Title: Working On the Work
1Make It Happen!!
2- Using the WOW Framework to Become a WOW School
3Schools cannot be made great by great teacher
performance. They will only be made great by
great student performance
4Pressure to Improve Student Performance
- Work on Students
- Work on Teachers
- Work on the Work
5The Basic Theme
- Working on the Work The WOW Framework
- The key to school success is to be found in
identifying or creating engaging schoolwork for
students
6Schoolwork
- Tasks, activities, and experiences that teachers
design for students and those that teachers
encourage students to design for themselves,
which the teacher assumes will result in
students learning what it is intended that they
learn. - A form of work intended to produce learning.
7Basic Assumptions
- One of the primary tasks of teachers is to
provide work for students work that students
engage in and from which students learn that
which it is intended that they learn. - A second task of teachers is to lead students to
do well and successfully the work they undertake. - Therefore, teachers are leaders and inventors,
and students are volunteers. - What students have to volunteer is their
attention and commitment
8Basic Assumptions
- Differences in commitment and attention produce
differences in student engagement. - Differences in the level and type of engagement
affect directly the effort that students expend
on school-related tasks. - Effort affects learning outcomes at least as much
as does intellectual ability.
9Basic Assumptions
- The level and type of engagement will vary
depending on the qualities teachers build into
the work they provide students. - Therefore, teachers can directly affect student
learning through the invention of work that has
those qualities that are most engaging to
students.
10Great teachers are great leaders.
11The primary function of a leader is to inspire
others to do things they might otherwise not do.
12Competence
13Competent at What?
- The teacher needs to be skilled in providing
students with schoolwork that will engage them
and encourage them to direct their efforts in
productive ways.
14Commitment
15Committed to What?
- The teacher needs to be committed to ensuring
that the work he or she provides students results
in their working with the knowledge they are
expected to acquire in order to be entitled to be
called well educated. The teacher also needs to
be committed to providing students with
instruction and practice in the skills that will
be continuing value to them as they mature.
16Engaging
17How is it Defined?
- Pleasantness, winning ways, charm, charisma
- To draw into, entangle, attract, hold
- Are you an engaging person or are you able to
engage your students?
18Heroic teachers do exist, but they cannot be the
stuff of which great schools are made.
19What we need is teachers who know how to create,
as a matter of routine practice, schoolwork that
engages students.
20What we are going to talk about today
- 5 Levels of Engagement
- 12 Standards of the WOW School
- How does this apply to my classroom?
- What does this do for me that I cant already do?
- How do we get started?
21(No Transcript)
22Student Engagement
23Student Engagement
- What does it mean to engage someone?
24Objectives for Session
- To be able to define student engagement and have
a personal understanding of what engagement is - To understand the importance of student
engagement - To understand the two things that educators use
to get engagement - To know be able to identify the five levels of
student engagement - To be able to identify the 3 types of classrooms
based on the difference levels of engagement
25To Engage
- To involve
- To entangle
- To attract
- To come in contact with
- To bind to
- To fix attention on
26To Engage
- To require the use of (as to engage someones
strength or mind) - To hold attention
- To engross
- To induce to participate
- To draw out
- To begin and carry on an enterprise
27Definitions of Engaged
- Occupied
- Employed
- Greatly interested
- Earnest
- Involved
28Definitions of Engagement
- Involvement
- Attachment
- Something that is engrossing
- A rendezvous
- A tryst
- An assignation
- An appointment
29What is Student Engagement?
- Students are attentivenot just in attendance
- Students stick with the tasks they have been
assigned or encouraged to undertakethey are
persistent. They stick with the task until it is
completed and completed well. - Students are committed to the task, activity, or
assignment.
30What is Student Engagement?
- Students invest energy beyond that needed to
simply get by. - Students find some inherent value in what he or
she is being asked to do. - Student perform the task because they perceive
the task to be associated with a near-term end
that they value. - Students do the task with enthusiasm and
diligence.
31What is Student Engagement?
- Engagement is an active process.
- Our goal a educators should be to get as many
students as possible authentically engaged. - Student engagement should be a central concern of
educators.
32Why do we want Student Engagement?
- Read the following statement and be able to tell
why you agree with it or why you disagree with
it.
33Why do we want Student Engagement?
- Schools are in the business of ensuring that
students learn what it is intended that they
learnthe content, the curriculum. If students
become engaged in the right stuff, they are
likely to learn what we want them to learn.
Engagement precedes learning therefore, we need
to ensure that students are engaged, and we need
to develop skills as educators to assess
engagement.
34How do educators get Student Engagement?
- FIRST
- Educators need to be able to assess IF their
students are engaged. - Educators need to be able to assess HOW ACTIVELY
their students are engaged. - SECOND (The topic of another session)
- Educators need to invent experiences, tasks,
activities, assignments that students find
engaging and that bring them into profound
interactions(engagement) with content and
processes.
