1 / 27

Student learning objectives introduction

Student learning objectives introduction. Edgar School District January 24, 2014. What’s on the agenda…. SLO background What are SMART goals? SLOs – types/scoring Critique an SLO Write an SLO My Learning Plan – OASYS DPI Example SLOs link Other SLO Resources Training Opportunities

palti
Télécharger la présentation

Student learning objectives introduction

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. Student learning objectives introduction Edgar School District January 24, 2014

  2. What’s on the agenda…. SLO background What are SMART goals? SLOs – types/scoring Critique an SLO Write an SLO My Learning Plan – OASYS DPI Example SLOs link Other SLO Resources Training Opportunities Questions

  3. 2013-14 Teacher Outcome Measures

  4. Student/School Learning Objectives Defined Student/School Learning Objectives (SLOs) are detailed, measurable goals or student academic outcomes to be achieved in a specific period of time (typically an academic year), informed by analysis of prior data, and developed collaboratively by educators and their evaluator.

  5. Purposes of an SLO • Focus on student results • Explicitly connect teaching and learning • Improve instructional practices and teacher performance • Serve as a tool for school improvement

  6. Things EFFECTIVE teachers do….plus one! • Assess students to determine their instructional levels and clarify their academic goals • Set instructional goals for students • Design strategies and identify resources to address identified needs • Monitor and assess student progress throughout the school year and adjust instruction accordingly • Work cooperatively with colleagues to share professional expertise • Formalize this process so that the teacher’s effectiveness can be documented and acknowledged!

  7. What’s a SMART Goal?

  8. Major Types of SLOs • Whole Group • Tiered • Individual – fewer instances • Program (specialists) • School (principal)

  9. Whole Group Example • During the course of this school year, 100% of student will make measurable progress in Spanish I as measured by the district-developed assessment. All students will improve their pre-assessment score by 58 percentage points on the post-assessment.

  10. Tiered Example • During the course of this school year, all students will make measurable progress in US History as measured by the district-developed primary sources comparative analysis rubric for high school. Students will improve their scores as follows: • Students scoring at the Novice and Developing levels on the pre-assessment will improve to the Proficient level on the post-assessment • Student scoring at he Proficient level on the pre-assessment will improve to the Exceeding level on the post-assessment • Students scoring on the Exceeding level on the pre-assessment will have their pre-assessments re-scored using the College and Professional level rubric, and will improve their scores by one level on the post-assessment

  11. Program Example • During the course of the 2014-15 school year, parent participation in middle school parent-teacher conferences will increase by 15% as measured by the number of parents in attendance during conference night or at an alternately arranged time.

  12. Discuss with your neighbor…. • Knowing the different types of SLOs, which type do you think you will write most often? • What about your situation frames your thinking? • What if you need to write multiple SLOs?

  13. Scoring SLOs – examples • SLO Scoring Rubric • Exceeded • Met • Partially Met • Minimally Met • Incomplete/Did Not Engage • Structured metric approach • 80%+ met/exceeded • 70-79% met/exceeded • 50-69% met/exceeded • Fewer than 50% met/exceeded

  14. SLO CRITIQUE • Work in small groups • Review the sample SLOs • Critique and revise each SLO. Consider: • How can you rewrite it so that it meets SMART goal criteria? • How can you rewrite it so that it is a stronger goal? • Be prepared to share your revised SLOs with the group • Trouble choosing a reporter? How about the person who has the most pets!

  15. What’s a SMART Goal?

  16. Sample SLO Statement #1: Grade 2 Literacy • During this school year, my students will improve on word knowledge and oral reading fluency

  17. Sample SLO Statement #2: Grade 8 P.E. • During this school year, all 8th grade physical education students will improve performance by 75% on each of the Fitness-Gram (pacer test, curl-ups, trunk lift, push-ups, and the sit-and-reach) subtests.

  18. Sample SLO Statement #3: MS Science • In the current school year, all students will make measurable progress in science basic knowledge and inquiry application using a district-developed multiple choice and performance assessment. • All students will score at least ½ of the score needed to make a 100% on the post-assessment (for example, a student scoring 70% on the pre-assessment should score an 85% on the post-assessment). • Additionally, students scoring an 80% or above on the pre-assessment will complete self-designed independent projects each quarter using the Application and Inquiry rubric from our district middle school.

  19. PRACTICE WRITING AN SLO! • Choose one of the sample data sets at your table • Write an SLO from that data • Be prepared to share with the group • Trouble choosing a reporter? How about the person who graduated HS the furthest from Edgar!

  20. MORE about SLOs…. • Must be tied to ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT! • What if I don’t teach a content area? • How many SLOs? • By myself?? • Approved by principal or designee

  21. My Learning plan oasysSLO form

  22. Accessing SLO Resources from dpi http://ee.dpi.wi.gov/

  23. EXAMPLE STUDENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES FROM DPI: http://bit.ly/1dPOqkR

  24. Slo examples and resources Website/QR Codes sheet LiveBinder

  25. Upcoming SLO Training Events at CESA 9 • Half-day sessions: AM or PM options each day • “NON-CORE” • music, art, PE, tech ed, IMC, etc. • February 3, 2014 • PUPIL SERVICES • psychologists, nurses, counselors, social workers • March 4, 2014 • SPECIAL EDUCATION • EC – 12 teachers, OTs, PTs, speech therapists • Initially held January 16, 2014 • Considering a second date in the near future

  26. Questions?

  27. Practice writing an slo using your own data sources

More Related