Teacher-Leader Workshop July 14, 2003 Transforming East Alabama Mathematics East Alabama Partnership for the Improvement of Mathematics Education.

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Presentation transcript:

Teacher-Leader Workshop July 14, 2003 Transforming East Alabama Mathematics East Alabama Partnership for the Improvement of Mathematics Education

Small Groups… Please sit in groups of 4 including: –Representatives from different levels (primary, intermediate, middle, high school) –Representatives from different districts –Both dotted and non-dotted name badges

Overview of Session Introduction to the Partnership (Gary) Cooperative Learning (Marilyn) Roles of Teacher Leaders (Marilyn) Questioning (Gary) Final Reflection

Introduction to the Partnership

Partners Auburn University Tuskegee University Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama Macon County Opelika City Phenix City Russell County Tallapoosa County Tallassee City Alexander City Auburn City Chambers County Elmore County Lanett City Schools Lee County SCHOOL DISTRICTS

#1. Achievement Levels Our students are not achieving at an adequate level. There are substantial gaps in performance.

National Assessment of Educational Progress, 2000 Grade 4: – Alabama ranked 35 th out of 40 states –Significantly worse than 27 states Grade 8: –Alabama ranked 35th of 39 states –Significantly worse than 29 states

Comparison of East Alabama to State Averages (2002) Grade 4 (SAT-9) –State Average:56 –East Alabama:52 Grade 8 (SAT-9) –State Average:53 –East Alabama:47 Grade 11 (Pass rate on AHSGE) –State Average:79 –East Alabama:73

Comparison of Subgroups in East Alabama ( 2002 SAT-9) Grade 4 –White students: 61 –Black students: 39 –Fully-paid lunch: 66 –Free/reduced lunch:42 –General education: 56 –Special education: 14 Grade 8 –White students:55 –Black students: 35 –Fully-paid lunch: 58 –Free/reduced lunch:36 –General education:50 –Special education: 14

Comparison of Subgroups in East Alabama ( 2002 AHSGE Pass Rate) Grade 11 –White students: 81 –Black students: 62 –Fully-paid lunch: 79 –Free/reduced lunch:60 –General education: 75 –Special education: 34

#2. State Cycle for Mathematics Alabama Course of Study: Mathematics approved in February –No overlap in content –Many fewer objectives Result: It is particularly important that districts work on curriculum and pacing guides Textbook Adoption the coming year

#3. Teacher Preparation Shortage of mathematics teachers The additional “Highly Qualified” challenge Preparing more-effective new teachers

The Power of Partnership By pooling resources, we can accomplish more together than we can individually

Students Can Do Basics, %73% Source: NAEP – 38

… But Students Cannot Solve Problems Ms. Yost’s class has read 174 books, and Mr. Smith’s class has read 90 books. How many more books do they need to read to reach the goal of reading 575 books? Ms. Yost’s class has read 174 books, and Mr. Smith’s class has read 90 books. How many more books do they need to read to reach the goal of reading 575 books? 33% Source: NAEP 1996

Long-term NAEP Steady increases in basic skills since the 1970s However, there is a continuing “performance gap” in NAEP and other measures where students are asked to apply their knowledge The problem in mathematics education is NOT a lack of the “basic skills.”

How NOT to Make Progress… Focusing on raising test scores by “teaching to the test” results in only short- term gains (1-2 years) GOOD TEACHING Leads to Good Outcomes

Baltimore City Public School System CTBS Mathematics Composite Scores Median National Percentiles

A New Vision for School Mathematics National Council of Teachers of Mathematics: Principles and Standards for School Mathematics This is the basis for the Alabama Course of Study: Mathematics

Small Groups What are characteristics of this “New Vision”?

Characteristics of the Vision Designed to meet the needs of all students Engages students in making sense of mathematics— “inquiry based” Focuses on the usefulness of mathematics Includes a broad view of mathematics –More than arithmetic in elementary school –Attention to statistics and data analysis across the curriculum

TeachingAssessmentTechnology The Principles Describe particular features of high-quality mathematics programs SMALL GROUPS: Read the description of one of the principles in the Overview. EquityCurriculum Learning Learning

Statements of Principles The Equity Principle Excellence in mathematics education requires equity– high expectations and strong support for all students. The Curriculum Principle A curriculum is more than a collection of activities: it must be coherent, focused on important mathematics, and well articulated across the grades. The Teaching Principle Effective mathematics teaching requires understanding what students know and need to learn and then challenging and supporting them to learn it well.

