1 / 59

Implementing the Common Core State Standards and the North Carolina Essential Standards

Implementing the Common Core State Standards and the North Carolina Essential Standards. The Administrator’s Role. Today’s Meet http://todaysmeet.com/wresa. Deep Diving. Our Level of Depth for this Topic is:. Water Skiing. www.wpclipart.com. www.wpclipart.com. Ideas to ponder….

basia-cash
Download Presentation

Implementing the Common Core State Standards and the North Carolina Essential Standards

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ImplementingtheCommon Core State Standardsand the North Carolina Essential Standards The Administrator’s Role

  2. Today’s Meethttp://todaysmeet.com/wresa

  3. Deep Diving Our Level of Depth for this Topic is: Water Skiing www.wpclipart.com www.wpclipart.com

  4. Ideas to ponder…

  5. “In order to positively impact student achievement, the Common Core State and NC Essential Standards must be not just adopted but implemented.”

  6. “The goal is to have content standards that actually impact what happens in the classroom. Unfortunately, there are too many examples where states have fine content standards that bear little resemblance to what is actually being taught and learned in classrooms.”

  7. It’s 2011: Do you know where your teachers are? Do you know what and how your teachers are teaching?

  8. “We need to think carefully about what it will take for the Common Core and NC Essential Standards to become fully operationalized in every classroom, every year, from kindergarten to high school graduation.” ESL Occupational EC AIG

  9. I. Understanding the Common Core State Standards and NC Essential Standards

  10. Common Core State Standards (Adopted by 48 states and the District of Columbia) • English Language Arts • Mathematics NC Essential Standards • Science • Social Studies • World Languages • Arts Education • Healthful Living • Career & Tech Ed • Exceptional Children • English as Second Language • English Language Development (approved 2008) • Information & Technology NOTE: English Language Development and Information & Technology Essential Standards must be delivered by classroom teachers through ALL content areas, in appropriate grade levels– in collaboration with AIG, EC, ESL, media coordinators and tech facilitators.

  11. What do the Common Core State and NC Essential Standards look Like?

  12. Common Core Big Picture • Aligned with college and work expectations • Focused and coherent • Includes rigorous content and application of knowledge through higher-order skills • Internationally benchmarked – prepares students for global economy & society • Based on evidence and research

  13. Rationale for Implementation • EQUITY – Expectations the same regardless of where students live • College/Career Readiness – Students need to be more than proficient • Comparability – State results will be comparable through common assessments

  14. Rationale Cont… • Shared Resources – Ability to share and team across district and state lines • Economies of Scale – Possible savings due to sharing of resources and assessments • Student Mobility – Students encounter same standards wherever they go

  15. Common Core MATHEMATICS Elementary • Kindergarten number core • K-5 math foundation • Continuous progression through grades • Procedural skills + conceptual understanding

  16. Middle • Robust middle school standards • 8th grade algebra • Hands-on, applied learning in algebra, geometry, probability, statistics

  17. High School • High School mathematics applications solve messy, real world problems • High school students apply mathematics to novel situations, as college students and professionals do – unexpected problem solving • Mathematical modeling in physical, economic, public policy, social and everyday situations – integrates mathematical and statistical methods and reasoning

  18. Common Core ELA Reading • Staircase of increasing • complexity in reading • Diverse array of literature and • informational “sample” texts • Critical content “types” • mandated

  19. Writing • Logical arguments (opinion writing) • Research writing featured prominently • Includes student writing samples Speaking & Listening, Language, Media & Tech • Each are integrated throughout the ELA standards

  20. What are some of the strengths (and weaknesses), of the Common Core, that principals need to be aware of? http://www.leadandlearn.com/multimedia-resource-center/video-library?video-topic=355 See “Doug Reeves discusses the Common Core State Standards” Min: 6:35 – 16:05.

  21. NC Essential Standards Big Picture • Narrower and deeper • Clear articulation of skills, understandings, and learning experiences critical at each grade level • Infusion of writing; 21st century content; thinking and learning skills; and life skills throughout the content standards • Reflection of rigor, relevance, and relationships (integration) between and among subject areas.

