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Transitioning to Common Core One Step At A Time
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Introductions Patty Sweet psweet@alcaweb.org (Cell) 580-744-0611
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“Identify Problems – Look for Solutions” “Wouldn’t it be nice if…?”
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New Initiatives More work! More time! More meetings!
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Why are New Initiatives a Problem? There is never enough time. There is never enough funding. There is never adequate guidance. And now, there are simply too many projects to manage efficiently and effectively.
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Discussion Discussion Process offers the Opportunity to Reflect and Share Elbow Partner (Paired-Reflection) Table Talk (Consensus) Group-Team (Shared Belief-Requires a Reporter) Partner-Outside-Your-Team (Quick-Break)
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Establishing Common Routines Call back signals… “Focus on Me Please” Silent “Five”
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Discussion Topics The collective consequences of too much, too soon, too fast… What questions do you have…
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School Improvement - Random School Improvement
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Vision, Mission, Purpose -Focused School Improvement
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Synergy – Focus Together! School Transformation
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Synergy Defined Cooperative interaction among groups, especially among the acquired subsidiaries or merged parts of a corporation, that creates an enhanced combined effect. A mutually advantageous conjunction or compatibility of distinct business participants or elements (as resources or efforts)
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The Question? Do I focus my energy on teaching to the test? Do I focus on teaching real-life application aligned to the world of work?
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Don’t be successful at the wrong thing? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBfHofVAy0c &feature=related
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Narrow Your Focus Integration of Effective Teaching Strategies and Brain-based Strategies
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Literacy Strategies for Every Content Area Building Academic Vocabulary Before-During-After Reading Guides Graphic Organizers Note-taking Formal and Informal Writing Assignments Cooperative Learning
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"The illiterate of the future are not those that cannot read or write. They are those that can not learn, unlearn, relearn." -Alvin Toffler (Futurist/Author)
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Learning Goal Today Develop a COMMON vocabulary, COMMON purpose, COMMON vision to communicate and collaborate efficiently and effectively as highly functioning, state- and district-wide teams.
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Big Idea for CCSS Sustained rigorous curriculum which is aligned to standards, assessment, and instruction requires highly functioning, inter-disciplinary, district-wide teams.
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Before-During-After Reading Guides/Strategies KWL – Strategy KnowWhat to KnowLearned
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Combination Notes TOPIC 1)Write informal notes here Use this portion to: draw examples, make connections (aha!) thoughts, collect questions Write your conclusions or summarize here
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Look Deeper
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Define Rigorous Google it…
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Rigorous by Definition According to American Heritage Dictionary http://education.yahoo.com/reference/dictionary/entry/rigorous Rigorous: ADJECTIVE 1.Characterized by or acting with rigor: a rigorous program to restore physical fitness. 2.Full of rigors; harsh: a rigorous climate. 3.Rigidly accurate; precise. See Synonyms at burdensome.
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SREB – TCTW National Forum January 2010
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Rigor Defined Rigor refers to a level of difficulty and the ways in which students apply their knowledge through higher-order thinking skills. …the reaching for a higher level of quality in both effort and outcome. Larry Ainsworth Rigorous Curriculum Design, 2010
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Rigorous Curriculum A rigorous curriculum is an inclusive set of intentionally aligned components – clear learning outcomes with matching assessments, engaging learning experiences, and instructional strategies – organized into sequenced units of study. Larry Ainsworth Rigorous Curriculum Design, 2010
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Address the Components of Rigor Explore the synergy of: Higher Order Thinking Problem-Solving Depth of Knowledge Rigor, Relevance, & Relationship
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Analyze and Evaluate Rigor Criteria for Complex Teaching and Learning Matrix adapted from: Benjamin Bloom's Taxonomy Norman Webb's Depth of Knowledge William Daggett's Rigor, Relevance, & Relationship L. W. Trowbridge’s Five E Teaching/Learning Cycle
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Rigorous Curriculum A rigorous curriculum serves as both the detailed road map and the high-quality delivery system for ensuring that all students achieve the desired end: the attainment of their designated grade- or course-specific standards within a particular content area. Larry Ainsworth Rigorous Curriculum Design, 2010
