Title: Know Your Students Know About Instruction
1Know Your Students Know About Instruction
2- Catawba County Schools will educate and
graduate lifelong learners equipped to be caring,
responsible, and productive citizens.
3 A Vision for Catawba County Schools The
premier system in North Carolina
- We will become the premier educational system in
North Carolina. - We will become the system of choice for parents,
teachers, students and community members, a
school system where parents will seek to send
their children. - We will build on past success and strive to be a
system that encourages innovation, creativity and
student success.
4Core Values
- Safe and Caring Schools-Safe, caring learning
environments-Climates and instruction that
enhance character - High Standards for All-All students at or above
grade level-No discernible differences among
student groups-Variety of instructional methods
and rigorous coursework
- Continuous Improvement-Attention to common
voices of teachers, students and community - -Improvement in all schools and departments
- -Open communications
- -Data-Driven Decision Making
- Human Resources Development-Recruitment and
selection of - high-quality personnel-Development of all
personnel-Retention of personnel
52007-2008 Review
6CCS District Accolades2007-08 Highlights
- CCS received Energy Excellence Award - 3 mil. in
avoided utility costs in first three years of
Energy program - Three Literacy Coaches awarded to CCS by state
- Awarded 1.368 million Carol M. White Physical
Education Program Grant from US Dept. of
Education (3 years)
7CCS District Accolades2007-08 Highlights
- Scholars Academy 26 CCS students in 1st year!
- Introduced Shining Stars Recognition Program
- Maiden Highs Dexter Shelton Speaks to NC
Legislative Committee on behalf of NCVPS -
- Cross Country Track introduced in middle
- schools
- Watch D.O.G.s established at Mt. View and Lyle
Creek
8CCS District Accolades2007-08 Highlights
- Facilities
- Opened Catawba Elementary
- Catawba Rosenwald Renovated Reopened
- Newcomers Center Relocated
- Broke ground for Snow Creek Elementary- a Green
School
9School Accolades2007-08 Highlights
- Claremont Elementary NAC named NC Nutritional
Advisory Council of Year - NC NAC Art Contest Winner Keyona Hicks, St.
Stephens Elementary - State Science Fair winners Alexis Zarro, Balls
Creek and Jonathan Bell, Maiden Middle - NC DAR winner Anna Taylor, Arndt Middle School
- CCS TAs one of Nine Who Care groups recognized
by WSOC TV - Rock Barn Tournament Ticket Art Contest Winner
Taylor Hicks, Lyle Creek Elementary
10School Accolades2007-08 Highlights
Eidson Energy Conservation Awards Banoak
Elementary School Maiden Middle School Bunker
Hill High School
11Staff Accolades2007-08 Highlights
Tammy Johnson Maiden Middle School SRO National
SRO of the Year Jamie Bumgarner Startown
Elementary NC Elementary Counselor of the
Year CCS Elementary Counselor of the Year Sharon
Fox White EC Director Western Region EC
Director of the Year CCS Administrator of the
Year
12- Donna Rudisill - Bunkcr Hill Feeder Area
- NC Instructional Technology Educator of the Year
- Karen Harris - Maiden Middle School
- NC School Library Media Coordinator of the Year
- Alice Rullman Claremont Elementary
- June Lyday Orton Award/ NC Branch/National
Dyslexia Association - Julie Young Tuttle Elementary
- Wachovia Regional Outstanding Elementary Educator
13- Diana Dagenhart Catawba Elementary
- NC Outstanding Elementary Math Teacher for CCS
- Thea Sinclair - St. Stephens High
- NC Nominee Presidential Award for Excellence
- in Mathematics and Science
- Chris Gibbs Claremont Elementary
- Catawba County Schools Principal of the Year
- Melinda Hamilton River Bend Middle
- Catawba County Schools Teacher of the Year
14- Carolyn Zimmerman Startown Elementary
- CCS EC Teacher of Excellence
- Linda Barnett
- CCS Secondary Counselor of the Year
- Terri Evans- Mountain View Elementary
- CCS Teacher Assistant of the Year
- Trish Scronce Maintenance Department
- CCS Educational Office Professional of the Year
15MaidenFeeder District 2007-08
- Maiden Elementary
- Startown
- Tuttle Elementary
- Maiden Middle
- Maiden High
16Grades 3-8
17High School Exit Standard Courses
18Maiden Feeder District Performance
- 3 of 5 schools made AYP
- 4 of 5 schools made Expected Growth
- 3 of 5 schools made High Growth
- High School Graduation Cohort Rate of 77.3
- 2 Schools of Distinction
- 2 Schools of Progress
19Preliminary Results for Catawba County
Schools2007-2008
- 12 out of 27 (44.4) Catawba County Schools made
AYP as measured thus far - CCS met 53 out of 61 (86.9) LEA targets thus far
- Overall, CCS met 356 out of 382 (93.2) possible
targets thus far - Currently, all but six schools, K-12, have made
expected growth - Currently, sixteen schools have been identified
as having made high growth
20CCS Performance 3-8
- 2007 2008
- 89.2 Unavailable Reading
- 74.1 77.1 Math
- 55.2 68.7 Writing
- 81.7 Unavailable Overall
- Performance
21Writing Performance 2008
22CCS Performance in Exit Standard Courses
- 2007 2008
- Algebra I 72.1 77.7
- Biology 75.7 73.4
- Civics 73.7 70.5
- English I 78.8 76.3
- US History 67.5 70.7
23Preliminary Graduation Cohort Rate Calculation
for Catawba County Schools 81.2
1114 graduates 13 million in scholarships
24AYP vs ABC
- This is the beginning of the real disconnect
between federal AYP and state ABC models. - Explaining this to parents will be a challenge.