Statements of Principles The Learning Principle Students must learn mathematics with understanding, actively building new knowledge from experience and prior knowledge. The Assessment Principle Assessment should support the learning of important mathematics and furnish useful information to both teachers and students. The Technology Principle Technology is essential in teaching and learning mathematics; it influences the mathematics that is taught and enhances students’ learning.

The Standards “Content Standards” Number and Operations AlgebraGeometryMeasurement Data Analysis and Probability “Process Standards” Problem Solving Reasoning and Proof CommunicationConnectionsRepresentation SMALL GROUPS: Look at the chart of Standards and Expectations for your gradeband.

Cooperative Learning

Organize cooperative groups

This problem is about using the digits 1, 2, 3, and 4, in any order you choose, to create arithmetic expressions with different numerical values according to the rules for order of operations. See handout for instructions. YOUR TASK: Create as many expressions as you can for each of the numbers from 1 to 25. Remember, you must use each of the digits 1, 2, 3, and 4 exactly once. ACTIVITY

Sharing of Responses

Questions Describe how your group worked on the activity. Describe within-group interactions. Did people explain things to one another? Did people ask questions of one another? What accounted for this level and degree of participation? Describe how the activity promoted individual accountability? Describe how the activity promoted mutual interdependence. Describe how the group formations affected the interactions within your group. Note: Questions were adapted from Artzt (1999), p. 13.

Characteristics Cooperative groups are a useful tool in promoting student learning and thinking. However, they need to be structured effectively.

Rules for Cooperative Learning Each member of the group has responsibility to contribute to the group work. Each member of the group should be willing to help any other member of the group who asks for help. Each member of the group is accountable for the learning progress of the group.

Rules for Cooperative Learning, Continued Within your group you will respect each other and listen to what each other has to say. When a question is asked of the group, each member should be able to answer the question and state what the group’s thoughts are. Each member of the group has a role.

Rules for Cooperative Learning, Continued Each member of the group has a role; –Group Facilitator ‘s role is to keep the group on task –Materials Manager’s role is to obtain, maintain, and return materials needed for the group to function. –Recorder’s role is to record all group activities and processes. –Reporter’s role is to report group processes and accomplishments to the teacher and/or the entire class.

Rules for Cooperative Learning, Continued You can only ask for help when all members of the group have the same question. Members of a group should speak in a voice that can only be heard by its members. Members of the group will be evaluated individually and collectively.

FAQ How many people should be placed in a group? –2-6 students depending on the nature of the activity. –4 students is the optimum number. How should I choose who should be in each group? –A teacher should carefully assign the members to each team. –Preferably the teams should be heterogeneously mixed based on ability, race/ethnicity and gender. –Teams of four could consist of a high achiever, a low achiever, and two average students unless there is a special reason for placing students of the same ability level together.

FAQ How long should a team stay together? –Teams should stay together from three to six weeks. –A team generally needs a couple of weeks to learn how to work together and deal with each others’ personalities. –Teams should be changed periodically so that students can experience working with a variety of students and that they will not get bored working with the same students all the time.

Kagan (1989) The Structural Approach to Cooperative Learning

Other Resources Tips for Using Cooperative Learning Groups Sample Scoring Rubric for Assessing Individual Students in a Cooperative Group Project Cooperative Learning Resources

How Do We Achieve the Vision?

Systemic Improvement of Mathematics Education Pay attention to the entire system –Teachers, administrators, the public Alignment is the key to success: –State Course of Study –Local Curriculum Guides –Assessment –Textbook Selection –Professional Development

Long-term Goals Improving mathematics achievement across partnership –Reducing gaps in performance between subpopulations of those students Increasing the content and pedagogical knowledge of teachers –Increasing the supply of qualified teachers –Developing mathematics teacher leaders

(continued) Increasing administrators’ understanding of mathematics goals and priorities Redesigning the preparation of teachers Aligning district curriculum, instructional materials, and assessment practices Improving parental and community understanding of mathematics education

Short-term Goals To begin to build the infrastructure needed to support the long-term, systemic improvement of mathematics education To take actions that can have an immediate impact on mathematics education

Initial Activities Professional development of mathematics teacher leaders Work on curriculum guides for each course and grade Review textbooks based on the curriculum guides to support district reviews

Curriculum Writing Team Goal: To create a workable curriculum guide for each course and grade that will guide instruction –Aligned with Principles and Standards, Course of Study, and other curriculum and policy documents –Responsive to assessments such as SAT-10, AHSGE, and NAEP –Emphasis on articulation across the grades –“It’s not just what you teach, it’s how you teach!”

