edad 516 wsup
DESCRIPTION
September 17, 2014 Class NotesTRANSCRIPT
EDAD 516CURRICULUM AND INSTRUCTIONAL LEADERSHIP
(SUPERVISION)
Washington State UniversityPuyallup Campus
Fall Semester 2014
Ailene M. Baxter, Ed. D. Director of Human Resources, Puyallup School District
EDAD 516 WSU-PuyallupFall, 2014
Ailene M. Baxter, Ed. D. Director of Human Resources, Puyallup School District
EDAD 516 WSU-PuyallupFall, 2014
“LET’S PUT OUR MINDS TOGETHER AND SEE WHAT LIFE WE CAN
MAKE FOR OUR CHILDREN”-SITTING BULL
Ailene M. Baxter, Ed. D. Director of Human Resources, Puyallup School District
EDAD 516 WSU-PuyallupFall, 2014
QUICK WRITE:
What do you know and or believe about leadership and the supervision
of instruction?
Ailene M. Baxter, Ed. D. Director of Human Resources, Puyallup School District
EDAD 516 WSU-PuyallupFall, 2014
THE BLUEBERRY STORY:
What does this story cause you to think about?
What are the messages for you as a leader?
How might you use this story with your “classroom”?
Ailene M. Baxter, Ed. D. Director of Human Resources, Puyallup School District
EDAD 516 WSU-PuyallupFall, 2014
COURSE SYLLABUS:
Norms Goals, Outcomes, and Assessments Purpose WCEAP Common Performance Task Guide:
Standards 2A and 2B Course Objectives Course Assignments Expectations for completion/grading
Ailene M. Baxter, Ed. D. Director of Human Resources, Puyallup School District
EDAD 516 WSU-PuyallupFall, 2014
GLICKMAN: SUPERVISION AND INSTRUCTIONAL LEADERSHIP
Theoretical framework Broader look at supervision Built on a clinical model
GLICKMAN: SUPERVISION AND INSTRUCTIONAL LEADERSHIP
SuperVision: A New Name for a New Paradigm Supervision and Moral Purpose
”Democratic Spirit” Prerequisites: (Figure 1.2)
Knowledge Interpersonal skills Technical skills
Ailene M. Baxter, Ed. D. Director of Human Resources, Puyallup School District
EDAD 516 WSU-PuyallupFall, 2014
GINSBERG:TRANSFORMATIVE PROFESSIONAL LEARNING
Foundation in intrinsic motivation
Cultural relevancy Grounded in inquiry-based
practices
GINSBERG:TRANSFORMATIVE PROFESSIONAL LEARNING
Who gets left behind? Interrupting deficit thinking about student potential
“All children ARE learners” Culturally responsive teaching Culturally responsive teaching through the lens of
intrinsic motivation Effective, innovative, and transformative pro dev. Inquiry and action cycles
Ailene M. Baxter, Ed. D. Director of Human Resources, Puyallup School District
EDAD 516 WSU-PuyallupFall, 2014
GINSBERG:TRANSFORMATIVE PROFESSIONAL LEARNING
Planning Ahead... Culture and motivation are inseparable influences
on learning Motivated teachers tend to have motivated
students Transformative learning: learning experiences that
can change beliefs and perspectives of educators Language choice not only represents how we think,
it influences how we think and act.
Ailene M. Baxter, Ed. D. Director of Human Resources, Puyallup School District
EDAD 516 WSU-PuyallupFall, 2014
“The best thing about being sad,” replied Merlin, beginning to puff and blow, “is to learn something. That is the only thing that never fails. You may grow old and trembling in your anatomies, you may lie awake at night listening to the disorder in your veins, you may miss your only love, you may see the world devastated by evil lunatics, or know your honor trampled in the sewers of baser minds. There is only one thing for it then-to learn. Learn why the world wags and what wags it. That is the only thing which the mind can never exhaust, never alienate, never be tortured by, never fear or distrust, and never dream of regretting. Learning is the thing for you.”
T.H. White (1996)Ailene M. Baxter, Ed. D. Director of Human Resources, Puyallup School District
EDAD 516 WSU-PuyallupFall, 2014
FINAL THOUGHTS:
REFLECTIVE PROMPT:
Glickman (p.13) states,” Educators are the primary stewards of the democratic spirit. The total of our efforts is far greater than the particulars of our job.”
Ginsberg reminds us that motivated teachers have motivated learners and that the whole activity of education is ethical and political in nature (p.5). What type of society do we desire? What type of educational environment should
supervision promote in order to move us toward the society we desire?
SEPTEMBER 10, 2014
Welcome
READING REVIEW
Glickman: The Norm...Traditional Schools The Dynamic School
Why are traditional schools the way they are? How does this differ from dynamic schools?
Fullan: Choosing the Wrong Drivers for Whole System Reform “The key to system-wide success is to situate the energy
of educators and students as the central driving force.” What are the right drivers, and why are they effective?
GINSBERG: The Motivational Framework for Culturally Responsive Teaching
Silently, think about a time in which you were learning and felt capable, creative, and joyful at the same time:
When did this occur? With whom, where, when, and under what conditions?
