260 likes | 405 Views
Module 8: Standard 2- Instructional Planning. APS Teacher Evaluation. Please sit in groups with teachers NOT from your school. Brainstorm. What are 8 things that you would expect to see in an effective lesson?. Anticipation Guide. APS Teacher Evaluation Process Overview. Writes. Teacher.
E N D
Module 8: Standard 2- Instructional Planning APS Teacher Evaluation Please sit in groups with teachers NOT from your school.
Brainstorm What are 8 things that you would expect to see in an effective lesson?
APS Teacher Evaluation Process Overview Writes Teacher Lesson Plans Participates Writes Compiles Participates Participates Approves Reviews Conducts Facilitates Facilitates Lesson Plans Evaluator Monitors
Agenda • Teacher Performance Standard 2 Instructional Planning • APS Lesson Plan Key Elements • Application
Additional Reading Brief 4 Instructional Planning
Windshield Check for Understanding • CLEAR = I get it! • BUGS = I get it for the most part, but some things are still unclear. • MUD = I still don’t get it!
Presentation Lesson Video- World War I: Writing From the Trenches APS Gunston Middle School Barbara Formosa and Greg Cabana
What key elements did you see? • Discuss in pairs
Practice In this particular grade level- what does _____(insert key element)___ look like?
Stations- Examples of Grade Level Specific Key Elements • Circle 4 key elements that you would like to spend more time learning about/practicing • Around the room are posters with information about each key element. • Stand by one poster (no more than 4-6 per poster) • Brainstormexamples of that element in your instructional planning • Repeat 3 more times • Grab a partner and gallery walk • Debrief as a group
3) Application • Select a content area (4 corners of the room) • Math, Science, Social Studies, or Reading • Re-organize in tables of teachers not from your school, by the content you selected Math Science Social Studies Reading
Plan A Lesson • Collaboratively plan a lesson with the given content area and objectives • Record on chart paper • Include the key elements
Debrief- Collaborative Lesson Planning • What was a successful part of this activity? • What was a challenge in this activity?
Check for Understanding: • Return to Anticipation Guide • Action Plan • Exit ticket
APS Teacher Evaluation Vision Since 1999 “Arlington Public Schools will provide every student with highly effective educators that have the necessary tools to positively impact student learning and growth.”
Language Objectives • State how students will use language to master the content • Include all four language domains – reading, writing, speaking and listening • Build academic language proficiency • Students need time to practice using all four language domains to develop understanding of the content
Key Questions When Writing language Objectives • Is the objective observable? • How will you assess student mastery? • Are the language objectives focused on the academic languageand/orlanguage processes you expect students to use? • Are the objectives written in student-friendly language? Consider: What are the language demands of the content objective? • Language functions – e.g. define, describe, explain, classify, compare, summarize, sequence • Academic vocabulary– (e.g. discipline-specific, test vocabulary, transition words) • Language structures – (questions, past tense, writing a complete sentence, writing a paragraph) Language Objectives
Example: The Water Cycle - Language Objectives Student will be able to: • Read • Read the text to ask and answer questions to demonstrate comprehension. • Write • Use key vocabulary and transition words to describe the water cycle process. • Speak • Describe the water cycle while viewing a diagram. • Use the key vocabulary in an oral description of the water cycle. • Listen • Listento a partner’s description and assess accuracy. Language Objectives
Content Objectives Content objectives: • are derived from the state content standards • should emphasize the key components of the topic • should be clear, direct, observable and student-friendly • Should build connections to prior background knowledge of key vocabulary and concepts • Students need time to practice using all four language domains to develop understanding of the content
A Process for Student and Teacher Growth APS Teacher Evaluation