Post on 11-Jan-2016
transcript
Teaching and LearningElementary
1.21.14
Dean Ave. Conference Room
Today’s AgendaTime Frame Agenda Item Area of Focus Presenter
8:30-8:35am
Welcome and Overview of Agenda Carlyn Cox
8:35-8:45am
Update on our Progress:Data-Driven Decision
MakingCarlyn Cox
8:45-10:45am
Moving Forward with Data Teams
Data-Driven Decision Making
Carlyn Cox & Liz Griesel
10:45-11:00am
Looking Ahead to 2014… Standards Referenced
Grading
Data-Driven Decision Making
Carlyn Cox
11:00-11:40am
Math Updates:Effective Instructional
PracticesAnna Taggart & Christi Donald
11:40-12:00pm
Scholastic UpdatesData-Driven Decision
MakingJ Starr
12:00-12:15pm
Updates: Collaborative Structures Carlyn Cox
12:15-12:30pm
Gifted & Talented SurveyData-Driven Decision
MakingMary Grinstead
PROGRESS UPDATE
Goal #1: District PLCs
90% of teachers indicate satisfaction with the quality of District PLCs as measured by the teacher feedback survey administered three times throughout the year (Oct, Feb, May).
How satisfied are you with the PLC sessions?
Very Satisfied20%
Satisfied36%
Neutral22%
Dissatisfied15%
Very Dissatisfied7%
Goal #2: Support to Schools
At least 50% of coordinators’ time will be devoted to direct support for teachers and
leaders as monitored by personal time analyses conducted three times throughout
the year.
65% of elementary coordinators’ time has been spent providing direct support to teachers and school
leaders.
TEACHER INDUCTION
PROGRAM SURVEY
On average, my mentor and I meet…
74.1%18.8%
3.0%4.1%
weekly
every two weeks
monthly or less often
never
When I meet face-to-face with my mentor, our work MOST often focuses on…
Acc
ess
ing m
ate
r...
Cla
ssro
om
ma..
.
Em
oti
onal
sup..
.
Less
on p
lannin
g
Analy
zing s
tud..
.
Coll
abora
ting w
...
Work
ing w
ith E
n..
.0.0%
10.0%
20.0%
30.0%
40.0%
50.0%
60.0%
70.0%
54.0%58.7%
46.6%
35.4%27.0%
1.6%
15.9%
My mentor and I have developed a trusting, confidential relationship.
60.3%33.9%
2.1% 1.1% 2.6%
Strongly agree
Agree
Disagree
Strongly disagree
Does not apply
My work with my mentor influences my teaching practice.
39.7%
50.3%
3.2%
2.1% 4.8%
Strongly agree
Agree
Disagree
Strongly disagree
Does not apply
My mentor meets my needs as a growing professional.
47.1%41.8%
3.7%
2.1% 5.3%
Strongly agree
Agree
Disagree
Strongly disagree
Does not apply
Mid-Year Mentor Meetings
• Your mentors will be contacting you to set up a brief mid-year meeting to discuss:– Your school goals for the 2nd semester– Specific areas where you’d like your 1st
year teachers to focus– Any questions you have about our
mentoring program
MOVING FORWARD WITH DATA TEAMS
Essential Beliefs
• Creation of CFAs is not the same as the creation of a formal test.
• Teacher-created assessments drive instruction.
• Assessments should mirror instruction.
• Teachers build a greater understanding of the standards through collaborative conversations (teamwork).
Celebrations from December 3rd
• We had 50 Teachers, Instructional Coaches and Building Principals attend.
• “I wanted you to know how valuable I found our session yesterday at the Botanical Center. Really digging into the standards and having qualities discussions about assessments helped change my way of thinking and teaching! ~DMPS 4th grade teacher
• “I am very appreciative of our ability to have one teacher per grade attend yesterday's meeting. All staff following the meeting spoke about how worthwhile the meeting was in allowing them to think differently about the process – a notable accomplishment. This provided unique leverage moving forward. I wish I could have every classroom teacher have the same experience.” ~DMPS Principal
Products from Dec. 3rd
Goals for Moving Forward with Data Teams (April 2013)
• Ensure that teams have assessments that support instructional decision making in both literacy & math. – “This teacher-created assessment may consist of entirely original
items, or of items available through sources like online databases and ancillary materials, or of a combination of original and non-original items. However, it's critical that the team agrees that the items on the assessment accurately measure the "unwrapped" standards.” ~ Peery, pg. 22
• Implement a data analysis process to ensure that we are modifying instructional practices based on student needs.
