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Meeting the Educational Needs of our Students

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Title: Meeting the Educational Needs of our Students


1
Meeting the Educational Needs of our Students
  • Cloverland Elementary School

2
  • The only thing harder than starting something
    new
  • is stopping something old.
  • --Russell Ackoff, Redesigning Society

3
IT ALL BEGINS WITH ATTITUDE!
  • The key here is not the kind of instruction but
    the attitude underlying it. When teachers (and
    administrators) do not understand the potential
    of the students they teach, they will under-teach
    them no matter what the methodology.
  • --Lisa Delpit Other Peoples Children Cultural
    Conflict in the
  • Classroom

4
WHO ARE WE? We are
  • out of Year 2 Program Improvement Status because
    were in the business of change
  • closing the achievement gap because of
    quality-first teaching based on the students we
    serve
  • a research-oriented and risk-taking community of
    learners
  • a 10 compared to similar schools because we
    are a Professional Learning Community, as are ALL
    SCHOOLS LABELED A 10 IN OUR SIMILAR SCHOOLS
    COMPARISON
  • a family first
  • bound by a sense of urgency we only have 180
    days
  • committed to the concept of whatever it takes
  • committed to differentiating content, process,
    and product according to students readiness,
    interests, and learning profile

5
Continuous change at Cloverland
  • can only happen if empowered leaders, cognizant
    of systems issues teachers most among them
    form a united group. This group must spend time
    together during the school day to confront
    realities, plan and implement relevant actions to
    improve student learning for all students, and
    hold each other accountable for continuously
    improving results.
  • Diana Walsh-Reuss and Jane Moore, Leadership
    Jan/Feb 2007

6
  • CONFRONTING REALITIES

7
2008 Cloverland Demographics ()
8
2008 Cloverland Demographics ()
9
2008 EL Districtwide
22.5
10
2008 Hispanic Districtwide
36
11
2008 Free/Reduced Lunch Districtwide
55
12
2008 Students With Disabilities Districtwide
18.5
13
  • BECOMING A UNITED GROUP

14
WHAT WEVE DONE FOR STUDENTS
  • Implementation of Professional Learning Community
    model of teacher collaboration
  • GLAD training and strategies
  • ASES After School Intervention Program
  • Focus on Students With Disabilities
  • Educational technology purchases

15
2005-2007 PLC STAFF DEVELOPMENT
  • What is a Professional Learning Community?
  • What is collaboration?
  • Staff meeting training session
  • Big Idea 1 Ensuring that students
  • learn
  • Big Idea 2 A spirit of collaboration
  • Big Idea 3 A focus on results

16
What is a PLC?
  • Educators committed to working collaboratively
    in ongoing processes of collective inquiry and
    action research to achieve better results for the
    students they serve. Professional learning
    communities operate under the assumption that the
    key to improved learning for students is
    continuous job-embedded learning for educators.

17
What collaboration is NOT
  • Congeniality and focus on building group
    camaraderie
  • Developing consensus on operational procedures
  • Committees to oversee facets of the schools
    operation

18
What collaboration IS
  • Systematic embedded, teachers given guidelines,
    focus on student achievement
  • Designed to impact professional practice a
    catalyst to change practices
  • Assessed in terms of effectiveness based on
    RESULTS rather than perceptions, projects, or
    positive intentions.

19
Professional Learning Communities2007-2008
  • Non-negotiable full implementation of PLC
    collaboration
  • Continued training at staff meetings
  • Developing team norms
  • Data analysis training
  • Creating SMART goals
  • Creating common assessments
  • District-calendared teacher collaboration days
    implemented
  • Results Now book study and discussion at each
    staff meeting

20
2008-2009 PLC Staff Development and Practice
  • Development of new norms
  • Data analysis
  • Site plan creation and monitoring
  • Intervention plan development
  • SMART goals

21
  • RELEVANT
  • ACTIONS

22
2008-2009 SITE PLAN
  • Goal 1 At least 46 of our English Learners and
    Students With Disabilities will be
    Proficient/Advanced in ELA on 2009 CSTs.
  • Goal 2 At least 47.5 of our English Learners
    and Socioeconomically Disadvantaged Students will
    be Proficient/Advanced in Math on 2009 CSTs.

