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Implementing the curriculum

Implementing the curriculum. February 20, 2014. Implementation science. Q - What is implementation? A specialized set of activities designed to put into practice an activity or program of known dimensions. How do I know when I have reached full implementation?

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Implementing the curriculum

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  1. Implementing the curriculum February 20, 2014

  2. Implementation science • Q - What is implementation? • A specialized set of activities designed to put into practice an activity or program of known dimensions. • How do I know when I have reached full implementation? • Full Implementation is reached when 50% or more of the intended practitioners, staff, or team members are using an effective innovation with fidelity and good outcomes. • Q- What work is to be done once we have full implementation? • The Stages are dynamic within organizations such as schools and clinics, moving back and forth among Stages as personnel and circumstances change.  Understanding Stages is important so the work of Implementation Teams can be matched to the Stage of the provider organization.

  3. Typically a 2-4 year process

  4. Stages of Implementation

  5. Implementation Science

  6. Return on Investment

  7. Implementation Science

  8. To prevent implementation dips • Important for regular assessment of • fidelity to the intervention and • fidelity to the implementation processes

  9. Implementation Team Implementation Team • Principal • Assistant Principals • Department Chairs • PLT Leaders • Workshop Attendees/Curriculum Writers Implementation Resources • Content Specialists • Implementation Team • Teacher Leaders • Training Opportunities • CMapp/Other Curriculum Support Materials • Content Wikis • Administrative Wiki • Researched Practices

  10. Roles for Full implementation

  11. Roles: DISTRICT LEADER • Develops communication plan to inform stakeholders • Develops communication protocols for identifying barriers, challenges, and problem solving • Develops a support plan to promote ongoing efforts • Develops tools for measuring and reporting fidelity of implementation • Models best practices and exemplars • Coordinates the provision of instructional resources • Uses data to improve fidelity of implementation

  12. Roles: Building Leader

  13. Roles: Department Chair • Department Chair as an Instructional Leader • Works with other department leadership and administration to shape the instructional program at the school • Works with other department leadership and administration to determine instructional needs of the school based on data • Incorporates researched best practices in classroom delivery • Understands the Essential Standards and Common Core Standards • Implements standards with fidelity • Uses appropriate structures and scaffolds to support student learning • Welcomes others to observe in the classroom • Observes others and coaches the department • Facilitates creating a strong instructional program rather than managing a department • Clearly communicates information/initiatives shared during district chair meetings to department

  14. Roles: PLT Leader • PLT Leader as an instructional Leader • Works closely with the Chair to cultivate a strong vertical alignment within the content program • Works with the chair to analyze school data • Guides the work of the PLT to promote common planning and common assessments of learning • Incorporates researched best practices in classroom delivery • Understands the Essential Standards and Common Core Standards • Implements standards with fidelity • Uses appropriate structures and scaffolds to support student learning • Welcomes others to observe the classroom • Observes others and coaches the PLT • Clearly communicates information/initiatives shared during district PLT Team Leader meetings where applicable

  15. Roles: Professional Learning Team • Reviews student data to improve and inform instruction • Creates common plans to promote fidelity of instruction • Creates common assessments to assess fidelity of instruction and student learning • Discusses the needs of students to inform instruction • Observes each other to provide feedback about fidelity of instruction • Coaches each other to increase fidelity of curriculum implementation • Includes school initiatives in the instructional program (SIP)

  16. Roles: PD Participant • Professional Learning Attendee to build capacity of all teachers • Prepared to share the learning with the PLT/Department/School • Desires the leadership opportunity to share content and learning • Makes meaning of the learning as it aligns to the School Improvement Plan • Represents the professionalism of the school

  17. Tool: Embedded coaching Coaching IS… Coaching is NOT… A limited-session PD course or webinar A post-observation conference Observation and evaluation for NCEES BT Mentors Buddy teachers Teacher Assistant or Co-teacher who works with students • On-site professional development in effective teaching practices • Embedded in real on-the-ground experience • Cycles of targeted support • Ongoing and recursive • Modeling and training in research-based effective strategies • Dedicated, meaningful reflective feedback, collaboration, and planning

  18. Tool: Capacity for coaching • Common Core Training/Curriculum Writing Opportunities • Teachers • Administrators • Teams – from the department and from across all departments • Increase understanding through opportunities to experience what Common Core should look & feel like for students • Time to create materials for classroom use • Common observation tool • Are attendees expected to share information in a strategic and intentional manner? • Are they specifically identified and trained to coach others? • Are they prepared to coach all teachers, including master teachers? Does your administrative team have common expectations? • Do they work collaboratively to determine common literacy practices across the school? • Do all the teachers in the building know how the inclusion of Common Core standards changes the delivery of instruction and planning for instruction? Do all teachers understand the dynamic between Common Core Literacy Standards and Essential Standards? • Are PLTs afforded the time to create model lessons? • Do all teachers and administrators share a common understanding of the components?