  22. Developed for readiness – elementary, middle, high school, college, workforce, and beyond. • Mindful of 21st Century skill requirements • Measurable and concise • Integrated with other content areas • Driven by Revised Blooms Taxonomy (RBT)

  23. II. Supporting the Change

  24. “Principals need to get to know the standards. A critical principal role in implementing the standards change process is to facilitate powerful conversations regarding what the new standards indicate students should know and be able to do by the time they enter and leave each grade level. To do this, principals need to become intimately familiar with the organization, scope, depth and purpose for the new Common Core and Essential Standards.”

  25. Traps to avoid Relinquishing responsibility • “My assistant principal handles curriculum.” • “I’m not a math/science/ELA… person.” Overestimating • “The teachers are getting plenty of training; they’ve got a whole year to work it out.”

  26. Underestimating support needs • “My people are professionals. I don’t need to be looking over their shoulders on this.” Expecting it to go away • “We change the curriculum every few years in this state…” Confusing priorities • “PLCs are great, but we don’t really have time for that around here.”

  27. Prepare to Launch! IMPLEMENT

  28. Principals Encourage, Facilitate, & Manage: • Rationale and “buy in” • Collaboration opportunities • Common ground (w/old standards) • Informational writing • “Power Standards” • Locate/reallocate resources • Common formative assessments • Exceed the standards

  29. Key Management Structures Support Implementation • Department Head/Lead Teacher Role • PLCs • Shared Decision-Making & Distributed Leadership

  30. Management Structures Cont… • Evaluation Considerations • How do principals know good instruction for the Common Core and Essential Standards when they see it? • How do principals incorporate a standards-based lens during classroom walk-throughs and formal evaluations— in so many different subject areas?

  31. Principals’ Concerns • What are some of your questions, fears and concerns about your role in this implementation? Time? Expertise? Resources? Accountability?

  32. Your comments: How can we help? • Your thoughts, comments, and questions:

  33. III. Utilizing the Principal’s Transition Plan Tool

  34. Standards Implementation: Nuts & Bolts • Teachers’ knowledge of the Standards • Teachers’ understanding of the Standards • Communicating w/ all stakeholders about the Standards • Resources & tools (for teacher understanding) • Adoption of resources & tools (for instruction) • Ongoing professional development support • Assessment (formative & summative, online) • Data & Evaluation

  35. State District Principal Timeline

  36. Tips on working with the Transition Plan • Highlight District Implementation and Transition Process activities that are directly relevant to you in your school. • Think about how the District activities impact what you will do in your building. • Consider the amount and kind of support you will require from your district & NCDPI. • Be mindful of the State’s goals and be sure to address each of these at the school level.

  37. IV. Meeting Challenges and Accessing Support

  38. Accountability and Curriculum Reform Effort (ACRE) http://www.ncpublicschools.org/acre/ www.commoncore.org/maps

  39. District Implementation Team 1. Know who they are 2. Read the District Plan • DPI Staff & Other Resources 1. Common Core Summer Institutes 2. PD Leads & NERESA 3. Professional Development Cycle 4. Online modules https://center.ncsu.edu/nc/login/index.php

  40. Common Core State Standards & North Carolina Essential Standards Support for School Executives Fall 2011

  41. Regional Professional Development Consultants Support RttT Professional Development Initiative (Section D5 of NC’s Plan) • NC Evaluation System • Common Core & Essential Standards • Data Literacy • Capacity team building for sustainability

  42. July 14-15, 2011 West Stokes High School Stokes County Region 5 July 21-22, 2011 Maiden High School Catawba County Schools Region 7 July 19-20, 2011 Pasquotank High School Pasquotank County Region 1 June 27-29, 2011 Grove Park Inn, Asheville (in conjunction with Annual Summer Leadership Conference) Region 8 July 26-27, 2011 Pinecrest High School Moore County Region 4 July 12-13, 2011 Kinston High School Lenoir County Region 2 2011 Regional Common Core Summer Institutes North Carolina Department of Public Instruction

  43. Formative Support • Summer Institutes: • Support the development of a cadre of professional development leaders in each district • Prepare district leaders to sustain professional development efforts in the years ahead

  44. Summer Institute Formative Support Formative Support July June Aug RESA Session RESA Session May Sept Annual Professional Development Cycle Formative Support April Oct Formative Support Nov Mar RESA Session RESA Session Feb Dec Jan Formative Support Formative Support RESA Session

  45. Formative Support

More Related