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Welcome Make sure you… Have signed the roster Have a binder Have a name tag Are ready to go

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Welcome. Make sure you… Have signed the roster Have a binder Have a name tag Are ready to go. First up…. Introductions Housekeeping Registration Ground rules. Next. Why are we here? History of Seamless work What are we going to do? What are the expectation for the three days? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Welcome

Welcome

Make sure you…Have signed the rosterHave a binderHave a name tagAre ready to go

Page 2: Welcome

First up…

Introductions Housekeeping Registration Ground rules

Page 3: Welcome

Next

Why are we here? History of Seamless work What are we going to do? What are the expectation for the three

days? What will the finished product look

like? Other concerns?

Page 4: Welcome

Assignment

Take a few minutes and ponder what you’ve heard so far…

On the orange piece of paper express your concerns and what it is that you’d like to see come out of this work

Page 5: Welcome

Career Academy

Developing the Algebra 2 curriculum to assure a smooth transition

Page 6: Welcome

One of our goals is to try to change the way we are currently doing business.

Core Curriculum report… Rigor and Relevance work later this

PM Status quo…is not good enough

anymore. Status quo…That is Latin for “the

mess we’re in.” Ronald Reagan

Page 7: Welcome

The Challenge to Change…Marge Scherer Educational Leadership

Depth…To sustain education reforms, we must focus on learning that matters and that results in measurable achievement.

Endurance…To make change last over time requires that reforms not be linked to one’s person’s bright ideas. If you want continuity, you must distribute leadership to many.

Page 8: Welcome

Cont.

Breadth…High-performing schools are communities of grownups whose members have real input into conversations about reform.

Diversity…Discovering that a given reform is not a solution for everyone can take the bounce out of the reform. There is no silver bullet!

Resourcefulness…The supply of energy is not bottomless. We need to attract the next generation of school leadership.

Page 9: Welcome

Cont.

Conservation…Good changes occur when leaders take time to understand the past.

Justice…As part of a system, every school must consider its effects on every other school.

Does your society have more memories than dreams or dreams than memories?

Thomas Friedman…The World is Flat

Page 10: Welcome

Curriculum…What is it? What’s it good for?

Curriculum is the road map that we use to get to a place that we have determined is worth getting to…Too often we wander aimlessly through the book with no purpose other than to “cover” it.

Page 11: Welcome

Three most important reasons for curriculum work.

Focus Focus

Focus Is it the answer to all of our

problems? Unfortunately, NO!

Page 12: Welcome

The role of the teacher…

In effective classrooms, teachers consistently attend to at least four elements: whom they teach (students), where they teach (learning environment), what they teach (content), and how they teach (instruction). If a teacher loses sight of any one of these elements and cease investing effort in it, the whole fabric of their work is damaged and the quality of learning impaired. -Connecting Kids to Content

Page 13: Welcome

We still need the highly effective teacher…

Quality curriculum should play a central role in meeting the core needs of students for affirmation, affiliation, accomplishment, and autonomy, but it is the teacher’s job to make the link between the basic human needs of students and the curriculum. – Integrating

Differentiated Instruction & Understanding by Design: Connecting Content to Kids

Page 14: Welcome

There’s more…

In truth, far more students would be successful if we understood it to be our jobs to craft circumstances that lead to success rather than letting circumstances take their course. Even the best curriculum delivered in the take-it-or-leave-it fashion will be taken by few and left by too many. –Connecting Content to Kids

Page 15: Welcome

By product of curriculum work Clearer understanding of what is expected

from your students It allows us to give accountability to the

student for his/her learning. “To be successful in Algebra 2, this is what you need to know, understand, and be able to do!”

Professional growth opportunity for each of you – addresses the State Teaching Standards as well as the demands of NCLB.

Page 16: Welcome

NCLB vs Highly Qualified

“Highly qualified” teachers are defined as those who hold at least a bachelor’s degree, are fully licensed or certified by the state in the subjects they teach, and can demonstrate competence in the subjects they teach.

Page 17: Welcome

Highly qualified doesn’t mean highly effective. Qualities of Effective Teachers Prerequisites of Effective Teaching The Teacher as a person Classroom Management and Organization Organizing and Orienting for Instruction Implementing Instruction Monitoring Student Progress and Potential

Page 18: Welcome

By the way…Research says…

A student who is forced to spend one year with an ineffective teacher…

…takes three years of highly effective teachers just to get back to where they should be in the educational process.

Page 19: Welcome

So what’s wrong with teaching the book?

Wasn’t it written by “experts”? Doesn’t it have everything in it? Consider the findings of Robert

Marzano and John Kendall (1998)

Page 20: Welcome

So…how do we decide what’s important? You look at research You look to National organizations (NCTM –

Standards and Benchmarks) You look at State Standards and

Benchmarks – State Assessments You look at local data and expectations of

the community You look inwardly…what does your

experience tell you?

Page 21: Welcome

Content Standards

Number and Operation Algebra Geometry Measurement Data Analysis and Probability

Page 22: Welcome

Process Standards

Problem Solving Reasoning and Proof Communication Connections Representations

Page 23: Welcome

Format of Workshop

Look over past work done in Calculus 1, Trigonometry and College Algebra

Identify the units necessary to support this learning

Identify what it is that we want our students to know, understand, or be able to do because of their exposure to this curriculum

Page 24: Welcome

Cont.

Identify the benchmarks/skills that support these understandings

Create common assessments to be used by all participants to evaluate student understanding

Create “relevant” performance tasks/assessments to be used by all participants to support each unit (at least one per unit…more is better)

Page 25: Welcome

Finished Product

Identify units that we teach to support these classes

Identify what is that we want our student to know, understand, or be able to do because of his/her exposure to this unit.

Identify Benchmarks/skills that support these understandings.

Page 26: Welcome

Finally…

When we are done we will have identified 80% of the Algebra 2 curriculum that you will teach.

We will come back together as a group to work on assessments/PBITS/ etc, after we’ve had time to work with the curriculum.

Page 27: Welcome

Curriculum Questions from McTighe, Wiggins, and DuFour

What is it that we want our kids to know, understand, be able to do be cause of their experience with this curriculum?

How will we know they got it? What will the evidence look like?

Page 28: Welcome

Cont…

What will we do for the kids who don’t get it?

What will we do for the ones who do?

Page 29: Welcome

Big Job …

Questions or comments? Tera and I will try to keep us on track

and moving in a good directions.