CONNECTOR: THREE TYPES OF PROFESSIONAL PRACTICE. CONNECTOR Outcome: Develop YOUR OWN understanding of the Instructional Framework Elements and begin to.

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Presentation transcript:

CONNECTOR: THREE TYPES OF PROFESSIONAL PRACTICE

CONNECTOR Outcome: Develop YOUR OWN understanding of the Instructional Framework Elements and begin to visualize what this looks like in practice to build the foundation for a Growth Mindset.

CONNECTOR Three Types of Professional Practice 1. Automaticity 2.Flow 3. Deliberate Practice

Three Types of Professional Practice Automaticity: occurs with a tasked carried out with minimal mental effort, possibly without thought Ok for routines and management stuff Not a great practice for instruction/learning Examples that can occur in the classrooms: spelling, vocab, math facts, calling on students

Three Types of Professional Practice Flow: engage in activities of which you are skilled at. The level of challenge perfectly matches the skills, training, strengths, and resources you possess. high level of performance often lose track of time

Three Types of Professional Practice Deliberate Practice: continually challenging yourself. You are on the edge of comfort and failure with the challenge. engaging in constant pursuit of excellence and growth

CONNECTOR Task: Create an analogy of these three types of Professional Practice Automaticity Flow Deliberate Practice Be prepared to share out with the group

SUPPORTING THE INSTRUCTIONAL FRAMEWORK

Supporting The Instructional Framework Outcome: Build YOUR OWN understanding of the Instructional Framework Elements and start to visualize what this looks like in practice.

Supporting The Instructional Framework

Generate a list of strategies/techniques that could be used for the element. Brainstorm how these strategies/techniques could be used with our current resources. Ideas are available in the Marzano books. “Teaching with Technology excerpt” is copied and stapled to your sheet. Be specific – another pair will use your receive your sheet for the second part of the activity.

BREAK PLEASE BRING YOUR ELEMENT PACKET TO THE FRONT OF THE ROOM

Supporting The Instructional Framework Choose a content area and lesson objective. Using a strategy/technique from the front page – identify what this element could look like at the four levels.

Supporting The Instructional Framework Thoughts to consider: The scale is vague – your work is thinking deeply about what does this actually look like in classroom at each level using a selected strategy/technique. There is not a right or wrong answer. This is an exercise you and a teacher will eventually do together around his/her selected element. It does not need to be a different strategy for each level. For example – Beginning: KWL, Developing: Anticipation Guide, Applying: Preview Question. Instead think about how a KWL chart may be an example of all four levels – but it is how it is used that changes the level of implementation. “Coaching Classroom Instruction” book provides examples at each level for every element.

Closing: Before Next Time Before next time – capture a classroom video (maximum 3 minutes). Be prepared to discuss which element this video represents.

THANK YOU FOR ALL YOU DO!