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Analyze and Evaluate Rigor Criteria for Complex Teaching and Learning Matrix adapted from: Benjamin Bloom's Taxonomy Norman Webb's Depth of Knowledge William Daggett's Rigor, Relevance, & Relationship L. W. Trowbridge’s Five E Teaching/Learning Cycle
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Knowledge and Critical Thinking Create 6 Evaluate 5 Analyze 4 Apply 3 Understand 2 Remember 1 Benjamin Bloom Revised
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Create 6 Evaluate 5 Analyze 4 Apply 3 Understand 2 Remember 1 DOK 4 Extended Thinking DOK 3 Short-Term Strategic Thinking DOK 2 Skills & Concepts DOK 1 Recall & Reproduction Norman Webb Depth of Knowledge (DOK)
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Create 6 Evaluate 5 Analyze 4 Apply 3 Understand 2 Remember 1 DOK 4 Extended Thinking 0% DOK 3 Strategic Thinking 15% DOK 2 Skills & Concepts 60% DOK 1 Recall & Reproduction 25% Norman Webb Depth of Knowledge (DOK) 3-5 Grade OCCT
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Create 6 Evaluate 5 Analyze 4 Apply 3 Understand 2 Remember 1 DOK 4 Extended Thinking 0% DOK 3 Short-term Strategic Thinking 25% DOK 2 Skills & Concepts 60% DOK 1 Recall & Reproduction 15% Norman Webb Depth of Knowledge (DOK) 6-8 Grade OCCT
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Create 6 Evaluate 5 Analyze 4 Apply 3 Understand 2 Remember 1 William Daggett Rigor/Relevance Framework 1 Knowledge in one discipline 2 Apply knowledge in one discipline 3 Apply knowledge across disciplines 4 Apply knowledge in real- world predictable situations 5 Apply knowledge in real-world unpredictable situations Application PROBLEM SOLVING SKILLS
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Create 6 Quadrant C Assimilation Quadrant D Adaption Evaluate 5 Analyze 4 Apply 3 Quadrant A Application Quadrant B Application Understand 2 Remember 1 William Daggett Rigor/Relevance Framework 1 Knowledge in one discipline 2 Apply knowledge in one discipline 3 Apply knowledge across disciplines 4 Apply knowledge in real- world predictable situations 5 Apply knowledge in real-world unpredictable situations Application PROBLEM SOLVING SKILLS
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Create 6 Requires Student to THINK In Complex Ways (analyze, compare, create, and evaluate) Requires Student to THINK and WORK (student-centered learning work is inter-disciplinary ) Evaluate 5 Analyze 4 Apply 3 Focus On Teacher Doing The WORK (Teacher creates and grades learning activities-student is a passive learner) Emphasis on STUDENT Doing Real-World WORK (takes time for students to complete work) Understand 2 Remember 1 William Daggett Rigor/Relevance Framework 1 Knowledge in one discipline 2 Apply knowledge in one discipline 3 Apply knowledge across disciplines 4 Apply knowledge in real- world predictable situations 5 Apply knowledge in real-world unpredictable situations Application PROBLEM SOLVING SKILLS
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Create 6 ELABORATE/EVALUATE Analyze Data/Draw Conclusions EVALUATE/EXTEND Accept or Reject your Hypothesis Recommendation beyond the experiment Evaluate 5 Analyze 4 Apply 3 ENGAGE/EXPLORE Observation/Hypothesis EXPLAIN/ELABORATE Design and Carry out your Experiment Understand 2 Remember 1 L.W. Trowbridge, 5E’s Model: Engage Explore Explain Elaborate Evaluate 1 Knowledge in one discipline 2 Apply knowledge in one discipline 3 Apply knowledge across disciplines 4 Apply knowledge in real-world predictable situations 5 Apply knowledge in real-world unpredictable situations Application PROBLEM SOLVING SKILLS
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Create 6 Quadrant C Assimilation DOK 3 ELABORATE/EVALUATE Analyze Data/Draw Conclusions Requires Student to Think In Complex Ways (analyze, compare, create, and evaluate) Quadrant D Adaptation DOK 4 EVALUATE/EXTEND Accept or Reject your Hypothesis Recommendation beyond the experiment Requires Student to Think and Work (student-centered learning: interdisciplinary) Evaluate 5 Analyze 4 Apply 3 Quadrant A Application DOK 1 ENGAGE/EXPLORE Observation/Hypothesis Focus On Teacher Doing The Work Quadrant B Application DOK 2 EXPLAIN/ELABORATE Design and Carry out your Experiment Emphasis on Student Doing Real-World Work (takes time for students to complete work) Understand 2 Remember 1 Adapted from: *Bloom Revised *Webb DOK *Daggett Rigor & Relevance *Trowbridge 5Es Model 1 Knowledge in one discipline 2 Apply knowledge in one discipline 3 Apply knowledge across disciplines 4 Apply knowledge in real-world predictable situations 5 Apply knowledge in real-world unpredictable situations Application PROBLEM SOLVING SKILLS
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Effective Instructional Strategies Brainstorm Cooperative Learning Demonstration Discourse Guided Practice Inquiry Instructional Technology Lecture Memorization Note-taking/Graphic Organizers Presentations/Exhibition Problem-based Learning Project Design Research Simulation/Role-playing Socratic Seminar Teacher Questioning Work-based Learning
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Effective Instructional Strategies Brainstorm Cooperative Learning Demonstration * Discourse (Reflection) Guided Practice Inquiry (Question) Instructional Technology Lecture Memorization Note-taking/Graphic Organizers Presentations/Exhibition Problem-based Learning Project Design Research Simulation/Role-playing Socratic Seminar Teacher Questioning Work-based Learning
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The Power of Vocabulary For Educators and Students
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Learner Responsibility
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FIDELITY OF IMPLEMENTATION Accountability Trustworthines s Commitment ResponsibilityConsistency Stability Uniformity
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“The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again expecting different results.” – Albert Einstein
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