  19. Common Observation Tool Environment Culture Technology Researched Best Practices Standards for Literacy/ Mathematical Practices/Domains of Speaking

  20. Knowledge about Full implementation from curriculum specialists

  21. English language Arts /Social Studies

  22. ELA - Indicators of full implementation • Discourse: Student to student • Specific emphasis on argument writing and deliberate use of appropriate complexity of text • Using model texts in the classroom • Intentional close reading, allowing students to grapple with a complex text • Use of a sequence of pre-written text-dependent questions that lead students to delve deeply into a piece of text • Appropriate scaffolding towards independence • Essential questions to elevate thinking • Grammar taught as an author’s tool to create and convey meaning • Performance tasks for assessment • Purposeful and integrated reading, writing, speaking, and listening in every lesson

  23. Social Studies- Indicators of full implementation • Student to student discourse • Minimal, focused lecturing with tools to foster student engagement • Specific emphasis on argument writing and deliberate use of appropriate complexity of text • Less dependency on textbook • More dependency on primary and secondary source documents • Shift from facts to concepts • Multiple perspectives on historical events/issues • Essential questions to promote inquiry and create “need to know”

  24. Tool: humanities approach Purpose: • to increase cross-curricular opportunities for ELA & social studies departments • to increase horizontal and vertical alignment of literacy standards • to focus on data to drive instruction; building the capacity of leadership partnerships Strategies: • Combined Department Chair meetings • Combined Office of Student Performance Day • Language Lessons/Model Common Core Lessons • Professional Development Opportunities

  25. Tools: Humanities Lessons • Over 30 Language Lessons (10 more being created) • Seven Integrated Lessons for Social Studies • Over 40 model Common Core Lessons embedded in Social Studies Courses in CMAPP • Content Area Wikis • Performance Tasks

  26. mathematics

  27. MATH – INDICATORS OF FULL IMPLEMENTATION STUDENTS DEMONSTRATE THE STANDARDS FOR MATHEMATICAL PRACTICE ON A CONSISTENT BASIS. 1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. • Students are reasoning, thinking, and/or proving their answers. • Students are demonstrating a structured approach to problem solving. • Students check the reasonableness of their answers. • Students collaborate to understand the approaches of others

  28. MATH – WHAT we are seeing STUDENTS DEMONSTRATE THE STANDARDS FOR MATHEMATICAL PRACTICE ON A CONSISTENT BASIS. 1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. • Students are reasoning, thinking, and/or proving their answers. • Students are demonstrating a structured approach to problem solving. • Students check the reasonableness of their answers. • Students collaborate to understand the approaches of others • Teachers are doing most of the talking, even answering their own questions sometimes. • Teachers demonstrate a structured approach to problem solving, students “copy” it without understanding why. • Students rarely check the reasonableness of their answers. • Students sometimes ask each other for help.

  29. MATH – INDICATORS OF FULL IMPLEMENTATION STUDENTS DEMONSTRATE THE STANDARDS FOR MATHEMATICAL PRACTICE ON A CONSISTENT BASIS. 3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. • Students are engaged in mathematical discourse (explain, agree/disagree, paraphrase, add on, verify, question each other). • Students are making and testing mathematical conjectures. • Students are making arguments to defend their reasoning. • Students understand and evaluate arguments of others.

  30. MATH – WHAT WE ARE SEEING STUDENTS DEMONSTRATE THE STANDARDS FOR MATHEMATICAL PRACTICE ON A CONSISTENT BASIS. 3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. • Students are engaged in mathematical discourse (explain, agree/disagree, paraphrase, add on, verify, question each other). • Students are making and testing mathematical conjectures. • Students are making arguments to defend their reasoning. • Students understand and evaluate arguments of others. • Teachers are doing most of the talking. When discourse takes place, it is often teacher to student, not student to student. • Students are not engaged. • However, there are pockets of classrooms where well-established collaborative group cultures exist.

  31. MATH – INDICATORS OF FULL IMPLEMENTATION STUDENTS DEMONSTRATE THE STANDARDS FOR MATHEMATICAL PRACTICE ON A CONSISTENT BASIS. 4. Model with mathematics. • Students are using mathematical models as evidence to support problem solutions (drawings, manipulatives, tables, graphs, symbols). • Students are using and/or sharing multiple representations (verbal, graphical, tabular, algebraic).

  32. MATH – What We are Seeing STUDENTS DEMONSTRATE THE STANDARDS FOR MATHEMATICAL PRACTICE ON A CONSISTENT BASIS. 4. Model with mathematics. • Students are using mathematical models as evidence to support problem solutions (drawings, manipulatives, tables, graphs, symbols). • Students are using and/or sharing multiple representations (verbal, graphical, tabular, algebraic). • Still lots of worksheets • Still lots of “naked math” • But, more contextual situations, more problem solving • More use of manipulatives (especially in remedial classes) • More use of multiple representations • Some acceptance by teachers of various solution pathways

