Title: Hayward Unified
1Hayward Unified
- Windows on Learning
- August September, 2005
2Todays Outline
- Take stock of who we are (our vision, goals,
achievement data). - Think about the standards of professional
practice we want to have in HUSD to be
successful. - Examine the linkages between philosophy and
pedagogy, and pedagogy and practice in supporting
academic language. - 4. Learn about district/superintendent
expectations.
3Vision
4HUSD Vision
- To be able to visualize the completed project,
the final goal, and all its rewards and
consequences, is the ultimate test for true
leaders. - In addition to visualizing the dream, they must
also be able to visualize - each task that must be completed
- the integration of those tasks to
successfully complete the project. - HUSD Board Goals, 2004
5My Personal Vision
Structure
6Goals
7(No Transcript)
8Where Are We Academically?
9HUSD Academic Goal
There are 15 school districts in Alameda County
with enrollments of over 1,000 students. Our
goal is for Hayward Unified School District to be
in the top third academically of these 15 school
districts.
10Alameda County School Districts
School District 2004 Base Academic Performance
Index (API)
11(No Transcript)
12Hayward Unified School District Historical API
Elementary
13Hayward Unified School District Historical API
Secondary
142004 API Progress (August 31 Report)
Hayward Unified
15Current HUSD structure
Advanced Placement courses
16AP Course Offerings
- HUSD District Composite
- English (2) 137 students
- Math (2) 232 students
- Science (1) 113 students
- Social Science (2) 185 students
- World Language (2) 48 students
- Art (2) 33 students
(English, Mathematics, Science, Social Science,
World Language, Art)
17Student Transfers
- Over 1,800 students residing in Hayward Unified
School District boundaries requested
inter-district transfers in 2004-2005 to
neighboring school districts. - This constitutes approximately 8 of what our
total student population would be with them
included.
18Student Transfers
- So far, for 2005-2006 there are over 1,000
students who have requested inter-district
transfers to other school districts. - Only 198 students from other school districts
have requested inter-district transfers into
Hayward Unified School District.
19HUSD Academic Goals
- Improve the academic achievement of all students.
- Increase graduation rates of our students.
- Decrease the drop-out rates of our students.
20Elbow Partner
- What does the data tells us?
21Overcoming Adversity
22LAUSD District 6 Conditions
- 99 Latino student population in the district
- 70 ELLs in elementary, 40 ELLs secondary
- All Title I schools, 80-98 free/reduced lunch
- All API 1 2 except one API 3 in 1999-2000
- Urban setting Very high density communities
- Multi-track year round schools with 163 days of
instruction - 5,000 high school, 3,800 middle school,
1,000-2,700 elementary - Gang problems in middle and high schools
23(No Transcript)
24District 6 Historical API -- Elementary
1 16 8 2
1 14 8 2 1
11 11 4
2 8 11 3 1
7 12 5 1
1 7 11 4 1
25District 6 Historical API -- Secondary
5 2
3 3
4 3
4 3
2 5
7
26AP Course Offerings
- District 6 Composite
- English (2) 865 students
- Math (2) 511 students
- Science (4) 1,030 students
- Social Science (5) 1,350 students
- World Language (2) 1,205 students
- Art (3) 98 students
-
(English, Mathematics, Science, Social Science,
World Language, Art)
27AP Equity Access
- South Gate High School
- AP Environmental Science
- Nationally, the high school with the largest
number of Latino students scoring 3 on AP exam. - College Board Advanced Placement Report to the
Nation 2005
28What Made the Difference?
- Site administrators made the difference!
- Teachers made the difference!
- High expectations made the difference!
- Instructional practice made the difference!
- Site and central alignment made the difference!
- Learning together made the difference!
29Trail of Blame
- The problem is NOT
- Students language
- Students ethnicity or race
- Familys poverty
- Familys commitment to education
- Parents
- Elementary school teachers staff
- Middle school teachers staff
- High school teachers staff
- Site central administrators staff
30District J Model United Nations General Assembly
(2/7/04)
31Por primera vez
32What kind of educational culture do we want to
develop in Hayward?
33Carl Glickman on Culture
Congenial
Conventional
Collegial
34- A healthy educational culture holds certain
- Standards of Professional Practice
- as central to its makeup.
35Our work Learning Focus Collegiality Behavior
36Standards of PracticeOur Work
- Our work needs to be connected.
- Our work needs to be aligned.
- Our work needs to be coherent.
37Standards of Practice
- Our work needs to be
- Intentional
- Explicit
38Standards of PracticeLearning
- Understand student learning, let it be the
driver. - Understand adult learning, let it guide student
learning. - Build teaching around learning, not learning
around teaching.
39Standards of PracticeFocus
- Stay focused on a few priorities over time.
- Go slow to go fast.
- Make all decisions on whats right for students.
40Standards of PracticeCollegiality
- Enter into a joint learning agenda.
- Support professional discourse.
- Deprivatize the practice.
41Standards of PracticeBehavior
- We earn our stripes everyday.
- Maintain a flat organization.
- All doors are open to everybody.
- No one is left out.
42Standards of Practice
What they are NOT No magic wand. No silver
bullets. No perfectly packaged curriculum
program. No running school or department on
automatic pilot.
43Standards of Practice
44Elbow Partner
- Will these standards of professional practice
help us support student achievement? How?
