Curriculum & Instruction
Curriculum & Instruction
Welcome to the Curriculum and Instruction page of the Briarcliff Manor School Union Free School District.
This page is a resource for various matters related to Curriculum and Instruction within the district.
Curriculum Mapping
One initiative that we are moving towards as a district is providing Curriculum Maps for our core classes. Although this is a work in progress we hope that this insight will provide you with strategies to support your child(ren) at home. Please visit the Curriculum Mapping tab.
Staff Resources
Use the Staff Resources section to access tools and resources related to Frontline Professional Growth, District Plans/Intiatives, and more. Please reach out to me if you need additional support or clarification.
Coaches Corner
There are 4 instructional coaches throughout the district. Each coach is placed in a building and provides professional development for staff in their building and district wide.
Best,
Dr. Jasmine McQuay
Director of Curriculum and Instruction
Curriculum Mapping
Welcome to the Briarcliff Manor Union Free School District curriculum and instruction website. You will find a unit calendar of most subjects at the K-12 level. Many curriculum maps are presently being created and revised to reflect changes in our curriculum. This tool will help you gain an overview of the curriculum.
A curriculum map, through Atlas, is a tool for organizing what Briarcliff Manor Union Free School District expects students to know and be able to do in subjects, over the course of the year. A unit calendar outlines the name/topic of the unit and when it will be taught throughout the school year. As you can imagine, a two-dimensional map cannot capture the rich, multi-dimensional curriculum we teach. We hope that you will find this information valuable, as a resource for understanding what our students are learning.
Our curriculum maps are not individual lesson plans. These curriculum maps are broad outlines of what students learn throughout the year. Maps are collaboratively created by our teachers, who spend many hours reaching consensus about the curriculum that is essential for our students.
These maps are still in the developmental phase and more components will become available and modified over time.
Sincerely,
Dr. Jasmine McQuay
Director of Curriculum and Instruction
ATLAS:
Todd Parents
BMS/BHS Parents
Todd Elementary
Fundations
At Todd Elementary School in grades K-3, students engage in daily Fundations lessons that encompass the teaching of reading, spelling, and handwriting skills in a multisensory way.
Grounded in the Science of Reading, Fundations is based on the Orton-Gillingham Principles of reading instruction and the Wilson Reading Program, which both focus on multi-sensory instruction to increase literacy. Students learn to spell high frequency words using gross motor memory, building automaticity with phonetically irregular words to facilitate reading and writing. Beginning reading skills taught in Fundations include phonemic awareness, phonics, decoding, word attack strategies, vocabulary building, and fluency.
The program also teaches reading comprehension skills through text analysis, story mapping, and inference-making. In writing, Fundations promotes spelling skills and the use of conventions and punctuation as well as grammar. Fundations instruction is delivered explicitly and practice occurs in a systematic, cumulative, and diagnostic manner.
Links to Fundations alignment with Science of Reading
https://www.wilsonlanguage.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/FUN-Activities-Alignment-to-the-SOR-2.pdf
Program Overview
https://www.wilsonlanguage.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Fundations-Program-Overview-Levels-K-3.pdf
Reading
Writing
The mission of the Todd Elementary School writing curriculum is to engage all learners in rigorous, authentic writing instruction that sets the groundwork for students to communicate effectively. The writing curriculum provides students to live in the three genres of writing: narrative, opinion, and informational. Through a combination of mini-lessons, guided practice, and peer collaboration, we aim to cultivate a love for writing while also honing essential literacy skills such as spelling, grammar, and sentence structure. We value the process of writing as much as the final product, emphasizing revision and reflection as integral parts of the creative journey. By fostering a community of writers who celebrate each other's successes and offer constructive feedback, we strive to instill confidence and a sense of ownership in every student's writing abilities. Our ultimate goal is to empower young writers to express themselves authentically and effectively, both in the classroom and beyond.
Science
Middle School
The Briarcliff Middle School Model
At Briarcliff Middle School (BMS), the skills and dispositions of a Briarcliff Graduate drive our curriculum and instruction. We believe critical thinking, complex problem solving, creativity, digital literacy, civic engagement, and personal agency are essential for success in the 21st Century.
