blaine and mount vernon twssp workshop september 21, 2013

41
Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Upload: clyde-tate

Post on 20-Jan-2016

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop

September 21, 2013

Page 2: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Who is in the room?

Page 3: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

3

•Pausing•Paraphrasing•Posing Questions•Putting ideas on the table•Paying attention to self and others •Presuming positive intentions•Pursuing a balance between advocacy and inquiry

Page 4: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• Increase understanding of importance of connecting feedback to learning targets and apply feedback ideas to own student work.

• Increase understanding of discourse strategies to activate students as resources for each other and commit to classroom implementation.

• Increase understanding of characteristics of good assessment questions for different purposes.

Page 5: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Classrooms with Embedded Formative Assessment PracticesMary Webb & Jane Jones

Exploring Tensions in Developing Assessment for Learning

•Acceptance that mistakes are an essential part of learning. •Mutual support for each other’s learning.•Trust that others will be supportive.•Willingness to take risks in trying new ideas.•Willingness to give and receive criticism.•A shared language of assessment and feedback.•Emphasis on dialogue and exploratory talk to support thinking.

•Shared belief in taking responsibility for one’s own learning.• Learning rather than performance orientation (mindset).

Page 6: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

–What successes have you had in communicating learning targets with your students so far this year?

Page 7: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Techniques you find to be particularly useful to increase

student understanding of learning targets.

Page 8: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

•Goal-setting and Target-setting

•Self-instruction (self talking and self questioning- the skills for which need to be taught)

•Self-evaluation (much more important than self-monitoring because it requires extra step of evaluating what he or she has monitored)

Learning Strategies with the

Highest Effect Sizes

Page 9: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

The most important instructional decisions are made, not by the adults working in the system, but by the students themselves.

Stiggins, R.J., Arter, J. A., Chappuis, J. and Chappuis, S.

Classroom Assessment for Student Learning: Doing It Right- Using It Well

Page 10: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Session Goals

•Increase understanding of characteristics of good assessment questions for different purposes.

Page 11: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013
Page 12: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

What do we want students to know?

How will students demonstrate their knowledge and skills?

How will we intervene for students that struggle and enrich for those who are proficient?

Four Questions

How can we use evidence of student learning to improve our individual and collective professional practice?

Page 13: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

•What are the purposes of diagnostic vs discussion questions?•Can you remember a time when you used a well-crafted question to inform your teaching? What evidence do you have that your question was informative for you, as well as your students?•Can you remember a time when your planned question did not provide the results you were looking for? What prevented your question from providing actionable results?

Individually ReadPages 93-100 of Embedded Formative Assessment up to “Diagnostic questions can be used...

Discuss

Page 14: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

•What are some of the qualities of a good diagnostic question?

•How can you use your PLC to help you craft and share good diagnostic questions?

Individually ReadPages 100, “Diagnostic questions can be used..” through the rest of the chapter (p. 105)

Discuss

Page 15: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Something to Indicate Content seating

Content Seating

Assignments

Page 16: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• Think of every possible way a student can get the right answer with incorrect reasoning.

Exchange questions with another group.

• Identify a question from an upcoming assessment task on one person’s learning progression.

• As a group write a good diagnostic and discussion question. Reserve discussion question for later.

• Provide feedback to other group.

Page 17: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Break

Take a Break

Page 18: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• Increase understanding of importance of connecting feedback to learning targets and apply feedback ideas to own student work.

Page 19: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

In giving student descriptive feedback, you have modeled the kind of thinking you want them to do as self-assessors.

Chappuis

Helping Students Understand Assessment

Page 20: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Classrooms with Embedded Formative Assessment PracticesMary Webb & Jane Jones

Exploring Tensions in Developing Assessment for Learning

•Acceptance that mistakes are an essential part of learning. •Mutual support for each other’s learning.•Trust that others will be supportive.•Willingness to take risks in trying new ideas.•Willingness to give and receive criticism.•A shared language of assessment and feedback.•Emphasis on dialogue and exploratory talk to support thinking.

