1 / 45

Standards Aligned System (SAS)

Standards Aligned System (SAS). SAS – Do you have an account?? www.pdesas.org . 1. Standards Circle: PA Core Standards.

hoshi
Download Presentation

Standards Aligned System (SAS)

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. Standards Aligned System (SAS)

  2. SAS – Do you have an account?? www.pdesas.org

  3. 1. Standards Circle: PA Core Standards • On July 1, 2010, the Pennsylvania State Board of Education adopted the Common Core State Standards in English language arts (ELA) and mathematics, with a transition plan that targeted July 1, 2013, as the full implementation date. • Keystone Exams are aligned to the PA Core Standards • Pennsylvania’s approved standards are the foundation of the Standards Aligned System • Pennsylvania Standards describe what students should know and be able to do; they increase in complexity and sophistication as students progress through school.

  4. What are the ELA Shifts with the PA Core Standards? • http://literacyresources.iu1.wikispaces.net/file/view/ELA%20Shifts.pdf/480408012/ELA%20Shifts.pdf

  5. Standards Portal Time

  6. 2. Curriculum Framework Circle • Identify standards, anchors, EC • Big Ideas • Concepts • Competencies • Essential Questions • Vocabulary

  7. Big Idea • Declarative statement that describes concepts that transcend grade levels. • Big Ideas are essential to provide focus on specific content for all students. • Example: Comprehension requires and enhances critical thinking and is constructed through the intentional interaction between reader and text.

  8. Essential Question • Questions connected to the SAS framework that are specifically linked to the Big Ideas. • Essential questions frame student inquiry, promote critical thinking, and assist in learning transfer • Example: How does the interaction with text promote thinking and response?

  9. Concept • Describe what students should know and understand (key knowledge) as a result of this instruction specific to grade level • Example: Essential content, literary elements and devices inform meaning

  10. Competency • Describe what students should be able to do (key skills) as a result of this instruction • Example: Identify and evaluate essential content between and among various texts types

  11. Brick and Mortar words: Tiers 2 & 3 VocabularyComing soon to SAS

  12. Curriculum Framework Portal Time

  13. 3. Assessment Circle • Fair assessment is a process used by teachers and students before, during, and after instruction to provide feedback and adjust ongoing teaching and learning to improve student achievement. • In Pennsylvania the four types of assessment are summative, formative, benchmark, and diagnostic

  14. Assessment in Pennsylvania Summative: Benchmark/ Interim: Diagnostic: Formative:

  15. Summative Assessment • Often used for grading, accountability and or research/evaluation • Seeks to make an overall judgment of progress made at the end of a defined period of instruction such as: • PSSA • Keystone • PASA • ACCESS for ELLs • TerraNova • Final Exam • Unit Test • Project Rubric Evaluation

  16. Benchmark Provide feedback to both the teacher and the student. Findings are reported by referencing the standards, not other students’ performance Measure performance regularly Examples: 4Sight AIMSweb Study Island Benchmarking Tools District Designed Benchmark Benchmark Assessment

  17. Diagnostic Students’ strengths, weaknesses, knowledge, and skills before and during instruction Allows for remediation or intervention PA will use a Computer-Adaptive testing approach with CDTs Examples: Classroom Diagnostic Tools (CDTs) Running Records DRA G-Made Diagnostic Assessment

  18. Formative Assessment • In Pennsylvania we are defining formative assessment as classroom based assessment that allows teachers to monitor and adjust their instructional practice in order to meet the individual needs of their students.

  19. Formative Assessment Activity • Think about how you use formative assessment with your students. • Make a list of three formative assessments that you have used with your students.

  20. Examples of Formative Assessment • Think-Pair-Share • Thumbs up – Thumbs down • Ticket out the door • Random Reporter

  21. Keystone Exams and Project Based Assessments(PBAs) • The Keystone Exams are end-of-course assessments designed to assess proficiency in various subjects • Keystone Literature Exam and the Keystone Writing Exam • The Keystone Exams are one component of Pennsylvania’s proposed system of high school graduation requirements • Students who are unable to meet Chapter 4 requirements relating to high school graduation requirements through the Keystone Exam may qualify to complete a project based assessment. • Item Scoring Samples and other resources on SAS

  22. Assessment Builder • Assessment Builder • Allows teachers to create customized assessments • Can be formative, summative, diagnostic, or benchmark

  23. Assessment Portal Time 23

  24. 4. Instruction Circle • Differentiated • Standard aligned • At instructional level (not frustration level), but be rigorous • Scaffold support – I do, We do, You do… • Engagement • Interventions

  25. Rigor with Webbs Depth of Knowledge • What kinds of questions do you ask during a lesson? • How many of each level of question do you ask during a lesson or unit? • What kinds of questions do you ask on your assessments?

