Title: CLASSROOM STRATEGIES TO INCREASE STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT ON CATS
1CLASSROOM STRATEGIES TO INCREASE STUDENT
ACHIEVEMENT ON CATS
- PAM CLEMONS
- pclemons_at_kde.state.ky.us
- OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS
- 502-564-3421
2People desire change - they resist being
changed.
3" Everything has changed but our ways of
thinking. If we do not change these, we drift
toward unparalleled catastrophe."
Albert Einstein
4Support
Develop
Build
Envision
Discover
Create
5A skilled craftsman has...
- has good tools
- fixes mistakes
- knows what tool to use for the job
6FOCUS BEACONS
- RESEARCH BASED STRATEGIES
- USING PROGRAM OF STUDIES
- ALIGNING CURRICULUM/CORE CONTENT
- INTERDISCIPLINARY LESSONS/REAL WORLD
-
- QUESTIONING TECHNIQUES
- LESSON PLANNING
- ASSESSING FORMALLY AND INFORMALLY
7LEARNING ACTIVITY RETENTIONWilliam Glasser, THE
QUALITY SCHOOL
8LEARNING MEMORY
LEARNING STYLES
MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES
- MEMORY LANES
- SEMANTIC
- EMOTIONAL
- EPISODIC
- PROCEDURAL
- AUTOMATIC
9LOCAL CURRICULUM
ACADEMIC EXPECTATIONS
PROGRAM OF STUDIES
CORE CURRICULUM
WHAT ABOUT CORE CONTENT FOR ASSESSMENT?
10(No Transcript)
11Children learn best if they are immersed in
complex experiences and are given the opportunity
to actively process what they have learned.
Renate Nummela Caine
International Center for Leadership in Education
1999
12BENEFITS
- Teacher collaboration
- Student involvement
- Higher level thinking
- Content mastery
- Mirrors real world
- Less fragmented learning
- International Center for Leadership in Education
1999-Helen M. Branigan, Sr. Consultant
13 The biggest obstacle to interdisciplinary
planning is that people try to do too much at
once. What they need to look for are some, not
all, natural overlaps between subjects.
Heidi Hayes Jacobs
14Education Research--Interdisciplinary Curriculum
What have we learned?
- Improves higher level thinking skills
- Lessens fragmented learning
- Heightens the opportunity for transfer of
learning - Improves mastery of content
- Improves motivation to learn
- International Center for Leadership in Education
1999-Helen M. Branigan, Sr. Consultant
15International Center for Leadership in Education
1999-Dr. Richard Jones
16- STANDARDS DRIVEN
- TEACHING THE RIGHT THINGS
- STUDENT CENTERED
- NOT ABOUT MORE CONTENT BUT ABOUT MORE APPLICATION
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
17TEACHER QUESTIONS
- Questions are an effective strategy because draw
students into a conversation, stimulate thought
and influence direction of communication. - Questions are driving force of good communication.
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
18EFFECTIVE TEACHER QUESTIONS
- Planned and directly relate to topic
- Focused on depth of response instead of breadth
- Precise rather than vague
- Elicit follow-up questions used to probe for
more answers
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
196 TYPES OF QUESTIONS
- INFORMATIONAL - request specific information
limited responses - ANALYTICAL - stimulate reflection, comparing,
giving a response - IMAGINATIVE - open-ended and challenge
considering vast amount of information
- FOLLOW-UP - probe for further information,
clarify misunderstandings or redirect thinking - OPINION - way for questioners to make known
opinions - CONVERSATIONAL- prompts to facilitate conversation
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
20EFFECTIVE USE OF INFORMATIONAL QUESTIONS
- TYPICAL WHO WHAT WHEN WHERE types
- USED TO BUILD CONFIDENCE AND WILLINGNESS TO
RESPOND PRIOR TO INTRODUCING AN OPEN-ENDED
QUESTION (requires more thinking)
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.Dr. Richard Jones
21EFFECTIVE USE OF ANALYTICAL QUESTIONS
- EXPLANATION QUESTIONS RESULT IN STUDENTS THINKING
ABOUT A PROCESS OR SYSTEM - USUALLY START HOW DO...?
- 3 TYPES - EXPLANATION (REQUIRES TO CONFRONT OWN
UNDERSTANDING), DISCOVERY (REQUIRES, AND CAUSATION
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
22INSTRUCTION
RIGOR
RELEVANCE
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
231999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.
Application Model
Blooms
Application
1. Awareness 2.Comprehension 3.
Application 4. Analysis 5. Synthesis 6. Evaluation
1. Knowledge of one discipline 2. Application
within discipline 3. Application across
disciplines 4. Application to real world
predictable situations 5. Application to real
world unpredictable situations
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
24Rigor/Relevance Framework
- APPLICATION MODEL
- KNOWLEDGE IN ONE DISCIPLINE
- APPLICATION WITHIN A DISCIPLINE
- APPLICATION ACROSS DISCIPLINES
- APPLICATION TO REAL-WORLD
- PREDICATABLE SITUATIONS
- APPLICATION TO REAL-WORLD UNPREDICTABLE SITUATIONS
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
25Rigor/Relevance Framework
- KNOWLEDGE TAXONOMY
- AWARENESS
- COMPREHENSION
- APPLICATION
- ANALYSIS
- SYNTHESIS
- EVALUATION
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
26Complex use of knowledge
Continuum of Knowledge
Recall of knowledge
International Center for Leadership in Education
1999-Dr. Richard Jones
27Continuum of Application
Knowledge for its own sake
Use of that Knowledge
1
2
3
4
5
International Center for Leadership in Education
1999-Dr. Richard Jones
28Rigor/Relevance Framework
International Center for Leadership in Education
1999-Dr. Richard Jones
Knowledge
Application
1
2
3
4
5
29Rigor/Relevance Framework
International Center for Leadership in Education
1999-Dr. Richard Jones
6
D
C
5
4
3
2
B
A
1
1
2
3
4
5
30INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES
RIGOR
RELEVANCE
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
311999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
6
Adaptation
Assimilation
5
4
3
2
Acquisition
Application
1
1
2
3
4
5
321999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
331999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
34EFFECTIVE INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES
- INQUIRY
- PROJECT DESIGN
- PROBLEM SOLVING
- TEACHER QUESTIONS
- SIMULATIONS
- WORK-BASED LEARNING
- INTERACTIVE TECHNOLOGY
35KEY QUESTIONS
- What is the focus of the instructional unit
(topic, area, theme, setting or concepts)? - What are students expected to know and be able to
do (knowledge and application level)? - What student work will be used to measure
achievement? - What content will students need?
- What key questions and/or concepts will trigger
student interest? - What assessment and instruction will be effective?
36TRADITI0NAL INSTRUCTNAL PLANNING
LINEAR
INSTRUCTION
CURRICULUM
ASSESSMENT
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
37PERFORMANCE PLANNING MODEL
1999 INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP IN
EDUCATIONS, INC.-Dr. Richard Jones
ASSESSMENT
CURRICULUM PLANNING STEPS
FEEDBACK / EVALUATION
INSTRUCTION
38YARD BY YARD, LIFE IS HARD, BUT INCH BY INCH,
LIFE IS A CINCH