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Welcome. Science Standards Revision Focus Group. Cheryl Kleckner Office of Educational Improvement and Innovation Oregon Department of Education December 12, 2007. Agenda. Science Standards Revision Scope, Timeframe & Process Mandates, Research, & Recommendations Standards
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Welcome Science Standards Revision Focus Group Cheryl Kleckner Office of Educational Improvement and Innovation Oregon Department of Education December 12, 2007
Agenda Science Standards Revision • Scope, Timeframe & Process • Mandates, Research, & Recommendations Standards • Content Standards • Core Standards Our Tasks • Develop Core Benchmark Level Standards • Envision Professional Development
Scope • Grade Level • Core Standards • Alignment to Post-secondary Education & Work-force Expectations • Address Evaluation & Review Recommendations
Timeline • Draft 1 (Panel Mtg) ~ January ‘08 • Draft 1 Public Review ~ February ‘08 • Feedback → Draft 2 (Panel Mtg) ~ April ‘08 • Draft 2 Public Review ~ May ‘08 • Feedback→ Draft 3 ~ June ‘08 • Draft 3 Public Review → Draft 4 ~ July ‘08 • External Review of Draft 4 ~ August ’08 • Feedback → Final Draft ~ September ‘08 • Instructional Materials Criteria ~ October ‘08 • State Board Adoption ~ April ‘09
Process Draft standards are: • Benchmarked to national Academic Content Standards, NAEP and OUS • Reviewed by national content and standards experts • Revised by the content and assessment panel • Reviewed by the public • Recommended to the State Board of Education for adoption
Mandates & Guidance • NCLB Requirements • Oregon State Statues • Oregon Administrative Rules • Oregon State Board of Education • New Diploma Requirements • Implementation Task Forces
Schmidt’s Recommendations • Curricular Coherence • Structure • Curricular Focus • Exposure Time • Curricular Rigor • Level of Complexity • TIMSS Data
Schmidt’s Recommendations Organizing Questions • How do we know what we know? • Of what are things made? • How do systems interact and change?
WestEd Recommendations WestEd was contracted to: • Review the content standards • Evaluate the structure of the content standards • Evaluate alignment between the state assessments and the content standards • Make recommendations for improvement of structures and systems • Address ODE’s Critical Questions
WestEd Recommendations General Considerations: • Comparable Content Standard Structure • Core Standards • Reduce Redundancy • Consistency in Level of Detail • Levels of Cognitive Demand are Appropriate and Intentional
Oregon Essential Skills • Essential Skills • Essential for success in college, work and life • Process skills that cross all disciplines, not content specific • Embedded in content standards and curriculum • Can be demonstrated in a variety of courses, subjects and settings • Students must demonstrate proficiency in Essential Skills to graduate
Oregon Essential Skills Identified by the State Board: • Read and interpret a variety of texts • Write for a variety of purposes • Speak and present publicly • Apply mathematics in a variety of settings • Use technology • Think critically and analytically • Demonstrate civic and community engagement • Demonstrate global literacy • Demonstrate career-related learning: communications, problem solving, personal management, teamwork, employment foundations and career development
Content Standards Define What Students are Expected to Know and Be Able to Do
Content Standards • Specific • Aligned • Clear and Understandable • Assessable • Illustrated by Student Work • Useful for Defining and Supporting Good Instruction
Content Standards • Big Ideas • Accurate and Sound • Clear and Useful • Parsimonious • Built by Consensus • Assessable • For Students • Developmental • Visionary
Fordham Criteria • Expectation of Scientific Literacy • Effective for Assessment of Learning • Comprehensible to All • Organization Reflects Fundamental Structure • Science Content and Approach • Quality • Seriousness • Inquiry • Evolution
WestEd Recommendations Core Standards: • knowledge and skills central to a content area • significant/critical content “targets” • state-specific priorities in a content area • learning expectations and performance goals for all students
WestEd Recommendations Advantages of Core Standards: • subsume other standards and/or provide the structure for a coherent standards system • these standards are addressed in each grade and developed across grades • local curricula are expected to align • common structure across content areas
Core Standards Focus instruction • key ideas • fewer key learning objectives • greater depth of teaching and learning Incorporate other content standards • in-depth understanding will imply, and be supported by, understanding of the underlying content standards Articulate clear grade level progression in both knowledge and skills
Guiding Principles • Standards organized around “core standards”. • Under each core standard are a number of content standards that provide a detailed list of expectations. • Core standards are not intended to require the entire year for coverage, allowing a pace that suits individual needs.
Guiding Principles • “Connections” provide additional topics and possible routes for differentiated instruction. Allow individualized instruction, while strengthening student understanding of the core standards. • Core content standards will provide the basis of statewide assessments. A common set of standards that should be covered by every classroom in the state. • Standards organized around core standards will allow districts and ODE to communicate clearly to teachers, parents, and students the science expectations at each grade.
Core Standards Criteria • Endurance: Will the standard provide students with knowledge and skills that will be of value beyond a single test date? • Leverage: Will the standard provide knowledge and skills that will be of value in multiple disciplines? • Readiness: Will the standard provide students with essential knowledge and skills that are necessary for success in the next level of instruction? Beyond school?
Core Standards Criteria • Scientifically Accurate: Fundamental to the science domains; Represent scientific inquiry • Developmentally Appropriate: Reflect the age and stage of students; Represent a learning progression K-12 • Educationally Adequate: Useable in instructional materials; Assessable in classrooms, districts, states; Understandable for teachers, administrators and parents
Core Standards Process • Review the Core Standards Development Process • Review the Core Standards Criteria for Science
Working Agreements • All Opinions & Expertise Honored & Valued • Think Big Picture – All Students & All Schools • Focused Work & Active Participation From All • Cell Phones Silent or Off; Calls Out of the Room • Capture Issues & Suggestions for Task Forces • Add Your Suggestion Here