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Georgia Performance Standards Initiation Training

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Title: Georgia Performance Standards Initiation Training


1
Georgia Performance StandardsInitiation Training
  • Georgia Department of Education
  • Office of Curriculum and Instruction

2
Welcome
  • Introduction of System Teams to Serve as
    Trainers/System Leaders
  • Goals and Expectations for the Day
  • Trainers will . . .
  • Understand the goals of the revision, the
    rationale, and what Georgia values
  • Understand the phase-in and implementation plan
  • Develop understanding of the four parts of a
    performance standard
  • Know and be able to use common vocabulary to
    respond to the new Georgia Performance Standards
    (GPS)
  • Understand how to read the new standards, how to
    review and comment online.
  • Develop the ability to plan and redeliver the
    Initiation training to system and school personnel

3
Our Rationale
  • History of Georgias Curriculum
  • External Reviews
  • No Child Left Behind
  • Linchpin for improving student achievement

4
Goals of the New Curriculum
  • Set high expectations for all students
  • Align to national level standards
  • Increase rigor
  • Guide teaching and learning
  • Align assessments and accountability to curriculum

5
What Works in Schools, Marzano
  • 11 Factors Affecting Student Achievement
  • Guaranteed and Viable Curriculum
  • Identify and communicate the content considered
    to be essential for all students.
  • Ensure that the essential content can be
    addressed in the amount of time available for
    instruction.
  • Sequence and organize the essential content so
    that students have ample opportunity to learn.
  • Ensure that teachers address the essential
    content.
  • Protect the instructional time that is available.

6
Performance Standards
  • Are
  • Georgia Performance Standards (GPS)
  • What students are to learn
  • Clear expectations of performance
  • Curriculum document
  • Few in number
  • Application of content
  • Are Not
  • New Quality Core Curriculum (QCC)
  • How teachers are to teach
  • Comprehensive School Reform
  • Instructional handbook
  • Checklist of objectives
  • Coverage of content

7
Current Status of GPS
  • DRAFT Performance Standards posted on Georgia
    Learning Connections
  • Development of Differentiated Instruction
    companion document
  • Review and Comment (January March)
  • Revision (April)
  • Recommendation to Board of Education (May)

8
Whats Working in Georgia Schools
9
What is good enough?
Tab 3
  • Read the writing sample.
  • Take a moment to chart your assessment of this
    piece of writing.
  • Note areas of the writing that are satisfactory
    and aspects of the writing that need improvement.

10
Think-Pair-Share
Tab 3
  • What criteria were used to evaluate this writing?
  • Which comments/opinions are valid or right?
  • What is good enough?
  • How would a student know what to expect?
  • Are all teachers consistent?

11
Phase-In Plan
Tab 4
  • 2004-06
  • English Language Arts grades K-12
  • Math grade 6
  • Science grades 6-7 and 9-12
  • 2005-07
  • Social Studies grades K-12
  • Math grades K-2 and grade 7
  • Science grades 3-5
  • 2006-08
  • Math grades 3-5 and grade 8
  • Science grades K-2 and grade 8
  • 2007-09
  • Math grades 9-12

12
Implementation Plan
Tab 4
  • Initiation Training Awareness
  • Two-Year Phase-In Plan
  • Implementation Training (Years I and II)
  • Two-day Summer Institute
  • Fall Training
  • Winter Training

13
Test Alignment
Tab 4
  • Criterion-Referenced Competency Tests (CRCT) and
    End of Course Test (EOCT)
  • Test alignment is completed during Year II
    implementation for each content area and grade
    level.
  • High School Graduation Test (GHSGT)
  • Test alignment is completed during the third year
    following Year II implementation for each content
    area and grade level.

