880 likes | 1.05k Views
QUALITY LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS: AISI 5. MAY 2012 PLANNING. Goals:. Understand provincial AISI requirements Collaborate Determine measures Complete school plan. Getting to know your group:. Introduce yourselves: Your name Your school Your role in the school – grade level; subject areas
E N D
QUALITY LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS: AISI 5 MAY 2012 PLANNING
Goals: • Understand provincial AISI requirements • Collaborate • Determine measures • Complete school plan
Getting to know your group: • Introduce yourselves: • Your name • Your school • Your role in the school – grade level; subject areas • Why you are excited to be part of the Learning Support Team
Priorities for Cycle 5 1. Research Capacity/Leadership • Site-based research taken to the next level • Examine current theories of teaching and learning • Read and evaluate published findings
Priorities for Cycle 5 Research capacity/leadership • Analyze findings • Incorporate findings into practice • 10% minimum expenditure {district} • Annual Progress report vs APAR
Priorities for Cycle 5 2. Community Engagement • All projects will be required to demonstrate active and meaningful engagement of key stakeholders: • Administrators • Teachers • Students • Parents • Elected officials • Businesses, organizations and institutions Community Engagement Rubric – on AISI 5 wiki
3. Collaborative Cross-School Authority Projects Additional funding available for 2 or more school authorities to submit one collaborative project Zone 4 collaboration ~ Adolescent Literacy (grades 7, 8, 9) Priorities for Cycle 5
AISI 5 • AISI 5 Projects will focus on all or some of the following: • Student engagement • Student learning • Student performance
CESD overarching question: To what extent and in what ways will our CESD Quality Learning Environment framework improve student learning?
QLE: Where have we been? • We have facilitated over 37 discussions… so far…. to build the QLE.
QLE: Early October • Clarified and re-wrote background • The Core: • Relationships: added the connection to parents; included a focus on genuine interest in students; • Student Engagement: made language less prescriptive in terms of describing instructional practice • The Cultural Elements: expanded explanation around literacy/numeracy
QLE: End October • 4 Key Components • refined personalization section (Personalized teaching) • The Cultural Elements • refined culture of inclusion • refined culture of using research and data to inform our work
QLE: December • 4 Key ComponentsRevised Essential Questions in 4 Key Elements • Re-ordered Outcomes section (so it would flow better J) • Re-worked Assessment & Instruction Sections to reduce overlap/repetition • Refined Personalization section • Cultural Conditions • Re-did the inclusion section with the help of student services • Re-did the section on research and data to broaden the scope • Examined research on Numeracy (thanks to Darlene Kusick).
QLE: December • Updated Core based on feedback and research done at Spruce View School. • relationships are now divided into relationships for academics; social needs and parental support • Engagement section is now divided into Intellectual, Social and Academic engagement
Alongside the QLE: • A K-12 literacy(reading) framework is being developed for CESD based on the increasing need in this area
Literacy especially Reading
Importance of Literacy • High percentage of dropouts have literacy problems. • Early literacy programs can be effective; however many adolescents continue to struggle with reading. • These adolescents struggle reading to learn. • Recent estimates indicate 42% of Canadian adults lack functional literacy. • 22% have serious reading problems.
Importance of Literacy • Most programs are either prepared or implemented poorly. • Most 4-12 teachers are poorly prepared to assess and treat reading difficulties. • More than two-thirds of new jobs are expected to required some post-secondary education. • Long term pd is the answer.
Importance of Literacy • What do we expect of students? • Acquire, manipulate, remember and use large amounts of information from texts and lectures. • Organize information, time and materials • Books become longer and discussions are based on a presumed understanding, rather than to form understanding. • Understand and use specialized vocabulary • Identify validity of information found in media, on internet and sources of text
Importance of Literacy • All while… • Being required to cover material independently. • With little time for academic interaction.
CESD Data • In a PAT analysis of a school within CESD: • we looked at the students that had not reach the acceptable standard in the math and science tests • Of those students, all but one of them had also failed the reading section of the English Language Arts PAT.
Myths • Literacy is the job of English/Language Arts teachers. • It is fruitless to spend time and money on older students because they have passed the point at which instruction can make a real difference. • Little can be done for students who are not motivated to engage in literacy activities. • Students with low IQs will never get it…so why bother.
Reading Readiness Simple View of Reading Background Knowledge
decoding 44 sounds
Fluency Word Automaticity + Phrasing/Stress/Intonation Fluency
Background Knowledge Baseball Story Heart and Soul of Reading Levels Tiers of Vocabulary Morphology # of words students learn Conceptual Knowledge
Text structure Narrative Expository