  26. Engagement vs. Time on Task • Can students be involved in the lesson but not engaged in the learning process?? • Engagement vs. Time on Task…is there a difference?? • When students decide, "I won't learn from you," they go into "not-learning" mode. "Not-learning" describes any number of behaviors that a learner uses to keep new information from getting into the brain. Herbert Kohl I Won’t Learn from You – and other Thoughts on Creative Maladjustment 1994

  27. Levels of Engagement 1. Students report what they have learned only (lowest level of engagement) 2.Students report what they have learned only with possible collaboration 3.Students solve a teacher-directed problem 4.Students given options to solve a teacher-directed problem with possible collaboration 5.Students help define the task, the process, and/ or the solution 6.Students help define the task, the process, and/ or the solution; collaboration extends beyond the classroom (highest level of engagement)

  28. Engaged Learning Example Consider the following: • If the students were collaborating with the students at other schools to write better poetrythen the engagement level is a 6. • Before I could decide I would need to ask how much collaboration beyond the classroom was involved.

  29. How do I get students engaged?? • Ask yourself….Where do students have the opportunity to make choices? • Content – determined by the state standards – no choice • Process • Product • Tic-Tac-Toe Menu

  30. NOT examples of Engagement • We observed that, on the average about 75% of class time was spent on instruction and that nearly 70% of this was “talk” – usually teacher to students. John Goodlad A Study of Schooling 2004 • Barely 5% of this instructional time was designed to create students’ anticipation of needing to respond. Not even 1% required some type of open response involving reasoning or perhaps an opinion from students. John Goodlad A Study of Schooling 2004

  31. Questions to ponder…. • What materials are you using to engage students? • How much of the class period is the teacher talking? • How much of the class period are the students collaborating or talking? • How are the students involved in the choices of process and product for your lessons?

  32. Instruction Portal Time

  33. 5. Materials & Resources Circle • Lessons and Unit Plans • Voluntary Model Curriculum • Learning progressions

  34. Materials & Resources Portal Time

  35. 6. Safe and Supportive Schools Circle • The Safe and Supportive Schools element is now active, and the Student Interpersonal Skills may be accessed from this element. • While still a work in progress, materials and resources are available but are not yet aligned to these new standards • Resources on engagement (parents), respect for diversity, school participation, and comprehensive resources

  36. Safe and Supportive Schools Portal Time

  37. Beyond the Circles: Teacher Tools My Profile My e-portfolio My website Publish your best My communities Curriculum Mapping PD Center

  38. My Profile • The information provided in this section will be used to manage your SAS account: • Manage personal information • Identify professional interests • Change a password

  39. My ePortfolio • A web-based, portable filing cabinet • Create organizational folders • Add resources • Add to My ePortfolio • Upload File • Add Bookmark

  40. My Website • Develop a classroom website to enhance communication between students, parents, and colleagues • Modify thesite to reflect: • Specific classes you teach • Events relevant to your class or school • Resources you want available for yourself, colleagues, students, and/or parents

  41. My Communities • Join Professional Learning Communities to participate in discussions and share ideas with colleagues throughout the state!

  42. PD Center • Under class registration, you can access many classes and workshops online for free.

  43. PDE Free Professional Development on the Danielson Framework • Pennsylvania has adopted Charlotte Danielson's Framework for Teaching as the overarching vision for effective instruction in the Commonwealth. The model focuses the complex activity of teaching by defining four domains of teaching responsibility. • Domain 1 – Planning and Preparation • Domain 2 – Classroom Environment • Domain 3 – Instruction • Domain 4 – Professional Responsibilities

  44. Teacher Tools Portal Time

  45. Questions???

More Related