- Lessons are designed to challenge students to analyze, evaluate and solve complex problems across all subject areas and attention is placed on planning interdisciplinary units to the extent possible.
- Students are encouraged and taught to ask questions, explore and think creatively.
- The New York State Next Generation Learning Standards act as the scope and sequence for the curriculum in each core class and our belief in student-centered learning that promotes the five skills and dispositions outlined above acts as the rationale for our pedagogical approach.
English Language Arts
Our English Language Arts classes promote critical thinking, creativity, and empathy by asking students to engage with a range of genres representing a variety of perspectives and experiences as portrayed through different characters and time periods. Students engage in analysis, reflection, and research to deepen learning and make connections across texts, current events, themes, and time periods. ELA classrooms place emphasis on visual and digital literacy, and you can often find teachers and students leaning on technology to enhance learning whenever possible. This might look like publishing short stories as eBooks in Pages or students researching common terms or artifacts to better understand the setting of a class novel.
We prepare students to become well-rounded readers, writers, speakers, and listeners. Each grade level uses a literature-based curriculum; students study a variety of literary and informational prose and poetry including essays, short stories, novels, and dramatic works. Through these texts, students consider multiple perspectives, identify themes and build a repertoire of writing craft and techniques to apply to their own writing. Students read classics and contemporary works representing a diversity of authors and a wide variety of cultural perspectives. Over the course of their three years at BMS, students write a balance of the genres outlined by the NYS Next Generation Standards: argumentative writing, informative writing, narrative writing, and poetry.
If you walked into an ELA classroom at BMS, you might find groups of students engaged in a “Socratic Seminar,” an open discussion, usually held in a circle formation, where students are responding to student generated questions and prompts. You might also find students analyzing captions on a published photo essay in order to identify craft techniques and features to be able to create their own unique photo essays. Still yet, you might find students engaged in a peer editing process, having exchanged “papers” (sometimes their iPads!) in order to provide specific and actionable feedback for improvement.
When it comes to content and depth, each grade builds on the last. All units and their subsequent assessments focus on the writing process, analytical reading, comprehension, as well as public speaking and discussion skills.
Mathematics
Math lessons are student-centered and collaborative, incorporating problem solving and hands-on and tech-based manipulatives. These classrooms are energizing. You are likely to walk into a math classroom and observe students conversing in small groups as they solve fast-paced problem, scribbling and erasing solutions until they enthusiastically indicate that they “got it!”
Students learn to reason, understand concepts and apply problem solving skills as they master the concepts mapped out by the NYS Next Generation Learning Standards-- from Ratios and Proportions to Number Systems, Expressions, Equations & Inequalities, Geometry, and Statistics & Probability. Students excelling in math and seeking an additional academic challenge are placed in our accelerated math program beginning in 7th grade. These students move at a faster pace, completing both 7th and 8th grade material in one academic year, allowing them to learn and sit for the Algebra I Regents in the 8th grade. Students who successfully complete the Regents in Algebra I earn high school credit with the final grade appearing on the student’s high school transcript.
Science
Science instruction at BMS is grounded in inquiry, problem-solving and hands-on experimentation. Students develop the skills of the discipline including data analysis, application, investigating phenomena, and understanding that certain concepts cut across all scientific disciplines. They are encouraged to discover and appreciate the wonders of science through the content.
- In 6th grade, students explore topics related to Earth’s Systems, History of Earth, Weather & Climate, Human Impacts, and Space Systems.
- All units incorporate lab activities, engineering, and design.
- 7th grade students study the living environment with a focus on the biological make up of living organisms from simple to complex and the impact they have on their environment.
- Our 8th grade science course is uniquely designed to prepare students for the rigor of high school science. Students study the foundations of chemistry and physics, through the investigation of the basic structure of matter.
- The course provides a blend of science concepts and skills culminating with a state assessment. Across all science classes, students are assessed in a variety of ways including practical examinations, multiple-choice, hands-on experiments and open ended writing prompts. All forms of assessment incorporate having students make a claim and use data and evidence to support and explain their reasoning.