- I am more worried about growth (ABCs) than AYP.
25Technology
- New desktop and laptop purchases totaled 1076
computersSharePoint server installed and will
become new web portalApple XServe provides
podcasting, blogging, and wiki forums - Inspiration and Kidspiration purchased and
training conducted for all elementary schools - All school media centers converted to Destiny
online library catalog - Comprehensive file storage established for high
school graduation projects - Email server upgraded and an email archive was
installed - All school servers now back-up to storage at the
Central Office
26Know Your Students
27The Millennials or The Net Generation
27
28(No Transcript)
29Who we are dealing with?
30The here and now
- Our kindergarten class was born in 2003.
- Our graduating class was born in 1991.
31The Echo Boom/Millennials
- The Millennials are almost as large as the baby
boom-some say larger - depending on how you
measure them (approx. 81M). - The Millennials are the children born between
1982 and 2002 (peaked in 1990), a cohort called
by various names
Echo Boom
Generation Y
Net Generation
Millennials
32Millennials
- This generation is civic-minded, much like the
previous GI Generation. - They are collectively optimistic, long-term
planners, high achievers with lower rates of
violent crime, teen pregnancy, smoking and
alcohol use than ever before. - This generation believes they have the potential
to be great, and they probably do. We are looking
to them to provide us with a new definition of
citizenship.
33The Millennial Childhood
- The most monumental financial boom in history
- Steady income growth through the 1990s
- Still great disparity between races
- Saw their parents lose all their stocks and
mutual funds (college funds) during the early
2000s
34Demographic Trends
- The Baby Boomers chose to become older parents in
the 1980s while Gen X moms reverted to the
earlier birth-age norm, which meant that two
generations were having babies. - In 1989, 29 percent of the 4.4 million live
births were to women aged 30 and older. - Millennials have older, largely Baby Boomer
parents Average age of mothers at birth at an
all time high of 27 in 1997.
35Demographic Trends, continued
- Smaller families Only child families will
comprise about 10 of the population. - More parental education 1 in 4 has at least one
parent with a college degree. - Kids born in the late 90s are the first in
American history whose mothers are better
educated than their fathers by a small margin.
36Demographic Trends Changing Diversity
- Increase in Latino immigration - Latino women
tend to have a higher fertility rate than
non-Latino women. - Nearly 35 of Millennials are nonwhite or Latino.
- Twenty percent of this generation has at least
one parent who is an immigrant. - Millennials have become the most racially and
ethnically diverse generation in US History.
37Safety Issues
- The Safest Generation
- This generation was buckled up in car seats, wore
bike helmets,
donned elbow and knee pads when skating, and were
the inspiration for Baby on Board signs. - The Well-Being of U.S. Teens
- Mortality Rate for US teens aged 1519 declined
from 1960 to 1997. - -Teens are having fewer accidents than Boomers.
38Major Influencing Factors
- Their parents
- The self-esteem movement
- The customer service movement
- Gaming and technology
- Casual communication
39Parenting Millennials
- This generation is being parented by
well-educated, over-involved adults who
participate in deliberate parenting. They have
outcomes in mind. - Boomers were the first generation to be thrown
out into an unsafe
world as adolescents. - The 60s and 70s were very scary and many of us
felt unprepared for it. - We were naïve and didnt have enough tools in our
tool box to deal with it.
40Baby Boomers as Parents
- Boomers rebelled against the parenting
- practices of their parents.
