Title: Planning for the Future
1 2A Thousand Years From Now
- Have we helped
- --every 5th child who is poor?
- --every 6th child who is black?
- --every 7th child who is Hispanic?
- --every 8th child who is mentally or physically
challenged?
3What is the Vision?
- New and/or inexperienced teachers need to be
encouraged and supported - Teachers need to be provided the professional
development they need - Teachers need to use diagnostic tools to guide
and facilitate their instruction - Teachers need to become leaders in instructional
practice - Teachers need to advocate for their own
profession
4What is the Vision?
- New and/or inexperienced teachers need to be
encouraged and supported
5(No Transcript)
6Try to turn every situation, positive or
negative, into a learning experience.
7Leaky Buckets Cant Hold Water
- Schools do not generally lack newly credentialed
candidates to choose from instead they are
rapidly losing the NEWLY HIRED teachers they
already have - Leaky buckets lose existing teachers faster than
they can take in new ones
8Leaky Buckets Cant Hold Water
- Ingersoll found
- 14 of first-time teachers quit in the first year
- 33 leave within three years
- 50 leave within the first five years
- Five years is the average time it takes for
teachers to maximize their students learning
9Leaky Buckets Cant Hold Water
- High attrition rates like these mean that for
every two new teachers a school district hires,
one of them will completely dropout of the
profession in five yearsjust at the time they
are able to consistently improve student
achievement.
10- 42 of our teachers
leave the field after
seven years - 51 of reported licensed personnel are over 45
36 are over 50 - Waivers comprise 0.6 of all licensed personnel
in Kansas 91 of all waivers are issued for
special education
11- Teachers teach because teaching is work they
love to do, and many report that if they could
choose their lifes work all over again, they
would choose teaching.
12Why Do Teachers Leave?
- Class size
- Not enough support from administration
- Undisciplined, poorly motivated students
- Uninvolved parents
- Unreasonable expectations
- Lack of resources
13Why Do Teachers Leave?
- Isolation from colleagues
- Assignments outside their area of training
- Lack of appreciation or respect
- Feeling discouraged
- Feeling frustrated
14Why Do Teachers Leave?
- Feeling left out of the decision-making
- Poor school management
- Lack of classroom resources specifically
- Too many regulations
- Lack of mentoring or induction programs
15If youre a seasoned teacher, take steps to make
new teachers feel welcome.
16Whats Needed?
- Support
- Personal and emotional support
- Task or problem-focused support
- Critical reflection on teaching practice
17What is the Vision?
- Teachers need to be provided the professional
development they need
18Show your students that they matter to you.Come
to class prepared.
19Supporting Quality Teaching
- 70 percent of teachers and 75 of principals
believe that providing more time for ongoing
professional development related to daily
classroom activities would help to retain quality
teachers - Less than half of principals (45 percent) believe
that allocating time and resources for
professional development is an extremely
important part of their job
20What Does Research Say?
- Teachers Who Learn, Kids Who Achieve, identified
characteristics from schools honored by the US
Department of Education - Had clear achievement goals
- Provided an array of professional development
opportunities - Embedded ongoing learning in the school culture
- Built a highly collaborative school environment
- Found and used time for teaching learning
- Used a broad range of student performance data
21What Does Research Say?
- The most powerful forms of professional
development match adult learning processes with
intended learning outcomes and the desired
instructional practices for teachers - Address student learning needs
- Align with school improvement goals
- Address students and teachers improvement areas
- Deepen content knowledge
- Expand the repertoire of teaching strategies
- Driven by data
- Frequent monitoring of student progress
- In-school instructional coaches
22What Does Research Say?
- U.S. teachers have about an hour each week for
collaboration while other countries provide 10-20
hours per week - Less than 1 or less of school budgets are spent
on professional learning - Release time
- Outsiders to assist
- In-school instructional coaches
23What Does KS Research Say?