35Five Levels of Student Engagement
- To see if students are engaged, we need to be
able to identify the five levels of engagement - Engagement
- Strategic Compliance
- Ritual Compliance
- Retreatism
- Rebellion
36Engagement
- The task, activity, or work the student is
assigned or encouraged to undertake is associated
with a result or outcome that has clear meaning
and a relatively immediate value to the student.
These students are committed to work, they
persist in the work until it is completed well.
They see value in the work and dont stop when
difficulties arrives. They experience a sense of
satisfaction, accomplishment, pride, and even
delight in their work.
37Strategic Compliance
- The immediate end of the assigned work has little
or no inherent meaning or direct value to the
student, but the student associates it with
extrinsic outcomes and results that are of value
to him/her. They do what is required because
they are compliant to authority. They meet
expectations for work more from obedience than
from commitment.
38Ritual Compliance
- The student is willing to expend whatever effort
is needed to avoid negative consequences,
although he or she sees little meaning in the
tasks assigned or the consequences of doing those
tasks. The students do the minimum to get by.
They are more concerned with just having their
work accepted than respected. They just want to
get by.
39Retreatism
- The student is disengaged from the tasks, expends
no energy in attempting to comply with the
demands of the tasks, but does not act in ways
that disrupt others and does not try to
substitute other activities for the assigned
task. There are various reasons for the
retreatuncertain of what is being asked, lack
the skills to do the task, etc.
40Rebellion
- The student summarily refuses to do the task
assigned, acts in ways that disrupts others, or
attempts to substitute tasks and activities to
which he or she is committed in lieu of those
assigned or supported by the school or teacher.
Key words refusal, rebellion, disruption.
413 Types of Classrooms
- WOW identifies 3 types of classrooms based on the
level of engagement by students - The Highly Engaged Classroom
- The Well-Managed Classroom
- The Pathological Classroom
423 Types of Classrooms
- The Highly Engaged Classroom
- Most students are engaged most of the time.
- All students are engaged some of the time
- Considerable strategic compliance
- Limited retreatism and ritual compliance.
- Little or no rebellion
433 Types of Classrooms
- The Well Managed Classroom
- Less engagement than highly engaged class
- May appear engaged because students are compliant
- Strategic compliance is the dominant mode of
engagement - Has more ritual compliance and retreatism than
highly engaged class - Little or no rebellion
443 Types of Classrooms
- The Pathological Classroom
- May look like the well-managed classroom except
for the presence of patterned rebellion - Many students actively reject work
- Many students substitute other activities
- Very little engagement
- Considerable strategic compliance
- High incidence of ritual compliance and
retreatism
45The WOW SchoolStandards
46- Beliefs shape visions, and visions drive
missions. - Beliefs are statements on which one is willing to
act. - Visions are not accomplished they are realized.
47From Vision to Reality
- Beliefs serve as the basis for visions
- Visions shape missions and strategic goals.
- Missions set strategic goals
- Strategic goals indicate needed actions.
- Action goals define tasks and specify activity
48Identifying Missions
- Strategies coming together in a set of goals, are
commonly referred to as a mission. - Strategic goals are therefore missions that have
been unbundled. - Beliefs serve as the basis for visions, visions
shape missions, missions set strategic goals, and
strategic goals indicate needed actions.
49The WOW SchoolAVision
50WOW Standards
- Standard 1 Patterns of Engagement
- Standard 2 Student Achievement
- Standard 3 Content and Substance
- Standard 4 Organization of Knowledge
- Standard 5 Product Focus
- Standard 6 Clear and Compelling Product
51WOW Standards
- Standard 7 A Safe Environment
- Standard 8 Affirmation of Performances
- Standard 9 Affiliation
- Standard 10 Novelty and Variety
- Standard 11 Choice
- Standard 12 Authenticity
52Disciplined conversations will help move a school
from words to action.
53Sometimes the obvious answer is not the most
accurate answer.
54Disciplined conversations are needed if
reflective discussions are to increase and
meaningless babble and happy talk are to
decrease.
55IMPLICATIONS FOR TEACHERS
56- By exercising control over curriculum content and
ensuring that the schoolwork provided is
engaging, the teacher increases the probability
that each child will learn what he or she needs
to learn.
57TEACHERS ARE
- Leaders--and like other leaders, they are known
more for what they can get others to do, rather
than what they do themselves. - Inventors--they are called upon to create
schoolwork that will produce authentic engagement.
58- THE WOW FRAMEWORK
- We assume that the level and types of student
learning are directly influenced by the effort
students expend (level of student engagement) on
tasks that call on them to learn what they are
expected to learn and to practice the skills they
are expected to master.
59- The effort students are willing to expend on
tasks is determined by the level and type of
engagement the tasks generate. This comes from
the way the work is designed.
60- The task for the teacher, therefore becomes to
design work that is responsive to students needs
and motives, which results in the students
learning what is intended for them to learn.
61- Excuses
- When thinking of why students cannot or do not do
assigned tasks, we come up with reasons. - Too many poor students
- Too many unsupportive parents
- Language barriers
- Economic Status
- While all of these excuses have some validity,
we still have no control over them.
