Title: From Standards to Success
1From Standards to Success
- Book Study Exemplar 3
- Chapter 1
2First of all.
- Standards are a minimum.
- Many teachers need help achieving the standards
or minimum. - We should especially consider new teachers in our
building as well as teachers who are struggling. - This is simply a starting place.
- Our goal is to produce instruction that far
surpasses the minimum.
3The Problem
- Regulations of NCLB are affecting school
districts. - Highly qualified teachers are needed in high
poverty schools with large numbers of students
who are English Language Learners. - Making adequate yearly progress in multiple
measures (Science, math, and Social Studies)
particularly on state content standards is a very
real concern. - Policy experts continue to focus on national
standards and schools are basing their AYP on
state standards. There is a huge disconnect. - Many states and districts have no clear plan for
achieving state standards. It is particularly
important to think in terms of a school level and
classroom level plans. - Enabling conditions, resources, assessments and
numerous policies have been proposed but no
theory of action or a plan on how to do the work
has been developed.
4The missing element
- Explicit directions to teachers and
administrators that will lead to standards
achievement at the school level. Some districts
have benchmark assessments in place, however
benchmarking should follow with an instructional
plan. - In other words a Theory of Action.
5The Solution
- The Standards Achievement Planning Cycle or a
Theory of Action is a plausible solution for the
local level plan. - This is a first proposal for achieving standards
and beyond to rigorous instruction-It is a
beginning. - SAPC is the first true theory of action for state
standards implementation. This theory of action
has been designed and researched by Mark OShea. - What can we learn from it?
6SAPCStandards Achievement Planning Cycle
- SAPC starts with inputs to the system and
describes a process that engages existing
resources. - Through a series of explicit actions SAPC changes
the input resources into intermediate products
that lead one after the other to standards
achievement as the goal of daily instruction. - SAPC brings together reform initiatives that have
demonstrated improved teaching and learning in
their own right. The initiatives are the New
Standards Project, Japanese Lesson Study, and
Looking at Student Work.
7NEW STANDARDS PROJECT
- The first reform initiative is the New Standards
Project. It is a system of performance standards
and assessments for students at the elementary,
middle, and high school levels. The performance
standards are internationally benchmarked and
indicate the level of performance that students
should demonstrate in English and language arts,
mathematics, science, and applied learning. The
assessments measure student performance against
the standards through the use of reference
examinations that include traditional test items
and performance tasks.
ISBN 188963090XFormat Hardcover, 304ppPub.
Date January 1999Publisher National Center on
Education the Economy
8New Standards Project
- New Standards is a joint effort of the National
Center on Education and the Economy in
Washington, D.C., and the Learning Research and
Development Center at the University of
Pittsburgh. It is guided by a governing board
composed in part of representatives of states and
school districts that collectively educate nearly
half the students in the United States. Thousands
of classroom teachers have participated in the
development of assessment tasks, scoring rubrics,
and portfolios. - For more information, refer to New Standards
Performance Standards and Assessments for the
Schools (National Center on Education and the
Economy, 1998).
9What is Lesson Study?Lesson Study is a way for
coaches to guide grade levels to best practice.
- The second research based practice is Lesson
Study. Lesson Study is a professional development
process that Japanese and American teachers
engage in to systematically examine their
practice. The goal of lesson study is to improve
the effectiveness of the experiences that the
teachers provide to their students.
10A Focus on the Examination of Lessons
- The core activity in lesson study is for
teachers to collaboratively work on a small
number of study lessons. These lessons are
called study lessons because they are used to
examine the teachers practice.
11The Lesson Plan Format
- You may download a sample study lesson plan
format directly from the resources section of the
LSRG website (www.tc.edu/lessonstudy), under
Tools for Conducting Lesson Study. - Cornerstone coaches have more information on this
process. Many Cornerstone coaches have
participated in a Lesson Study.
12Looking at Student Work
- The third research based practice is the idea of
looking collaboratively at student work and the
ways it can impact a teachers practice is at the
heart of LASW. - An important objective is to understand the
collaborative contexts for looking at student
work - The raising of questions about what can be
learned and who might be involved in the
collaborative process is a natural outgrowth of
the process. - A powerful professional development tool involves
teachers looking at their own students work. - This process enables teachers and administrators
to share and reflect on ways to develop new
classroom practices and change existing ones to
support learning. - An overarching goal of LASW is to broaden the
examination of student work to include parents
and community members.