- Strict discipline was the order of the day for
boomers. - They made conscious decisions not to
- say because I told you so or because Im the
- parent and youre the child.
- Boomers became more friendly with
- their children.
- They wanted to have open lines of communication
- and a relationship with them.
41Baby Boomers as Parents
- They explained things to their children (actions,
consequences, options, etc.) they wanted them
to learn to make informed decisions. - They allowed their children to have input into
family decisions, educational options and
discipline issues. - We told them just because it is on
television doesnt mean its
true or You cant
believe everything
you read. - We wanted them to question
authority.
42The Result
- Millennials have become a
master set of negotiators who
are capable of rational
thought and decision-making
skills at young ages. - They will negotiate with anyone including their
parents, teachers and school administrators. - Some call this arguing.
43One Teachers View
- More and more students challenge me and the
material. They either see it as opinion, and
nothing else, or they see it as propaganda.
44Contrasting Learning Styles
- Traditional
- Producer mentality
- Very limited computer access
- Tolerant of non-engaging pedagogical techniques
- Millennial
- Consumer mentality
- Ubiquitous computer access
- Intolerant of non-engaging pedagogical techniques
McGuire and Williams, 2002. The Millennial
Learner Challenges and Opportunities. To
Improve the Academy. Vol. 20 185-1996.
45Information Mindset
- Frand (2000) suggests that a distinctive
information-age mindset is common among
students growing up in the globally connected,
service- and information-intense, digitally based
culture. - He characterizes this mindset in terms of broad
observations of change, ways of doing things,
and subliminal needs. -
Frand, Jason. 2000. The Information-Age
Mindset Changes in Students and Implications
for Higher Education. EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 35,
no. 5 15-24.
46broad observations of change
- Computers Arent Technology
- Computers are part of the infrastructure of the
public realm technology is software and devices
for personal enhancement. - Internet is better than TV
- Internet is interactive and customizable.
- Reality No Longer Real
- Digital communications and virtual
representations can be as consequential and
meaningful as personal interactions and physical
realities. - Doing Rather Than Knowing
- The ability to deal with complex and often
ambiguous information will be more important than
simply knowing a lot of facts or having an
accumulation of knowledge.
47how people do things
- Nintendo over Chess
- Trial and error the predominant mode of reasoning
- Multitasking Way of Life
- No longer a single computer workstation but a
mobile, integrated set of personal information
synthesizers - Typing Rather Than Handwriting
- More need for digital input and graphic forms of
expression than personal handwriting and
sketching
48subliminal needs
- Staying Connected
- Personal devices allow continuous connection
- Zero Tolerance for Delays
- An expectation that it is possible for an
immediate response - Consumer/Creator Blurring
- The sampling of information from the Internet and
its remixing to produce new forms of expression
49Helicopter Parents
- Helicopter Parent (n) A parent who hovers over
his or her
children. - Or Snowplow Parent (n) Parents who clear the way
for their children. - these (echo) boomers are confident,
achievement-oriented and used to hovering
"helicopter" parents keeping tabs on their every
move. (Anthony DeBarros, "New baby boom swamps
colleges," USA Today, January 2, 2003)
50Helicopter Parent Goes to College
- A new generation of over-involved
parents is flooding campus
orientations, meddling in
registration and
interfering with students' dealings
with professors, administrators and
roommates, school officials say. - Some of these hovering parents, whose numbers
have been rising for several years, are
unwittingly undermining their children's chances
of success, campus administrators say. Now,
universities and colleges are moving rapidly to
build or expand programs aimed at helping parents
strike a better balance.
Colleges Ward Off Overinvolved Parents By Sue
Shellenbarger From The Wall Street Journal
Online
51Baby Boomer Parents have been their Biggest
Cheerleaders
- Millennials expect and need praise.
- Will mistake silence for disapproval.
- Millennials expect feedback.
52Focus on Self-esteem
- This generation was the center of the
self-esteem movement. - 9,068 books were written about
self-esteem and children during the 80s and
90s (There were 485 in the 70s.). - The state of California spent millions studying
the construct and published a document entitled
Toward a State of Self-esteem. - Yet they cant escape the angst of adolescence
they still feel disconnected, question their
existence, purpose and the meaning of life. They
want to feel valued and cared about.
