LEADING INSTRUCTIONAL IMPROVEMENT Richard F. Elmore Harvard Graduate School of Education Leadership:...

Post on 13-Jan-2016

213 views 0 download

Tags:

transcript

LEADING INSTRUCTIONAL IMPROVEMENT

Richard F. ElmoreHarvard Graduate School of Education

Leadership: An Evolving VisionJuly 2010

BUILDING HIGH-LEVEL INSTRUCTION THROUGH

OBSERVATION AND ANALYSIS OF PRACTICE

TEACHER STUDENT

CONTENT

THE INSTRUCTIONAL CORE •Principle #1: Increases in student learning occur only as a consequence of improvements in the level of content, teachers’ knowledge and skill, and student engagement.

•Principle #2: If you change one element of the instructional core, you have to change the other two.

•Principle #3: If you can’t see it in the core, it’s not there.

•Principle #4: Task predicts performance.

•Principle #5: The real accountability system is in the tasks that students are asked to do.

•Principle #6: We learn to do the work by doing the work.

•Principle #7: Description before analysis, analysis before prediction, prediction before evaluation.

TASK

OBSERVE, DESCRIBE, ANALYZE, PREDICT

TWO TEACHERS, TWO TASKS

• SAME DEPARTMENT

• COMMON PLANNING TIME

• COMMON UNIT OF STUDY

THE STANDARD

STUDENTS WILL DEMONSTRATE UNDERSTANDING OF HOW TO COMPUTE

FRACTIONS, DECIMALS, AND PERCENTAGES, AND HOW TO APPLY THIS KNOWLEDGE TO

REAL-WORLD PROBLEMS

THE COMMON CORE STANDARDS: FRACTIONS

THE PROBLEM OF PRACTICE:

ARE STUDENTS ABLE TO USE MATHEMATICAL LANGUAGE AND REASONING TO EXPLAIN THEIR

WORK?