14
  • ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS
  • CURRICULUMGrades K - 12

Tab 2
15
Whats changed in Language Arts?
Tab 2
  • Grades K-3Literacy Standards follow National
    Reading Panel Research
  • Grades 4-12Reading Standards from California
    Writing Standards from Massachusetts

16
Tab 2
  • Correlation to National Reading Panel
    ResearchPhonemic Awareness, Phonics, Vocabulary,
    Fluency, and Comprehension
  • Reading Standards for Comprehension, Habits of
    Reading, Vocabulary, and Fluency

17
  • Writing Standards for Modes of DiscourseNarrative
    , Expository, Persuasive, and Response to
    Literature
  • Speaking, Listening, Viewing Standards
    Emphasizing Media Literacy
  • Reading Across the Curriculum Standard in Grades
    6-12
  • Course Level Performance Standards in Grades
    9-12 with Literature Strand

Tab 2
18
SOCIAL STUDIES CURRICULUMGrades K - 12
Tab 2

19
  • The political system of democracy is radical,
    recent, and rare. It is our childrens
    inheritance. How best to pass it on?
  • American Educator, Fall 2003

20
Foundation of Proposed Social Studies
Tab 2
  • Based on best practices throughout the United
    States and research on National Standards.
  • Based on framework designed by Dr. Diane Ravitch
  • Based on expertise and insights of Georgia
    Educators
  • Based on experience and knowledge of Georgia
    teacher team members
  • Performance Standards

21
Basic Decisions
Tab 2
  • Social Studies Framework K 12 would consist of
    Four Strands
  • History,
  • Geography,
  • Economics, and
  • Government/Civics

22
History
Tab 2
  • Knowledge of the Past
  • Continuity and Change
  • Historical Research

23
Geography
Tab 2
  • Physical and Human Systems
  • Tools of Geography
  • Cultural Perspectives

24
Government/Civics
Tab 2
  • Principles of Constitutional Democracy
  • Responsibilities and Rights of Citizens
  • Comparative Political Systems

25
Economics
Tab 2
  • Knowledge and Analytical Concepts
  • Application and Interpretation Processes
  • Decision-Making and Consequences

26
K 3
Tab 2
  • Would be the foundations for
  • History
  • Geography
  • Government/civics
  • Economics

27
Grades 4 8
Tab 2
  • History based with
  • Geography
  • Government/Civics
  • Economics
  • Integrated into the history content

28
Continuum Approach
Tab 2
  • Divides the historic timeline
  • Allows for depth, deep understanding and
    retention
  • Allows for inclusion of all people
  • Allows time for students to examine history
  • Allows time for hands on activities

29
Study of the United States
Tab 2
  • Fourth Grade
  • The Beginnings to the Constitution
  • Fifth Grade
  • The Constitution through 1890s
  • Eighth Grade Georgia Studies History,
    Geography, Government and Economics with links to
    United States History
  • High School Founding Ideas and Ideals with
    emphasis since 1876

30
Study of the World
Tab 2
  • Sixth Grade
  • The Beginnings of Civilizations through Ancient
    Greece
  • Includes study of Africa, Asia, and Europe
  • Seventh Grade
  • Starts with Ancient Rome and continues through
    the Renaissance Period
  • Includes study of Africa, Asia, Europe and the
    Americas
  • High School The World since 1500s

31
Proposed GPS Performance Based.
Tab 2
  • Kindergarten History
  • BBCS Recognize that history is the story of what
    happened in the past
  • Knowledge of the Past

32
Expected Benefits from Proposed GPS
Tab 2
  • Greater clarity for teachers, students, and
    parents
  • Better cross grade-level understanding of what
    students are learning
  • Clear, measurable expectations of what students
    are expected to know and do
  • More globally oriented students who are better
    problem solvers
  • All Social Sciences are integrated throughout K-12

33
Expected Benefits from Proposed GPS
Tab 2
  • Curriculum is a ladder not a mountain
  • Content is more reasonable and balanced
  • Relationship between previous years is sensible
  • Performance standards provide guidelines and
    strategies

34
Science Performance Standards
Tab 2
35
Georgia Performance Standards
Tab 2
  • Performance-Based Standards
  • Nationally aligned curriculum-American
    Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
    Benchmarks for Scientific Literacy
  • Vertically aligned curriculum

