Title: Curriculum Visioning at Wilson
1Curriculum Visioning at Wilson
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4Answering the continuous improvement dilemma
- All of us are immigrants spiritually
5Answering the continuous improvement dilemma
- High stakes testing has caused many of us in the
education community to believe that someone was
changing our jobs.
6Wilson School District
7Learning by adults in the school is the key to
student achievement.
8Staff Development Continuum or The Re-culturing
Ladder
Alignment
Behavior
Attitude
Degree of difficulty
Knowledge
Length of time
9Answers to our school districts seemingly
intractable problems reside within us and our
staff but we have to cultivate a learning
environment to get at them.
10Mental Models
11Characteristics of a Learning Organization
- Cultivation culture
- Value for ones ability to learn v. what one
knows - Collaborative Teams
- Collective Inquiry
- Coherence-making is a never-ending proposition
and is everyones responsibility-Michael Fullan - Primacy of the whole
12The Main Thing is to Make the Main thing, the
Main Thing!
George Labovitz and Victor Rosansky The Power of
Alignment
13Once you re-culture the organization to the need
for continuous improvement and most understand
the meaning of all, how do you go about improving?
- There are six very important concepts to follow
for staff development to work - The theoretical underpinnings of this model were
extracted from the Winter 2001, American
Educational Research Journal article by Garet,
Porter, Desimone, Birman, Yoon, What makes
professional development effective?
14What are the reasons that staff development fails?
- There is no sustainability.
- One size fits all.
- There is a general lack of meaning.
- Never out to actually change teachers behaviors.
- We believe staff development is training and not
learning. - Lack of a plan (What do you want to do
differently?) - Inputs vs outputs (PD is an input session and no
outputs are required). - We violate everything that we know about learning.
15Step one in developing an effective staff
development program to improve student
achievement FORM
- Traditional classes, workshops, and seminars that
are once-and-done were less effective than
creating collaborative networks of teachers or
teacher study groups. - Technology acquisition, math improvement, writing
improvement, K-3 push-in program development
where teacher networks within our school system
are created. The key is teachers in the same
grade level or across two or three grade levels
work collaboratively at certain tasks throughout
multiple school years.
16Step two in developing an effective staff
development program to improve student
achievement DURATION
- Sustained and intensive professional development
programs are more likely to make an impact. Move
away from sage-on-stage professional development. - This is the first year we will embark on a
sustained professional development plan centered
around certain principles of learning. The goal
for this ongoing professional development
experience for our teachers is to enhance their
ability to differentiate instructional strategies
to accommodate all learning styles and to teach
ALL children in a standards-based environment.
Our goal is to continue to increase student
achievement to reach 100 advanced and proficient
in the PSSA test.
17Step three in developing an effective staff
development program to improve student
achievement COLLECTIVE PARTICIPATION
- Design activities for teachers who are in the
same school, even the same grade, teaching the
same subject. Old-style, large group in-service
that does not target groups of teachers who work
together will not improve math scores. - The key is meeting in a group setting
specifically for attaining some goal centered
action plan in math, technology, writing, or
reading. The formation of small learning
communities is another major goal we have to
enhance ongoing adult learning within the
organization.
18Step four in developing an effective staff
development program to improve student
achievement CONTENT
- Design professional development around both how
to teach and what to teach to improve student
achievement is key. Content is just as important
as pedagogy. Therefore demonstration lessons,
guiding lessons with standards and objectives,
using anchor problems within the same grade
level, expert grading of student work using PSSA
rubrics, sharing lesson plans, creating a
systematic way of attacking word problems all
create better student performance. - Use of rubrics to assist students in attaining
standards. - Providing ways to guide and demonstrate best
practice strategies - Accountability for the effort of taking a risk at
trying something new and innovative in the
classroom. There is a need to make the teaching
process less intimate and more collaborative and
collegial.