13Resources for LASW
- Looking at Student Work A Window into the
Classroom. Annenberg Institute for School Reform
series on school reformPub Date 1999, 28 min.
Video 49, ISBN 0807738735 - Hord, S. (1997). "Professional Learning
Communities Communities of Continuous Inquiry
and Improvement." Southwest Educational
Development Laboratory. Available in full on the
SEDL web site at http//www.sedl.org/pubs/change34
/.Go to research to read a summary. - Huff, D. (November 2000). "Teachers Examining
Student Work To Guide Curriculum, Instruction."
Education Week on the Web. - Barnes, Nancy. (2000). Teachers Teaching
Teachers. In Education Week, January 19, 2000
(1919, pp. 38, 42). The article is available in
full on EdWeek's web site. Go to research to read
a summary. - http//www.edweek.org/ew/
14The Real Problem
- Sustaining the use of collaborative lesson
planning and student work evaluation need
continuous encouragement and cultivation until
they become habits of mind. - The text we are studying describes in detail the
enabling and sustaining conditions that support
the work as it moves in the direction of rigorous
teaching and learning to achieve standards. - Continued insistence on excessive number of
standards and the refusal to rank standards by
significance compounds the problem for most
schools.
15Our question should be
- How does a teacher function differently in a
standards-based classroom? - How can we define a process for standards-based
instruction to support teachers work in this
endeavor of meeting state standards and rigorous
work?
16What this book does
- It describes a comprehensive approach to
implementing standards with a central strategy
that includes elements of whole school reform
organized in - A Recursive Cycle of
- Instructional planning,
- Teaching, and
- Looking at student work
- all focused upon raising learning
- expectations for standards
- achievement.
17How Does This Look
- Looking closely at one school and the work done
in the areas of - Instructional planning
- Teaching
- 3. Looking at student work
18Instructional Planning
19TeachingNovember Lesson Study at NMBE with many
Cornerstone Coaches
20Looking at Student Work
LOOKING AT STUDENT WORK
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22A Standards-Based Classroom During a Lesson Study
- Standards are used to focus teaching.
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25Lesson objectives are written as outcomes to be
demonstrated by the students.
- Lesson Objectives For Habitats and Adaptations-
NMBE Third Grade
LESSON ONE OBJECTIVES
LESSON OBJECTIVES ARE POSTED IN THE FORMAT FOR
STUDENT USE WILF (WHAT I AM LOOKING FOR..)
LESSON REWRITE OBJECTIVES
26The outcomes are written from the standards in an
integrative fashion.
- Lesson Study November Lesson Plan NMBE
- Habitats and Adaptations-Third Grade
- I. Plan of the unit
- A. Goals of the Unit
- We want to model how to integrate across the
curriculum, specifically in the content area of
science. Our unit of study is habitats and
adaptations. Children will be able to write a
synthesis from their nonfiction reading. - We want children to learn how to investigate
topics of importance, through a small group
setting, through observation, research, and
experimentation. - We want to increase the number of children that
are benchmarking on state assessments. - We want all children, at all different levels, to
work with rigor. - The literacy focus will be on questioning. The
writing will center on how to organize a response
to a nonfiction text. See pages 285 and 286 in
Strategies that Work. - We want the students to text map using the book,
All Kinds of Habitats (Sally Hewitt) - We want the students to create a
Fact/Question/Response chart in small groups.
27National Standards are included
- National Standards (K-4)
- The Characteristics of Organisms Organisms have
basic needs. For example, animals need air,
water, and food plants require air, water,
nutrients, and light. Organisms can survive only
in environments in which their needs can be met.
The world has many different environments, and
distinct environments support the life of
different types of organisms. - Organisms and Their Environment All animals
depend on plants. Some animals eat plants for
food. Other animals eat animals that eat the
plants.
28Relationships of Unit to Other Grades
- B. How this unit is related to the curriculum
- 2nd Grade (This will serve as their background
knowledge.) - SC Standards 2-II.C. Organisms and Their
Environments - 1. All animals depend on plants. Some animals
eat plants for food. Other animals eat
animals that eat the plants. - a. Investigate and describe ways in which
animals interact with each other and with
the environment. - 3rd Grade
- SC Standards 3-II.C. Organisms and Their
Environments - 1. All animals depend on plants.