- The following were found as a result of a study
regarding the professional development practices
used in the Kansas Challenge Award schools - Challenge School teachers participated in
significantly more professional development
overall - Challenge School teachers rated the benefit of
professional development more positively - 44 as compared to 31 of the comparison school
teachers said that professional development had a
direct positive impact on their teaching
24What Does KS Research Say?
- In both groups, teachers did not feel that
professional development activities included
enough time to think about, try out and evaluate
new ideas - Both groups gave their highest rating to the
support for professional development that came
from building and district administrators
25What Does KS Research Say?
- Both gave their lowest ratings to items related
to having enough time to work and plan together - Challenge school teachers said that learning
teams met at least weekly the district office
was committed to professional development
decisions were based on data, follow-up was
essential everyone worked together
26What Does KS Research Say?
- Both groups reported needing more on-the-job
practice of new skills - Comparison school teachers said that less time
was spent in learning about content and in
observing each others instruction - Teachers responses about professional
development became less positive with teaching
level - Elementary teachers were much more positive about
quality and relevance than secondary
27What Does Research Say?
- A longitudinal study of the Eisenhower program
found that when professional development was
focused on reform teachers increased their use of
desired strategies in their classes - Teacher study groups
- Teacher collaboratives
- Networks
- Mentoring
- Internships
- Resource centers
28Self-refection clarifies better than any mirror.
29Whats Needed?
- Rigorous, ongoing, school-based, job-embedded
professional development - A focus on improving student learning
- Deepening teachers content knowledge,
research-based instructional strategies, and
formative assessment techniques - Support by school administrators
- Time to practice what they are learning
- Mentoring and induction programs to support new
staff
30What is the Vision?
- Teachers need to use diagnostic tools to guide
and facilitate their instruction
31(No Transcript)
32- You seldom get what you go after unless you know
in advance what you want. - Unknown
33Instructional Decisions
- Decisions made by teachersspecifically
instructional decisionsare at the heart of the
teaching-learning process - These decisions must be based on
- real time classroom assessments
- less-frequent external assessments
34- Corandic is an emurient grof with many fribs it
granks from corite, an olg which cargs like
lange. Corite grinkles several other tarances,
which garkers excarp by glarcking the corite and
starping it in tranker-clarped storbs. The
tarances starp a chark which is exparged with
worters, branking a slorp. This slorp is garped
through several other corusces, finally frasting
a pragety, blickant, crankled coranda. Coranda
is a cargurt, grinkling corandic and borigen.
The corandic is nacerated from the borigen by
means of loracity.
35A Standardized Test
- 1. What is corandic?
- ___a) a chark which is exparged with worters
- ___b) an olg which cargs like lange
- ___c) an emurient grof with many fribs
36A Standardized Test
- 1. What is corandic?
- ___a) a chark which is exparged with worters
- ___b) an olg which cargs like lange
- _X_c) an emurient grof with many fribs
37A Standardized Test
- 2. What does corandic grank from?
- ___a) a garker
- ___b) corite
- ___c) the borigen
38A Standardized Test
- 2. What does corandic grank from?
- ___a) a garker
- _X_b) corite
- ___c) the borigen
39A Standardized Test
3. How is the corandic nacerated from the
borigen? ___a) by starping it in storbs ___b) by
means of loracity ___c) by branking a slorp
40A Standardized Test
3. How is the corandic nacerated from the
borigen? ___a) by starping it in storbs _X_b) by
means of loracity ___c) by branking a slorp
41A Standardized Test
4. What is coranda? ___a) a cargurt ___b) a
garker ___c) a storb
42A Standardized Test
4. What is coranda? _X_a) a cargurt ___b) a
garker ___c) a storb
43A Standardized Test
5. What does the slorp finally frast? ___a) a
blickant ___b) a crankle ___c) a coranda
44A Standardized Test
5. What does the slorp finally frast? ___a) a
blickant ___b) a crankle _X_c) a coranda
45What Does the Research Say?
- Black and William found that school improvement
efforts that included strengthening the practice
of formative assessment produced significant and
substantial learning gains - Rick Stiggins found that using formative
assessments produced gains equivalent to two to
three grade levels - Schmoker provided numerous examples of schools
that made remarkable improvement in achievement
by using local assessment data
46What Does the Research Say?
