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Parents4Parents of the Black Hills

Parents4Parents of the Black Hills. Dr. Timothy Mitchell Rapid City Area Schools 10/22/11. The First Building Block. All Kids Can Learn Activity Why do we exist? This question challenges us to reflect on the fundamental purpose and the very reason for our existence

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Parents4Parents of the Black Hills

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  1. Parents4Parents of the Black Hills Dr. Timothy Mitchell Rapid City Area Schools 10/22/11

  2. The First Building Block All Kids Can Learn Activity Why do we exist? This question challenges us to reflect on the fundamental purpose and the very reason for our existence This question requires us to clarify priorities and gives us direction for our classrooms

  3. The First Building Block On the activity sheet you will find descriptions of four schools that operate under very different assumptions. Even though the educators within these schools would contend that they believe “all kids can learn,” they would respond to students who are not learning in very different ways Please complete Activity

  4. The First Building Block -The first school views failure to learn as an indication that the student lacks the ability or motivation to master content. Based on this assessment, the school offers a less rigorous program as a solution -The second school considers failure an important part of the learning process-students who do not put forth the necessary effort must be taught individual responsibility and they are allowed to fail

  5. The First Building Block -The third school is prepared to accept responsibility for helping each student demonstrate some growth but is unwilling to establish high standards for all students. Here, too, the faculty members contend that they have little influence over the extent of an individual’s learning

  6. The First Building Block Clearly then, it is only the fourth school in the activity that offers a viable, modern-day approach to students who are not learning

  7. The First Building Block • Significant finding: The most successful schools function as a professional learning community: • Teachers pursue a clear shared purpose • Engage in collaborative work • Take collective responsibility for student learning

  8. The First Building Block We expect our students to learn, and we work to fulfill our collective responsibility to ensure that this learning takes place for all students

  9. What is essential!! • Community Support • Community Involvement • Community Trust

  10. RCAS Mission Building a community of life long learners, one student at a time.

  11. RCAS Vision All Rapid City Area School students will achieve to their full potential.

  12. RCAS Priorities • Guaranteed, viable, relevant curriculum • Life and career skills • Technology literacy (21st century skills) • Staff effectiveness and organizational capacity-building • Comprehensive system of assessment • Diverse opportunities for students to learn and be academically successful

  13. My Personal Vision To embrace learning rather than teaching as a school’s mission, to work collaboratively to help all students learn, to focus on results to foster continuous improvement and to assume individual responsibility to take steps to create such a school.

  14. My Sentence I provide the leadership to create a purposeful learning community that creates high quality learning experiences for all community members.

  15. The Three C’s of Community Building Confront the Brutal Facts Communication (Effective) Collaboration

  16. Developing Trust • Function of two things: • Integrity • Competence

  17. Developing Trust • Integrity • Honesty-telling the truth & leaving the right impression • Congruence-no gaps between intent and behavior “walk your talk” • Humility-recognize principles before yourself • Courage-do the right thing-even when hard

  18. Developing Trust • Competence • Your capabilities • Your skills • Your results • Your track record • They are both vital-one without the other will not work

  19. Speed of Trust-Behavior #9 Clarify Expectations-to create shared vision and agreement about what is to be done up front

  20. Speed of Trust-Behavior #10 Practice Accountability-Hold yourself accountable. Hold others accountable. Take responsibility for results. Be clear on how you’ll communicate how you’re doing and how others are doing. Don’t avoid or shirk responsibility. Don’t blame others or point fingers when things go wrong.

  21. Adjusting for Learner Needs Educational leaders know that what matters is whether schools can offer their neediest students good teachers trained in effective strategies to teach strong academic knowledge and skills. Harry K. Wong

  22. IDEA/NCLB/Section 504/ADA Major Theme (Federal Education Acts/Civil Rights Statues) “Fairness means giving each student what they educationally need. Fairness is not treating each student equally” John Copenhaver, Director-Mountain Plains Regional Resource Center

  23. IDEA Provisions that Support Student Participation in the General Curriculum The Individualized Education Program (IEP) must include accommodations, modifications, and any special services that the child need to participate in the general curriculum, as well as identify support teachers needed to carry out the child’s program.