  33. MATH – INDICATORS OF FULL IMPLEMENTATION ASSESSMENT • Balance procedural fluency with conceptual understanding • Combination of multiple choice, selected response, short constructed response, extended response, and performance tasks • Should involve math discourse in the sense of explaining, agreeing/disagreeing, justifying, or proving

  34. MATH – What We are Seeing • Questions focus on procedures • Question types most often multiple choice and short answer; students rarely asked to explain • Writing in mathematics? What?? ASSESSMENT • Balance procedural fluency with conceptual understanding • Combination of multiple choice, selected response, short constructed response, extended response, and performance tasks • Should involve math discourse in the sense of explaining, agreeing/disagreeing, justifying, or proving

  35. Math - tools • Core Plus and CMP2 materials designed for math discourse • Summer Trainings focusing on Math Discourse • July 7th–11th Core Plus Training Course 1/Math I and Course 2/Math II • Looking for teams of 3-5 PLT members committed to fully implementing the Core Plus curriculum • Site visits – data with recommendations • Question Analysis Tool/Question Stems • Resources for collaborative learning and rich tasks • Cooperative Learning in Math books • Station Activities (purchasing this spring) • Websites on Math Wiki

  36. science

  37. Indicators of Full Implementation • Students are engaged in inquiry-based instruction • Students are developing conceptual understanding of science content • Students are provided the opportunity for experimentation and technological design • Science process skills are acquired through active experiences ( observing , classifying , inferring etc.) • Classroom science practices are evident: such as, • Asking questions and defining problems • Developing and using models • Planning and carrying out investigations

  38. Indicators Continued • Analyzing and interpreting data • Using mathematics and computational thinking • Constructing explanations and designing solutions • Engaging in argument writing from evidence • Obtaining , evaluating , and communicating information

  39. Career & technical education

  40. CTE Indicators of full implementation Classroom Elements • Students are reading and writing to gain a deep understanding of subject specific language. • Students are able to apply the Mathematical Practices within their technical area of study. • Students are engaged in the application of social studies, health, science, and finance as related to their technical area of study. • Students are engaged in activities that require that authentic application of essential standards, current knowledge, skills, and technologies used in the workplace. Program Elements • Students are learning in an innovative and professional environment fostered by the use of advanced learning methods and technology. • Students are working towards concentrating in a career cluster. • Students are regularly engaged with professionals from business and postsecondary institutions. • Students are earning industry recognized credentials. • Students are involved in work-based learning. • Students are involved in Career and Technical Student Organizations.

  41. Tools • NCDPI Content Area Moodles • Blueprints, Instructional Guides, Professional Development Information • ELEMENTS, for formative and summative assessments • Instructional Specialists • Special Population Coordinators • Career Development Coordinators

  42. Healthful living

  43. Healthful living – indicators of full implementation • Discourse: Student to student • Opportunities for argument writing & debate on health topics • Use of lessons aligned with all Essential Standards. Lessons aligned with every Health Standard are available on CMAPP as a resource • Use of research and corollary documents of appropriate and rigorous text complexity with appropriate scaffolding provided. • Use of a sequence of pre-written text-dependent questions that lead students to delve deeply into a piece of text • Essential questions to elevate thinking • Performance tasks for assessment Health Physical Education • Discourse: Student to student • Clearly defined units of study which include skill and concept assessments aligned to Essential Standards • Student understanding of daily learning objectives • Essential questions to elevate thinking

  44. Tool - Welnet • Provided to all district Healthful Living teachers and every student in WCPSS • Longitudinal data collection of students beginning in 4th grade and follows students until graduation • Student login for individual goal setting • Aligned Assessment for 3 of the 13 NC Essential Standard Objectives • Data collection informing PLTs on individual/classroom/ overall school fitness performance • Updated County Data is provided to chairs and posted to the WCPSS Healthful Living Blackboard site for each department chair meeting

  45. Tool – Flipped classroom videos • Available to begin ‘14-’15 school year • 3-5 minute videos which go through basic skill development for 20 units of Physical Education • Located as a link in each CMAPP unit for Healthful Living I

  46. Tool – CMAPP • All Physical Education units will include • Sports Education Model lessons • Rubrics for skill assessment • Written assessments for concept assessment • All Health Units include • Specific lessons for each objective in the NC Essential Standards

  47. World languages

  48. World languages Full Implementation • Interpretive listening • Authentic source for information and comprehension • Teacher delivered passages for comprehension • Students completing self-analysis and peer feedback • Interpretive reading • Authentic text; adapted text; teacher or student created text • Presentational speaking • Formal and informal; individual or group • Presentational writing • Formal and informal (answering questions, responding to prompt) • Interpersonal Communication • Communication with the teacher, peer, or in a group • Culture • Integrated/isolated, target culture/student’s culture

  49. Tools • DPI Documents – Proficiency Expectations, Essential Standards, New Proficiency Posters • ACTFL – Proficiency Guidelines, Can-do statements • CMAPP – Spanish I-IV, French I-IV, German I-IV, Chinese I-II, Latin I-II • Language Specific PLT’s • PD offered by the district (OSP, AP, argument training, etc.)

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