- a. Investigate and predict ways living things
will interact with each other and the
environment. - b. Interpret the interdependency of plants and
animals within a food chain by - defining the following,
producer, consumer, decomposer, herbivore,
- carnivore, omnivore,
predator, and prey. - 4th Grade (This will be the knowledge that will
be developed next year pertaining to this
concept.) - SC Standards 4-II.B. Organisms and Their
Environments - 1. An organisms patterns of behavior are
related to the nature of that organisms
environment, including the kinds and the numbers
of other organisms present, the availability
of food and resources, and the physical
characteristics of the environment.
29Use of academic vocabulary is evident in the
classroom.
30More Vocabulary Work
- Conversation in the classroom includes the
academic vocabulary of the standard selected for
the lesson plan.
Students express their thinking in large group as
well as in partnerships.
31Conceptual understanding is held at a high
premium in a standards based classroom.
- Building an Understanding of Food Chains
Students dissected owl pellets and then wrote
about the experience to build rich conceptual
understanding of food chains.
Prior to the Lesson Study Students Built
Conceptual Knowledge of the Topic
32The teacher questions thoughtfully in a standards
based classroom.
Teacher conferences create on the go assessment
of student understanding. Records of these
conferences show student progress.
The teacher questions for student understanding
of the lessons objectives.
33Students are engaged in meaningful academic work
in this classroom.
Student thinking is valued by recording it and
keeping the ideas on anchor charts.
Every student records important vocabulary in
their notebook.
34Activities relate to objectives in a standards
based classroom.
- Classroom activities are clearly aimed toward the
achievement of planned outcomes that appear in
the lesson plan objectives.
35And
- Standards assessments are a part of classroom
routines. - Work is collected and scrutinized as a measure of
achievement of lesson objectives. - This process causes a teacher using a
standards-based lesson plan to reflect on her
teaching in relation to the goals set for
students. - Teachers are fully aware of the characteristics
of accurate standards-meeting responses and what
work is substandard. - Benchmark papers such as those available from the
New Standards Project, Six Traits Writing, and
various state departments are a good starting for
writing. The best benchmark papers for writing
are derived as teachers work over a period of
time to collect papers from their own classrooms.
36Lesson Design with Standards Assessment
- Objectives are written in outcomes language.
- Work is examined to discern student attainment of
standards. - Lesson objectives are clearly written from state
standards and frameworks using the explicit
vocabulary. - If students achieve the objectives of the lesson,
then they also achieve selected standards.
37From Standards to Success
38Standards Achievement Planning Cycle
- A protocol to link state standards to improved
student achievement that delineates the teachers
role in implementing the standards. - A curriculum management system is essential for
effective schools.
39A NMBE Curriculum Management System
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42NMBE
- These photos show school wide design maps that
determine specific units of study by grade level.
- NMBE is a second and third grade school.
- These charts are visible daily as teams of
teachers meet in the staff development room. The
effect of this map is powerful as teachers, at a
glance, can see where they are and where they are
going in their planning cycles.
43Common Strategies for Implementing Standards
44The Typical Strategies
- Are usually ineffective as shown in the chart
Figure 2.1. - By careful study of the chart, it is easy to
discern that as the strategy moves further away
from the role of teaching it is less effective. - In the next slide, we see the problem points to
the box in the middle which is also identified as
the position that contains teacher planning. - OShea postulates that the missing component is a
protocol for standards-based instructional
planning. - Nave, Miech, and Mosteller (2000) address the
need for a theory of action for standards
implementation. - The authors state in Phi Delta Kappan
45- What mechanisms actually link the act of raising
standards with improved student achievement?...if
we had a sufficiently detailed theory of action
that explained how standards could influence
student achievement, then evaluation could focus
closely on this causal chain, with its particular
expectations and assumptions, to see what happens
when new standards are put into practice.
46Standards-Based Teaching as a Black Box Problem
47Promising initiatives that set foundation for SAPC
- Functional Standards of New Standards Project
- Japanese Lesson Study
- Looking at Student Work
48Standards-Based Lesson Plan
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