53Focus on Customer Service
- Expect access (24/7)
- Expect things to work like
they are supposed to - If they dont that is your
problem - They want what they have paid for
- Everything comes with a toll-free number or web
address - Want Gateway Go Back in
classes
54Add the Impact of Gaming
- Gaming has impacted children
- The game endings changed based
on the decisions children made
(Role Playing Games
Legend of
Zelda, Final Fantasy, Chronotrigger)
impacting locus of control. - Involves a complex set of decision-
making skills - Teaches them to take multiple
pieces of data and make
decisions quickly - Learning more closely resembles Nintendo, a trial
and error approach to solving problems
55We navigated our way through
56They navigated their way through
57Technology
- This generation has been plugged in since they
were babies. - They grew up with educational software and
computer games. - They think technology should be free.
- They want and expect
services 24/7. - They do not live in an
85 world. - They function in an
international world.
58Millennials Want to Learn
- With technology
- With each other
- Online
- In their time
- In their place
- Doing things that matter (most important)
Source Achievement and the 21st Century Learner.
59Technology In School
- Students are increasingly savvy when
it comes to technology. - In general, students expect faculty to
incorporate technology into their teaching and be
proficient at it. - At the very least, communication via e-mail,
access to online resources, PowerPoint
presentations, Internet activities, discussion
boards and electronic classrooms are expected. - Faculty will need to balance the use of
technology with their own philosophies of
teaching.
60Technology Use
- Children under 6 years
- 48 have used a computer
- 27 (4-6 year-olds) use a computer daily
- 39 use a computer several times a week
- 30 have played computer games
- Teens
- 100 use the internet to seek information
- 94 use the internet for school research
- 41 use email and IM to contact teachers and
schoolmates about school work - 81 email friends and relatives
- 70 use IM to keep in touch
- 56 prefer the internet to the telephone
61By age 21..
- It is estimated that the average
- child will have
- Spent 10,000 hours playing video games
- Sent 200,000 emails
- Spent 20,000 hours watching TV
- Spent 10,000 hours on their cell phone
- Spent under 5,000 hours reading
- But these are issues of income. Will a child who
grows up in a low income household have these
same experiences?
62The Information Age Mindset
- Students have never known life without the
computer. It is an assumed part of life. - The Internet is a source of research,
interactivity, and socializing (they prefer it
over TV). - Doing is more important than
knowing. - There is zero tolerance for
delays. - The infrastructure and the
lecture tradition of school
may not meet the
expectations of students
raised on the Internet and interactive games.
63Cell Phone Technology
- They all have cell phones and expect to be in
contact 24/7. - Not a phone a lifestyle management tool
- Staying connected is essential.
- Communication is a safety issue for parents.
- Communication has become casual for students (IM,
email and cell phones).
64What About 1st Generation Students?
- Not all students will be proficient
first-generation and students from low income or
working class families may have less experience. - Their experience with technology has been in
arcades and minimally in school (poorer
districts). - They have not had the exposure to educational
uses of technology. - Huge digital divide between the haves and the
have nots is based on income levels (class). - Digital divide is appearing in pre-K.
65College Full-time Enrollments in Millions
First Millennial College Graduates Spring 2004
--- Peak Enrollment 2010. Of the 5.8 million in
college in 2010, 56 will be women.
66Boys and Their Educational Choices
The Boys Project. http//www.boysproject.net/stati
stics.html
67First Time Freshman Enrollments by Gender 50
Years (numbers in thousands)
(54.8)
(45.2)
68Difference in Values
- They have witnessed their baby boomer parents
coming home from jobs stressed, exhausted,
falling asleep at the dinner table and they
dont want that for themselves. - They are a generation who is interested in a life
with value and meaning they do not aspire to
what the boomers aspire to they want
something different.
69True Multi-taskers
- Millennials have lived programmed lives and are
already quite capable of learning several jobs
simultaneously and performing them admirably. - Millennials will change careers
many times. - Retooling and recycling their
skills and talents
will become
common. - To retain them, smart employers
will encourage Millennials to
try out different careers within the same company.
70Need for Services
- It is estimated that 3 million Millennials have
been diagnosed with ADHD and have been medicated
(80 are boys). - Within student populations, the number with
disabilities has jumped from 3 to 9. - Many have had individual education plans.
- Many need testing services (quiet, separate
setting). - Need to self-advocate to teachers.
- Major transition from high school to college.
71Some are already in the workforce. What are
they saying?
- The technology is too slow.
- Just because Im young doesnt mean I should be
given low pay and a poor work schedule. - I expect to be treated fairly.
- We are inheriting a mess in the workforce who
got us there? - My dad worked 60 hours a week and then lost his
pension no way Im doing that. - I can get my work done in 40 hours sorry if
you cant.
Charlotte Observer, Sunday, March 5, 2006.
