1 / 23

RESA 6 and the Next Generation of Content Standards

RESA 6 and the Next Generation of Content Standards. PRI, October 8-9, 2013 Presented by: Jon Pollock Coordinator of Curriculum and Instruction Michalene Mills Coordinator of School Improvement and Technical Assistance. 3 Major Shifts in the NxtGen Curriculum. Application. ELA:

stesha
Télécharger la présentation

RESA 6 and the Next Generation of Content Standards

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. RESA 6 and the Next Generation of Content Standards PRI, October 8-9, 2013 Presented by: Jon Pollock Coordinator of Curriculum and Instruction Michalene Mills Coordinator of School Improvement and Technical Assistance

  2. 3 Major Shifts in the NxtGen Curriculum Application ELA: • Content-rich Nonfiction • Reading, Writing and Speaking Grounded in Evidence • Text Complexity and Academic Vocabulary Math: • Focus:strongly focus on what the standards emphasize • Coherence: Think across grades and link to major topics within grades • Rigor: Require conceptual understanding, fluency, and application Procedural Skill & Fluency Conceptual Understanding

  3. Why do the NxG CSO’s Matter? The Student We as educators… • …are seeking the evidence of making a positive impact in the learning of all our students. • …want to also experience the awakening of students who have long given up and see them take notice and engage. • But, how do we get there?

  4. Universal Design for Learning • A Learning Environment that Challenges, Engages and meets the needs of All Students • Built around 3 principles: Action and Expression Engagement Representation • Provide alternatives for accessing information (visual, auditory) • Provide or activate background knowledge in multiple ways (pre-teaching, advanced organizers) • Provide options for responding (keyboard, voice recording) • Provide options for completing assignments using different media (text, speech, film, music) • Provide options that increase the relevance and authenticity (use money, culturally significant activities) • Provide options that encourage collaboration and communication (peers, tutoring)

  5. Backward and Evidence-Centered Design • Begin with the end in mind. • What does EACH student need to KNOW, UNDERSTAND, and DO to achieve? • What do you want the students to have mastered and completed by the end of the unit? • What evidence will you accept in order for a student to demonstrate mastery of the objective? • Use Rubrics as a guide

  6. Next Generation CSO’s in Action: ANxtGen Poetry Unit • Began with Hip Hop Lyric Challenge – No mention of the word “Poetry” - Students composed a ‘rap’ and had the option to challenge me to music, or just read/recite their compositions. • Incorporated short research-based essay assignment • 3-4 weeks of poetry study, gradually increasing in difficulty • In-depth poem analysis (student chosen), which led to… • Culminating event: high level poetry recitation

  7. Best Practices:Useful in Every Classroom • Fishbowl and the Micro Lab Protocol • Connect-Extend-Challenge • Book Pass (ELA) • Compass Points • Color-Symbol-Image • I used to think…,Now I think… • Think-Pair-Share Making Thinking Visible by Ritchhart, Church, and Morrison (Harvard Project Zero) Visible Thinking in the Mathematics K-8 Classroom Hull, Balka, and Harbin

  8. Standards in Mathematics suitable for 21st century learners must address two kinds of knowledge: mathematical content and mathematical practice. Smarter Balanced Assessment will assess BOTH

  9. The ability to solve new and unforeseen problems requires mastery not just of the results of mathematical thinking (the familiar facts and procedures) but of the ways that mathematically proficient individuals do that thinking. When the real world throws us a problem, it never asks what chapter we’ve just studied.

  10. Standards for Mathematical Practice 1. Make Sense of Problems and Persevere in Solving Them 2. Reason Abstractly and Quantitatively 3. Construct Viable Arguments and Critique the Reasoning of Others 4. Model With Mathematics 5. Use Appropriate Tools Strategically 6. Attend to Precision 7. Look For and Make Use of Structure 8. Look For and Express Regularity in Repeated Reasoning

  11. Smarter Balanced Assessment Smarter Balanced is a system. • Performance Tasks • Computer Adaptive • Interim Assessments • Digital Library of Tools

  12. Claims of Smarter Balanced Math • Claim 1:Concepts and Procedures Must understand the underlying concepts; not just the procedures. • Claim 2: Problem Solving Autonomous Reasoning—Multiple feasible approaches Don’t mistake it for math surrounded by words. Basic procedure goes into Claim 1. • Claim 3: Communicating and Reasoning Younger kids—counterexamples or an example to support a statement • Claim 4: Modeling Not everything in this world is neat. We have to work with extra and not enough information. Must provide a reasonable answer.

  13. Problem of the Month and Professional Development Modules • K-8 can work together on a single problem • K students work with first graders on a basic version of a problem. • First graders take the work to second grade and explain the solution as well as revise with the second graders. • Second graders work on another piece of the problem with the first graders then take the work to third grade. • This continues on until you reach the highest grade level you want to work with.

  14. ELA Claims for Smarter Balanced Assessment • Claim 1: Students can read closely and critically to comprehend arange of increasingly complex literary and informationaltexts. • Claim 2: Students can produce effective writing for a range ofpurposes and audiences. • Claim 3: Students can employ effective speaking and listeningskills for a range of purposes and audiences. • Claim 4: Students can engage appropriately in collaborative andindependent inquiry to investigate/research topics, posequestions, and gather and present information.

  15. The Rigor/Relevance Framework K N O W L E D G E T A X O N O M Y 6 5 4 3 2 1 Evaluation C Assimilation D Adaptation Synthesis Analysis Application APPLICATION MODEL A Acquisition B Application International Center for Leadership in Education Understanding Awareness 1 2 3 4 5 Apply across disciplines Apply to real world predictable situations Apply to real-world unpredictable situations Knowledge Apply in discipline

  16. The Rigor/Relevance Framework K N O W L E D G E T A X O N O M Y 6 5 4 3 2 1 Evaluation C Assimilation D Adaptation Synthesis Analysis Application APPLICATION MODEL A Acquisition B Application International Center for Leadership in Education Understanding Awareness 1 2 3 4 5 Apply across disciplines Apply to real world predictable situations Apply to real-world unpredictable situations Knowledge Apply in discipline

  17. Robert Hull, WVDEAssociate Superintendent, Division of Teaching and Learning • Wordle created from Mr. Hull’s research on what Students need:

  18. Why call RESA? We will work with you on: • Data Collection and Analysis • Consistent and On-going Support for the Next Generation Curriculum, Professional Development, and Supplemental Programs • Customizing school-specific improvement strategies for YOU A Fresh Pair of Eyes… Tell us what you need!

  19. Exit Slips: Resa 6 School Improvement Services I used to think…, Now I think…. Thank you!

  20. Contact Information: Michalene Mills Coordinator of School Improvement and Technical Assistance mcmills@access.k12.wv.us Cell: 304-312-7058 Office: 304-231-3817 Jonathan Pollock Coordinator of Curriculum and Instruction jpollock@access.k12.wv.us Cell: 304-312-9676 Office: 304-231-3830

More Related