•Shared belief in taking responsibility for one’s own learning.• Learning rather than performance orientation (mindset).

Page 21: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Revised PLC schedules for at least 16 hours of

meetings to Shannon before end

of day

Additional 8 hours of collaborative time:

•PLC special project (combined disciplines? combined schools?)•Plan involves classroom implementation and collection of evidence•Plan to Shannon by October 15th

Page 22: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• How can you regularly challenge one another to improve your individual and collective instructional practice in your PLCs?

Page 23: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• Consider these questions as you read and prepare to discuss with your group :• What practical considerations about feedback

were clarified in this article?• What feedback practices will you commit to

implement?

Page 24: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Something to Indicate Content seating

Move to content groups in order to provide feedback to your students.

Page 25: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• With a partner, provide feedback to students on the student work you collected using post it notes.• Look at the comments you each provided to

students and discuss whether the comments will allow students to move forward in their understanding.

Page 26: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Feedback Rubric

In what ways do the comments you provided for students meet the criteria provided in the rubric?

What changes could you make to your feedback to make it more useful for your students?

Page 27: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• What common structure can we create for how we give written and oral feedback to students?• What common

language can we agree to use in that feedback?

Page 28: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

When students know there are no additional opportunities to succeed, they frequently take teacher feedback on their performance and stuff it into desks, backpacks, and wastebaskets.

Grant Wiggins

Page 29: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Initial Ideas Part 1

• What elements or characteristics were present in that academically productive discussion?

• What did that discussion look like? What was the teacher or facilitator doing? What were the students or participants doing?

Think back to a rich discussion that you have facilitated or participated in as a learner.

Page 30: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• Ground rules for discussion that would be useful in your own classroom.• Think about the ‘science specific ideas’ on the top of page 3. How could

similar discussions be structured in math, ELA, or social studies?• What elements you listed as necessary components of a rich discussion

were also listed in the article?• What elements that you thought were important for rich discussions

were missing from this article?

Read Part 1: What is Academically Productive Talk

Pages 1-4

Think about and be prepared to discuss with your group

Page 31: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• What elements you listed as necessary components of a rich discussion were also listed in the article?• Were there any elements from the

article you feel might have been missing from the elements you identified earlier? If so, what are they?

Page 32: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• Why is it important to talk about academic content in classrooms?

• How can you establish a culture of productive talk in your school?

Page 33: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• Consider the authors’ 5 points about the importance of talk in classrooms. Rank the 5 points in terms of importance for your discipline and be prepared to discuss.

• In your estimation, what characterizes academically productive talk in your discipline? Why is it important to talk in math, science, ELA, and social studies?

• What are 3 to 5 norms for collaboration that you would like to establish in your school?

Part 2Why is Talk Important?Pages 4-6And Part 3

Establishing a Culture of Talk

Think about and be prepared to discuss with your group

Page 34: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

With a content partner, on your whiteboards:

•What characterizes academically productive talk in your discipline?•Why is it important to talk in math, science, ELA, and social studies?

Page 35: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Chart Paper Record

• On chart paper for each school record:• 3-5 common norms for discussion you would like

to establish in your school

Page 36: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

What do you worry about when considering how to facilitate a discussion in your classroom?

Page 37: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• How can you prepare your students for different talk formats (whole group/ small group/ partner talk)?

• What infrastructure needs to be in place for students?

Part 4: How Can Teachers Support Productive Talk

Pages 7-11

Think about and be prepared to discuss with your group

Page 38: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Something to Indicate Content seating

With your content peers, plan an academically productive

conversation with your students,

taking into account format and talk

moves.

Page 39: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Reflect•What individual and group commitments can you make about collecting good evidence, providing feedback, and encouraging student discourse?•How can your PLC help support you?

Page 40: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

• What evidence can you collect around student discourse or talk between now and February 1st?• Observations?• Video?

Page 41: Blaine and Mount Vernon TWSSP Workshop September 21, 2013

Winter DatesObservations

Friday, February 7thWorkshop

Saturday, February 8th

Summer Academy

June 23-27, 2014