2014-15 District Goal To drive our instructional focus across the district using benchmarking, diagnostic, and classroom level data. Remind teachers of.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Overview Session Objectives I.Review Teacher Effectiveness System II.Define SLO process III.Exploring SLO Template 10 IV.Identifying Key Points for School.
Advertisements

Annual UMES Summer Institute “Making the Adjustment” Student Learning Objectives :
Teacher Evaluation New Teacher Orientation August 15, 2013.
Student Learning Objectives (SLO)
Student Learning Targets (SLT)
Hazleton Area High School
STUDENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES (SLOs) “Designing” © Pennsylvania Department of Education.
Student Learning Targets (SLT) You Can Do This! Getting Ready for the School Year.
STUDENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES (SLOs) 1 Orientation Module.
1 Pennsylvania’s Student Learning Objectives (SLOs) Process.
Student Growth Developing Quality Growth Goals II
Student Learning Objectives (SLO) Essential Questions: 1. How does an SLO factor into teacher evaluation? 2. How will the SLO process be organized at Lower.
SLO Process A process to document a measure of educator effectiveness based on student achievement of content standards.
Overview for Teachers. Session Objectives I.Review Teacher Effectiveness System II.Define SLO process III.Exploring SLO Templates -Assessment Literacy-
Central Columbia School District. Multiple Measures of Student Achievement Multiple Measures of Student Achievement 1.Building Level Data (School Performance.
PROPOSED MULTIPLE MEASURES FOR TEACHER EFFECTIVENESS
Student Learning Objectives (SLOs) Upper Perkiomen School District August 2013.
GOAL SETTING CONFERENCES BRIDGEPORT, CT SEPTEMBER 2-3,
STUDENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES (SLOs) 1 Heather Brown Denise Kaminski.
Overview for School Leaders. Session Objectives I.Review Teacher Effectiveness System II.Define SLO process III.Exploring SLO Template 10 IV.Identifying.
Putting the Pieces Together…. Understanding SLOs.
Principles of Assessment
STUDENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES (SLOs) 1 Heather Brown Denise Kaminski.
Student Learning targets
Student Learning Objectives (SLOs) 1 Michele Westphal.
* Provide clarity in the purpose and function of the Student Learning Objectives (SLOs) as a part of the APPR system * Describe procedures for using.
(B) FOR PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYES AND TEMPORARY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYES WHO SERVE AS CLASSROOM TEACHERS, THE FOLLOWING SHALL APPLY: (1) BEGINNING IN THE
Student Learning Objectives (SLO)
Information for school leaders and teachers regarding the process of creating Student Learning Targets. Student Learning targets.
Student Learning Objectives: Approval Criteria and Data Tracking September 17, 2013 This presentation contains copyrighted material used under the educational.
Student Growth Measures in Teacher Evaluation Using Data to Inform Growth Targets and Submitting Your SLO 1.
After lunch - Mix it up! Arrange your tables so that everyone else seated at your table represents another district. 1.
Hastings Public Schools PLC Staff Development Planning & Reporting Guide.
PDE’s Student Achievement Challenge. We don’t want you to feel like this….
1 Support Provider Workshop # East Bay BTSA Induction Consortium.
March 23, NYSCSS Annual Conference Crossroads of Change: The Common Core in Social Studies.
Changes in Professional licensure Teacher evaluation system Training at Coastal Carolina University.
SLO’s Student Learning Objectives Student Learning Outcomes.
Student Growth Goals for Coaching Conversations. Requirements for Student Growth Goals Time line Reference to an Enduring Skill Proficiency and Growth.
New Hope-Solebury School District Effective Educator Student Learning Objectives (SLOs)
1 Overview of Teacher Evaluation 60% Multiple Measures of Teacher Performance At least 31 points based on “at least 2” observations At least one observation.
Introduction to Student Learning Objectives
Performance Goals Samples (Please note, these goals are not proficient- they are for training purposes) What do you think?
Presented by: O. Dave Deitz, Karen Ruddle and Cristine Wagner-Deitch
Writing and Submitting Student Learning Objectives
Student Learning Objectives (SLOs)
J. Sterling Morton High Schools
Wethersfield Teacher Evaluation and Support Plan
Overview for School Leaders
Transforming Grading Robert Marzano
Courtney Mills Principal, Midlands Middle College
Changes to the Educator Evaluation System
FEAPs (Florida Educator Accomplished Practices)
Overview for School Leaders
Making Sense of SLOs Overview
Teacher Evaluation “SLO 101”
Evaluating the Quality of Student Achievement Objectives
Core Competencies: Moving forward with Self-Assessment
Student Learning Objective (SLO) Staff Development
Introduction to Student Achievement Objectives
Preparing to Use This Video with Staff:
Creating Student Learning Objectives (SLOs)
Selecting Baseline Data and Establishing Targets for Student Achievement Objectives Module Welcome to the Polk County Selecting Baseline Data and.
SUPPORTING THE Progress Report in MATH
Jeanie Behrend, FAST Coordinator Janine Quisenberry, FAST Assistant
(Introduce new electronic score reports)
CBSD Differentiated Supervision Review
Student Learning Objectives (slos)
Student Growth Measures
CLASS KeysTM Module 6: Informal Observations Spring 2010
Presentation transcript:

2014-15 District Goal To drive our instructional focus across the district using benchmarking, diagnostic, and classroom level data. Remind teachers of our district goal and how we are trying to connect all of this information as we move forward with the SLO. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Student Learning Objectives (SLO)

Historic Perspective PDE initially required the SLO process to begin at the start of the 2014-15 school year. PDE changed the mandatory start date to the second semester of the 2014-15 school year. The administration of CBSD opted to start the SLO process in the second semester. The administration and the CEA met to discuss SLO - specific requirements for the LEA. Remind teachers that this is a PDE mandate and not a district initiative. The administration has worked closely with the CEA in developing the SLO requirements for this year. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS Review how the elective data will also be used for the teacher specific data. The 15% teacher specific data will be determined based on their assignment. The teacher specific data will be worth 15% of the teacher evaluation and will be distributed as follows: Scenario 1 – tested subject with IEP count under 25 (All PSSA & Keystone Teachers)   1) Student performance on assessments _ 3__% 2) PVAAS 3-year rolling average 0% 3) IEP goal progress 0% 4) LEA developed rubric _12__% Scenario 2 – non-tested subject with IEP count under 25 (Most Other Teachers) 1) Student performance on assessments 0% 4) LEA developed rubric 15% IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

measure of educator effectiveness SLO Process A process to document a measure of educator effectiveness based on student achievement of content standards. Discuss the philosophy behind the process and how it relates to teacher effectiveness and connections to content specific standards. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

The SLO in PA is written to a specific teacher and a specific class/course/content area for which that teacher provides instruction. The SLO must connect to the content standards being taught. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Every teacher designs an SLO Math Physics Physical Education History Chemistry This is not just for tested subject areas. Kindergarten Special Ed Journalism IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Working Together to Create an SLO Collaborative development of an SLO is encouraged (e.g., similar content area or grade level teachers, interdisciplinary groups of educators) Encourage teachers to work together for creating their SLO and let them know it is OK to copy examples they may find. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Check for understanding…. Reflect on the following questions: How is the SLO used? Who writes an SLO? What does an SLO measure? Address any questions or areas of confusion. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

