1 / 56

Prepared for the Professional Learning Communities of the Montana Educators’ Summer Institute

Mining for Diamonds in the Rough Research Strategies that Produce Positive Results. Part II. Prepared for the Professional Learning Communities of the Montana Educators’ Summer Institute by Dan Mulligan, June 2008.

Télécharger la présentation

Prepared for the Professional Learning Communities of the Montana Educators’ Summer Institute

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. MiningforDiamondsintheRoughResearch Strategies that Produce Positive Results Part II Prepared for the Professional Learning Communities of the Montana Educators’ Summer Institute by Dan Mulligan, June 2008

  2. Effective Instruction #2: focuses on essential knowledge and essential skills • Three types of curricula exist in any classroom: • The Intended Curriculum: content/skill specified by the state, division, or school at a particular grade level. • The Implemented Curriculum: content/skill actually delivered by the teacher. • The Attained Curriculum: content/skill actually learned by the students. Implemented Curriculum Attained Curriculum Intended Curriculum Montana Content Standards and PerformanceDescriptors

  3. Content-Related Evidence of Validity(Attained Curriculum) Essential Skills & Processes Essential Knowledge LEARNING TARGET (attained curriculum) Essential Vocabulary

  4. Demonstrate an understanding of and an ability to use data analysis, probability, and statistics Knowledge Vocabulary Skills When is a relation called a function? What does interact mean? Which event will most likely occur? How do you know?

  5. Collecting QUALITATIVE Data • Putting a Twist on the GLYPH method of collecting data: • Find the Glyph Page in your packet (yellow). • Create a team of 2 by using your team number and the following rule: • Even number match with next highest odd number (e.g., 2 &3, 4 & 5, 6 & 7, …) • Highest even number match with person number 1. • Interview your partner, using the categories from the next chart, to complete a Glyph OF YOUR PARTNER. • Share your completed Glyph with your partner. • Compare and contrast the 2 GLYPHS… How are they the same?How are they different?

  6. Checking for background knowledge: What is a hieroglyphic? • American Heritage Dictionary - hi·er·o·glyph·ic, adj.   • Of, relating to, or being a system of writing, such as that of ancient Egypt, in which pictorial symbols are used to represent meaning or sounds or a combination of meaning and sound. • Written with such symbols.

  7. Getting to Know YOU!!!

  8. “Involvement of all stakeholders (students, parents, teachers and administrators) is essential in improvement efforts. The process of sustaining student achievement is to know what students must be able to do, where you (they) are, determine where you want them to be, then figure out what actions will get you (them) there and who is going to do this. Regular monitoring of progress and resulting course corrections completes theprocess.

  9. Required pass rates foreach subgroup: 2007 tests – reading (74%) math (51%)

  10. Montana Comprehensive Assessment System MontCAS “If they can’t read the question, you will never know how much math they know!” ~Dan, ‘08

  11. Self Reliance There are three types of baseball players--those who make it happen, those who watch it happen, and those who wonder what happened. Tommy Lasorda teachers & administrators

  12. Research-based Strategy: Cooperative learningPercentile Gain 27 Latoya and Kirk Get It Together…

  13. Latoya and Kirk LaToya – 159 cm Silk – 108 cm • 42 • + 135 • 177 • 108 • 69 • 73 • 4 cm below Shoulder – 135 cm Counter – 73 cm Stool – 42 cm

  14. Why Group Teams Heterogeneously? H HM LM L • One high, one high medium, one low medium, and one low achieving student • Produce the greatest opportunity for peer tutoring and active participation • Maximum cross-race, cross-sex, & cross-ability team contact • Make classroom management easier - assign roles • Balanced