STEP 1: FOCUSING OUR INSTRUCTION
Goal for Step #1: Focusing our Instruction
Promote teacher conversation & understanding of the grade-level standards:
– What does the standard expect of students?– How do the different standards fit together?– What does this standard look like at previous
or future grade levels?
Great resource to promote this conversation:
Explaining the Process
What it is… What it is not…• Discussing how the
standards are connected throughout the unit.
• Defining Learner Outcomes that we will work towards throughout the unit.
• Selecting 1 “I Can” from each standard.
• Creating 1 big “I Can” statement for each standard.
• Selecting 1 or 2 Standards to work on (i.e. bold)
Analyzing Step 1
• Read through the transcript of Step 1.
• Put a #1 next to areas where you see the team discussing what the standard expects of students.
• Put a #2 next to areas where you see the team discussing how the standards are connected.
• Put a #3 next to areas where you see the team discussing what the standard looks like at previous or future grade levels.
Analyzing Step 1
• Review the transcript for a 2nd time.
• What prompts did the coach use to facilitate the conversation around our 3 goals?
STEP 2: DESIGNING A CFA
We’ve got our “Focused I Can Statements”… Now what?
Assessment is a direct, logical step in the instructional process that is necessary to ensure that students achieve the outcomes our learner objectives describe.
~ Anne Reeves (Where Great Teaching Begins – pg. 111)
The Best Value in Formative Assessmentby Stephen Chappuis and Jan Chappuis
The Bottom Line: Ready-made benchmark tests cannot substitute for day-to-day
formative assessment conducted by assessment-literate teachers.
Goals for Step 2: Create the Pre/Post Common Formative Assessment
• Assessment items directly aligned to prioritized I Can Statements.
• Assessment items are designed to highlight the strengths and needs of students.
• Assessment passages are grade level text.
• Assessment length is reasonable.
Resources to Support:
– Journeys passages (practice book, projectable, unit assessments)
– Read Works Website– District provided options
Assessment items directly align to prioritized I Can Statements.
• Go back and read through I can statements to check questions for alignment
• “For Teacher Use” section can help desegregate data by the I can statements
• Team should agree upon proficient answers together
Assessment items are designed to highlight the strengths and needs of students.
• Could incorporate a pre-requisite skill if we know they will not understand the question
• What do we need to know in order to effectively enter into instruction?
• Students should take pre-test and post-test–If pre-test is different, modify question as 0 so that data reflects the growth
• Use the same language, organizers, sentences frames as instruction
Assessment passages are grade level text.
• Keep it at the rigor level you set your I can statements.
• If already progress-monitoring because they are 2+ years below, know that the CFA will not give you very much data.
Assessment length is reasonable.
• One fiction passage. One non-fiction passage.
• Could be just 4-5 questions and graphic organizer
• Less than 30 minutes to complete
Resources
Resources to Support:
– Journeys passages (practice book, projectable, unit assessments)–Read Works Website–District provided options
Visualize: What will student success look
like?• What can the student do to show me that
they have achieved the objective?–What can this student say, write or create?–What questions can be answered?–What tasks can be performed?
• Given the kind of thinking the objective describes, how can the student prove that they are doing that thinking?
~ Anne Reeves (Where Great Teaching Begins – pg. 111-112)
Think Aloud: The What & How
Think Aloud: The Passage
• Journeys
• ReadWorks.org
• District Options
Think Aloud: The Organizer
• Journeys
• Common Core Book
• Other Resources
Think Aloud: The Answers
• Team agreed upon proficient answers
• Might help revise to have clearer questions
Think Aloud: Website Resources
• CFA Resources page for grades 2-5
• Passages
• Question Stems
Think Aloud: Format of Questions
• What do we need to know in order to effectively enter into instruction?