Share your experience with a partner:Focus on those conditions that led you to feel creative, capable, and joyful.
Share out and chart as a large group: What does this mean with respect to creating classrooms
or environments in which ALL students feel motivated to learn?
GINSBERG: The Motivational Framework for Culturally Responsive Teaching
In small groups: (Chapter 2) Establishing Inclusion: How do we create or affirm a learning
environment in which we feel respected by and connected to one another?
Developing a Positive Attitude: How do we create or affirm a favorable disposition toward learning through personal relevance and student volition?
Enhancing Meaning: How do we create engaging and challenging learning experiences that include student perspectives and support civic participation?
Engendering Competence: How do we create or affirm an understanding that students have effectively learned something they value and perceive as authentic to the real world?
The Motivational Framework for Culturally Relevant Teaching*The Motivational Framework for Culturally Relevant Teaching*
Attitude
Choice and
Personal Relevance
Attitude
Choice and
Personal Relevance
Inclusion
Respect and
Connectedness
Inclusion
Respect and
Connectedness
Competence
Authenticity andEffectiveness
Competence
Authenticity andEffectiveness
Meaning
Challengeand
Engagement
Meaning
Challengeand
Engagement
*Source: Adapted from Ginsberg & Wlodkowski (2009, p. 34).
Routines and rituals are present.Respectful learning and interactions occur.Students are comfortable.The teacher treats all students respectfully and fairly.Students’ lives and cultures are represented.
Classes are taught with students’ experiences, concerns, or interests in mind.Students make choices related to learning that include experiences, needs, values, and strengths.Students are able to voice their opinions.
There are clear criteria for success.Grading policies are fair to all.Performances and demonstrations have real-world connections.Assessment takes into account students’ perspective; there are multiple ways to reach standards.
Student participation is active; they are challenged.Questions go beyond facts and encourage different points of view.The teacher builds on what students know.The teacher respectfully encourages high-quality responses.
SHADOWING STUDENTS TO STIMULATE AND ENRICH TEACHER (AND LEADER) KNOWLEDGE
Moving beyond traditional walk-throughs... Deeper look at schooling through the eyes of a single
student Greater Clarity about instructional and curricular
practices including supports that exist or don’t exist Opportunity to explore conventional & unconventional
ways of collecting data that may be generalized across the school
Gain insight & perspective on a student’s experience of being in school
Ideas for instructional and school improvement Implications for leaders at all levels of the system as
willing adult learners
INSIGHTS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR LEADERSHIP:
TRIADS:
As you think about shadowing a student, what do you want to learn and why? (This will help you define your inquiry question)
PROJECTING AHEAD:
Skype Interview with Margery Ginsberg: What questions do you have for her regarding the
Motivational Framework, Culturally Responsive Teaching, and/or Shadowing a Student?
Facilitator? Reread/Deep Read: Chapter 3 Work Session: Planning the shadowing experience
SUMMARY:
Drivers: leading with accountability is not the best way to get accountability, let alone whole system reform.
Intrinsic motivation, instructional improvement teamwork, and “allness” are crucial elements of whole system reform.
Motivation is foundational to learning; students who feel unsafe, unconnected, and disrespected are often unmotivated to learn.
A strengths-focused orientation to teaching and learning is foundational to student success within and across demographically diverse student groups.
REFLECTIVE PROMPT(THIS WILL BE POSTED TO THE BLOG)
Given your experience with schools and schooling, what is resonating with you thus far? What are you wrestling with?
CLOSURE:“This is the value of the teacher, who looks at a face and says there’s something behind that
and I want to reach that person, I want to influence that person, I want to encourage
that person, I want to enrich, I want to call out that person who is behind that face, behind
that color, behind that language, behind that tradition, behind that culture. I believe you can do it. I know what was done for me.”
-Maya Angelou
SEPTEMBER 17, 2014
Welcome Video Conference with Margery Ginsberg Quick Reading Review
In Yassir’s Shoes Sam Palmer The Farah Case Example
Work Session: Preparing for the Shadowing Experience Video (part deux)
Post Shadowing Reflection and Write Up Wrap Up
SHADOWING STUDENTS TO STIMULATE AND ENRICH TEACHER (AND LEADER) KNOWLEDGE
Moving beyond traditional walk-throughs... Deeper look at schooling through the eyes of a single
student Greater Clarity about instructional and curricular
practices including supports that exist or don’t exist Opportunity to explore conventional & unconventional
ways of collecting data that may be generalized across the school
Gain insight & perspective on a student’s experience of being in school
Ideas for instructional and school improvement Implications for leaders at all levels of the system as
willing adult learners
AS YOU THINK ABOUT YOUR INQUIRY QUESTION…
While shadowing will not dismantle the complicated infrastructure of educational systems, it CAN illuminate problems of everyday practice that re within the spheres of influence of many educators.
WORK SESSION
RECAP
Sharing out of plans Pulling all the pieces together What questions or concerns remain?
“The road was new to me, as roads always are, going back”
-Sarah Orne Jewett (2009) in Ginsberg