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2018 National Title 1 Conference Jeremy Koselak Jeremy.koselak@d11.org @koselak37 Brad Lyall lyallbrad@gmail.com @ Brad_Lyall. The Revitalized Tutoring Center: Disrupting Inequity Through the Power of Peer Tutors.
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2018 National Title 1 Conference Jeremy Koselak Jeremy.koselak@d11.org @koselak37 Brad Lyall lyallbrad@gmail.com @Brad_Lyall The Revitalized Tutoring Center: Disrupting Inequity Through the Power of Peer Tutors
Believing that every/each student can learn at a high level for college and career …and that it is our responsibility to ensure they have enough time and support If so... Clarifying Why
to get students “back on track” • before they fall behind, • when they behind and • after they fall behind to ensure they graduate college and career ready at the: • Teacher level • PLC, Course, Department Level • School Level What do you do in your schools (systematically)?
Changing demographics, more at risk, less prepared • Gaps widening, high failure rates for freshmen in math and ELA • Math tutorial, remedial, yearlong placement, or below grade level placement • Double-dipping most at risk students, who still struggled • Movement to alternative school Our Story
Provide Flexible Tier 2 (beyond just remediation) • Embedded in School day (in our control) • Systematic and sustainable way to ensure students aren’t slipping through the cracks • Be preventative and responsive (in a layered manner) • Empower PLCs and their formative assessment process • Actualize the Core Belief...that all students can achieve and it is our job to collectively provide the time and support Creating a Better Way...
The Revitalized Tutoring Center! What did we come up with?
Evolving Model (started small…) • Hub of support, meeting supply and demand • It is open to all, and directive to some • Open all day, everyday* • System of Layered, Intentional, Flexible Supports • Teacher as conductor... • Leverage peer tutors in partnership with PLCs… • Tutors (peer and community) providing small group support for academics and SEL, mentoring • Bridge (for student and the system) Picture This
Preventative Support Homework help & skill development Responsive Support Reteach & revisions Test preparation & test taking strategies Salvage and Recovery Retest & rewrite Target credits to save Recover credits Work ethic, organizaiton & study skills Mentoring & motivation The Convergent Process: Layering Preventative & Responsive Supports
A room • 1-2 teachers • A cadre of willing peer tutors • The will to try something new and continuously improve What was the cost?
Palmer HS: % Receiving Free and Reduced Lunch 1735 Students 49.5% White 31% Hispanic 5-7% SPED 4-7% ELL
No Surprise... Research already pointed to this (Hattie, Tom Many, Dufours, Bloom, and many others) Not surprising why this works: --more time with academic work in small group setting with ample error analysis and….. Benefits accrue to both tutor and “tutee”
Research says… • Bowman-Perrott and colleagues summarized the findings from previous reviews to note that “peer tutoring is an effective intervention regardless of dosage, grade level, or disability status” • Over 300 books and 7000 research articles clearly indicating the benefits of peer tutoring (Gordon, Morgan, Ponticell, & O’Malley, 2004)
Research says… • As the National Drop Out Prevention Network has pointed out, tutoring in general and cross-age peer tutoring in particular is one of the most cost effective way to improve academic outcomes available to schools today. • It consistently proves itself to be an “enormously resource efficient procedure” (Dufrene, et. al, 2010)
Research says… To optimize the impact of peer tutors, schools should be • Intentional • Systematic • Flexible
? ? ? ? Tutoring Center ? ? CORE COMPONENTS—What do you predict?
Professional Learning Communities Peer Tutors Leadership Support Personnel Tutoring Center Access Environment CORE COMPONENTS
“Relentlessly respectful, respectfully relentless” • A dedicated certified FTE with support from admin, PLC teams, counselors, departments. • Different gig than teaching…more like running a business • With several traits that lead to greater success: • Entrepreneurial • Great with Students--high expectations blended with empathy– • Focus on Improvement (data driven) • Invest in the champion’s mental health and well-being PERSONNEL: Who will be the champion?
