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Changing Teacher Practice. Changing Student Outcomes. Summer Institutes. 2013. How to use Professional Development to Ensure Improved Student Outcomes. This presentation was adapted from Learning Forward, 2012. Our Outcomes . Define evaluation in relationship to professional learning;
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ChangingTeacherPractice ChangingStudentOutcomes Summer Institutes 2013
How to use Professional Development to Ensure Improved Student Outcomes This presentation was adapted from Learning Forward, 2012
Our Outcomes • Define evaluation in relationship to professional learning; • Examine the process of teacher change and its impact on student learning; and • Acquire strategies, tools, and resources to assist in evaluating professional learning- Building PD Capacity Toolkit (link)
Our Essential Questions • How can evaluating professional learning leverage school, school system, and state improvement effort? • How will I align professional learning objectives to measurable short, medium and long-term results for educators and students? • How will I collaborate with others to construct a framework that outlines a detailed plan for evaluation? • How do I incorporate evaluation into my work and normative practice?
Group Norms • We’re all in this boat together, so lets agree to… • Listen as an Ally • Value Differences • Maintain Professionalism • Participate Actively • If we start sinking, and we need some help, we’ll be clear about whether we need a bucket or a boat.
The Standards for Professional Learning Professional learning that increases educator effectiveness and results for all students uses a variety of sources and types of student, educator, and system data to plan, assess, and evaluate professional learning. -Standards for Professional Learning, 2011 http://www.ncpublicschools.org/docs/effectiveness-model/ncees/standards/prof-learn-quick-ref.pdf
DuFour Questions • What do we want students to learn? • How will we know if they have learned it? • What will we do if they have? • What will we do if they haven’t? Apply this to Professional Learning: What does it mean in your district: Full implementation vs. Full Participation • How do you know you have full implementation?
Full Implementation - Evaluation A systematic, purposeful process of studying, reviewing, and analyzing data gathered from multiple sources in order to make informed decisions about a program. – Killion, 2008 The systematic investigation of merit and worth. – Thomas Guskey, 2000
Your Evaluation Process Write 4-5 sentences that describe the evaluation process/steps you currently use as a leader responsible for assisting others with evaluating professional learning. Tech Tool Idea: Penzu – online writing journal
Group Think – Table talk, share out or Padlet • What aspect of evaluating professional learning do you find essential? • How do we know that the professional learning is making its way to the classroom?
How and Why of Evaluation Good evaluations are the product of thoughtful planning, the ability to ask good questions, and a basic understanding about how to find valid answers. In many ways they are simply the refinement of everyday thinking. Good evaluations provide information that is sound, meaningful, and sufficiently reliable to use in making thoughtful and responsible decisions about professional development processes and effects (Guskey & Sparks, 1991).
? Input Output Lead Box Evaluations Superman X-ray A simplistic approach to professional learning evaluation that fail to amplify the underlying theory and operation of the professional learning program. Glass Box Evaluations Results Actions A comprehensive approach to professional learning evaluation that illuminates how professional learning program components interact to produce results.
Lead Box ? Professional Learning Action Student Achievement Results Focus on outputs rather than what occurs in the program or what is presumed to be causing those outcomes and why
Lead Box Curriculum Development ? Student Achievement Results Professional Learning Focus on inputs and fail to shed light on HOW a program’s activities and resources interact to produce results. Nonacademic factors
Glass Box Focus on what occurs and how it occurs within the program. Student Achievement Results Professional Learning Actions
Glass Box Coaching/Follow-up Instructional Resources Implementation Monitoring Student Assessment Student Achievement Results Professional Learning Focus on illuminating factors contributing to transformation process.
Lead Box vs. Glass Box What is the difference?
8 Smooth Evaluation Steps • Reporting • 7. Disseminate and Use Findings • Evaluate the Evaluation • Planning • Determine ‘what’ to evaluate • Formulate Evaluation Questions • Construct Evaluation Framework • Conducting • 4. Collect Data • 5. Organize, Analyze, & Display Data • Interpret Data
3 Types of Evaluation • Planning – before program design to provide information on conditions or needs to address • Formative – during implementation to provide information on whether the program is working as designed • Summative – after completion to provide information on outcomes or overall impact
Tiers and Benchmarks • Multiple settings • Data sources – affective, quantity, performance data • Initial vs. embedded • 5 year plan for data collection • Universal Design for Learning (UDL)
Reflection • Review your 4-5 sentences about evaluation • Look at the Padlet responses • ‘Steal’ ideas to take back to your district • Reflect on what you can do differently as result of your new knowledge
Change is Learning Concerns-Based Adoption Model : Developed by Bill Rutherford, Gene Hall, Shirley Hord, and Susan Loucks-Horsley 4 Components: • Stage of Concern – 7 stages of responses • Levels of Use – eight ranges of intervention use • Innovation Configuration – described actions • ‘Change’ facilitators – leaders of learning
Change Learning Exchange • Distribute numbered cards (#1-4) at your table. • Read and the corresponding article on change. • Prepare a two-minute talk about your article. Use any of the following to prepare. • Why your focus area is important. • Implications of the change process. • Ways to facilitate your area of change. • Challenges you anticipate when helping others understand this area of change.
Change Spotlight • Find a partner that read a different article. • Take two minutes each, discuss your article. • Focus on any of the following: • Why your focus area is important. • Implications of the change process. • Ways to facilitate your area of change. • Challenges you anticipate when helping others understand this area of change. • Listen for the timer to repeat the process.
Note to Self What new insights did you gain as a result of your reading and discussion with others? Share Out
Weebly Activity • Access the Toolkit • Find the ‘Evaluation’ Tab • Read and Complete the activities Share big ideas as a group
Summary & Wrap-up Set Standards for Acceptable Performance • Specify how good is good enough • Specify “success” in advance • Provide a benchmark/baseline for comparison before and after professional learning
Teachers participate in collaborative learning experiences. Teachers implement new learning in their instruction. Student performance increases.
Evaluation Assumptions • The staff development program is data-driven, research-based, and well-defined. • The school, district, or regional agency has the capacity, including fiscal and human capital, to implement both the program and evaluation with fidelity to their designs. • Key stakeholders in the school, district, or agency intend to use the evaluation results to make decisions about the program.
Debrief • How are the ideas presented today CONNECTED to what you already knew? • What new ideas did you get that EXTENDED or pushed your thinking in new directions? • What is still CHALLENGING or confusing for you to get your mind around? What questions or wonderings do you now have?