- Diagnostic teaching is the proactive use of a
wide repertoire of assessment approaches that
lead to the wide use of curricular and
instructional practices which are consistently
used with students with diverse needs, abilities,
strengths, experiences, and interests in order to
best support their learning.
47Differentiation
- Teachers need to use assessments to shape their
lessons to fit the needs of individual students - Teachers do this by differentiating
- Contentwhat
- Processhow
- Products--demonstrate
- Readinessentry point
- Interestcuriosity
- Learning profilehow they learn
48Whats Needed?
- A comprehensive assessment plan that includes
- High stakes external assessment
- Local summative measures
- Local formative measures
- Sound assessment design that includes
- Clearly defined expectations for student learning
- Clearly defined purpose for the assessment
- Different assessment methods
- Sampling of content versus all content
- Elimination of bias
- Professional development in methods of
assessment, data interpretation, communicating
data
49Whats Needed?
- Differentiation is not
- a recipe for assessing or teaching
- an assessment or instructional strategy
- what a teacher does when he or she has time
- Differentiation is
- A way of thinking about teaching and learning
- A philosophy
50Whats Needed?
- Diagnostic teaching is based on the belief that
- Students differ in their readiness to learn,
interests, styles and experiences - These differences define students needs, pace of
learning and the support needed - Students learn best when pushed by teachers
- Students learn best when they make a connection
between the curriculum and life experiences - Students learn better when schools create a sense
of communities
51What is the Vision?
- Teachers need to become leaders in instructional
practice
52There will be times when you must stand on
principle, even when it is unpopular.
53Schools that Broke the Mold
- Focused on early intervention
- Held high expectations for all students
- Aligned curriculum to standards
- Based decisions on data that resulted in changes
in instruction - Monitored pupil progress frequently and
continuously
54Schools that Broke the Mold
- Used research-based approaches to professional
development - Redefined leadership roles
- Engaged parents and community actively as
partners - Used a system-wide approach to improving
instruction
55Lessons Learned
- While no particular intervention strategy leads
to a high success rate there is a common thread
found in successful turnaround efforts good
school level leadership. - Ronald Brady, Can Failing Schools Be Fixed?
56Leaders From Within
- This wont work. Who wants to hear from the
redhead down the hall? - Teacher, Julie Breaux-Bliss when asked to become
involved in more decision-making and being a
resource for her buildings own professional
development.
57Leaders From Within
- Five years later, shes singing a different
chorus - We started drawing on the expertise of the
faculty. We have a bigger turnout when faculty
presents, and the respect level is much higher.
When you need to find someone who knows
something, that person is just down the hall.
58Leaders From Within
- Julie Breaux-Bliss reported that in her school,
there are now - 35 formal leadership roles of the 105 teachers
- There are 6 teacher led action teams that
- Focus on implementing strategies from the school
improvement plan - Meet once a month
- Are voluntary
59Leaders From Within
- The teams include
- School organization team that focuses on large
structural issues - Professional development team that oversees all
aspects of professional learning - Advocacy team designs curriculum
- Instructional focus team ensures all teachers
focus on the instructional goals for the year - Student Voice team replaced the student council
- Community engagement team recruits more
volunteers, improves relationships, and designs
activities that build community - Leadership team consists of the leaders from
academy teams (content areas) and every action
team
60McRELs Research on Distributed Leadership
- 70 studies
- 2,894 schools
- 1.2 million students
- 14,000 teachers
- A correlation exists between leadership behavior
school achievement - Instructional leadership is associated with a 10
percentile point gain in school achievement
61(No Transcript)
62What is the Vision?
- Teachers need to advocate for their own
profession
63On days when you wonder why you ever became a
teacher, close your eyes and recapture the moment
that inspired you long ago.
64Advocacy
- What does it mean to advocate?
- To be a vocal supporter of any a cause
- To plead or speak for another
- To recommend
- To maintain by argument
65Advocacy
- What is the perception of teaching?
