Elementary Math Lead Teacher Update - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Elementary Math Lead Teacher Update

Description:

Assume leadership for CLEAR implementation and other district-wide initiatives ... and classify two-or-three-dimensional geometric figures shapes and solids ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:24
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: KFEA5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Elementary Math Lead Teacher Update


1
Elementary Math Lead Teacher Update
  • Houston I.S.D.
  • Fall, 2005

2
Elementary Math Lead Teachers Role/Responsibilitie
s
  • Assume leadership for CLEAR implementation and
    other district-wide initiatives including a role
    in planning for TAKS
  • Present CLEAR or other content specific
    professional development at the building level
  • Disseminate information from Lead Teacher
    meetings
  • Participate in a minimum of nine hours of content
    specific professional development by the
    Curriculum Department

3
Whats New with AMI?
4
Diagnostic Assessments K-2
  • Assessing Math Concepts
  • Revised schedule for 2005-2006
  • Opening of School Assessments
  • Models of Best Practices

5
Diagnostic Assessments 3-6
  • Opening of School Assessments
  • Grade 3 - Assessing Math Concepts
  • Grades 4-6 TAKS Data
  • End of Nine Weeks Assessments
  • Snapshots Grades 3-6

6
Lets Talk About It
  • What is the purpose of diagnostic or benchmark
    assessment?
  • How do you use the information gained by
    assessing students?

7
(No Transcript)
8
Frequently Asked Questions
  • Accelerated
  • Mathematics Instruction
  • (AMI)

9
When do we assess our students?
  • Assessing Math Concepts
  • During or before the end of the 9 weeks grading
    period in which they are listed on the 2005-2006
    Assessment Schedule
  • Snapshots
  • Upon completion of the units indicated on the
    grade level/course syllabus planner

10
How do I record/track student data?
  • Assessing Math Concepts
  • Complete the Class Summary sheet found in the
    back of each assessment guide
  • List all students with Is or any combination of
    Is and Ps
  • Snapshots
  • Print out the Student by Objective Report from
    PASS
  • Highlight student name and each objective that
    he/she did not master (Mastery equals 3 or more
    items correct out of 4)

11
How do I show when students reach mastery of a
concept?
  • Record the date of mastery in the appropriate
    column of the student data sheet
  • Assessing Math Concepts
  • Class Summary Sheet in the column of each I or
    P received by the student
  • Snapshots
  • Under each objective that student did not master
    on the Student by Objective Report from PASS

12
How do I determine if students have mastered a
concept?
  • Teachers may use a variety of ways to determine
    student mastery
  • Observation of students at work
  • Recordings of center or group work
  • Re-administer the assessment/portion of
    assessment in which students received Is and Ps
    (K-2)
  • Re-administer a modified test composed of items
    for highlighted objectives on Student by
    Objective Report (3-6)

13
Can our campus select an alternative assessment
to use for AMI?
  • No. The Accelerated Mathematics Instruction
    (AMI) Guidelines require the District to
    designate which assessment will be used for
    identification of students in need of
    intervention.

14
How do I provide intervention for students who
are in need?
  • Students with similar needs should be grouped for
    intervention based upon assessment data
  • AMI intervention sessions may be scheduled
  • During the school day (Strongly recommended
    because of its timeliness and effectiveness)
  • Before or after school

15
Developing Mathematical Literacy
16
Mathematical Literacy
  • Students who are mathematically literate have
    developed
  • Procedural and computational skills
  • Conceptual understanding

17
Strands of Mathematical Proficiency
  • Understanding (Conceptual Understanding)
  • Comprehending mathematical concepts, operations,
    and relations
  • Computing (Procedural Fluency)
  • Carrying out mathematical procedures flexibly,
    accurately, efficiently, and appropriately
  • Applying (Strategic Competence)
  • Being able to formulate problems mathematically
    and to devise strategies for solving them using
    concepts and procedures appropriately
  • Reasoning (Adaptive Reasoning)
  • Using logic to explain and justify a solution to
    a problem or to extend from something known to
    something not yet known
  • Engaging (Productive Disposition)
  • Seeing mathematics as sensible, useful, and doable

18
Conceptual vs. Procedural Knowledge
  • Conceptual Understanding
  • Well-defined concepts
  • Relationships among ideas, concepts, skills
  • Procedural Knowledge
  • Knowledge of facts, symbols, rules, procedures

19
Conceptual vs. Procedural Errors
  • Conceptual Errors
  • Students lack fundamental understanding and
    experience with the concept
  • Remediation begins with using manipulative
    materials
  • Procedural Errors
  • Students forget rules and algorithmic steps, but
    do understand the concept
  • Remediation activities do not necessarily have to
    involve manipulatives
  • Lessons can focus on drawing and/or representing
    objects and then connecting numerals to those
    figures or making notations as reminders

20
Diagnosing Student Errors Activity
  • Working together in groups, score the student
    practice sheet you have been given.
  • Once you have finished scoring the paper,
  • Identify the type of errors you find. Decide if
    there is a pattern in the errors.
  • List the strengths exhibited in the childs work.
  • Be ready to share with the whole group.

21
Whats Happening in TEA?
22
2004-2005 List of TEKS Student Expectations Tested
  • Released in September
  • Website address
  • http//www.tea.state.tx.us/student.assessment/reso
    urces/release/expect/index.html
  • TEA will release TAKS tests for the 2005-2006
    school year and produce item analysis reports.

23
Elementary Math TEKS
  • SBOE meeting October 18th
  • Scheduled for second reading and approval
  • SBOE will set the implementation schedule

24
Effects of TEKS Refinements on TAKS Grades 3-5
  • TEA will make plans to determine the effect of
    the TEKS refinements on TAKS grades 3-5 as soon
    as the elementary mathematics TEKS have been
    approved by the SBOE and an implementation date
    has been set.

25
Grade 4
  • a. Introduction.
  • 2. Students select and use formal language to
    describe their reasoning as they identify,
    compare, and classify two-or-three-dimensional
    geometric figures shapes and solids
  • (4) Throughout mathematics in Grades 3-5,
    students develop numerical fluency with
    conceptual understanding and computational
    accuracy. Students in Grades 3 5, use knowledge
    of the base-ten place value system to compose and
    decompose numbers in order to solve problems
    requiring precision, estimation, and
    reasonableness. By the end of Grade 5, students
    know basic addition, subtraction, multiplication,
    and division facts and are using them to work
    flexibly, efficiently and accurately with numbers
    during addition, subtraction, multiplication, and
    division computation

26
Number, Operation, and Quantitative Reasoning
  • 1B. Objects and pictorial add on
  • 2A. Generate equivalent fractions using concrete
    and pictorial models use concrete objects and
    pictorial models to generate equivalent
    fractions
  • 2B. Objects add on
  • Materials and pictures take out
  • 2C. Objects add
  • 2D. Concrete objects and pictorial models add
    on
  • 4D. Involving two digits numbers take out
  • no more than two-digits times two-digits without
    technology add on
  • 5B. Estimate a product or quotient beyond basic
    facts. Use strategies including rounding and
    compatible numbers to estimate solutions to
    multiplication and division problems.

27
How to Reach Us
  • Karen (Feagin) Steinhauer
  • kfeagin_at_houstonisd.org
  • Last name will be changing in the address book
    later this fall
  • Barbara Williams
  • bwilli10_at_houstonisd.org
  • Telephone Number
  • 713-892-6165
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com