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Learning and Growing Together
WELCOME TO THE HAMILTON COUNTY SCIENCE LEADERS
NETWORK MEETING
October 15, 2015
Please Share: Your Name Your School What You Teach or Your Role What’s Your Favorite Thing To Do
Outside of School
GETTING TO KNOW YOUR GROUP!
LikeMe!
GETTING TO KNOW OUR NETWORK!
1. Believe in the power of students and teachers to grow their intelligence. Intelligence can be grown through effort and continued learning.
2. Focus your work on our most precious asset, our students! Don’t get caught by the distractors. Support students by implementing meaningful tasks and high-leverage instructional practices that promote student learning, engagement and inquiry.
TWO CORE BELIEFS:
Create an atmosphere of openness,
collegiality and true professionalism
through:Shared Norms and Common LanguagePromoting Growth through Collaboration and Continued Learning
Engaging Students through Research-based Best Practices
Encouraging Reflective Practice
PURPOSE AND VISION:
Keep student learning at the center of all decisions
Be respectful of other’s time — Begin and end on
time
Monitor air time and share your voice
Be solutions oriented – For the good of the group, look
for the possible
Risk productive struggle
Actively participate and bring requested materials
Share a sense of responsibility for student learning
Be professional at all times
Be the learner you want in your class
SECONDARY SCIENCE DISTRICT NORMS
Review:Habits of Interaction and Practice are the
expected norms of the classroom and behaviors of Hamilton County students.
Informational Texts are to be carefully selected to provide context, extensions, and support for the learning of scientifi c concepts. They are not to replace the exploratory and inquiry-based nature of learning science.
Update:The new State Science Standards are ready for
review! https://apps.tn.gov/tcas/ Our Science Assessments will be the same
format for the next two years. There will be new assessments to refl ect the new standards for the 2018-19 School Year.
A QUICK REVIEW AND UPDATES
ENGAGING IN SCIENCE AS A LEARNER
CRASH BARRIERSScience Leaders NetworkOctober 14, 2015
How do these things protect you? How do they absorb your energy if you crash?
CRASH BARRIERS
How does this work to protect the driver?
CRASH BARRIERS
How does this work to protect the driver?
CRASH BARRIERS
How does this work to protect the driver?
CRASH BARRIERS
How does this work to protect the driver?
CRASH BARRIERS
How does this work to protect the driver?
CRASH BARRIERS
CRASH BARRIERS
Focus Question: How does height and mass affect the way a crash barrier works?
CRASH BARRIERS
Which crash barrier do you think will be pushed the farthest? One marble and one book; two marbles and one book; or one marble and two books. Make a prediction in your notebook. Please EXPLAIN your reasoning.
CRASH BARRIERS
Sharing your ideasShoulder Partner ShareFace Partner ShareReport Partners Ideas
CRASH BARRIERS
Task Instructions:
In your notebook, record the results from all three scenarios doing multiple trails and averaging each scenario separately. If time permits, you may do another scenario of your own choosing.
CRASH BARRIERS
Artifact: Organize your data into a table and write three sentences that state your results. Below the sentences, use the equation for Gravitational Potential Energy (Ep = mgh ) to prove your results are correct.
CRASH BARRIERS
Structured Science Talk:
Listen and Compare
CRASH BARRIERS
Re-Answer Focus Question
CRASH BARRIERS
Exit Task:
How has your thinking about potential energy changed because of this experience?
What did the task have you doing?
What elements of the task promoted your engagement and learning?
Where would this task fall on the TAGS?
ENGAGING IN SCIENCE AS A TEACHER
What instructional practices were used in the lesson? Where? Be Specific.
Which instructional practices helped you the most as a learner? How? Be specific.
ENGAGING IN SCIENCE AS A TEACHER
What Habits were evident in the lesson? Where? Be specific.
Did you experience any Habits that were not necessarily shared by your group? Where? Be specific.
ENGAGING IN SCIENCE AS A TEACHER
Two Critical Challenges in Science Instruction:Designing and selecting instructional
tasks that provide opportunities for students to simultaneously engage with science practices and learn core concepts
Providing and managing opportunities for students to talk productively with one another about their problem-solving approaches, solutions, models, etc.
TASKS MATTER
5 PRACTICES FOR ORCHESTRATING PRODUCTIVE TASK-BASED
DISCUSSIONS
What resonated with you? (Go-around) What questions does this raise for you?
What are the implications for your work?
Morning Reflections
What resonated with you? (Go-around)
What did science instruction look like when you were in school?
How does the Growth Mindset connect to this reading?
What implications does this have for your work?
READY, SET, SCIENCE!
DATAGRADES 3-8 TVAAS
DATA – 6TH GRADE PERFORMANCE DIAGNOSTIC
DATA – 7TH GRADE PERFORMANCE DIAGNOSTIC
DATA – 8TH GRADE PERFORMANCE DIAGNOSTIC
DATAEXPLORE TVAAS
DATA –EXPLORE PERFORMANCE DIAGNOSTIC
How does your school data compare to the district?
What surprised you? What questions or curiosities does this raise?
What are your initial reactions as to implications to your work?
YOUR SCHOOL DATA
What surprised you about the test?
How was this test used in your school?
How can this test be used as a teaching tool?
LOOKING DEEPER AT A FORMER OPERATIONAL TEST
The quote that most resonated with me was _______ because… (Go-around)
Which idea do you find the most challenging to implement? Why?
FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT IN THE SCIENCE CLASSROOM
One idea that reasonated with me from the Preface was _________ because… (Go-around)
In my preview, ________ really sparked curiosity because…
SCIENCE FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT
Connections
Planning for Redelivery
ASSESSING AND ADVANCING QUESTIONS