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‘Backward Planning’

‘Backward Planning’. What it’s about, why we need it, and how do school leaders encourage it? Working with Ruth Sutton, October 2013. Outline for the day. Understanding the process of ‘backward planning’ in the curriculum

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‘Backward Planning’

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  1. ‘Backward Planning’ What it’s about, why we need it, and how do school leaders encourage it? Working with Ruth Sutton, October 2013

  2. Outline for the day • Understanding the process of ‘backward planning’ in the curriculum • Discovering how ‘instructional leadership’ really works, in this context • Checking out all the available resources • Enabling and encouraging teachers to work collaboratively: Why? How? • Developing skills and confidence in your own school: designing a PD ‘process’, using ‘backward planning’ • Sustaining the focus in the longer term • Identifying most effective next steps, in school, for your Division, and for mRLC

  3. What do we already know? In a small group… • Share your understanding of ‘backward planning’ and how it works • Draw a picture, or a diagram, to illustrate it • What questions do you, or your teachers, have about it?

  4. Planning: from big picture to ‘chunks’ • Fight the urge to plan too much detail too soon • Teachers – and leaders too - step back and take a long look at the curriculum requirements, for a whole grade level • Consider the total of content, skills and approaches expected/required for that year long program • Break the whole into ‘chunks’ and decide their size and order

  5. ‘Backward Planning’ for each chunk • Big learning goals: what do we want the students to learn, ie. content knowledge, skills and ‘behaviours’? (Don’t go straight to what the students are going to do) • Evidence of learning: what will we look for to show that these expected outcomes have been achieved? How will students be involved in developing and understanding these criteria? • Assessment activities: how will students be enabled and encouraged to provide this evidence, and get feedback to decide their next steps? Assessments must be as valid (ie..accurate) and reliable (ie. consistent/fair) as possible (ie. manageable) • Teaching: what teaching and learning activities will enable and encourage students to learn and practice the desired skills and content? How will these activities be differentiated? • Starting point: how will the students’ prior learning be identified and built upon, and previous misconceptions be rectified?

  6. Things to consider… • More ‘evidence’ doesn’t necessarily mean better evidence: what matters is ‘sufficiency’ • The quality – validity and reliability – is more important than the quantity of data about student learning • The question is not ‘How much evidence can we manage?’ but ‘How little evidence do we need?’

  7. Assessment:the search for balance Validity (accuracy) Reliability (fairness) Best fit Manageability and ‘Credibility’

  8. Lessons from experience • Teachers need help to design ‘valid’ assessment activities • Shared professional judgment is much more important than individual professional judgment • Teachers who are unsure of their evidence will try to gather too much

  9. Successful school leaders in the current curriculum climate….. • Enable and encourage their teachers to share their interpretations of the ‘outcome’. I call this process ‘moderation’. • This process is time-consuming, needs careful management and has a huge payoff for students (greater clarity), teachers (greater confidence) and parents (better information)

  10. Moderation in practice • Choose some outcomes to focus on • Share what we think the outcomes mean • Find ‘neutral’ examples of these outcomes in practice, at various levels • Discuss what ‘levels/standards’ the examples represent • Design and agree a ‘shared assessment’ around these outcomes • Try it out and bring back examples of student work • Discuss the outcomes and ‘standards’ in this work

  11. mRLC resources, available on line • www.mRLC.ca, follow links to Tools • The backward planning template • The ‘essential outcomes’ • A sample Science unit

  12. Reflection and questions… • From what you know already, and have heard from me, and have seen on the mRLC website….. • Go back and add to the picture/diagram you started with, and add or amend where necessary • What issues and questions still remain?