36
Georgia Performance Standards
Tab 2
  • Science has been written as a dual curriculum.
  • Characteristics of Science
  • Content

37
Students should do science, not view science.
Tab 2
38
Six-Eight Switch
Tab 2
39
Mathematics Performance StandardsGrades K - 12
Tab 2
40
Foundation of Mathematics
Tab 2
  • Reorganized current content curriculum to reflect
    the characteristics of the Japanese Standards
    Rigor and Complexity.
  • Based Process Standards on the National Council
    of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM)National
    Standards.
  • Based on expertise and insights of Georgia
    Educators
  • Based on experience and knowledge of teacher team
    members

41
Expected Benefits from new GPS
Tab 2
  • Greater clarity for teachers
  • Better cross grade-level understanding of what
    students are learning and what they need to
    prepare for
  • Clear, measurable expectations of what students
    are expected to know and do
  • Better teaching Greater learning

42
Kindergarten Mathematics Curriculum
Tab 2
  • Three Strands
  • Numbers and Operations
  • Measurement
  • Geometry

43
K-8 Mathematics 3-Tier Curriculum
Tab 2
  • 1st Tier (Foundation) Kindergarten- 4th grade
    Basic Skills of Arithmetic with measurement and
    geometry
  • 2nd Tier 5th and 6th grade
  • Percentages and Proportions
  • 3rd Tier 7th and 8th grade
  • Algebra and Geometry

44
Course Descriptions
Tab 2
  • Strands
  • Algebra
  • Geometry
  • Data Analysis

45
Benefits to all students
Tab 2
  • Standards are high but attainable
  • Content is rich
  • Standards allow opportunities for ALL learners
  • Standards are based on success and achievement
  • All students will graduate with the mathematics
    requirements for college.

46
Benefits to all teachers
Tab 2
  • Content is more reasonable and balanced
  • Relationship between previous years is sensible
  • Performance standards provide guidelines and
    strategies

47
Four Parts of a Performance Standard
Tab 5
48
Sample Task
Tab 5
  • Grade 7 It Was Midsummer Writing Sample
  • Task - Using narrative strategies the student
    writes about a particular event that is
    meaningful or significant in the students life.

49
Narrative Writing Standard
Tab 5
  • ELA7W2 The student demonstrates competence in a
  • variety of genres
  • The student produces a narrative (fictional,
    personal, experimental) that
  • a. Engages readers by establishing and
    developing a plot, setting, and point of view
    that are appropriate to the story (e.g., varied
    beginnings, standard plot line, cohesive devices,
    and sharpened focus).
  • b. Creates an organizing structure appropriate to
    purposes, audience, and context.
  • c. Develops complex major and minor characters
    using standard methods of characterization.
  • d. Includes sensory details and concrete language
    to develop plot, setting, and character (e.g.,
    vivid verbs, descriptive adjectives, and varied
    sentence structures).
  • e. Excludes extraneous details and
    inconsistencies.
  • f. Uses a range of strategies (e.g., suspense,
    figurative language, dialogue, expanded
    vocabulary, flashback, movement, gestures, and
    expressions, tone, and mood).
  • g. Provides a sense of closure to the writing.

50
Student Work Analysis Find the Elements
Tab 5
  • Read the Writing Standards provided.
  • Note the elements of the performance standard are
    identified using lower case letters.
  • Using the writing sample, identify the parts of
    the student work that meet the elements of the
    Narrative Standard.
  • Underline the part of the student work that meet
    a specific element of the standard and label each
    part by using the lower case letters correlated
    to elements.

51
Think-Pair-Share
Tab 5
  • How did the process of locating elements in
    student work help you understand whether or not
    the work met standard?
  • How does this help you define expectations for
    student work?
  • How does the standard help teachers define and
    communicate whether a piece of student work does
    not meet standard, meets standard, or exceeds
    standard?

