Download presentation
1
Systemwide Focus on Effective Instruction
Bill Daggett, Founder and Chairman February 21, 2014
2
Growing Gap School Improvement
3
Growing Gap Changing World School Improvement
4
Growing Gap Changing World School Improvement
5
Growing Gap School Improvement Changing World
6
Take Control or Be Controlled
7
System
13
Organizational Leadership
Culture Culture
14
Findings Culture Trumps Strategy
15
The Solution becomes the Problem
17
Questions
18
70%
19
Eligible for the Military
Lack High School Diploma Cannot Pass Basic Literacy Test Obesity Drugs Incarceration
20
-Is Increasing at 1% Per Year-
70% -Is Increasing at 1% Per Year-
21
70% Are they employable?
22
Are they headed to public assistance?
70% Are they headed to public assistance?
23
Population 1950 Male Female
24
Life Expectancy Vs. the Social Security Retirement Age
90 Female 85 Male 80 75 70 Retirement Age 65 60 Source: 2004 Annual Reports of the Board of Trustees of Social Security and Medicare
25
Birth Rates, Births Per 1,000 women ages 15-44 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 Source: National Center For Health Statistics Pew Research Center
26
Population Male Female
27
The Changing Landscape
Technology
28
Technology Shift Chip Processing Speed Memory Capacity Cloud
29
What is different here? Pope Francis Pope Benedict XVI FY 2005
Paul took over as CEO $ 5.6 B in rev (FY) 210 M 3G device shipment estimates (CY) 250M 3G connections Top handset models Moto, RIM, Nokia 2013 $24.5B – midpoint revenue guidance 1.05 B3G/4G device shipment estimates ~ 2.1 B 3G/4G connections Pope Benedict XVI Pope Francis
32
SmartWatch (Samsung, Sony, Apple)
33
SPOT Integrated Projection Projection Keyboard
34
Projection Keyboard
35
Projection Keyboard and Projector
36
On Line and Gaming
37
Findings Culture Trumps Strategy
Address today’s issues within context of emerging trend
38
Emerging Trends Career Ready
39
Well or Very Well Prepared
College Freshman Well or Very Well Prepared - High School Teachers % - College Instructors – 26% Source: ACT survey
40
Freshmen Needing Remediation
Two Year College – 51.7% Four Year College – 19.9%
41
College Retention Rate
2012 First to Second Year Two-Year Colleges – 55.5% Four-Year Colleges – 65.2% Source: ACT
42
College Dropout Rate 2012 First to Second Year
Two-Year Colleges – 44.5% Four-Year Colleges – 34.8% Source: ACT
43
Average Graduation Rate
Two-Year Colleges in 3 years – 29.1% Four-Year Colleges in 5 years – 36.6% Source: ACT
44
California 4 Year Public College
45
California 2 Year Public College
46
Career Ready
47
13 Million Americans are Unemployed
BUT 3.8 million jobs in the U.S. remain unfilled
48
College is a means to an end NOT the end
49
are jobless or underemployed
53.6% of Bachelor’s degree holders under 25 are jobless or underemployed Source: USDOL – March, 2013
50
Your Major Matters A LOT
51
Bachelor’s Degrees Business General Studies Social Science and History
Psychology Health Professions Education Visual and Performing Arts Engineering and Technology Communications and Journalism Computer and Information Science Source: National Center for Education Statistics
52
Bachelor’s–Competing Nations
Business (1) General Studies (10) Social Science and History (6) Psychology (9) Health Professions (4) Education (5) Visual and Performing Arts (8) Engineering and Technology (2) Communications and Journalism (7) Computer and Information Science (3) Source: National Center for Education Statistics
53
48% of employed 4-year college graduates are in jobs that require less than a 4-year degree
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
54
37% of employed 4-year college graduates are in jobs that require less than a high school diploma
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
55
Job Shares by Skill Group, 1980-2010
High-skill Upper-middle Lower-middle Low-skill Percent 100 80 60 40 20 12.7 18.9 47.1 21.3 16.2 25.4 37.7 20.7 1980 2010 2040 Sources: NY Fed Calculations, U.S. Census Bureau
56
Lost Jobs Telemarketers - 99% source: The Future of Employment
C. Frey and M. Osborne
57
Lost Jobs Telemarketers - 99% Secretarial/Adm. Assistant - 96%
source: The Future of Employment C. Frey and M. Osborne
58
Lost Jobs Telemarketers - 99% Secretarial/Adm. Assistant - 96%
Accountant/Auditors – 94% source: The Future of Employment C. Frey and M. Osborne
59
Lost Jobs Telemarketers - 99% Secretarial/Adm. Assistant - 96%