- Who is advocating?
- Who needs to be advocating?
- Who can make a difference?
- How can you make a difference?
66Be an advocate for someone who really needs it.
67www.nctq.org
- Increasing the Odds How Good Policies Can Yield
Better Teachers - National Council on Teacher Quality
68Do Masters Degrees Make a Difference?
- Evidence is conclusive that masters degrees do
not make teachers more effective - Evidence suggests that rewarding teachers for
these degrees is an inefficient use of limited
public resources
69Do Masters Degrees Make a Difference?
- Bottom Line
- Districts interested in exploring smarter
compensation packages might consider redirecting
lockstep salary increases connected to earning an
advanced degree toward a more targeted purpose.
70Does Experience Make a Difference?
- The preponderance of evidence has found that the
benefits of experience are realized after only a
couple of years in the classroom after that
there isnt evidence that teachers become more
effective each year they are in the classroom - The most effective teachers may be the first to
leave the classroom
71Does Experience Make a Difference?
- Bottom Line
- Policies based on a simple linear growth over
time in teacher effectiveness should be
reexamined.
72Do Education Courses Make a Difference?
- One study looked at the test performance of
24,000 8th graders the study found that an
education degree had no impact on student scores - Another study found that students actually did
worse on achievement tests if their teachers had
a degree in education - One theory is that the apparent lack of an impact
from education coursework might be related to the
low academic caliberon averageof the people who
take such coursework.
73Do Education Courses Make a Difference?
- Bottom Line
- Pre-service education courses may help some
aspiring teachers to become more effective than
they would have been otherwise, but there is no
evidence to support policies that bar individuals
from the profession because they lack such
coursework.
74Does Certification Make a Difference?
- One study found that students whose teachers had
emergency certification performed just as well as
students whose teachers had standard
certification - Another study in CA found that teachers
certification had very little impact on student
achievement
75Does Certification Make a Difference?
- Bottom Line
- States should ensure that their certification
systems are sufficiently flexible to accommodate
capable nontraditional candidates.
76Does Teachers Race Make a Difference?
- One study of a large school district found that
having a black teacher did not affect the scores
of black 7th 8th graders - A longitudinal study found no effect of the
teachers race on scores for white, blacks, or
Hispanics
77Does Teachers Race Make a Difference?
- Bottom Line
- States should ensure that their certification
systems are sufficiently flexible to accommodate
capable nontraditional candidates.
78Does Subject Area Knowledge Make a Difference?
- One study found that the positive impact achieved
from taking courses did not increase after 4 and
6 college-level courses. - No relationship was found in student achievement
when elementary teachers took recent coursework
in mathematics
79Does Subject Area Knowledge Make a Difference?
- Bottom Line
- The growing call for more subject matter training
for secondary teachers appears justified.
80Does Level of Literacy Make a Difference?
- Many schools of education have few or no
admissions criteria - Nearly 90 of colleges with schools of education
accept more than 70 of their applicants - Teacher education programs focus on subject areas
and education coursework and neglect what is
directly relevant to what a K-12 teacher needs in
his/her repertoire
81Does Teachers Level of Literacy Make a
Difference?
- Bottom Line
- A prospective teachers level of literacy should
be a primary consideration in the hiring process.
82Does Selectivity of College Make a Difference?
- A study that looked at hundreds of middle and
high school students found that students made
greater gains when assigned to teachers who had
attended higher rated colleges low-income
students posted the greatest gains - A study of 30,000 high school students found a
strong positive relationship between the
selectivity of teachers college and student
academic gains
83Does Selectivity of College Make a Difference?
- Bottom Line
- Teachers with strong academic credentials are
more likely to produce greater student learning
gains but are also more likely to leave teaching.
84- Love what you are doing and show it.
- Helen Boehm
85Whats Needed?
- Build relationships
- Stay informed
- Communicate
- Always have 3-5 must-airs
- Practice makes perfect
- Show them that you are a thinking, caring person
- Focus
- Stay on message
86(No Transcript)
87Their minds are in our hands.
88(No Transcript)