Think Aloud: Back to I cans
• Check for I can statement alignment
• Desegregate data
ANALYZING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF OUR DATA TEAMS
Things to Listen for in your Data Teams…
Step 1:– team discussing what the standard expects of students– team discussing how the standards are connected– team discussing what the standard looks like at previous
or future grade levels
Step 2:– team discussing what students will do to show they
“CAN” do what we’ve articulated– team discussing what instruction will look like (i.e.
graphic organizers, language frames, anchor charts)– team discussing how they want students to answer each
question – what is proficient?
Action Planning for Next Steps
• Where is our understanding of the goals for Steps 1-2 in the Data Team process?
• What teams would benefit from the opportunity to script and analyze their Data Team conversation?
• How might we collect this data?
• What will be our next steps?
LOOKING AHEAD TO
2014…Standards Reference
Grading
Timeline & Action Plan
• Spring 2014: Collect names of interested individuals to serve on a 2014-2015 Task force
• Fall 2014: Convene a Task Force to:– Prepare parent and community communications regarding
rationale and process.– Prepare a reporting structure using Grade Level CC
Standards– Define the “Body of Evidence” for each grade level in
regards to our CC Standards– Identify support and professional development structure
• Fall 2015: Roll-out of new reporting structure K-5
What will be necessary to move forward with Standards Reference Grading?
• A collaboration structure for scoring of our “body of evidence” (Data Teams)
• Common Assessments that can be used in our “body of evidence” (Data Teams – Step 2)
• Strong teacher knowledge of the Iowa Common Core Standards and what proficiency looks like (Data Teams – Step 1)
MATH UPDATES
Elementary Math Materials Upgrade
Houghton Mifflin Go Math! (©2015) Comprehensive Mathematics Program
Elementary Math Materials Upgrade
Go Math! ORGANIZATION: Iowa Core
Critical Areas
Domain
Standard
Elementary Math Materials Upgrade
Go Math! ORGANIZATION: Iowa Core
Critical Area
Domains
Standards
Elementary Math Materials Upgrade
Go Math! ORGANIZATION: Practice Standards
Elementary Math Materials Upgrade
Go Math! BALANCED MATHGo Math lessons are designed for 45 – 60 minutes of
instructional time. • We will continue to implement Daily Math Review and Mental Math into our daily math block.
• Go Math presents a balance between conceptual understanding, application and procedural skill and fluency when called for in the Iowa Core.
Elementary Math Materials Upgrade
Go Math! PROBLEM SOLVINGStudents will be PROBLEM SOLVING daily with Go Math.
Elementary Math Materials Upgrade
Go Math! GRADUAL RELEASEDaily lessons are set up to support whole group, small group, and
intervention.
Whole Group
Guided Practice + Formative
Assessment
Small Group Instruction
Application
Elementary Math Materials Upgrade
Go Math! TECHNOLOGYGo Math lessons are rich with technology.
Interactive Whiteboard Lessons
iToolsAnimated Math Models
Mega Math
The 2015 copyright will include new technology…
Math On The Spot Videos
Personalized Math Trainer Program
Interactive Student Edition
Go Math App
Elementary Math Materials Upgrade
More Information Coming Soon…The Teaching and Learning in February will be dedicated to the implementation plan for Go
Math. • Designing your Instructional Day• Professional Development Plan• Data Teams and Assessment Plan• Summer Training• Materials Delivery • Grade Level Planning and Curriculum Guides
The remainder of District Math PLC Meetings this year will be dedicated to orientation of Go
Math.
District PLC Update
• Focus on Math Practice Standards and continuing to grow the teachers’ capacities to teach math through problem solving.
• Science and Social Studies Units and Available Resources
• Opportunities to collaborate, discuss, and share ideas.
• Feedback has been positive and constructive.
Elementary Math: Feedback from December 3rd
Feedback: Why are we no longer being trained in CGI and instead focusing on the Math Practice Standards?
• Based on the requirements of the Iowa Core – we are moving forward with professional development with the Mathematical Practice Standards which correlates well with the practices of CGI.