Social Studies
In Social Studies classrooms, students learn to read and write like historians, analyzing and annotating primary and secondary source documents to understand multiple perspectives and context, and asking questions to deepen learning about the world around them and how they contribute to it. Classes are hands-on and inquiry based. It’s not uncommon to find students engaged in a discussion protocol in small groups or circulating the room looking at primary sources in a “gallery walk.” Students foster awareness of larger communities (local, national, and global), and cultivate understanding of their roles and responsibilities as citizens.
Our teachers follow the New York State Social Studies Framework for Grades 6-8, which places emphasis on the skills and dispositions needed for college, career, and civic life. The focus in 6th grade is on ancient civilizations whereas in 7th and 8th grade the focus on American History. Across these contexts, students explore open ended questions to guide inquiry and teachers encourage student voice and choice by offering opportunities for self-paced and collaborative learning. Students build historical thinking skills through source analysis, recognize sequence of events, how events are interrelated, recognize patterns and themes in history, and understand how events impact or help explain one another. Teachers assess students through project-based assessments, claim-based and document-based writing assignments, and stimulus-based multiple-choice questioning. The goal is to help students grow into global citizens who can solve problems, think creatively, and live as learners in an increasingly complex world.
World Language
Our World Language Department is committed to preparing our students for today’s increasingly global society. Students have the choice of learning Spanish or French over the course of three-years. The courses are communicative, designed to help students feel comfortable in the four essential language skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing. At each grade level, students are immersed in language and cultures through projects, games, conversations, hands-on activities, and technology. Whereas in 6th grade there is a heavier focus on speaking and listening and in 7th and 8th grade there is a heavier emphasis on vocabulary and grammar. Students who complete the three-year course and pass our local proficiency exam receive one high school credit. Our goal is to prepare students to become life-long learners and lovers of language, and to be able to compete in the global society.
Related Arts
At BMS, core classes, while important, are just a piece of the whole. Students cycle through related arts classes throughout the year, providing a holistic and rich experience with the arts, technology, and career/life readiness. Courses include visual art, computer art, creative movement, health, computer science, design & modeling, home and careers, and music (students choose between chorus, band/orchestra or exploring music). All students take physical education at least twice a week. Most students also rotate through three cycles of enrichment each year, designed to enrich and extend academic learning and ranging from math games to creative writing, robotics, and Project Lead the Way classes around design and simulation.
High School
At Briarcliff High School, we offer a dynamic curriculum designed to inspire and empower students to reach their full potential. On the academic front, we offer students a robust program with 145 course offerings, including 25 Advanced Placement, 46 college accredited, and 12 Honors courses. Whether it be STEAM, humanities, performing & visual arts, and athletics, health & wellness, students can choose from our many electives to find and explore their interests.
We are constantly striving to enrich our program through extracurricular activities with field trips, as well as a diverse offering of clubs and athletics.
Focusing on the Skills and Dispositions of a Briarcliff Graduate, we work every day to prepare our students for life beyond the classroom, equipping them with the skills and knowledge they need to be successful in the world that awaits them outside the doors of Briarcliff High School!
Please use the link below to explore our High School Course Catalog.
Staff Resources
Welcome all staff members to the Curriculum and Instruction Page.
This page will provide you with resources related to Frontline-Professional Growth, Professional Development Related Documents, and the District Plans/ Initiatives related to Curriculum and instruction.
If you need any information that is not provided on this website please contact me directly.
Best,
Dr. Jasmine McQuay
Director of Curriculum and Instruction
Coaches Corner
Instructional Coaching Vision
Student learning is at the heart of instructional coaching. The Briarcliff Manor Instructional Coaching Team provides job-embedded support to teachers as they build their knowledge base and skill level around pedagogy, lesson development, and assessment. Using an inquiry-based framework, we work alongside teachers to set achievable goals that improve instructional practices. We provide differentiated professional development opportunities highlighting evidence-based practices. Through our collaborative efforts, we hope to foster a student-centered community that values and celebrates risk-taking, learning and empowerment.
Veronica Fazzini - Instructional Coach Todd (Book a Coaching Session)
Meera Rajani- Instructional Coach Todd (Book a Coaching Session)
Maggie White - Instructional Coach MS (Book a Coaching Session)
Dr. Tracy Campanile - Instructional Coach HS (Book a Coaching Session)