45Systemic
Philosophy
Pedagogy
Practice
46Principles of Learning Institute for
Learning GWU Principles of Effective Second
Language Education
47Principles of Learning
48Principles of Learning
- Clear Expectations
- Academic Rigor in a Thinking Curriculum
- Accountable Talk
- Socializing Intelligence
- Organizing for Effort
49Principles of Learning
- Learning as Apprenticeship
- Fair and Credible Evaluations
- Recognition of Accomplishments
- Self-Management of Learning
50Principles of Learning
- Accountable talk
- What are you doing?
- Why are you doing it?
- How do you know your work is good enough?
-
51GWU Principles for Second Language Education
Meeting Content Standards
High Expectations
Full English Proficiency
Listening ? Speaking ? Reading ? Writing
Appropriate Instruction
Shared Responsibility
Valid Assessments
George Washington University Center for Equity
and Excellence, 2004
52A system of teaching and learning that is tied to
and reflects an educational philosophy
53Hayward Unified
- We want to become a standards-based system.
54How Do We Do This?
As we implement the standards, we focus on a few
standards K-12.
55Focused Academic Standards
- Standards-based mathematics
- Standards-based language arts
- (Second language scaffolding and academic
language development)
56All subject area standards
- use literacy strategies to make meaning for both
the teacher and the student.
57All subject area standards
- ....are seen through the lens of English language
learners and Standard English language learners.
58Gatekeeper to High School Graduation
Algebra
- Over 50 of students do not pass the course in
urban and urban-like settings. - Students are not the problem.
- Teachers are not the problem.
- The system of preparing for and teaching algebra
is the problem (need to rethink how and when we
teach mathematics).
59Focused Math Standards
- Rethink Algebra
- Algebraic thinking and reasoning, K-7.
- Bundle appropriate standards building algebraic
thinking, K-7. - Develop assessments K-7 that support this
thinking.
60Focused Math Standards
- Strands need to include
- Skills
- Problem Solving
- Conceptual Understanding
61Focused ELA Standards
Listening and Speaking
62Speaking and Listening
- Are as important as reading and writing.
What of an ELL students day is spent in
academic talk? Source Diane August, National
Literacy L2 Panel, 2003
63Academic Language Development
- Shadowing protocol
- 26 seconds!
64Focused ELA Standards
Literary Response and Analysis Reading for
Information
65Focused ELA Standards
- Narrative Writing Expository Writing
66Linkages in Academic Language Development
Meta-Cognition Think Reflect Wonder
Understand Create Question Process Make
Meaning Revise Challenge
Listening
Speaking
67Gradual Release of Responsibility
Instructional Approaches
Student
Student
Student
Student
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Teacher
Guided Reading Guided Writing Guided Oracy
Instructional Read Aloud Modeled Writing Modeled
Oracy
Shared Reading Shared Writing Shared Oracy
Independent Reading Independent
Writing Independent Oracy
68Instructional strategies, skills and techniques
that assist in the learning of the standards.
69How Do We Engage ELL And Other Students?
We need to move students from BICS (Basic
Interpersonal Communication Skills) Social
language to CALP (Cognitive Academic Language
Proficiency) Academic language. Academic rigor
in a thinking curriculum.
70Academic Language Development
Academic Language Development utilizes explicit
and intentional strategies of listening,
speaking, reading and writing while we teach our
content area.
71Instructional Read Aloud
- Instructional Read Alouds help ELL and other
students - acquire and develop English academic language.
- develop the necessary English reading
comprehension strategies to access literary and
informational text. - access curriculum content.
72Academic Language Development
Historically, we have relied on K-2 teachers to
teach students how to read and write.
73Academic Language Development
Today, we need to build and support listening,
speaking, reading and writing skills and
strategies in elementary, middle and high school.
74Academic Language Development
- Dont dumb down the standards, curriculum, and
instruction. - Scaffold it up!
75Elbow Partner
- How do you see the philosophy, pedagogy and
practice structure helping us support student
achievement?
76Expectations
- Focus on ELA and math standards and ELD/ALD
scaffolding strategies. - Implement professional standards of practice.
- Conduct at least one Instructional Read Aloud.
- Implement Instructional Read Alouds regularly.
77Expectations
- Recognize the presence or absence of academic
language. - Become familiar with the systemic nature of
philosophy, pedagogy and practice. - Participate in the development of the HUSD
learning community.
78Expectations
- Collect and display evidence of student writing
in classrooms. - Become familiar with culturally responsive
pedagogy. - Become familiar with culturally relevant
curriculum. - Support equity and access for all students.
79ImplementingStandards of Practice
- Administrators Academy
- Learning together
- Refining instructional expertise
- Developing team
- Establishing one voice/una voz
80ImplementingStandards of Practice
- Administrative Classroom Visit Protocols
- Observations
- Learning Walks
- Shadowing
- Teacher evaluations
81Implementing Standards of Practice
- Instructional Leadership
- Visit classrooms everyday.
- Model teaching in classrooms.
- Recognize opportunities for academic language.
82Groups of Four
- Will these expectations
- support our focus? How?
83One Last Thought
Be patient with ourselves, this work is not a
sprint.
84Related Thought
Our work needs to be like a long distance race.
85Hayward Unified
- Onward!
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