Curriculum Team Progress Initial goals: –Develop the general scaffolding which will guide the further development of the Curriculum Guides –Develop sufficient detail to guide the textbook adoption process About 60 teachers and faculty have met eight times between April 30 and July 8 –Organized into four gradeband committees (K-2, 3-5, 6-8, 9-12)

Initial Curriculum Document Statement of intent for the document Mission statement Big ideas across grade-bands Mission statement for each gradeband Big ideas for each grade and course

Textbook Review Team Goal: To review textbooks that will support the TEAM-Math curriculum Three committees (K-5, 6-8, 9-12) –At least representative from each district on each committee, along with two university consultants Field-testing is being planned for early in the school year The committee will be formed late summer and meet through September/October.

Continuing Curriculum Development The team will reconvene after textbook selection is completed to produce a more-detailed guide, including: –A description of the guide, its philosophy of instruction, and how to use the guide –A developmental sequencing of big ideas and instructional objectives for both content and process outcomes –Units of instruction noting placement and duration as well as clustering and ordering of instructional objectives Sample tasks Correlation to textbooks by page number.

Other Activities Set up Advisory Board –Need nominations from districts and schools Briefings for parents and the community –Partnership-wide briefing for October –District briefings for October-November

What Does It Mean to Be A Teacher Leader? Dr. Marilyn Strutchens Auburn University

What are the roles and responsibilities of a leader? Think-pair-share (5 minutes) –Be prepared to report back to the full-group. Report back to the full group

Major Roles for Teacher Leaders Change Agent for Individual Teachers Change Agent for Groups of Teachers Vanguard for Reform Leadership Intermediary (Miller, 2003)

Change Agent for Individual Teachers Peer coach Co-teach Demonstration lesson PlanAdvise Debrief after observation

Change Agent for Groups of Teachers Design/deliver workshops Lead study groups Facilitate meetings among departments or grade levels

Vanguard for Reform Create awareness of reform agenda Provide existence proof of reform work –Engage teachers in discussions about the reform agenda Do demonstration lessons to show that materials work with teachers’ students

Leadership Intermediary Build leadership capacity in others –Design/develop training experiences for school-base teacher leaders –Consult with principals and administrators Collaborate with project leaders to help accomplish partnership goals –Reform mathematics teaching –Participate with Curriculum Team, Textbook Review Team, and other activities Work with District leadership to ensure that your district and school are represented at Partnership activities

Immediate Responsibilities Organize district and school inservice sessions promoting awareness of TEAM- Math Provide leadership with district textbook adoption and other district decision- making Participate with Curriculum Team, Textbook Review Team, and other activities

Professional Development for Teacher Leaders Teacher Leader Training: –Two days in July 2003 –Quarterly meetings on Saturdays throughout the year Join professional organizations and participate in professional meetings (ACTM, NCTM, etc.) Become familiar with resources supporting reform ( and so forth)

Russell and Schifter Article Read the article and discuss the following questions within your group. Be prepared to share your responses with the whole group. –What would you have done to change the atmosphere when the teachers who had negative views were dampening the excitement of other less confident participants? –How can you help to change teachers’ beliefs that they need quick activities from workshops? What would you do to help them value reading research related to teaching and learning? –What did you think of Laurie’s solution to her problem of having three different types of participants?

Our goal is for you to teach teachers how to become fisherman. We want you to help them think about and develop meaningful learning environments. We do not want you to get in the habit of just giving them lesson plans and activities.

Questioning

Why Ask Questions? Small group discussion Share back to the class

What Different Purposes Do Questions Serve? Small group discussion Share back to the class

Types of Questions Managing –“What are you working on?” Clarifying –“How did you get that?” Orienting –“What is this problem asking you to do?” Prompting Reflection –“How you explain why that works? Eliciting Mathematical Thinking/Justification –“Will that always work?”

The Tank Problem Solve the problem. Solve the problem a different way.

Video Population: –9 th grade geometry, mixed ability Context: –Beginning of third quarter (non-block) –They have studied area and volume of prisms –First period of the morning

Guiding Questions What role does the teacher play? How is it different from “usual” classes? What role does questioning play in his conduct of the class? What types of questions can you observe?

Good Questions for All Occasions Develop a list of good questions of each type. They should be general or generalizeable.

Issues Should you routinely call on particular students? Should you call on a student who might not know the answer? What if no one answers your questions? What if you’re not sure of the answer to your question?

Final Reflection

Individually… Write down: –Something interesting you learned today. –Something you still have questions about. –Something you will do in the future, based on the session today. Share responses with your group…