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N E P F N evada E ducator P erformance F ramework Southern Nevada Regional Professional Development Program www.rpdp.net Standard 2 Part 2 Secondary Mathematics.

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Presentation on theme: "N E P F N evada E ducator P erformance F ramework Southern Nevada Regional Professional Development Program www.rpdp.net Standard 2 Part 2 Secondary Mathematics."— Presentation transcript:

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2 N E P F N evada E ducator P erformance F ramework Southern Nevada Regional Professional Development Program www.rpdp.net Standard 2 Part 2 Secondary Mathematics

3 Standard 2 Module for Mathematics Part 1 – What and Why Goal 1: What is Standard 2? Goal 2: What are the indicators for Standard 2? Part 2 – Implications for Mathematics Goal 3: What activities/instruction in the classroom would provide evidence of this standard? Goal 4: What specific plans can be designed to implement this standard?

4 NEPF: 5 High Leverage Instructional Standards and Indicators

5 Standard 2: Learning tasks have high cognitive demand for diverse learners

6 NEPF: Evidence Indicators

7 Main sources of evidence include: Mandatory Direct evaluator observation Plus at least one from other sources Other Sources Teacher pre/post conference Lesson plans Student classroom interviews Student work Student feedback (e.g., survey, writing) Teacher notes

8 Demonstrating Evidence LOOK FORSLISTEN FORS In teacher planning: What are the understandings teachers have about their students that guide the planning of lessons? In class (teacher talk): How are students engaged according to the indicators? In student work: What is the quality and depth of the work students are doing in the lesson? In class (student talk): How are students interacting, responding and engaged in the tasks and activities?

9 Historically…. ….teachers have used a one- size-fits-all approach to deliver instruction. Every student heard and did the same thing.

10 OUR TEACHER HAS AN INTERESTING THEORY…. HE SAYS TEACHING IS LIKE BOWLING ALL YOU DO IS ROLL THE BALL DOWN THE MIDDLE AND HOPE YOU AFFECT MOST OF THE STUDENTS HE MUST BE A TERRIBLE BOWLER!

11 Animal School http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QJeyNywDxPc

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13 Today... Effective teachers must adjust to address student differences. We must design tasks and implement research-based strategies that motivate all students to learn and maximize student achievement.

14 Learning Pyramid Let’s take a look at research-based strategies that are used in classrooms and see how they affect our students’ memory retention rates.

15 Discussion Teaching Others Lecture Demonstration Audiovisual Reading Practice Doing Using the provided list identify the least effective teaching method and place it at the top of the pyramid. Place the most effective teaching method at the base of the pyramid.

16 The Learning Pyramid Teach Others Lecture Practice Doing Discussion Demonstration Audiovisual Reading Passive Learning Active Learning

17 While the standard is not negotiable, the road to it is.

18 How do we design instructional strategies (learning tasks) in a way that we create high cognitive demand for diverse learners?

19 Small changes may have… great impact on learning!

20 Video PIANO STAIRS http://search.yahoo.com/search;_ylt=AgI4hVeoMI 8XJUFpiba4bU.bvZx4?p=fun+theory&toggle=1&cop =mss&ei=UTF-8&fr=yfp-t-171 http://search.yahoo.com/search;_ylt=AgI4hVeoMI 8XJUFpiba4bU.bvZx4?p=fun+theory&toggle=1&cop =mss&ei=UTF-8&fr=yfp-t-171

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22 We can change the way we address... CONTENT: What students learn PROCESS/ACTIVITIES: Strategies through which students makes sense of understandings and skills PRODUCTS: How students demonstrate and extend what they have learned LEARNING ENVIRONMENT: Varied resources and flexible grouping structures

23 Based on the student’s... READINESS: Pace of learning, dependence on the teacher or independence INTERESTS: What the students enjoy LEARNING PROFILE: Learning preference, multiple intelligence preferences

24 Let’s Look at Alternative Avenues for Active Learning Teach Others Lecture Practice Doing Discussion Demonstration Audiovisual Reading Passive Learning Active Learning Cooperative learning activities Peer Teaching Explaining concepts Projects Demonstrating solutions

25 Alternate avenues: Mix whole group/small group/independent instruction Use learning modes (auditory, visual kinesthetic) to present content Create learning centers representing varied ability groups to reteach ideas different learning styles CCSS Mathematical Practices

26 Provide activities that have students… Identify similarities and differences Summarize and take notes Create visual representation Use cooperative learning Apply graphic organizers and cues Alternate avenues: (continued)

27 Modify by giving students choice where possible Journal topics/writing topics Varied graphic organizers Working alone or together Tiered assignments/assessment Centers/stations Projects Student presentations Games

28 Explore specific activities that allow choices: Menus Tic Tac Toe RAFT Jigsaws... See Resources List

29 Given conditions Unique Strategy Unique solution Various Strategies Unique solution Various solutions Given conditions “Traditional” “Open Middled” “Open ended”

30 Rewriting Questions A total of thirteen bicycles and tricycles traveled past my window today. Together they had a total of 31 wheels. How many were bicycles and how many were tricycles? I saw at least one bicycle and at least one tricycle travel past my window today. I saw 31 wheels altogether. What are some combinations of vehicles that might have passed by my window?

31 Rewriting Questions Jack bought these items at the grocery store: 1 loaf of bread for $1.26, 2 pounds of apples at $0.59 per pound, and 3 cans of cat food for $0.33 per can. How much did the purchase cost? Jack needs bread, apples, and cat food. Bread costs $1.26 per loaf, apples cost $0.59 per pound, and cat food costs $0.33 per can. Jack only has $10.00. What are some combinations of purchases that Jack can make?

32 Nevada Academic Content Standards include the 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.

33 Resources for NEPF Standard 2 can be found at www.rpdp.net Math > High School or Middle School

34 Take a moment… Think of one change you could make that would incorporate more “ Active Learning ”.

35 For additional NEPF resources rpdp.net Select NEPF


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