Accountant/Auditors – 94% Retail Salespersons – 92% source: The Future of Employment C. Frey and M. Osborne
60
Lost Jobs Telemarketers - 99% Secretarial/Adm. Assistant - 96%
Accountant/Auditors – 94% Retail Salespersons – 92% Technical Writers – 89% source: The Future of Employment C. Frey and M. Osborne
61
Lost Jobs Machinists – 65% source: The Future of Employment
C.Frey and M. Osborne
62
Lost Jobs Machinists – 65% Pilots – 55%
source: The Future of Employment C.Frey and M. Osborne
63
Lost Jobs Machinists – 65% Pilots – 55% Economist – 43%
source: The Future of Employment C.Frey and M. Osborne
64
Lost Jobs Machinists – 65% Pilots – 55% Economist – 43%
Health Technologists – 40% source: The Future of Employment C.Frey and M. Osborne
65
College Challenges Success of Graduates Cost
66
College tuition rates have increased on average at twice the rate of inflation in the past 17 years
Source: ACT
67
2012 college grad average loan debt was $26,600
Source: ACT
68
Percent Change Since January 1978
College Medicare Shelter Consume Price Index Food 1,200% 1,000% 800% 600% 400% 200% 1980 1990 2000 2010
69
The Growing Call For Career Ready
70
Systemwide Focus on Effective Instruction
Bill Daggett, Founder and Chairman February 21, 2014
71
System
77
Organizational Leadership
Culture Culture
79
Teaching Rigor and Relevance Rigor and Relevance
80
Emerging Trends Career Ready Focus on Application
81
Application Model Knowledge in one discipline
Application within discipline Application across disciplines Application to real-world predictable situations Application to real-world unpredictable situations
82
Poh, M.Z., Swenson, N.C., Picard, R.W.
4:00 PM 7:00 PM 9:00 PM 12:00 AM 3:00 AM 6:00 AM 9:00 AM 12:00 PM 3:00 PM
83
Knowledge Taxonomy Awareness Comprehension Application Analysis
Synthesis Evaluation
84
Levels Bloom’s C D A B 4 5 6 3 2 1 Application
85
Rigor/Relevance Framework
6 Analyze the graphs of the perimeters and areas of squares having different-length sides. Determine the largest rectangular area for a fixed perimeter. Identify coordinates for ordered pairs that satisfy an algebraic relation or function. Determine and justify the similarity or congruence for two geometric shapes. Obtain historical data about local weather to predict the chance of snow, rain, or sun during year. Test consumer products and illustrate the data graphically. Plan a large school event and calculate resources (food, decorations, etc.) you need to organize and hold this event. Make a scale drawing of the classroom on grid paper, each group using a different scale. D C 5 4 3 Calculate percentages of advertising in a newspaper. Tour the school building and identify examples of parallel and perpendicular lines, planes, and angles. Determine the median and mode of real data displayed in a histogram Organize and display collected data, using appropriate tables, charts, or graphs. Express probabilities as fractions, percents, or decimals. Classify triangles according to angle size and/or length of sides. Calculate volume of simple three- dimensional shapes. Given the coordinates of a quadrilateral, plot the quadrilateral on a grid. 2 A B 1 1 2 3 4 5
86
Rigor/Relevance Framework
6 Analyze the graphs of the perimeters and areas of squares having different-length sides. Determine the largest rectangular area for a fixed perimeter. Identify coordinates for ordered pairs that satisfy an algebraic relation or function. Determine and justify the similarity or congruence for two geometric shapes. Obtain historical data about local weather to predict the chance of snow, rain, or sun during year. Test consumer products and illustrate the data graphically. Plan a large school event and calculate resources (food, decorations, etc.) you need to organize and hold this event. Make a scale drawing of the classroom on grid paper, each group using a different scale. D Express probabilities as fractions, percents, or decimals. Classify triangles according to angle size and/or length of sides. Calculate volume of simple three- dimensional shapes. Given the coordinates of a quadrilateral, plot the quadrilateral on a grid. C 5 4 3 Calculate percentages of advertising in a newspaper. Tour the school building and identify examples of parallel and perpendicular lines, planes, and angles. Determine the median and mode of real data displayed in a histogram Organize and display collected data, using appropriate tables, charts, or graphs. 2 A B 1 1 2 3 4 5