Pause and jot down the answers to this question, as well anything else that comes to mind thinking of personnel. • Who are 2 –3 people that come to mind when describing this role? Time to Think Personnel
Educators working in collaborative teams, with a results orientation, represent the best way to guarantee high levels of learning. • This is about never giving up on students and building a growth mindset. A formative shift---my students haven’t learned that…yet. PLC as Guiding Culture & Beliefs
Amplifying PLCs and RtI/MTSS to provide a viable “middle tier” support structure & enhance PLC’s active collaboration 4 C’s of RtI: • Concentrated Instruction (ELO) • Collective Responsibility • Convergent Use of Data (CFA) • Certain Access (DuFour’s, Eaker, Many; Mattos, Bufum and Weber) PLCs linked to TieredSupports
clarify essential outcomes by grade or course (for college and career). • establish SMART goals and monitor their progress on those. • develop common formative (short-cycle) assessments. • analyze assessment results in order to • improve assessment/curriculum • identify effective instructional approaches • identify students by name and need for intervention and enrichment • plan for, deliver, and monitor the impact of intervention by name and need. • improve instructional strategies through job embedded professional development (observe one another, lesson study, seek help based on identified needs) • innovate responsibly based on action research (Adapted from DuFour and Many) Read: High Leverage actions of PLCs
Consider both the beliefs and high leverage actions of PLCS: • Discuss how a Revitalized Tutoring Center Harnesses the Power of PLCs while also being Empowered by them. Time to Collaborate--PLC
Building leaders through service • Recruiting is ongoing and diverse • Training initially is essential • Why—making students feel valued, focus on positives, ok to make mistakes! • Do’s and Don’ts • Role Play (emphasize asking questions) • Curriculum • Regular feedback and re-training • Peer tutor rubric • Training guide (role playing, practice) Peer Tutors (and Community Volunteers)
Focus on what you can control: in the school day, all day every day • Open to all, Directive to some* • With admin support • Study hall/study skills, distributed advisory • …other ideas (even less than ideal)? • • ACCESS to Students
Pause and jot down the answers to these questions, as well anything else that comes to mind thinking of access. • What existing structures would allow access to students in the school day for flexible support? • What model of access would most likely fit your situation? (e.g., study hall, intervention class, distributed advisory) Time to Think Access
What current space is underutilized and conducive for a tutoring environment? Time to Think Environment
Who is the #1 ally who needs to get behind the model? Time to Think Leadership
It is all about the PLCs and access points • Beware of the “band-aid” effect • Focus on the tutors! • Watch for burn out • The tutoring center is not enough--if we don’t better hook students into their “purpose” behind their diploma, even the best of interventions and programs can only do so much... • Long term approach, not a short term fix • Shift towards Competency Based Learning (H.O.W., SAT, etc.) OBSTACLES AND LEASONS LEARNED
Book Signing (Q/A) at 12, Book Store in Exhibit Hall Jeremy Koselak Jeremy.koselak@d11.org @koselak37 on twitter Brad Lyall lyallbrad@gmail.com @Brad_Lyall Contact & Follow Up Support
Bloom, B. S. (1984). The 2-sigma problem: The search for methods of group instruction as effective as one-to-one tutoring. Educational Researcher, 13(6), 4-16. Bowman-Perrott, L., Davis, H., Vannest, K., Williams, L., Greenwood, C., & Parker, R. (2013). Academic benefits of peer tutoring: A meta-analytic review of single-case research. School Psychology Review, 42(1), 39-55. Buffum, A., & Mattos, M. (2011). Simplifying response to intervention: Four essential guiding principles. Solution Tree Press. DuFour, R., & DuFour, R. (2013). Learning by doing: A handbook for professional learning communities at work TM. Solution Tree Press. Dufrene, B. A., Reisener, C. D., Olmi, D. J., Zoder-Martell, K., McNutt, M. R., & Horn, D. R. (2010). Peer tutoring for reading fluency as a feasible and effective alternative in response to intervention systems. Journal of Behavioral Education, 19(3), 239-256. Gordon, E. E., Morgan, R. R., Ponticell, J. A., & O'Malley, C. J. (2004). Tutoring solutions for No Child Left Behind: Research, practice, and policy implications. NASSP Bulletin, 88(638), 59-68. Hattie, J. (2012). Visible learning for teachers: Maximizing impact on learning. Routledge. Koselak, J., & Lyall, B. (2016). The Revitalized Tutoring Center: A Guide to Transforming School Culture. Routledge. National Dropout Prevention: http://dropoutprevention.org/effective-strategies/mentoring-tutoring/resources/ Wexler, J., Reed, D. K., Pyle, N., Mitchell, M., & Barton, E. E. (2015). A synthesis of peer-mediated academic interventions for secondary struggling learners. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 48(5), 451-470. Research