  15. The average student talks 35 seconds a day. The student who is talking is growing dendrites.

  16. “Learning from Explaining: Does It Matter if Mom is Listening” • Learning improves dramatically among young children who take the time to explain academic concepts to their mothers or who explain their logic aloud to themselves. • On a test of reasoning to 4 and 5 year olds: • Children who explained concepts to their mothers before taking a test scored correctly on 75% of questions; • Children who explained concepts aloud to themselves before taking a test scored correctly on 72% of questions; • Children who did not explain concepts at all prior to a test scored correctly on only 42% of questions; • The study examined youngsters’ ability to place toy insects in a certain pattern based on color and type. Breaden Research study completed in 2007

  17. Instructional Strategies that Facilitate Successful Inclusion Must … • Supply students with STRUCTURE and ORGANIZATION • Encourage student COMMUNICATION and COLLABORATION • Provide students with VISUAL and HANDS-ON learning experiences

  18. “A pupil from whom nothing isever demanded which hecannot do, never does all he can.” John Stuart Mill “No one Rises to Low Expectations.” Carl Boyd

  19. Research Related to Teaching Reading Skills from Cognitive Science Premise: The meaning of a text is NOT contained in the words on the page. Instead, the reader constructs meaning by making what she thinks is a logical, sensible connection between the new information she reads and what she already knows about the topic. Read the paragraph on the single sheet and fill in the missing words. ENJOY! (this is NOT a test)

  20. The questions that p_____ face as they raise ch_____ from in_____ to adult life are not easy to an_____. Both fa_____ and m_____ can become concerned when health problems such as co_____ arise any time after the e_____ stage to later life. Experts recommend that young ch_____ should have plenty of s_____ and nutritious food for healthy growth. B_____ and g_____ should not share the same b_____ or even sleep in the same r_____. They may be afraid of the d_____. An essential element of checking for understanding is for students to share the meaning of essential content related vocabulary.

  21. The questions that poultrymen face as they raise chickens from incubation to adult life are not easy to answer. Both farmers and merchants can become concerned when health problems such as coccidiosis arise any time after the egg stage to later life. Experts recommend that young chicks should have plenty of sunshine and nutritious food for healthy growth. Banties and geese should not share the same barnyard or even sleep in the same roost. They may be afraid of the dark. ~Adapted from Madeline Hunter

  22. Montana Comprehensive Assessment System MontCAS

  23. What is higher order thinking? "Every day thinking, like ordinary walking, is a natural performance we all pick up. But good thinking, like running the l00-yard dash, is a technical performance... Sprinters have to be taught how to run the 100-yard dash; good thinking is the result of good teaching, which includes much practice." David Perkins, Howard University

  24. Thinking Skills Test • What kind of grollers were they? • 2. What did the grollers do? • 3. Where did they do it? • 4. In what kind of gak did they grangle? • 5. Place one line under the subject and two lines under the verb. Moral:Students can answer low-levelquestions without thinking. Students enter/exit classroomswith no more understanding ofwhat they've learned than"The Griney Groller"taught you!

  25. Blind Sequencing

  26. “A pupil from whom nothing isever demanded which hecannot do, never does all he can.” John Stuart Mill “No one Rises to Low Expectations.” Carl Boyd

  27. Learning Goals As a result of what we do today I will : create a story question involving fractions in the solution. solve a story question from one of my team members.

  28. When students know what they are learning, their performance, on average, has been shown to be 27 percentile points higher than students who do not know what they are learning.

  29. Part 2Using Qualitative Data to Focus Staff Improvement Efforts “"THE GREATEST ENEMY OF UNDERSTANDING IS COVERAGE".” ~Howard Gardner

  30. Knowing the Learner Directions: Rank the symbols (1-4) in order from most (1) like you as a learner to least (4) like you as a learner.

  31. Learning Style of Beach Balls Knowing the Learner

  32. Learning Style of Microscopes Knowing the Learner

  33. Learning Style of Clipboards Knowing the Learner

  34. Learning Style of Puppies Knowing the Learner

  35. “If an educator keeps using the same strategies over and over and the student keeps failing, who really is the slow learner?”

More Related