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Introduction to Surveys of Enacted Curriculum Presentation: Introduce SEC to Educators [Enter place and date]
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Think for a moment about the curriculum work in your school or district
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What are the SEC? Practical, reliable set of data collection tools used by teachers Online web-based surveys in Mathematics, English Language Arts, and Science Group data that is reported in user-friendly charts Assists in Facilitating group discussions for observed differences across classrooms, schools and districts
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Click to add your state Add your state purpose here and important dates
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Alignment as a Systemic Tool Classroom Content
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SEC History Lesson The Surveys of Enacted Curriculum (SEC) Collaborative Project was initiated in 1998 in Mathematics and Science. Over the past six years the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) and their partners have worked with states to implement the SEC tools for data collection, analysis, and reporting.
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History (continued ) In 2003, CCSSO working with state specialists, Learning Point Associates™ (LPA) and the Wisconsin Center for Educational Research (WCER), developed an English Language Arts and Reading survey. Surveys are available K-12 for Mathematics, Science, and English Language Arts and Reading.
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Steps in SEC Development Research on course content, Porter/Smithson, early ‘90s Surveys: TIMSS, NAEP, Weiss/Nat S/M Survey States development of content standards, mid '90s CCSSO Science Assessment project--Opportunity to Learn items State Collaborative: 11 states '98-'01 (NSF grant) Development of SEC Survey models in M/S, Alignment analysis Use of SEC data in PD, experimental design study, 40 urban middle schools, '01-04 English Language Arts/reading survey, developed '02-04 Evaluation of PD study: 5 M/S Partnerships/NSF, '02 – 05 Current projects: 18 States, 4 Districts, 5 MSPs
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www.ccsso.org/SEC/products SEC Research
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— Carl Glickman, 2002 Research has found that faculty in successful schools always question existing instructional practice and do not blame lack of student achievement on external causes.
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What if… … there was a powerful tool that compared teacher’s reflected instructional practices to other teacher’s across a school, district or the nation? … a powerful tool compared teacher’s reflections of content instruction to state standards, benchmarks and assessments? … you could start powerful school discussions about teacher’s curricular and professional development needs based on data, observed differences between student achievement scores and schools curriculum?
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Education Improvement Questions Collecting Data: How can in-depth subject content data be collected -not simple topic checklists- to analyze teaching content in relation to curriculum goals, standards, or assessments? Analyzing Data: How can methods of teaching/ practices be compared across classrooms, schools, districts, and states? Using Data: And, how can the data then be used to improve instruction toward standards? Source: Maine SEC Project PPT, 2004
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Enacted (3 rd Grade Teacher Reports)Intended (3 rd Grade Math Indicators)
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Enacted (3 rd Grade Teacher Reports)Intended (3 rd Grade Math Indicators)
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Intended (3-4 Math Benchmarks)Assessed (3 rd Grade Math Achievement Test)
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Enacted (9 th Grade Teacher Reports)Intended (9 th Grade Indicators)
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Reading First: 3 rd Grade TeachersRandom Sample: 3 rd Grade Teachers
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SEC Project Planning Guide
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Take a Guided Tour www.seconline.org
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Taking the Online Survey Approximately 60-90 minutes to complete May be completed in multiple sittings Data is saved as each section is submitted
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SEC Home Page
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Registration
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Username and Password = Confidentiality
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User Information Agreement
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SEC Survey Selection
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Reminders to Teachers
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Survey Menu
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Survey Instruments: Teachers Teacher Characteristics –Teacher Readiness –Professional Development Experiences –Influences on Curriculum –Teacher Beliefs Class Description Source: CCSSO- PPT: An introduction to Understanding and Assessing SEC Data, 2005
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School and Class Description
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ELA Content Sections
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Math Content Sections
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Survey Instrument: Alignment Subject Content Student Specific Topics Time Spent on Topic & Student Expectations
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Instructional Content: Part 1
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Instructional Content: Part 2
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Taking a look at the survey Items Please take the next 10 minutes to read through some of the questions in each Instructional Content section of the survey. Record any questions you have, and we will address them to the entire group at the end of this time.
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Instructional Practices- Math Use of Homework Problem-Solving Activities Small Group Work Educational Technology Teacher Opinions and Beliefs Professional Development Instructional Influences Instructional Readiness
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Instructional Practices- ELA Use of Homework Instructional Activities Small Group Work Educational Technology Teacher Opinions and Beliefs Professional Development Instructional Influences Instructional Readiness
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Instructional Practice
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Taking a look at the survey Items Please take the next 10 minutes to read through some of the questions in each Instructional Practice section of the survey. Record any questions you have, and we will address them to the entire group at the end of this time.
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Report Generator
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Report Generator - Submit
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Documents Standards and Assessments Add state documents that have been content analyzed
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Data Survey Output Reports on three (3) or more teachers only Currently there are three types of data displays Instructional Content 1. Contour Maps 2. Tile Charts Instructional Practice 3. Floating Bar Charts
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Contour Map Instruction Content-Mathematics
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Contour Map-ELA
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Tile Chart- ELA
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Tile Chart Instructional Content: Mathematics
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Floating Bar Chart Instructional Practice: ELA
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Floating Bar Chart Instructional Practice: Math
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“And so you just threw everything together?… Mathews, a posse is something you have to organize.”
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Applications for K-12 Education: –Aligning standards, assessments and curriculum –Improvement of instruction –Interpreting student assessment results –Needs assessment and program evaluation –Indicators system for monitoring progress
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What’s Required of Teachers Sharing –Bring information about your instruction Time –Survey administered by trained leader –1-2 hours Planning –Schedule over year, meetings, etc. –Next Steps Source: Maine SEC project PPT, 2004
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“Regardless of what a state policy requires or what a district curriculum spells out,” says Andrew C. Porter of Vanderbilt University, “the classroom teacher ultimately decides” what to teach. Education Week, October 8, 2003 Source: Maine SEC project PPT, 2004
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Planning Guide: Steps 4-7 Take a few minutes, read over the planning strategies and discuss them with the person next to you and make a few notes. –What was the purpose? –Similarities in your thoughts, perspectives? –Based on what you read – how could the SEC help to improve your classroom, school or district?
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Possible Data Analysis Outcomes Targeted Professional Development Changes in Environmental Factors Positive Climate of Change Continuous Improvement Process Review of Curriculum Materials Other Data-Driven Decisions and Actions
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