1 / 44

Making Decisions…The Right Way

Making Decisions…The Right Way. Dr. Cory J. Steiner, Data Steward Jane Hovda, PowerSchool Manager New Town Public Schools SEED Project Training Day #3. Motivation from the Kid President. http:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-gQLqv9f4o. Objectives .

miracle
Télécharger la présentation

Making Decisions…The Right Way

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 Dr. Cory J. Steiner, Data Steward Jane Hovda, PowerSchool Manager New Town Public Schools SEED Project Training Day #3

  2. Motivation from the Kid President • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-gQLqv9f4o

  3. Objectives • Identify key themes from previous training and how they relate to current/future training. • Identify key trigger events for identifying green, yellow, and red students via triangulation. • Engage and utilize practical strategies for developing at-risk seating charts. • Increase proficiency in navigating the SLDS(District School Roster & Student Directory). • Collaborate with peers on current and best practices for utilizing data. • Identify steps for data process.

  4. Agenda • Part I • Reinforcing Day #2 • Part II • SLDS Exploration Activity • Part III • Identifying Green, Yellow, and Red Students (triangulation) • Part IV • Rubber Meets the Road • Part V • Conclusion

  5. Establishing Norms

  6. Launching a Data Team • What will the data team do?

  7. Launching a Data Team • What roles must the data team utilize to accomplish goals?

  8. Part I

  9. Culture • Divide the article into equal sections • Read your section of the article ‘Positive or Negative’ • Share your section with the group • Discuss article

  10. Collaboration • Resources • Team Analysis of Common Assessment • Data Team Process Sheet • PLC Cycle Notes • Utilize the 3R Strategy • Review • Rip • Revise

  11. Data Walls Activity • GET FOUR • Why utilize data walls?

  12. Data Walls • Steps to building data walls: • Write predictions on a sheet of chart paper • Post predictions • Post a large graph or chart of data the organization is processing • Record observations from the graph or chart and record on chart paper

  13. Data Walls Activity • For examples, go to www.ndseed.k12.nd.us • General Resources

  14. Part II

  15. SLDS Exploration Activity • https://slds.ndcloud.gov

  16. District Snapshot • Select District and Click Apply • What information is located on the overview page? • What information is located in the enrollment dashboard? • What information is located in the academic dashboard?

  17. School Snapshot • Select School and Click Apply • What information is located on the overview page? • What information is located in the enrollment dashboard? • What information is located in the academic dashboard?

  18. School Snapshot • Click for Roster and Select a Teacher • What information is located in the enrollment dashboard? • What information is located in the academic dashboard?

  19. School Snapshot • Click for Roster on Selected Teacher (District Roster Report) • What do ‘E’, ‘L’, ‘M’, and ‘D’ represent? • What student has the highest percentage of missed classes in the last four weeks? • What student has the most grades below a ‘C’? • What student has the highest percentage of grades failing or down 10%? • What do the various colors for assessments represent? • Change the assessment (parameters) and click apply to see other data. • What do the arrows represent

  20. Student Directory • Student Directory (student section) • What information is located on the overview page? • What information is located in the academic dashboard? • What information is located on the following pages? • Attendance • Assessment • Grades and Credits • College and Career Readiness

  21. Exporting • Exporting • Click on actions (upper left hand side of screen) • Click on export • Click on Excel • Open and/or save (know where your download goes)

  22. Part III

  23. Identifying Green, Yellow, and Red Light Students (Triangulation)

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

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

  26. Triggers Activity

  27. Triggers Activity

  28. 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. • 4. Assign ranking • Low number—less at risk; high number—at risk • Example for NDSA: • Advanced-0 • Proficient-1 • Partially Proficient-2 • Novice-3

  29. Part IV

  30. At-Risk Seating

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

  32. 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

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

  34. 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

  35. Other Strategies • 2 x 10

  36. Part VI

  37. Next Steps • Review examples of assignments (website) • Post-survey (May) • Submit final drafts of assignments to Cory.Steiner@k12.nd.us • Due final week of May • Complete feedback survey on Day #3 • Complete feedback survey on SEED training

  38. Exit Slip • What worked well? • What would you change?

  39. 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

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

More Related