72How They Will Push Us
- More independence in the workforce
- Consumer-based fairness
- Better technology
- Enhanced professional development
- Get rid of thats the way weve always done it
- Have more life balance
- Re-establish priorities
73So How Do We Work With Them?
- Because they have grown up in a different world,
never assume they know certain things like - You dont want to talk to their mother when they
are having problems. - You dont get points for showing up or an A for
effort. - The definition of plagiarism and cheating.
- Its not appropriate to call the teacher at home
after 9pm. - They cant use IM language in papers.
- When they email you at 3am, youre not sitting on
the other end waiting to respond to them.
74Some Major Issues Worth Addressing
- Some of them have been performing below grade
level all their lives and they may not know it
(age of social promotion). - You may be the first strict grader they have
encountered (will discourage them). - They are not good planners and will do everything
late if allowed. - Many are not very hardy. Will quit or drop out
because its hard. - They are very good consumers and will figure out
a way to stay under the radar.
75What Should Institutions Do (In the Classroom)?
- Develop policies and practices around appropriate
communication. - Give them electronic access to as much as is
philosophically possible. - Draw a line on negotiations.
- Give them definitions, boundaries and rules.
76One Final Word
- In case you're worried about what's going to
become of the younger generation, it's going to
grow up and start worrying about the younger
generation. (Roger Allen)
77(No Transcript)
78Know Instruction
79An Education Challenge
- Always design a thing by considering it in its
next larger context -- a chair in a room, a room
in a house, a house in an environment, an
environment in a city plan." - -Eliel Saarinen, "Time", July 2, 1956
80My wife and I went to a kindergarten
parent-teacher conference and were informed that
our budding refrigerator artist, Christopher,
would be receiving a grade of Unsatisfactory in
art. We were shocked. How could any childlet
alone our childreceive a poor grade in art at
such a young age? His teacher informed us that he
had refused to color within the lines, which was
a state requirement for demonstrating
grade-level motor skills. Jordan Ayan, AHA!
81What is the next larger thing for our schools?
- Preparation of students for the world beyond high
school - Transition of students to postsecondary education
- Transition, immediately or ultimately, to the
world of work - Transition of students to lifelong learning
82What do those transitions look like from the
other side?
- 60 of students entering postsecondary education
need remediation - 65 of todays workforce is in skilled and
technical jobs (compared to 15 in 1950) - Most of the jobs students of today will hold
havent even been created yet, so the
responsibility of and capacity for lifelong
learning is essential.
83What do Millennials look for in their
instructors? (from survey of students)
Percent Who Agree
84Learning Centered Schools
- We are in our third year of LCS work.
- The first two years focused on Principals.
- (They needed a head start.)
- This year focuses on Teachers.
- Each school will send teachers to LCS Academy.
- I expect teachers will catch administrators very
quickly.
85New Work. New World. New Education. The Three
Must Meet.Tom Peters/09.16.2004
86Attributes of Those Who Made the 10th Grade
History Book
- Committed!
- Determined to make a difference!
- Focused!
- Passionate!
- Irrational about their lifes project!
- Ahead of their time / Paradigm busters!
- Impatient! / Action obsessed!
87Attributes of Those Who Made the 10th Grade
History Book
- Made lots of people mad!
- Flouted the chain of command!
- Creative! / Quirky! / Peculiar! / Rebels! /
Irreverent! - Masters of improv! / Thrive on chaos! / Exploit
chaos!
88Attributes of Those Who Made the 10th Grade
History Book
- Forgiveness Permission
- Bone honest!
- Flawed as the dickens!
- In touch with their followers aspirations
- Darn good at what they do!
89Each of us has a design problem to solve to
create from the raw material around us the
curriculum for a good life. It isnt easy, and it
isnt the same for any two people.John Taylor
Gatto, A Different Kind of Teacher
90Our toughest learning achievementmastering our
native languagedoes not require schools, or even
competent parents. It does require a desperate
need-to-know.Great teachers are great learners,
not imparters-of-knowledge.Great teachers ask
great questionsthat launch kids on lifelong
quests.The world is not about right wrong
answers it is about the pursuit of increasingly
sophisticated questionsjust ask a ski instructor
or neurosurgeon. Manifesto for Education in the
3rd Millennium
91My Challenge
- Review your current instructional practices
- Do your instructional methods match your
students needs? - Try something new every week!
- Embrace technology
- Let the students have at it.
- Find creative ways to use technology in your
lessons. - Try one of the following
- Wiki
- Blog
- Web Page
- Take part of your lesson and put it online.