1 / 41

Making Decisions…The Right Way: Part II

Making Decisions…The Right Way: Part II. Dr. Cory J. Steiner, Data Steward Hettinger Public Schools January 27 th , 2014. A Little Inspiration…. A pep talk for teachers and students from the Kid President http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RwlhUcSGqgs. Agenda. Part I

Télécharger la présentation

Making Decisions…The Right Way: Part II

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Making Decisions…The Right Way:Part II Dr. Cory J. Steiner, Data Steward Hettinger Public Schools January 27th, 2014

  2. A Little Inspiration… • A pep talk for teachers and students from the Kid President • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RwlhUcSGqgs

  3. Agenda • Part I • Review & Introductory Activities • Part II • SLDS Navigation Activity • Part III • Developing ‘At-Risk’ Seating Charts • Part IV • Identifying Green, Yellow, and Red Students • Part V • Conclusion

  4. Objectives • Review key themes from previous training. • Understand the guiding principles as they relate to conversations within your organization. • Understand triggers and/or conversation starters as they relate gathering, understanding, and analyzing key student achievement data. • Increase proficiency in navigating the SLDS. • Develop a ‘start’ plan for utilizing ‘information’ from training within 100 hours of presentation. • Collaborate with peers on current and best practices for utilizing data.

  5. Purpose • The focus must be on moving from good to great • Get a little better every day • It is about correction…and then…continuous improvement Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap and Others Don't (Collins, 2001)

  6. The ‘Data’ Movement • Data is not new…the focus on data is new • We have been using data to inform practice throughout educational history • This is simply an additional input • WIN (What’s Important Now) • What is the ‘WIN’ in your organization? • The answer has to be… • STUDENTS

  7. Norms • Listen • Learn • Share • Stay Engaged

  8. What Great Educators Do • What do great educators do differently (and daily)?

  9. Guiding Principles -What educators are saying… • Utilize common formative assessments • Value a careful and ethical approach to using and sharing data • Create a culture that values self-reflection • Never assign lazy as a diagnosis • Don’t rush to judgment • Collaboration time built into the existing schedule • Value quality data

  10. Guiding Principles Activity: In Your Words

  11. State Longitudinal Data System (SLDS)

  12. What is a Data Warehouse? • Logical and strategic ordering and storage of data in central area • System consists of a statewide data warehouse that allows program evaluation over single or multiple years • Integrates data from several state agencies • In other words: • Cumulative file made electronic • School improvement binder made electronic

  13. Analyzing Data • How are we doing? • Compared to SelfGrade Level, Sub Groups, Trends • 2. Compared to Others • National, State, Similar Schools • Compared to Absolutes • Standards, Cut Scores, Scale Scores, Readiness • Michael Fullan

  14. Analyzing Data • -Creating Information and Avoiding DRIP • (Data Rich Information Poor) • -So What, Now What Syndrome • Drill Down • Go Visual • Export

  15. Roles in the Data Movement: Administration

  16. Roles in the Data Movement: Teachers

  17. Part II

  18. Jigsaw Collaboration Activity • Break into groups of four • Divide the article into equal sections • Read your section of the article ‘Moving Every Child: Building A Data Culture to Promote Academic Growth’ • Share your section with the group • Discuss article • Share out themes with group

  19. Debriefing the Article

  20. Debriefing the Article

  21. Ideas for Using Data

  22. Tips and Tricks • Use Internet Explorer or Firefox • Avoid Chrome and Safari • DON’T click on main ‘browser’ arrows • Click on small blue arrows ‘within’ page • Small blue arrow takes you back one page • If parameters don’t show up, click on arrow to close section and then reopen (iPads) • To get back to main page, double click on PK-12 • To export a file, click on ‘actions’ (left side of screen) • Exporting to Excel allows visual ‘manipulation’

  23. Let’s Roll • https://slds.ndcloud.gov • Enter log and password (right side of screen) as K-12 user • DISREGARD ‘user’ settings message (in yellow) • Double click on PK-12 • STOP and wait for further directions!!

  24. Key Reports (refer to handout) • Public Reporting (if time) • Teacher Roster Report • Guiding Question • How could you utilize these reports with your peers? With your students?

  25. Part III

  26. At-Risk Seating: One Quick Strategy

  27. The Fundamental Five • Frame the lesson • Teach in the power zone • Praise and encouragement • Critical writing • Small group purposeful talk

  28. What is the Power Zone? • Teach or monitor in close proximity to: • One student • Small group of students • Entire classroom full of students • Increases effectiveness of other teaching practices • Classroom space is about learning and not about teaching Cain, S. & Laird, M. (2011). The Fundamental Five: The Formula for Quality Instruction

  29. Why the Power Zone? • Improve Teaching and Maximize Student Learning • Monitor understanding • Answer questions • Differentiate as needed • Immediate feedback • Manage transitions • Two Minute Problem • Need to utilize great starters and closers Cain, S. & Laird, M. (2011). The Fundamental Five: The Formula for Quality Instruction

  30. Power Zone Activity • Draw what a classroom set up might look like when it is design • Things to Consider: • Can you get anywhere at any time without interrupting teaching and learning? • Get ‘there’ without verbal interaction • Stand next to any student (front, side, and behind) • Engage in non-teaching tasks without interruptingstudent learning

  31. Rubber Meets the Road • When in the ‘Teacher Report’ • Select a teacher • Select the assessment • Select a class • Export to excel • ‘Actions’ (top left hand corner) • Highlight row as necessary • Create the seating chart • Attach a number for each ‘level’ • Surround at-risk students with higher level

  32. Part IV

  33. Identifying Green, Yellow, and Red Light Students

  34. Student Directory Report • Purpose: Displays student proficiency details selectable by school year, grade, school, proficiency level, and student demographics

  35. Student Directory: Triggers and/or Conversation Starters • The report contains: • Class schedule • Grades • Assessment scores • Program information • Attendance • College and career readiness • Transcripts

  36. Triggers Activity

  37. Triggers Activity

  38. Spreadsheet Activity • Go to http://www.ndseed.k12.nd.us • Go to ‘General Resources’ page • Continuous Improvement Model Simulation Data Spreadsheet(2nd on the page) and click on link • Open to Excel • Save to desktop • Review spreadsheet: • 1. What do the ‘headings’ mean? • 2. What data is in the spreadsheet? • 3. What other data needs to be added? • Think in terms of triggers.

  39. Spreadsheet Activity • Review spreadsheet: • 1. Determine headings for the spreadsheet. • What do you keep? • What do you add? • 2. Define your headings. • Be specific • 3. Determine ‘legend’ items. • Be specific NOTE: You can build the spreadsheet for individual students OR full class skill sets.

  40. Final Thoughts • Have a genuine appreciation for the effort and commitment that everyone makes because together, we shall succeed. • Casey Bradley, Jacksonville Jaguars Head Coach

  41. Questions?? Dr. Cory J Steiner E-mail: Cory.Steiner@k12.nd.us Twitter: @nddatasteward Blog: http://blogs.edutech.nodak.edu/corysteiner/ Phone: 701-893-5087

More Related