• Our district supports all who have been trained and continue to implement the practices of CGI.
• In the past, our district was awarded a grant to help train teachers in CGI. Unfortunately, the funding is no longer available.
• 1,000 elementary teachers in DMPS have various levels of understanding of CGI ranging from zero to deep implementation.
• If you are interested in beginning or continuing training in CGI – please check the AEA summer course offerings.
DMPS MIDDLE SCHOOL MATH PROGRAM
Christi Donald
Secondary Mathematics Curriculum Coordinator
Middle School Math Task Force
Christi Donald –Sec. Math Curriculum Coordinator
Debra Mishak – Gifted and Talented
Noelle Tichy – Director of T&L Sec.
Anna Taggart – Elem. Math Curriculum Coordinator
Alex Hanna – Principal at Merrill
Cheryl Modlin – SIL at Callanan
Thomas Hoffman – Principal at Brody
Zac Christensen – Math Coach at Perkins
Tony Voss – GT Consultant
Ryan Baumgartel – GT Consultant
DMPS Middle School Math Program
Timeline and Resources
Date Communication Plan
January • Elementary T & L – Share plan and logistics• Secondary T & L – Share plan and logistics• Middle School District PLC – Share plan and logistics with
teachers
February • 5th Grade District PLCs – Share plan, logistics, and resources with teachers
• Resources sent out through CIA eBlast• Information emailed to all middle school math teachers
through monthly Math eBlast• Brochures sent to each elementary building
Feb/March
• Brochures handed out at Spring Conferences• Letter sent home with all 5th Graders• Teachers share information with students
April/May • Iowa Assessments• SMI – Due 5/16/14• DMPS 5th Grade Math Assessment – Due 5/23/14• Teacher Recommendation – Due 5/23/14
June • Data collected and sent to middle schools
SCHOLASTIC UPDATES
SRI & SMI testing
• The deadline for SRI & SMI testing is January 31st. Please be sure to have testing completed at this time.
• We have scheduled upgrades and updates to the system for the first week in February. It is very important to have testing completed to not experience a loss in services during that time.
SRI & SMI reports
• Many of us will be looking for “Growth” reports in the coming weeks. Please be mindful of the following:– Growth data requires 2 or more tests during the time period selected.– Your time period window can be manipulated to see data from specific dates.
SRI & SMI reminders
• The data ranges for the SRI and SMI reports are end of the year ranges.
• Your default dates for data reports are this school year. If you want further data, you may change the date ranges.
• Your data is only as consistent as IC. If you are looking at data within SAM, it is up to date as of midnight.
Common Issues
• Many have received emails regarding multiple students with the same user ID.– This is how the system is supposed to work.– It reflects a change in the IC data over a course of time. (Name change, spelling, etc…)
Common Issues
• Fastt Math notifications can be received weekly to monitor use of the software at a building level.– If you do not desire these emails, you can change the notification settings within SAM or your dashboard.– These notifications reflect the usage for the past week. They can be cross-referenced with student or class specific reports.
SAM Information
• Please remember that there is a complete training module dedicated to SAM (SRI, SMI, Fastt Math, Fraction Nation) on the KITE project.
• This is available at any time for any staff member.
UPDATES
SUMMER 2014 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Handout
Literacy Feedback
February T & L Meeting
Our February Teaching & Learning meeting will be dedicated to the Math Materials upgrade and corresponding technology integration plan.
We hope to be able to share with you:–Timeline–Critical Success Factors for Implementation–Aligned Assessment Plan–Professional Development / Support Structures
GIFTED AND TALENTED PROGRAM EVALUATION
Principal Survey
Process Evaluation
• Are the gifted and talented structures in place effective?
• Purpose:–Align gifted and talented programming to district curriculum/initiatives–Improve gifted and talented services to schools and students
Data
• Document review (identification process, activities offered)
• GT consultant activity logs–Traveling, administrative tasks, direct services to schools and students–What type of services are being provided?
• Principal survey
Survey
• www.surveymonkey.com/s/dmpsgt
Next Steps
• Compile information this spring
• Present findings to administration
• Implement changes (timeline will depend on findings)