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Work Group on Student-Centered Learning in High School August 20, 2013 2:00-3:30pm. Introductions and Background. Welcome Work Group Introductions Background: Nellie Mae Education Foundation New Approaches in Urban Districts Grant
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Work Group on Student-Centered Learning in High School August 20, 2013 2:00-3:30pm
Introductions and Background • Welcome • Work Group Introductions • Background: • Nellie Mae Education Foundation New Approaches in Urban Districts Grant • $450,000 / 18 months to research , plan and pilot blended learning models at the high school level • Part of a cross-district community of practice with other Connecticut communities: Danbury, Meriden, New Haven, Manchester, Norwalk; Chelsea and Revere in Massachusetts; and Providence in Rhode Island
Planning Goals Goals: • To increase district and community knowledge of student-centered blended learning • To determine ways to use blended learning to increase student achievement and differentiate learning • To engage in action research to pilot and evaluate blended learning approaches in two schools: Pathways Academy of Technology and Design and Bulkeley Teacher Prep and Humanities Academy • To share best practices from the blended learning research for consideration throughout district
Project Scope and Planning Activities I Establish Current State: Where we are today • What is Blended Learningand current district blended learning practices • Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats of blended learning II Conduct an Innovation Landscape: Explore promising practices • Literature and case study review of key models and web-based and dynamic computer-based instruction • Visit best practice blended learning models III Determine Desired State: Develop a Shared Vision for Blended Learning • Vision statement for blended learning for Hartford Public Schools • Theory of Action and Logic Model: Moving from Current to Desired State • Implications on research, practice and policy for HPS
Project Scope and Planning Activities IV Engage the Community for Input and Expand Knowledge • BOE, community and stakeholder sessions • Reports and information sharing throughout project V Pilot implementation plans in Bulkeley and Pathways • Action research plan to implement and document the experiences from multiple perspectives VI Project Report • Based on research and results of action research, develop recommendations for consideration in advancing blended learning in the district
Planning Teams and Key Participants • Superintendent’s Work Group on Student-Centered Learning in High School • Bulkeley/Pathways Professional Learning Community (PLC)
Lightning Round…. In one sentence or less…jot down: • Something that you know about blended learning OR • Question you have about blended learning OR • Something you like or dislike about blended learning
What is…Student Centered Learning? Student Centered Learning: • Emphasizes that education is not “one-size fits all.” • Students develop their academic and career interests and produce authentic, professional work to demonstrate their learning. • Teachers act as coaches, advisors, and facilitators, providing students with the opportunity to take charge of their own learning. (Moeller & Reitzes, 2011)
What is…Blended Learning? Blended Learning – a formal education program in which a student learns in part through online learning, with some element of student control over time, place, path, and/or pace; in part in a supervised brick-and-mortar location away from home. (Clayton Christensen Institute, 2012)
What is happening nationally? • 56% of District Administrators report implementing some kind of blended learning in their districts • Of the remaining 44% of districts not currently implementing some form of blended learning, almost all are in some stage of planning • 75% of District Leaders and 78% of School Leaders report interest in implementing a blended learning model • Costs, teacher capacity, student access, and hardware were the most commonly cited obstacles (The Parthenon Group, 2013)
The Basics of Blended Learning educationelements. (2011, September 24). The Basics of Blended Learning [Video file]. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3xMqJmMcME0
Rotation • Within a course or subject, students rotate on a fixed schedule (or as directed by the teacher) between different learning modalities, at least one of which is online learning.
Rotation • Example: The KIPP LA Empower Academy
Flex • Instruction is delivered primarily via the Internet, with students moving on an individually customized sequence; scheduling is fluid among learning modalities, and the teacher of record is on site.
Flex • Example: San Francisco Flex Academy
Self-Blend • Students choose to take one or more courses entirely online to supplement their traditional courses. • Example: Quakertown Community School District
Enriched model • Students divide their time between attending a brick-and-mortar campus and learning remotely using online delivery of content and instruction. • Example: Albuquerque eCADEMY
Summary Thoughts • What are the most compelling opportunities that blended learning can provide for our students? • What are the challenges, risks, concerns with blended learning?
Next Step: Landscape Scan • School survey: work group feedback on topics, key questions, areas of inquiry
Going forward • Project Activities • Meeting Schedule: • October 22, 2013: 2:00-3:30pm • December 3, 2013: 2:00-3:30pm • April 29, 2014: 5:30-7:00pm: Work Group with Community • September 23, 2014: 2:00-3:30pm • Website: http://blendedlearningct.wordpress.com/