62What Teachers Cannot Control
- Resources available
- School calendar
- Level of parental involvement
- Socioeconomic Status of Students
- Primary Language
- Learning Readiness
63What Teachers Can Control
- The content of the curriculum that they deliver
to students - The qualities and characteristics of tasks
assigned to students
64Knowing and Teaching the Right Stuff
- Presentation manner of material
- Knowledge and technical ability
- TEKS and TAKS knowledge
- Curriculum maps
- Grade level knowledge and skills
65Focus on Engagement
- Engagement should be our main concern. We should
spend less time teaching to the test, and more
time teaching test taking skills. Teaching test
taking skills emphasizes that what you can show
is more important than what you know. Where
schools have problems is when test scores and
grades become more important than what is
learned.
66Focus on Engagement
- Teachers need to focus their engagement in the
classroom. They need to be just as clear about
what they expect in terms of engagement as they
need to be with regard to expectations for what
students will learn. Engagement proceeds
learning. Assessing engagement is a way of
preventing deficiencies in learning. Real
improvements in learning can only occur as
engagement increases.
67To Ensure Proper Focus Teachers should.
- Estimate level and types of engagement compare
on a daily basis. - Conduct student questionnaire\interviews
- Invite principal and colleagues to assess types
of engagement - Relate patterns of engagement observed to the
quality of student work
68Work on the Work
- To insure student engagement teachers must create
quality learning experiences that are of interest
to and responsive to student needs.
69Work on the Work
- To increase engagement the teacher must evaluate
the motivational processes of students. These
attributes have been derived from research and
observations regarding the needs students bring
to classrooms and the values held that come into
play as they decide whether and how they will
become engaged.
70These Attributes Are.
- Product focus
- Affiliation
- Clear product standards
- Choice
- Protection from adverse consequences for initial
failures - Novelty and variety
- Affirmation
- Authenticity
711 Product Focus
- One of the more certain ways to increase student
engagement and persistence with academic work is
to link this work with some problem, issue,
product, performance, or exhibition that students
find compelling.
722 Affiliation
- Work that is designed to permit, encourage, and
support opportunities for students to affiliate
with others is likely to encourage some students
to engage the work that otherwise they might not
find engaging.
733 Clear Product Standards
- Students are more likely to engage and persist
with work when the standards for the products are
clear and compelling. Children and young adults
prefer to operate in a world where they know what
is expected and where what is expected is
something they care about or can be brought to
care about.
744 Choice
- Choice implies some degree of control over
events. Individuals who have choice are
empowered. Empowerment increases the likelihood
of commitmentengagement.
755 Protection from Adverse Consequences for
Initial Failure
- The level of engagement of studentsespecially
students who work more slowly than the
majorityis clearly affected by the extent to
which students have opportunities to engage in
tasks at which they are not proficient without
fear of embarrassment, punishment, or an
implication of personal inadequacy.
766 Novelty and Variety
- Novelty adds freshness and new life to the tired
and repetitious novelty improves performance
because it insists that one continue to learn to
master the new situation. Giving student novel
things to do and novel ways of doing them is
simply one more way of increasing the likelihood
that they will engage the work provided.
777 Affirmation
- Designing schoolwork in ways that encourage
significant others such as parents, peers, and
younger or older students to communicate that
they too consider the work that students are
being asked to do and the products associated
with the work to be important often increases
student engagement.
788 Authenticity
- Authenticity refers to a sense of realness about
experiences. When experiences have a sense of
realness about themfor example, if they carry
real consequences, such as getting a one at
band contest doesthen student engagement is
likely to increase.
79Points to Ponder
- All of these attributes are not required in every
lesson, but are a list of possibilities a teacher
might want to consider when designing lessons. - Engagement occurs only when the work is designed
in a way that it appeals to values and needs that
are real to the students.
80Teachers Thinking as Leaders
- Instead of asking yourself What am I going to
do? ask yourself What is it that I am trying
to get others to do? Engagement only occurs when
tasks assigned respond in some way to the motives
and values the students bring into the classroom.
Effective leaders earn attention instead of
demanding attendance. Teachers that understand
this are effective leaders.
81Does Effective Change Occur Top Down or Bottom
Up?
- It must occur at the very exact same time. It
starts with us thinking out our assignments
better to suit needs of students, while at the
same time visiting with parents about their
children. Not telling them about them, asking
them about them.
82What does this do for me?
83The WOW Framework
- Insight and increased control over the work
designed for students. - A structure to discipline the design and analysis
of the work. - A common language that promotes disciplined
discussions among teachers and between teachers
and principals. - In many ways, it is little more than common sense.
84Resistance
- Academic learning is an elite enterprise.
- Designing schoolwork that is engaging to most
students most of the time probably cannot be done
without more time for collegial interaction - Many see the choice being between improving
instruction or improving test scores.
85What is society asking for?
- Today, there is a demand for men and women who
can think, reason, and use their minds well. - We must provide an elite education for nearly
every child.
86Can we
Make it Happen?