  13. ‘School Leadership and Student Outcomes’NZ ‘Best Evidence’ Research, Vivianne Robinson, 2007 • 26 studies, of which 11 were chosen as most useful to decide the leadership activities most associated with improving student learning and achievement • Each activity was identified, and its ‘effect size’ showing how important it was

  14. Leadership activities, for improving student learning Decide the priority order for these factors, from least to most influential for improved student learning • Strategic resourcing • Planning, co-ordinating and evaluating teaching and the curriculum • Ensuring an orderly and supportive environment • Promoting and participating in teacher learning and development • Goal setting

  15. Leadership activities, in ascending order of significance for improving student learning • Ensuring an orderly and supportive environment (0.27) • Strategic resourcing (0.34) • Goal setting (0.35) • Planning, co-ordinating and evaluating teaching and the curriculum (0.42) • Promoting and participating in teacher learning and development (0.84)

  16. Using a backward planning process, plan a 5 hour adult learning PD experience in your school on ‘Backward Planning’: work with people you don’t normally work with • What’s the ‘big idea’ and the desired learning outcomes for teachers in your school? • What would/could the evidence of teachers’ learning be? • How, when and by whom would this ‘evidence’ be gathered and assessed? • What will teachers need to learn and practice to be able to demonstrate this evidence? • How will you differentiate? What about the resources you might need, groupings etc? What about ‘structure’ for this PD? • How will you check teachers’ prior learning and experience? • How will you engage and motivate the teachers throughout this process? Be prepared to present this plan another group!

  17. SUSTAINABILITY Backward planning is not an ‘initiative’ : it raises questions all the stages of teaching… • How teachers plan their ‘units’ • How they ‘differentiate’ and include as many students as they can • How they engage and motivate their students • How they find and judge the evidence of learning • How they ‘record’ their assessments • How they describe and report student achievement

  18. Short-term ‘initiative’ or long-term school focus • ‘Initiatives’ sound and feel different from year to year • Teachers and Principals complain about ‘initiative overload’, lose sight of the big picture, and what’s fundamentally important SO..What other school priorities do you have? What’s on your ‘front burners’? • How do these priorities link together? Do they have ‘indicators’ in common? • How might these ‘overlaps’ make your implementation plans more effective or efficient?

  19. From ‘initiatives’ to ‘fundamentals’

  20. Teaching and leading are both hard-wired habits • We learn to teach mainly through experience • Our teaching and leadership styles reflect our personal approach: what we do is a reflection of who we are • Habits are notoriously hard to change

  21. The 3 part brain • The neo-cortex: useful for academic assignments • The reptilian brain: useful for basic instincts • The limbic brain: useful for changing habits

  22. From ‘knowing’ to ‘doing’ • The practices of teaching, schooling and leadership are deeply ingrained or ‘hard-wired’ • Habits are formed and changed in the limbic brain not the neo-cortex • They can only be changed through the limbic brain

  23. Changing habits – according to ‘Addiction Theory’ (Proshaska) • Pre-contemplation • Contemplation • First step • Discomfort and floundering • Practice • Confidence • New habit • Coach someone else

  24. The Weightwatchers Model The Weight-watchers model for improving teaching, and leadership, involves: Big, important, agreed goals Small steps and continual feedback Perseverance Collegial support and accountability Recognition of success

  25. Planning next steps: individual reflection Think about your own school/role • What have we already achieved in implementing the outcomes - based curriculum in our classrooms? • What’s still to do? • What will be the ‘indicators’ of progress? • What are your one or two next steps – no more – between now and the end of this term? • Who needs to do what, with whom and by when?

  26. Have a Learning Conversations with someone from outside your Division • Explain why you’ve made these choices and decisions • Ask and answer good questions about these decisions • Be prepared to amend and improve • Very careful listening • Open questions designed to make the other person reflect, not just to seek information • Clear achievable next steps

  27. Back in your ‘Division’ group • Share what you’re planning to do. • Consider – what might help us achieve these changes? • What might be the barriers to these changes? What could get in your way? How might you deal with these potential roadblocks? • Consider - what you will need more help with, in the January session, and in March

  28. Thanks for your work • Keep in touch. If I can help, I wil • Email exit slips to lorimtighe@gmail.com • Sutton.ruth@gmail.com • Twitter: @ruthsutton • www.ruthsutton.co.uk

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