  24. IDEA Provisions that Support Student Participation in the General Curriculum At least one classroom teacher must, to the extent appropriate, participate in the development, review, and revision of the child’s IEP, including the determination of: • Appropriate positive behavioral interventions and strategies for the child. • Supplementary aids and services, program modifications, and supports for school personnel that will be provided for the child

  25. IDEA Provisions that Support Student Participation in the General Curriculum The child’s IEP must be accessible to each classroom teacher, who is responsible for its implementation. The teacher must be informed of the specific accommodations, modifications, and supports that must be provided for the child in accordance with the IEP.

  26. Terms to Know Accommodation-alters the delivery of instruction or method of student performance in a way that does not change the content or conceptual difficulty of the curriculum.

  27. Terms to Know Accommodations-Changes in course/test preparation, location, timing, student response, or other attribute which are necessary to provide access for a student with a disability to participate and demonstrate “academic achievement and functional performance” an do not fundamentally alter or lower standard or expectations

  28. Terms to Know Modification-alters the delivery of instruction or method of student performance in such a way as to change the content or conceptual difficulty of the curriculum.

  29. Terms to Know Modification-Changes in course/test preparation, location, timing, student response, or other attribute which are necessary to provide access for a student with a disability to participate and demonstrate “academic achievement and functional performance” an do fundamentally alter and/or lower standard or expectations

  30. Assumptions About Accommodations • Accommodations respond to a student’s need • Accommodations do not give the student an unfair advantage • Accommodations enable students to participate in instruction and show what they know without being impeded by their disability

  31. Leaders as Communicators “The void created by the failure to communicate is soon filled with poison, drivel, and misinterpretation.” C. Northcote Parkinson

  32. Leaders as Communicators “The difference between the best school districts and the good or the worst is not the number of problems they have. All school districts deal with problems. In the best school districts, key individuals and groups find a way to engage in healthy dialogue. They talk through important issues.

  33. Crucial Conversations Definition A discussion between two or more people where (1) stakes are high (2) opinions vary, (3) emotions run strong

  34. Crucial Conversations How are they handled ? 1) We can avoid them 2) We can face them and handle them poorly 3) We can face them and handle them well The results can have a huge impact on the quality of your success in the classroom!

  35. Crucial Conversations Dialogue-The free-flow of meaning between two or more people The more willing people are willing to share information, the larger the pool The sooner we notice we are not in dialogue, the quicker we can get back to dialogue and lower the cost

  36. Crucial Conversations The first thing that degrades during a crucial conversation is not our behavior (that comes second), but our motives We need to focus on what we really want! When we take responsibility for our own behaviors, we also take control of our lives

  37. Crucial Conversations Learn how to step out of the content, create mutual purpose, resolve conflict, and return to healthy dialogue “They are not resistant because they don’t care about me or my views. They’re resistant because they think we don’t care about what they care about.”

  38. Crucial Conversations Watch for the three clever stories: Victim-Villain- Helpless To take control of your emotion take control of your story. To take control of your story, separate facts from the stories. First control your story. Then your story controls you. If you want to change results, change your story

  39. Crucial Conversations “One of the paradoxes of dialogue is that when we share controversial, touchy, or otherwise risky views, the more forceful we are, the less persuasive we are. With touch subjects, tentativeness increases influence”

  40. The Irony of Dialogue When we shift our purpose from winning our way to adding to the shared pool-When we give up trying to convince, we become more convincing-Taking time to fill the pool leads to faster and more effective results

  41. Vital Smarts • Crucial Conversations • Crucial Confrontations • The Influencer • You Can Change Anything • www.vitalsmarts.com • Books, Articles, E-Newsletter, Videos and Training

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