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Updates from the State Board of Education

Updates from the State Board of Education. 2014 ETSU STEM Conference . Dr. David Sevier Dr. Scott Eddins. General Assembly. Governor. TNDOE Rule, Policy and Statute Implementation. SBE- Rule and Policy Promulgation. Local Boards of Education.

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Updates from the State Board of Education

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  1. Updates from the State Board of Education 2014 ETSU STEM Conference Dr. David Sevier Dr. Scott Eddins

  2. General Assembly Governor TNDOE Rule, Policy and Statute Implementation SBE- Rule and Policy Promulgation Local Boards of Education Local School Districts Operation of Public Schools

  3. Nine Congressional Districts Plus One High School Member

  4. Duties and Powers • Authorized under T.C.A.§49-1-301 • Teacher Program Standards and Approval • Teacher Licensure Actions • Evaluation Models • Curriculum Standards • Charter School Appeals and Authorization • School Funding Oversight

  5. On the Horizon… • Teacher licensing standards • Teacher program approval standards • Science Standards • Office of Charter Schools

  6. In Our Lap…(What We Are Monitoring) • Teacher Evaluation • CCSS • Instructional Leadership • Teacher Leadership • Virtual Learning

  7. Science Standards Steering Committee Meetings • http://tn.gov/sbe/2013_Dec_18_Science_Steering_Committee.shtml • http://tn.gov/sbe/2014_Feb_28_Science_Steering_Committee.shtml

  8. Tennessee Science Standards Value Statement • Tennessee possesses a citizenry known to be intelligent, knowledgeable, hard working, and creative. Tennessee’s schools offer science programs that introduce a broad range of important subjects along with opportunities to explore topics ranging from nuclear energy science to breakthrough medical discoveries. The challenge of developing and sustaining a population of scientifically informed citizens requires that educational systems be guided by science curriculum standards that are academically rigorous, relevant to today’s world, and attendant to what makes Tennessee a unique place to live and learn. • To achieve this end, school systems employ curriculum standards to craft meaningful local curricula that are innovative and provide myriad learning opportunities that extend beyond mastery of basic scientific principles. Tennessee science standards include the necessary qualities and conditions to support learning environments in which students can develop knowledge and skills needed for post-secondary and career pursuits, and be well-positioned to become curious, lifelong learners.

  9. Develop an in-depth understanding of the major science disciplines through a series of coherent K-12 learning experiences that afford frequent interactions with the natural and man-made worlds; • Make pertinent connections among scientific concepts, associated mathematical principles, and skillful applications of reading, writing, listening, and speaking; • Recognize that certain broad concepts/big ideas foster a comprehensive and scientifically-based picture of the world and are important across all fields of science; • Explore scientific phenomena and build science knowledge and skills using their own linguistic and cultural experiences and/or with appropriate assistance or accommodation; • Identify and ask appropriate questions that can be answered through scientific investigations; • Design and conduct investigations independently or collaboratively to generate evidence needed to answer a variety of questions; • Use appropriate equipment and tools and apply safe laboratory habits and procedures; • Think critically and logically to analyze and interpret data, draw conclusions and develop explanations that are based on evidence and free from bias; • Communicate and defend results through multiple modes of representation (e. g., gestural, oral, mathematical, pictorial, graphic, and textual models). • Integrate science, mathematics, technology, and engineering design to solve problems and guide everyday decisions; • Consider trade-offs among possible solutions when making decisions about issues for which there are competing alternatives; • Locate, evaluate, and apply reliable sources of scientific and technological information; • Recognize that the principal activity of scientists is to explain the natural world and develop associated theories and laws; • Recognize that current scientific understanding is tentative and subject to change as experimental evidence accumulates, and/or old evidence is reexamined; • Demonstrate an understanding of science principles and the ability to conduct investigations through student-directed experiments, authentic performances, lab reports, portfolios, laboratory demonstrations, real world projects, interviews, and high-stakes tests. Information from the NSTA Position Statements was adapted to compile this document.

  10. Lets Talk About STEM

  11. Fastest Growing Occupations

  12. The ResponseFrom Local Higher Education Institutions • Information Security • Healthcare Information Technology • Informatics • Data Science • Analytics ... And partnerships with industry that lead to increasing numbers of internships and new hires

  13. A New Vocabulary

  14. Three Strategies to transform Education in your community • Organically Grow Talent • Recruit Talent from Specific Markets with the Talent YOU Need • Retrain Talent

  15. Careers of the Future • Analytics  Visualization  Predictive • Community Engineering/Hacking • Data Scientist

  16. Data scientist • So you want to be a data scientist? • Data Aggregator • DBA • Statistics/Mathematician • Artist • Big Data discussion shifts to Visualization • Coder • Model Builder/Crusher

  17. Owning STEM Our Comfort Level with the Sciences • Biology, Physics and Chemistry • Engineering and Mathematics • Computer Science, Data Science, Informatics, Analytics, Visualization

  18. Softer Issues • Problem Solving • Communicating Solutions • Working in Teams • Motivation • Work Ethic • Persistence, Determination, Curiosity, Creativity

  19. Questions? David.Sevier@tn.gov Scott.Eddins@tn.gov

  20. The Tennessee State Board of Education Recognizes and Honors Dr. Jack Rhoton for a Lifetime of Outstanding Leadership in STEM Education in Tennessee _____________________________________ Dr. Gary L Nixon Executive Director Tennessee State Board of Education

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