19CONTENT
- Example of Technology Strategies that Enhance
Achievement - Use technology to present resources to students
with diverse needsUse technologies to allow
students to progress at different paces through
the curriculumUse technologies to design
simulations that illustrate critical
conceptsUse technology to deliver basic skills
and/or remedial instructionUse technology to
access real world data, news, and
problem-scenariosUse technology to increase the
number and currency of effective instructional
resourcesUse technology to enrich the quality
and content of instructionUse technology to
present content, freeing time formerly spent in
delivery of instruction for other
purposesProvide assistive technologies to
students with special needs
20Step five in developing an effective staff
development program to improve student
achievement ACTIVE LEARNING
- This is the show-me-the-money part of the staff
development program, the real glue. Teachers
observe each other, are observed by experts, are
guided in teams, debrief, and receive feedback on
their work. Classroom implementation is checked
and reviewed. Student work is analyzed by other
teachers and by experts. Teachers become lead
learners here doing presenting and evaluating
their performance. This action part of PD is
usually the part missing with the framework of
traditional approaches. - We are employing a more inside-in model of
professional learning at Wilson where in-house
teachers and administrators are lead learners
within the organization. We visit every classroom
to both demonstrate and debrief as we watch
teachers teach. All lesson plans are reviewed by
principals and are guided by state standards and
objectives written into our curriculum, all class
presentations are guided by standards and
objectives. Action planning is slowly enhancing
district improvement.
21Step six in developing an effective staff
development program to improve student
achievement COHERENCE
- Teachers need to perceive professional
development as part of a coherent program of
teacher learning and development that support
other activities at school, like standards
implementation or textbook adoptions or new
course creations. Not too much at one time! - We have tried very hard to bring about program
coherence to improve student achievement through
professional developemnt. We have adopted
standards, driven lessons and student work with
by standards, monitored teacher usage of
standards in their daily practice, contracted
services with universities, created grade level
assessments driven by the standards, purchased
texts, provided remedial programs for students at
the basic and below level, integrated technology,
and in terms of student achievement, we are
making excellent strides in our K-8 program to
improve PSSA scores. Central Junior High reached
90 advanced and proficient in the 2006 PSSA math
exam!
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23PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATIONLEADING
FOR LEARNING! GETTING RESULTS!
District Strategic Planning BUILDING BLOCKS
School Improvement Planning
What We KNOW to be important
What We COMMIT to
2. Collective Will
What We WANT for ALL Students
3. Collective Skill
What We DO
1. Collective Outcome
What We ACCOMPLISH
5. Collective Accountability
4. Collective Action
24Planning isnt STRATEGIC unless its
student centered
based upon the best research
future-focused
25Content Performance Standards
- (Content) Standard2.1. Numbers, Number Systems
and Number Relationships - 2.1.8 Grade 8 (Performance Standard at grade
level) - A. Represent and use numbers in equivalent forms
(e.g., integers, fractions, decimals, percents,
exponents, scientific notation, square roots) - B. Simplify numerical expressions involving
exponents, scientific notation and using order of
operations
26Assessment Anchor
- M8.A.1 Demonstrate an understanding of numbers,
ways of representing numbers, relationships among
numbers and number systems - Represent numbers in equivalent forms.
- Eligible Content
- Convert fractions, decimals and/or percents to
equivalent forms - Use scientific notation or exponential forms to
express numbers - Find the square or cube of a whole number and/or
the square root of a perfect square (without a
calculator)
27Learning Goals
- Process information
- Problem solve
- Work independently
- Collaborate with others
- Become more pendent in data
- Adapt to change
28Alignment
- Districts Objective to develop a plan to ensure
all instructional programs link the written, the
taught, and the assessed components of the
curriculum K-12 in all buildings - Curriculum Review Cycle
- Curriculum mapping K 12
- Elementary
- Secondary
29District Curriculum Goals
- Ensure alignment of all curriculum to PA
standards and anchors - Provide a rigorous, relevant and rich curriculum
for all of Wilson students K 12 - Evaluate curriculum on an ongoing basis
- Provide access to district curriculum via our
website