

KNOWLEDGE HERE) What is the purpose of undertaking work in this area of knowledge? (What set or class of knowledge do practitioners seek to obtain? What is the basic content of this area of knowledge?)

What values underlie the desire to seek knowledge in this area?

What beliefs about reality underlie the desire to seek knowledge in this area?

Is the content in this area of knowledge discovered or invented (or both)?

What are the important questions that practitioners of this area of knowledge seek to answer?

What are the important sources of information for answering the questions and achieving the purpose in this area of knowledge?

What important concepts must be understood in order to successfully make knowledge in this area?

What are the barriers to certainty in this area of knowledge? (What problems must we overcome in order to achieve the purpose?)

What mechanisms do practitioners of this area of knowledge employ in order to overcome those barriers to knowledge? (These might be technological or procedural.)

What values are reflected in the mechanisms for knowledge-making?

What are the consequences for human experience of increased knowledge and understanding in this area of knowledge?

Page 18: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

Sample: Ethics

Page 19: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

For Use with TOK Students: Complete chart for

individual subjects Complete chart

comparing/contrasting two or more subjects

Page 20: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

Carolyn P. HenlyMeadowbrook High School4901 Cogbill Rd.Richmond, VA [email protected]://home.comcast.net/~cphenlymbk2006

Presentation Prepared By:

Page 21: IBMA Summer Academy 2010. All handouts and other materials available at:

The End