5 Part SLO Template Classroom Context SLO Goal Performance Measure (PM) Performance Indicators (PI) Elective Rating Distribute the SLO Template and refer to the structure and the 5 sections listed. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Section 1: Classroom Context General Description Contains demographic information about the educational setting Articulates the course, grade level (s), and students on which the SLO is based Provides class size, frequency, and duration data Start with Section one. It describes the demographics unique to each teacher. 11 IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Section 1: Art Example IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS Use this example of a completed form. This will look like their handout. Tell them PA-ETEP will put things into the correct form as they enter their information online. See next slide. 12 IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS Tell Teachers they will be putting this information into PA-ETEP so the format will look a bit different. The information is the same, but they may want to make notes on the handouts as the presentation continues. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Section 2: SLO Goal General Description Contains a statement about the “enduring understanding” or “big idea” Provides the specific PA standards associated with the goal Articulates a rationale about the Goal Statement Discuss broad goal statements as they relate to content standards as you move to the next slide. 14 IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Goal Aligned to Standards Key SLO Process Component: Know and understand the Standards a) PA Standards b) National Standards c) Professional Content Standards IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Goal Statement: Big Idea Definition: Narrative articulation of the “big idea” upon which the SLO is based Characteristics: Encompasses the “enduring understanding” of the standard Central to the content area Foundational concepts for later subjects/courses (it is what the students need to know before they can move on) May make a reference to a unit EQ versus a daily lesson EQ. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Goal Considerations Is the goal statement… Aligned to a Big idea Related to the teacher’s content area of certification? Focused on major area(s) of learning at the grade level? Measurable? Realistic? Remind teachers that they need to be working with the end in mind. Will you be able to measure your goal in a concrete way? IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

The SLO Goal Statement: What’s the Important Learning? Spanish 1 Students will be able demonstrate effective communication in the target language by speaking and listening, writing, and reading. 8th Grade Art Students will demonstrate the ability to manipulate visual art materials and tools to create works based on the ideas of other artists and to evaluate the processes and products of themselves and other artists. Grade 5 Library Students will demonstrate the ability to use online D.P.S. databases and search engines, Britannica Elementary, Culture Grams, and Net trekker toward support real world experiences and determine which is the best source for specific information. 2a. The SLO Goal Statement: What’s the Important Learning? Go over these examples. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Sample Goal Statement Apply the concepts and the competencies of nutrition, eating habits, and safe food preparation techniques to overall health and wellness throughout the life cycle at individual, family, and societal levels. This is the place to insert goal statements from your buildings. You may also tell them that there are resources and other examples of SLO documents and goal statements on the curriculum web site. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

http://www.pdesas.org IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS Take them to the site and direct them to the standards link tab at the top of the page. Go to next slide. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS Point out the big ideas and where they can find them in SAS. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Section 2: Art Example This slide looks like their handouts but has the same information included. This example uses numerical representations for the standards. We are asking teachers to write out the wording for the standard in this area. All Standards should be written in full after the identification number. 22 IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS This slide will show them what things will look like in section 2 on PA-ETEP. Discuss 2a, 2b, and 2c as it relates back to slide 22 and the art example. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Section 3: Performance Measures General Description Identifies all performance measures, including name, purpose, type, and metric Articulates the administration and scoring details, including the reporting Note: Section 3 is based upon high-quality performance measures aligned to the targeted content standards Section 3 is about what structures/assessments a teacher will use to show movement within the SLO. It is very important that these measures closely reflect the standard being used for the SLO. 24 IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Performance Measures What performance measures (assessments) Key SLO Process Component: Performance Measures What performance measures (assessments) are appropriate to measure student learning of the standards? Here you can talk about data work hat has been done this year for tested areas versus non-tested subject areas that will need to find alternative assessments through local tests or projects that use a rubric for the assessment. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Performance Measures Consider your existing assessments: What assessments do you use in your classroom/school? Why do you use them? How could they work in your SLO? If your assessments do not work, what will you use to measure growth and/or mastery? Will you need to design an assessment? Ask teachers to think about assessments they already use as part of their daily practice. Is there an assessment you are already using that can provide data points for SLO measurement? Pre and post testing would not be sufficient data for this without other data points along the way. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Section 3: Art Example 3. 3a 3b 3c 3d This examples shows the use of three Performance measures (#1,2,and3) in 3a 3b addresses the type of PM that will be used 3c Describes the purpose as it connects to the standard(s) 3d Talks about the type of measurement that the SLO will use 3c 3d 27 IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Section 3: Art Example 3e 3f 3g 3h IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS Continue to describe the example. 3g 3h 28 IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Section 3: Art Example 3i 3j IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS Continue to describe the art example. 29 IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS The next three slide take teachers through putting information into section 3 on PA-ETEP. These are here for them to relate their handouts to what things will look like when they go online. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Section 4: Performance Indicators General Description Articulates targets for each Performance Measure Includes all students in the identified SLO group May include a focused student group Affords opportunity to link indicators and/or weighting This area will be used to discuss the various approaches that can be used as performance indicators for each SLO. 33 IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Common Growth Approach Student Baseline Target A 50 of 100 70 of 100 B 90 of 100 C 55 of 100 75 of 100 All will grow 20 points based on individual starting points. This allows for different levels of learners. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Mastery Approach Student Baseline Target A 3 of 10 7 of 10 B 2 of 10 C Growth to Mastery. Here all students must meet the final target from their individual starting points. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Half the Gap Approach Student Baseline Target A 10 of 100 55 of 100 B 100 total points- A: 100-10= 90 (gap) 45 is half the gap and 10+45=55 B: 100-75= 25 (gap) 12.5 or 13 is half the gap and 75+13= 88 C: 100-50= 50 (gap) 25 is half the gap and 50+25=75 IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Banded Approach Student Baseline Target A 8/10 (high) 10 of 10 B 3/10 (low) 7 of 10 Rank scores and group them High, Middle, Low- each band has a different target 1-3 low – must increase 4 points 4-5 middle- must increase 3 points 6-10 high- must increase 2 points IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Performance Indicators Key SLO Process Component: Performance Indicators Discuss the need to connect the performance measure with the performance indicator. Based on the performance measure, what are the expectations for individual student achievement? IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