87
Rigor/Relevance Framework
6 Analyze the graphs of the perimeters and areas of squares having different-length sides. Determine the largest rectangular area for a fixed perimeter. Identify coordinates for ordered pairs that satisfy an algebraic relation or function. Determine and justify the similarity or congruence for two geometric shapes. Calculate percentages of advertising in a newspaper. Tour the school building and identify examples of parallel and perpendicular lines, planes, and angles. Determine the median and mode of real data displayed in a histogram. Organize and display collected data, using appropriate tables, charts, or graphs. Obtain historical data about local weather to predict the chance of snow, rain, or sun during year. Test consumer products and illustrate the data graphically. Plan a large school event and calculate resources (food, decorations, etc.) you need to organize and hold this event. Make a scale drawing of the classroom on grid paper, each group using a different scale. D C 5 4 3 Express probabilities as fractions, percents, or decimals. Classify triangles according to angle size and/or length of sides. Calculate volume of simple three- dimensional shapes. Given the coordinates of a quadrilateral, plot the quadrilateral on a grid. 2 A B 1 1 2 3 4 5
88
Levels Bloom’s C D A B 4 5 6 3 2 1 Application
89
Quad D Skills and Knowledge
Decision Making Innovation/Creativity Goal Setting/Results Driven Multi Tasking Work with Others
90
Packed with high-rigor, high-relevance resources – and still growing
250 Next Generation Assessment Items 200 Model Lessons 2000 Lesson Starters (formerly Gold Seal Lessons) 300 Lesson Plans Thousands of additional resources – white papers, videos, courses, tech bulletins, case studies. Available for purchase as a site license (school-wide or district-wide) Visit leadered.com/nextpert
92
Instructional Leadership
High Expectations High expectations
93
Interquartile Ranges Shown (25% - 75%)
Reading Study Summary Interquartile Ranges Shown (25% - 75%) 1600 1400 1200 Text Lexile Measure (L) 1000 800 600 High School Literature College Literature High School Textbooks College Textbooks Military Personal Use Entry-Level Occupations SAT 1, ACT, AP* * Source of National Test Data: MetaMetrics
94
Grade 4 Reading Proficiency
TN 170 MA 234 CA 202
95
Grade 4 Reading Proficiency
TN 170 MA 234 CA 202 (210)
96
Grade 8 Reading Proficiency
MO 267 CA 259 TX 201
97
Grade 8 Reading Proficiency
MO 267 (262) CA 259 TX 201
98
Grade 4 Math Proficiency
TN 195 MA 255 CA 220
99
Grade 4 Math Proficiency
TN 195 MA 255 CA 220 (231)
101
Organizational Leadership
Structure and Systems Vision Culture
102
Criteria Foundation Learning (Achievement in the core subjects of English language arts, math and science and others identified by the school)
103
Criteria Foundation Learning (Achievement in the core subjects of English language arts, math and science and others identified by the school) Stretch Learning (Demonstration of rigorous and relevant learning beyond the minimum requirements)
104
Criteria Foundation Learning (Achievement in the core subjects of English language arts, math and science and others identified by the school) Stretch Learning (Demonstration of rigorous and relevant learning beyond the minimum requirements) Student Engagement (The extent to which students are motivated and committed to learning; have a sense of belonging and accomplishment; and have relationships with adults, peers, and parents that support learning)
109
Criteria Foundation Learning (Achievement in the core subjects of English language arts, math and science and others identified by the school) Stretch Learning (Demonstration of rigorous and relevant learning beyond the minimum requirements) Student Engagement (The extent to which students are motivated and committed to learning; have a sense of belonging and accomplishment; and have relationships with adults, peers, and parents that support learning) Personal Skill Development (Measures of personal, social, service, and leadership skills and demonstrations of positive behaviors and attitudes)
110
Guiding Principles Responsibility Contemplation Initiative
Perseverance Optimism Courage Respect Compassion Adaptability Honesty Trustworthiness Loyalty
111
