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Quality Instruction: How Teachers Make a Difference

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Readers Digest 09/06. It's a bit like a marriage. ... surprise for everybody - for Reader's Digest, for parents and for teachers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Quality Instruction: How Teachers Make a Difference


1
Quality Instruction How Teachers Make a
Difference
  • Rural Schools Renewal Conference
  • 20/10/06
  • Faye Brownlie

2
Unfulfilled Expectations - Catherine Snow, 1991
3
Preventing Reading Difficulties in Young Children
- National Research Council, 1998
  • Quality reading instruction in the primary grades
    is the single best defense against reading
    failure, overcoming even the effect of childhood
    backgrounds that increase the risk of reading
    difficulties.

4
Preventing Reading Difficulties in Young Children
- National Research Council, 1998
  • Effective instruction requires that teachers
  • focus on
  • The relationships between letters and sounds
  • The process of obtaining meaning from print
  • Practice for fluency

5
Teacher Quality and Student Achievement Linda
Darling- Hammond, 1999
  • the quality of a teaching force is a much more
    powerful predictor of student achievement levels
    than other factors, including student demographic
    characteristics and measures of school resources.
    Teacher quality accounted for 40-60 of the
    variance in the NAEP achievement for 4th and 8th
    grade reading and math.

6
Allington, 2001
  • The most powerful feature of schools, in terms of
    developing children as readers and writers, is
    the quality of classroom instruction.

7
Principles of Learning
  • Learning is an active process
  • Learning is an individual and social process
  • Children learn in different ways and at different
    rates

8
Student Achievement Task Force - 2003
  • Classroom Management
  • Engagement
  • Inquiry questions
  • Social responsibility

9
Reading Dont Fix No Chevys Going with the
Flow - Smith Wilhelm
  • The study why boys were passionate about their
    interests and how this related to their literate
    activity inside and outside of school
  • The goal to make literacy learning in school
    resemble the passionate engagements sought
    outside of school

10
Csikszentmihayli (1990)
  • Flow -
  • intense engagement

11
Csikszentmihayli, Smith Wilhelm
  • Control competence
  • Challenge with an appropriate level of skill
  • Clear goals feedback
  • A focus on the immediate experience
  • Social

12
  • 3 Minutes

13
Teaching Content to All
Open-ended teaching
adapted
modified
14
The Gradual Release Model
  • Model
  • Guided practice
  • Independent practice
  • Independent application
  • Pearson (1992)

15
Readers Digest 09/06
  • Its a bit like a marriage. For the most part,
    parents and teachers have the best interests of
    the child at heart. And they know its better if
    they keep talking to each other. Still,
    sometimes what should be said is left unsaid -
    both the positive and the negative.

16
4 Minutes

17
  • So this story is about opening up those lines of
    communication. First, with the help of Leger
    Marketing, we polled 630 Canadian parents. In a
    web survey, we presented them with 14 statements
    and asked them if they had ever wanted to say any
    of these things to teachers.

18
4 Minutes

19
  • The biggest surprise for everybody - for Readers
    Digest, for parents and for teachers - was that a
    whopping 90 percent of parents said teachers were
    doing a very good or good job. This is an
    extraordinary level of satisfaction.

20
4 Minutes

21
  • Perhaps even more extraordinary is the fact that
    nobody is talking about it.

22
2 Minutes

23
Schema for Instructional Support
  • Connecting (pre)
  • Processing (during)
  • Transforming and personalizing (post)
  • Brownlie, Close, Wingren (1988)

24
Questioning
  • Present a picture
  • Ask students to pose questions about the picture
  • Present a second picture
  • Notice how questions change as students link the
    pictures
  • Student Diversity, 2nd ed. - Brownlie, Feniak,
    Schnellert

25

26
3 Minutes

27

28
3 Minutes

29

30
3 Minutes

31
Student Achievement Task Force - 2003
  • Student Learning Strategies
  • Independence
  • Plan, monitor, revise
  • Metacognition


32
Student Achievement Task Force - 2003
  • Background Knowledge
  • Activate
  • Build
  • Motivate

33
  • 1992
  • 1996
  • 2006

34
  • USA
  • India
  • North Korea

35
3 Minutes

36
  • The strategy was once to try to detonate in
    secret. But no more.
  • North Korea all but yelled look at me in
    announcing that it plans
  • a generation of commercial satellitescan see
    objects 2-3 feet wide

37
3 Minutes

38
Student Achievement Task Force - 2003
  • Student/Teacher Positive Interactions
  • Relationships
  • Safe environment
  • Risk-taking

39
Student Achievement Task Force - 2003
  • Expectations and Challenge
  • Teaching with the end in mind
  • Building criteria with students
  • Scaffolding for all learners

40
Student Achievement Task Force - 2003
  • Feedback
  • Shift in assessment purposes
  • Classroom observation

41
Black Wiliam, 1998
  • Review of 250 articles
  • Improving formative assessment raises standards
  • Few initiatives in education have had such a
    strong body of evidence to support a claim to
    raise standards.

42
(No Transcript)
43
Assessment OF Learning
  • Purpose reporting out, summative assessment
  • Examples standardized tests such as Gates
    McGinitie, CAT, CTBS end of the unit tests most
    scantron tests Spring DART, Final RAD

44
Assessment FOR Learning
  • Purpose guide instruction
  • Performance-based assessment
  • Fall DART (Brownlie)
  • Initial RAD (Pearson)
  • Smart Reading (Close, New West.)
  • QCA (Pearson)
  • SRA (Student Diversity, 2nd ed., Ministry
    Webcast, 2004)

45
Assessment FOR Learning
  • Descriptive scoring
  • Coding in teams
  • Class/grade profile of strengths and areas of
    need
  • Action plans developed - whats next?
  • Individual students identified for further
    assessment

46
Assessment AS Learning
  • Purpose students taking responsibility for
    their own learning
  • Setting goals
  • Monitoring their progress toward
    their goals

47
Assessment AS Learning Grand Conversations -
Brownlie

48
Structures to support teaching
  • Teacher teams
  • School plans
  • On-going professional development
  • A formative assessment process
  • A summative assessment process
  • District alignment of goals and supports

49
Cedar Community Secondary - Science 8 Lara Tait
Stacy Aitken, 2006


50
Mission Action Research Paula Chmilar, 2005-06
  • DART
  • focused teaching
  • SRA
  • focused teaching
  • SRA
  • focused teaching

51
Mission - Chmilar
  • Lesson study
  • Co-plan lesson
  • Teach and observe
  • Review and refine lesson
  • Another teaches observe and refine
  • Teach lesson in own classes

52

53
Campbell River District Initiative 2005-06
  • Response to spring grade 3 DART
  • 5 schools identified - lower performing students
  • 8 week intervention
  • 5 extra .5 teachers, 4days/week
  • CT worked with leveled texts, targeted students
  • Extra teacher taught reciprocal questioning

54
Nisgaa - Mary Takasaka 2005-06
  • Conduct oral interviews with spring and fall
    assessment
  • Meets 11 to mark with most of primary/intermediat
    e teachers
  • Compares oral/written responses
  • Build class and district focus together
  • Graphic organizers visual thinking

55
15-30
  • Without -
  • professional development
  • ongoing formative assessment of students, and
  • ongoing summative assessment of students and
    programs
  • Reading Next - Biancarosa Snow, 2004
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