52
Commentary
Tab 5
  • It Was Midsummer meets the standard for 7th
    grade narrative writing by describing the
    authors experience at her first big horse show.
    The organizing structure for the piece is the
    chronological timeline of the horse show weekend.
    The story progresses logically from beginning to
    end, and the writer uses transitional devices to
    guide the reader through the story. She uses
    phrases such as, I woke up the next morning and
    After the seven jump course to show time
    transitions.
  • The writer develops character by explaining her
    excitement and her frustration throughout the
    weekend. She includes sensory details to give
    the writer a sense of the atmosphere at the horse
    show (Everything seemed so fresh. I could smell
    the pine trees, and the newly cut grass and It
    was ninety degrees out but it felt like twenty).

53
Commentary (continued)
Tab 5
  • For the most part, the writer excludes extraneous
    details. In some places she could provide more
    detail. For instance, the writer uses vocabulary
    specific to horse shows such as refusals and
    leads but she does not explain the meaning of
    those terms. Neither does she provide enough
    context for the reader to infer meaning.
  • The writer uses dialogue to help the storys
    progress and to communicate a sense of the shows
    atmosphere (Walk please, all walk, the judge
    announces to the other riders around me.) The
    final sentence provides the story with a sense of
    closure and conveys the message of the piece (It
    was one of the best days of my life, and a little
    advise advice can really go a long way.)

54
Comparison of Georgia Performance Standards to QCC
Tab 5
  • 4th Grade QCC Reads for a variety of purposes
    in different kinds of texts.
  • 4th Grade GPS The student demonstrates
    comprehension and shows evidence of a warranted
    and responsible explanation of a variety of
    literary and informational texts. The texts are
    of the quality and complexity illustrated by the
    Grade Four reading list.

55
Differentiated Instruction
Tab 5
  • 4th Grade Writing Sample Task - Using narrative
    strategies the student writes about a particular
    event that is meaningful or significant in the
    students life.
  • Sample Task for Differentiated Instruction Next
    Slide

56
  • ELA4W2 A Georgia Performance Standard for
    fourth grade writing
  • A sample differentiated task for this standard
    is
  • The student writes a report on a topic of
    personal interest by using a graphic organizer to
    relate personal knowledge and information
    gathered from research (encyclopedia, Internet,
    interviews, etc.) This task includes a conference
    between student and teacher to guide academic
    content such as scientific, mathematical, and/or
    social studies concepts.

57
  • ELA6W2 A Georgia Performance Standard for sixth
    grade writing
  • A sample differentiated task for this standard
    is
  • The student reads several books and writes a
    review that describes the authors style and
    purpose for others by orally dictating the
    information to a scribe. The review offers a
    recommendation for or against the author, and the
    student provides evidence to support his/her
    recommendation.

58
Think-Pair-Share
Tab 5
  • How did the performance standard and commentary
    assist you in evaluating the same piece of
    writing?

59
Lets Play Jeopardy!!!
Tab 6
60
Standards-Based Vocabulary
Tab 6
  • STANDARDS-BASED EDUCATION
  • In standards-based classrooms, standards are the
    starting point for classroom instruction that
    ensures high expectations for all students.
  • CURRICULUM DOCUMENT
  • The Georgia Performance Standards document is the
    curriculum document that contains all standards
    that should be learned by all students.
  • STRAND
  • A strand is an organizing tool used to group
    standards by content. For example, the English
    language arts curriculum contains strands of
    reading, writing, listening, speaking, and
    viewing. K-5 science curriculum contains a life
    science strand, physical science strand, and an
    earth/space strand.
  • STANDARD
  • Something set up and established by authority as
    a rule for the measure of quantity, weight,
    extent, value, or quality.