23
Continuing ELA Interventions
  • Universal Access
  • Professional Learning Community Model of Teacher
    Collaboration
  • Parent Involvement
  • ASES After School Intervention Program
  • Read Naturally Program
  • SRA Reading Program
  • GLAD Training
  • Mountain Language
  • Bilingual Instructional Aide
  • Accelerated Reader
  • Lexia Software Use
  • Technology to Support Current Programs

24
Continuing Math Interventions
  • Professional Learning Community Model of Teacher
    Collaboration
  • Parent Involvement
  • ASES After School Intervention Program
  • GLAD Training
  • Mountain Math
  • Bilingual Instructional Aide
  • Math Facts in a Flash Software
  • Technology to Support Current Programs

25
New 08-09 ELA Interventions
  • Reading Comprehension Practice
  • Vocabulary Practice Cards
  • Book Talks
  • Rosetta Stone Software Use
  • Examine EL STAR Testing Practices

26
New 08-09 Math Interventions
  • Examine EL STAR Testing Practices
  • Test Taking Skill Program Development and
    Training
  • Parent/Child Math Academy
  • Math Curriculum Technology
  • Homogeneous Grouping
  • Math Academic Vocabulary Practice

27
Some challenges
  • Changing Demographics
  • - 33 of our K students are EL
  • - 3 Special Day Classes - 7 of school
    population
  • - 18.5 of students have disabilities
  • - 55 Free/Reduced Lunch
  • Small school limitations
  • - limited Universal Access across grade
    levels/limited
  • homogeneous grouping
  • - limited collaboration
  • - limited funding
  • School manager vs. instructional leader

28
RESULTS
  • How do we know our students are learning?
  • HOLDING EACH OTHER ACCOUNTABLE

29
We need you to expect more from us than we do
from ourselves. We need you to demand the very
best from us. --Your students
30
Schoolwide API
31
Challenge us with material that is relevant and
interesting. Keep believing, urging, and
reminding us that we can reach higher. --Your
students
32
English Learner API
33
When you get to know us, you learn that our
differences make us who we are. Different isnt
better or worse, its just different. --Your
students
34
Socioeconomically Disadvantaged API
35
Say what you mean, mean what you say, and do what
you say you will do. --Your students
36
Hispanic API
37
You are our role model and what you do in your
classroom reaches far beyond the classroom.
--Your students
38
White API
39
If we dont get it the first time you teach it,
we probably wont the second time around unless
you teach it differently. --Your students
40
Schoolwide Proficient ELA
41
Kind words can refocus and renew us. We need
encouragement and we need to know that you
believe in us even when we may not believe in
ourselves. --Your students
42
English Learner Proficient ELA
43
Enjoy us. Laugh with us. Lets take every
opportunity to find fun together. --Your students
44
Socioeconomically Disadvantaged Proficient ELA
45
When you show us that you care about us as
individuals, we try harder to please you, work
harder, and cooperate more. --Your students
46
Students With Disabilities Proficient ELA
47
Good teachers control their classrooms and their
students understand the boundaries. --Your
students
48
Schoolwide Proficient Math
49
Remember what it felt like to be a student.
Remember the challenges you faced when you were
young. Keep up with the things that are
important to us. --Your students
50
English Learner Proficient Math
51
You always lead and everything you do counts. We
watch what you do. We see how you behave at your
kids soccer games. We are watching. --Your
students
52
Socioeconomically Disadvantaged Proficient Math
53
If we cant trust you, we wont learn from you.
Keep your promises. Speak out for what you think
is important. Error on the side of
fairness. --Your students
54
Students With Disabilities Proficient Math
55
  • It can be argued that organizations do not
    change, only individuals change. It is only when
    enough of the people within an organization
    change that the organization can be transformed.
  • The fundamental role of the principal is to help
    create the conditions which enable a staff to
    develop so that the school can achieve its goals
    more effectively. In short, the key to school
    improvement is the willingness and ability of a
    principal to assume the role of staff developer
    and make it their mission to alter the
    professional practices, beliefs, and
    understandings of school personnel toward an
    articulated end.

56
If you treat an individual as he is, he will
remain as he is. But if you treat him as if he
were what he ought to be and could be, he will
become what he ought to be and could be. --
Goethe
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