Learning Criteria Foundation Learning (Achievement in the core subjects of English language arts, math and science, and others identified by the school) Stretch Learning (Demonstration of rigorous and relevant learning beyond the minimum requirements) Learner Engagement (The extent to which students are motivated and committed to learning; have a sense of belonging and accomplishment; and have relationships with adults, peers, and parents that support learning) Personal Skill Development (Measures of personal, social, service, and leadership skills and demonstrations of positive behaviors and attitudes)
112
Rubrics
113
Survey Tools for Rigor, Relevance and Relationships
We Learn Student Survey We Teach Instructional Staff Survey We Lead Whole Staff Survey
114
Teacher vs. Student Comparison
T – Students can apply what I am teaching to their everyday lives. 92% S – I can apply what I learn to my everyday life. 58%
115
Teacher vs. Student Comparison
T – Students in my classroom engage in hands-on activities. 88% S – We do lots of hands-on activities in my classes. 45%
116
Teacher vs. Student Comparison
T – I make learning exciting for my students. 84% S – My teachers make learning exciting. 40%
117
Teacher vs. Student Comparison
T – I recognize students when they demonstrate positive behavior in school. 95% S – Good citizenship is rewarded in this school. 40%
118
Organizational Leadership
Structure and Systems Structure and systems Vision Culture
119
Organizational Changes
Looping
120
Organizational Changes
Looping Interdisciplinary Chairs
121
Organizational Changes
Looping Interdisciplinary Chairs 9th Grade Electives
122
Organizational Leadership
Build Leadership Structure and systems Build leadership Vision Culture
123
Top-down support for bottom-up success
124
Empower Leadership Teams
125
Organizational Leadership Selection, Support, Evaluation
Structure and systems Build leadership Selection, support, evaluation Vision Culture
126
Organizational Leadership Selection, Support, Evaluation
Structure and systems Build leadership Selection, support, evaluation Vision Culture
127
Organizational Leadership
Data Systems Structure and systems Build leadership Selection, support, evaluation Vision Data systems Culture
128
Lexile Framework® - Student Profile
1600 1600 1400 1400 1200 1200 Text Lexile Measure (L) 1000 1000 800 800 600 600 1st Quarter Matt 2nd Quarter High School Literature 3rd Quarter College Literature 4th Quarter High School Literature High School Textbooks College Textbooks High School Textbooks Military Personal Use Military Entry-Level Occupations Entry-Level Occupations SAT 1, ACT, AP* SAT 1, ACT, AP* College Textbooks Personal Use College Literature * Source of National Test Data: MetaMetrics
129
Learning Criteria Foundation Learning (Achievement in the core subjects of English language arts, math and science, and others identified by the school) Stretch Learning (Demonstration of rigorous and relevant learning beyond the minimum requirements) Learner Engagement (The extent to which students are motivated and committed to learning; have a sense of belonging and accomplishment; and have relationships with adults, peers, and parents that support learning) Personal Skill Development (Measures of personal, social, service, and leadership skills and demonstrations of positive behaviors and attitudes)
130
Rubrics
131
Survey Tools for Rigor, Relevance and Relationships
We Learn Student Survey We Teach Instructional Staff Survey We Lead Whole Staff Survey
133
Instructional Leadership
High Expectations High expectations
135
Instructional Leadership
Curriculum Curriculum High expectations
136
Instructional Leadership
Literacy and Math Literacy and math Curriculum High expectations
137
Instructional Leadership
Data-driven Literacy and math Data-driven Curriculum High expectations
138
Instructional Leadership Provide Professional Growth
Literacy and math Data-driven Curriculum Provide professional growth High expectations
141
Teaching Rigor and Relevance Rigor and Relevance
142
Levels Bloom’s C D A B 4 5 6 3 2 1 Application
143
Standards D C A B
144
Assessments D C A B
145
Teaching Relationships Relationships Rigor and Relevance
146
Rigor/Relevance Framework
D C 3 A B Calculate with numbers, including decimals, ratios, percents, and fractions. Understand two-dimensional motion and trajectories by separating the motion of an object into x and y components. 2 1 1 2 3 4 5
147
Rigor/Relevance Framework