61
Standards-Based Vocabulary
Tab 6
  • PERFORMANCE STANDARDS
  • Performance standards define specific
    expectations of what students should know and be
    able to do and how well students must perform to
    achieve or exceed the standard. Georgias
    performance standards are composed of four
    components content standards, tasks, student
    work, and teacher commentary.
  • CONTENT STANDARDS
  • Content standards state the purpose and direction
    the content is to take, and are generally
    followed by elements. Content standards define
    what students are expected to know, understand,
    and be able to do.
  • PROCESS STANDARDS
  • Process standards define the means used to
    develop patterns of thought and behavior that
    lead to conceptual understanding.

62
Standards-Based Vocabulary
Tab 6
  • ELEMENTS
  • Elements are part of the content standards that
    identify specific learning goals associated with
    the standard.
  • TASKS
  • Keyed to the relevant standards, tasks provide a
    sample performance that demonstrates to teachers
    what students should know and be able to do
    during or by the end of the course. Some tasks
    can serve as activities that will help students
    achieve the learning goals of the standard, while
    others can be used to assess student learning
    many serve both purposes. Although the Georgia
    Performance Standards include tasks, teachers may
    develop their own tasks.

63
Standards-Based Vocabulary
Tab 6
  • STUDENT WORK
  • Examples of successful student work are included
    to specify what it takes to meet the standard and
    to enable both teachers and students to see what
    meeting the standard looks like.
  • TEACHER COMMENTARY
  • Teacher commentary is meant to open the pathways
    of communication between students and the
    classroom teacher as well as within faculty in
    order to ensure consistency within assessment and
    expectations. Commentary shows students why they
    did or did not meet a standard and enables them
    to take ownership of their own learning.

64
Vocabulary Activity
Tab 6
  • Defining Our Terms
  • First, individual staff members should create
    that own definitions of each of the following
    terms related to the field of standards-based
    education.
  • Then, each staff member should pair up with a
    partner to explore how they agree or disagree
    about the meaning of each term.
  • Finally, at the conclusion of this activity, the
    definitions provided by the Georgia Department of
    Education should be shared and discussed.

65
Comment and Review
Tab 7
  • Curriculum will be on the Georgia Learning
    Connections website between January 12 and March
    31.
  • www.glc.k12.ga.us
  • Or
  • www.gadoe.org

66
Tab 7
67
Tab 7
68
Tab 7
69
Tab 7
70
Professional Learning Plan
Tab 8
  • District and school leaders can do a number of
    things to help make the change to standards-based
    education easier for teachers.
  • Support teachers by clearly communicating the
    changes that standards-based education will
    entail
  • Pace the progress of reform (note phase-in and
    implementation plan)
  • Provide structures and opportunities for teachers
    to learn the knowledge and skills to implement
    standards
  • Align other aspects of the system (e.g., time,
    technology, and teacher evaluation) with the
    goals of standards-based education
  • Assist with support of struggling students, and
  • Help to make needed resources available

71
Professional Learning Plan
Tab 8
  • Teacher collaboration is the key to success. It
    is important for teachers to work together to
  • understand what standards require of students
  • design lessons to teach standards, and
  • develop assessments to determine if students are
    meeting standards.

72
Professional Learning Plan
Tab 8
  • Professional Learning Plan should be coherent and
    comprehensive and include or make provisions for
  • structures (e.g., grade-level teams, curriculum
    task forces, study groups, departments) for
    learning
  • resources (e.g., time and materials) needed
  • formal and informal learning opportunities
    (formal professional development sets the stage,
    it is through informal personal exchanges that
    new ideas take root and become part of daily
    practice professional learning communities)
  • focus on day-to-day classroom work (What lesson
    plans will help students reach proficiency? How
    will I know each student has become proficient?
    How will I document student achievement?)

73
Professional Learning Plan
Tab 8
  • Learning Outcomes
  • Who (audience and personnel), When (time), Where
    (space), How (, materials)
  • Learning Activities
  • Goals of the revision, our rationale, our beliefs
    and what Georgia values
  • Phase-In and Implementation Plan
  • 4 Parts of a Performance Standard
  • Standards- Based Vocabulary
  • Comment and Review

74
  • Questions?
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