4: Performance Indicator: What does Student Performance Look Like? Describes individual student performance expectation 4a. What performance measure(s) –tests, assessments– will be used to measure student achievement of the standards, and what’s the expected student achievement level based on the scoring system for those measures? 4b. What’s the expected achievement level for unique populations? (students who did not do well on a pre-test, etc.) 4: Performance Indicator: What does Student Performance Look Like? How will teachers frame their assessments and what results should they expect. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Section 4: Art Example 4. 4a 4b 4c 4d The performance indicators are described in 4a as shown. 4c 4d 40 IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS PA-ETEP view. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Section 5: Elective Rating General Description Identifies each level (Failing, Needs Improvement, Proficient, Distinguished) students are meeting the PI targets. Selects the overall SLO rating. Key Points for Trainers Teachers predict the % range of students that will reach their targets to determine whether the teacher is proficient. Ex. Set your target first – 80% of my students will reach benchmark to be proficient – WE WANT TO SEE GROWTH WITH ALL STUDENTS! 42 IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Elective Rating Key SLO Process Component: Describes the number of students expected to meet the performance indicator criteria. Example: Proficient 70% to 89% of students meet the performance indicator. We will all use the same numbers for section five. See next slide. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

You will need to type the percentages in each category as listed You will need to type the percentages in each category as listed. Everyone will use the same ranges for each category. Tell them to look at the bottom of their handouts for this same information. On PA-ETEP teachers will fill in the percentages. All teachers will use the same numbers for this year. This will be addressed on the next slides. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

CBSD 2014-15 SLO Articulations IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS The next slide will address specific requirements based on an agreement with the administration and CEA. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

Student Learning Objectives All teachers must complete 1 or 2 Student Learning Objectives. For the 14-15 year teachers will complete 1 to 3 performance measure (s) tied to their data results or LEA rubric. The performance measure(s) should be targeted to a specific standard within the content area and address one of the metric areas of Growth, Mastery, or Growth and Mastery. Highlights: 1 or 2 SLO’s 1-3 Performance Measures IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS

SLO Design Coherency GOAL STATEMENT PERFORMANCE MEASURES RATING PERFORMANCE MEASURES PERFORMANCE INDICATORS ALL STUDENTS TARGETED STUDENTS This is a nice slide to bring the process together. Remind teachers that they are encouraged to work together and that they copy examples that are available to them through the curriculum page under resources. Module 7-C4 Final

SLO Timeline SLO to be submitted for review by 1-30-15. Principals will review the SLO. Data collection can begin once approval has been received from the building principal. Electronic documents may be stored in your online folders. Review the process you have established for your building. IMT Orientation Draft 02Sept11-CS