D C 3 A B Know the characteristics and phenomena of sound waves and light waves. Understand the effect of sounds, words, and imagery on a listening audience. 2 1 1 2 3 4 5
148
Teaching Content Content Relationships Rigor and Relevance
149
Teaching How Students Learn How students learn Content Relationships
Rigor and Relevance
150
Levels Bloom’s C D A B 4 5 6 3 2 1 Application
151
D C A B
152
LEARN to DO
153
D C A B
154
LEARN to DO vs. DO to LEARN
155
Instructional Strategies
Teaching Instructional Strategies How students learn Content Instructional strategies Relationships Rigor and Relevance
156
Take off the plate
157
HOW Take off the plate Quad D lessons Quad D assessments
Focused and Sustained Professional Development
158
Instructional Strategies
Teaching Instructional Strategies How students learn Content Instructional strategies Relationships Rigor and Relevance
159
Assessment to Guide Instruction
Teaching Assessment to Guide Instruction How students learn Content Instructional strategies Relationships Assessment to guide instruction Rigor and relevance
160
Conference Model Schools 22nd Annual June 22 – June 25 |Orlando, FL
161
Doctor Pilot
162
ACTION ITEMS Create a Culture
163
ACTION ITEMS Create a Culture Address both Rigor and Relevance for
for ALL Students
164
ACTION ITEMS Create a Culture Address both Rigor and Relevance for
for ALL Students Focus on Literacy
165
ACTION ITEMS Create a Culture Address both Rigor and Relevance for
for ALL Students Focus on Literacy Needs Assessment – 20 Day Plan
166
20 Day Plans
167
ACTION ITEMS Create a Culture Address both Rigor and Relevance for
for ALL Students Focus on Literacy Needs Assessment – 20 Day Plan Support your Teachers - Nextpert
168
CA STAR / CAHSEE English LA Benchmarks Tested
169
Packed with high-rigor, high-relevance resources – and still growing
250 Next Generation Assessment Items 200 Model Lessons 2000 Lesson Starters (formerly Gold Seal Lessons) 300 Lesson Plans Thousands of additional resources – white papers, videos, courses, tech bulletins, case studies. Available for purchase as a site license (school-wide or district-wide) Visit leadered.com/nextpert
170
ACTION ITEMS Create a Culture Address both Rigor and Relevance for
for ALL Students Focus on Literacy Needs Assessment – 20 Day Plan Support your Teachers – Nextpert Model Schools Conference
171
Model Schools Conference
22nd Annual Model Schools Conference Focusing on the end goal: preparing all students for successful futures Taking control rather than being controlled by the short term agenda Preparing teachers to provide rigorous and relevant instruction for higher standards Strategically using technology to maximize the learning experience for all students Using data to monitor improvement efforts and adjust course nimbly for maximum impact Register Today!
172
Doctor
173
Systemwide Focus on Effective Instruction
Bill Daggett, Founder and Chairman February 21, 2014
174
System
180
Organizational Leadership
Culture Culture
181
The Changing Landscape
Technology Financial
182
The Changing Landscape
Technology Financial Globalization
184
The Changing Landscape
Technology Financial Globalization Demographics
185
Model Schools Conference
22nd Annual Model Schools Conference Focusing on the end goal: preparing all students for successful futures Taking control rather than being controlled by the short term agenda Preparing teachers to provide rigorous and relevant instruction for higher standards Strategically using technology to maximize the learning experience for all students Using data to monitor improvement efforts and adjust course nimbly for maximum impact Register Today!
186
ACTION ITEMS Create a Culture Address both Rigor and Relevance for
for ALL Students Focus on Literacy Needs Assessment – 20 Day Plan Support your Teachers – Nextpert Model Schools Conference
187
ACTION ITEMS Create a Culture Address both Rigor and Relevance for
for ALL Students Focus on Literacy Needs Assessment – 20 Day Plan Support your Teachers - Nextpert
188
ACTION ITEMS Create a Culture Address both Rigor and Relevance for
for ALL Students Focus on Literacy Needs Assessment – 20 Day Plan
189
ACTION ITEMS Create a Culture Address both Rigor and Relevance for
for ALL Students Focus on Literacy
190
ACTION ITEMS Create a Culture Address both Rigor and Relevance for
for ALL Students
191
ACTION ITEMS Create a Culture
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.