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NY State DDI Workshop. November 3, 2011. Introductions. Marc Etienne Nate Franz Alix Guerrier Shannell Jackson Liz Dozier . Theory Action . Group Norms. Start on time Hands ups for questions Ask what’s relevant for all Hands up to bring folks back together . GRAPH. 100%. 90%.
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NY State DDI Workshop November 3, 2011
Introductions Marc Etienne Nate Franz Alix Guerrier Shannell Jackson Liz Dozier
Group Norms • Start on time • Hands ups for questions • Ask what’s relevant for all • Hands up to bring folks back together
GRAPH 100% 90% 80% 70% Pct. Proficient 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Pct. Free-Reduced Lunch
Today’s Objectives • Identify/review the key principles/lessons from Paul’s summer workshop • Apply the key principles to our situation (Analysis) • Create a concrete plan (Action) • Incorporate ideas you’ve learned throughout the sessions into your action plan
Key Insights • If you’re not at the pool, you cannot do the analysis • Relationships matter • Creasy went from “what” was wrong, to “why” • The practice targeted on the exact problem • The practice simulated the real event • They set a specific goal that they could track
Insights Applied to Interim Assessments • IMMEDIATE: ideal 48 hrs, max 1 wk turnaround • USER-FRIENDLY: data reports are short but include analysis at question level, standards level and overall • TEACHER-OWNED analysis • TEST-IN-HAND analysis: teacher & instructional leader together • DEEP: moves beyond “what” to “why”
Let’s Review • Using the “Key Take Aways” handout • At your table jigsaw each topic among two people, • Individually - Jot down at least one take away from each of these activities • Small group/Jigs • Discuss finding collectively and record
Springsteen Case Study • Year end results are not enough • List of standards are not enough • Alignment means different things to different people • People interpret “mastery” and “rigor” differently
Assessment Analysis Role Play • The focus should be on what students learned, not what teachers taught • The conversation should center on the actual results of student learning. • Looking at results together creates collaboration; it’s about moving to what to do better • Tips for Analysis meetings • Let the data do the talking • Let the teacher do the talking • Go back to the test and specific questions • Know the data yourself
Douglas Street Case Study • Active Leadership Team: Teacher-leader data analysis meetings; maintain focus • Introductory Professional Development: What to do and how • Calendar: Done in advance with built-in time for assessment, analysis, and action • Build by Borrowing: Identify and implement best practices from high-achieving teachers and schools
Power of the Question • Standards are meaningless until you define how you will assess them • Assessments are the starting point, not the end point, of teaching and learning • If you don’t define the assessments first, teachers will teach to their own level of expectations • Curriculum maps and scope and sequences aren’t enough; teachers need assessments to guide them as to the rigor of their teaching • In a multiple choice question, the options define rigor
Prompts • What is Billy Beane doing differently than his peers? • What are key ideas or insights that connect to the work you are currently undertaking? • What about his tactics make others uncomfortable? Who is it making uncomfortable?
Prompts • What is Billy Beane doing differently than his peers? • What are key ideas or insights that connect to the work you are currently undertaking? • What about his tactics make others uncomfortable? Who is it making uncomfortable?
Objectives • Identify the key principles/lessons from Paul’s summer workshop • Apply the key principles to our situation (Analysis) • Create a concrete plan (Action) • Incorporate ideas you’ve learned throughout the sessions into your action plan
What Do You Think? 1. Is change easy or hard? • What’s the 2nd biggest life change that Americans reported on a recent survey? Would you guess people resisted this change or volunteered for it?
What Do You Think? 1. Is change easy or hard? • What’s the 2nd biggest life change that Americans reported on a recent survey? Would you guess people resisted this change or volunteered for it?
Switch by Chip Heath Read pages 4 - 8
Three-Part Framework • Direct the Rider: What looks like resistance is often a lack of clarity. Provide crystal-clear direction. • Motivate the Elephant: What looks like laziness is often exhaustion. Engage people’s emotional side. • Shape the Path: What looks like a people problem is often a situation problem. When you shape the situation or “path” you makes change more likely.
Driven by Data • Pages 242-243
What to Do When There’s a “2”Core Actions to Reach DDI Proficiency • Read through sections on Assessments, Culture, and Analysis • Choose one focus area • Use template to reflect • Share feedback with a partner from your district * 1 Required – Plan what PD you going to provide
Lunch Session resumes in One hour
October Sky • How did they turn analysis into action? • What were the strengths and weaknesses of their strategy?
October Sky Key Insights • You need to be relentless • Teams > individual • Find expertise wherever you can; build on what is already known • Isolating the problem helps you take the right action • Keep testing your hypothesis
Action Plan Reflection • What do you notice? • What stands out as strengths? What stands out as weaknesses?
Process • Individual – Read and Reflect (8 min) • Pair – Share with a partner (4 min) • Share with large group (8 min)
Key Insights • Targeted/Focused • Right-Sized • About Instruction • You can shape the path with templates and exemplars
Menu of Options • Whole group re-teach • Short-term strategy group (e.g., two-four-day, skill-driven group) • Long-term strategy group (e.g., multiple weeks) • Individual Action Plan (Inclusion teachers only) • Instructional Shift (e.g., including more higher-order thinking, changing approach to vocabulary teaching, etc.) • Instructional Routine (e.g., 5 days of math message or slate math on PRA.1, daily fact fluency practice)
Menu of Options • What would all of these options need to have in common? • What’s the benefit of providing options?