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Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler Don Deshler University of Kansas University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009 October 8, 2009

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Page 1: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy

Don DeshlerDon DeshlerUniversity of KansasUniversity of Kansas

Center for Research on LearningCenter for Research on Learning

Alameda Unified School DistrictAlameda Unified School DistrictOctober 8, 2009October 8, 2009

Page 2: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

A Highly Valued Partnership

Page 3: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

#1About the KU Center for Research on Learning

Page 4: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

KU-CRL KU-CRL missionmission is to is to markedly improve . . .markedly improve . . .

• The performance of struggling adolescent The performance of struggling adolescent learnerslearners

• How How teachersteachers instruct academically instruct academically diverse classesdiverse classes

• How secondary How secondary schoolsschools can be can be structured to improve outcomesstructured to improve outcomes

• How our validated practices How our validated practices reachreach tens of tens of thousands of practitioners in the fieldthousands of practitioners in the field

• How How public policypublic policy initiatives are crafted initiatives are crafted to support struggling learners to support struggling learners

Page 5: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

CRL R & D Model

Practitioner Questions/insights,

Theory, Existing Literature,

Dissemination

Scale Studies

Effectiveness Studies

Design Studies

Product Refinement

Professional Development

Programmatic Evaluation

Emerging Knowledge

Initial Product Development

Cost

effectiv

eness

Cost effectiveness

Page 6: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

KU-CRL ResearchKU-CRL Research

• $185+ million since 1978• Funding Sources

– Federal agencies (U. S. Departments of Education, Labor, and Defense, National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health)

– 14 State Departments of Education– Foundations (Carnegie Corporation of NY, Gates, Stupski, McDonalds)

• Portfolio– Research (40-50%)– Model Demonstration (25%)– Dissemination (15%)

– Leadership Preparation (10%)

Page 7: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

KU-CRL ResearchKU-CRL Research

Improve Student LearningImprove Student Learning• Learning Strategies Curriculum

– Adopted by 3500 schools in North America

• Fusion Reading– Selected for national reading study for struggling adolescent learners– Newly funded Striving Readers project in Michigan

• Goal-setting Program– Used in Academic Support Program for KU Athletic Department

• Strategic Tutoring Program – One of most broadly used evidence based after school tutoring programs in

country

Page 8: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009
Page 9: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

KU-CRL ResearchKU-CRL Research

Improve Quality of InstructionImprove Quality of Instruction

• Content Enhancement Routines– Tools to create “learner friendly” instruction in academically diverse

classes

• Blending Assessment with Instruction (BAIP)– Online program for aligning mathematics instruction with results on

Kansas state assessments -- adopted by 245 Kansas School Districts, state of Arkansas, Riverside will publish

Page 10: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

KU-CRL ResearchKU-CRL Research

Improve Teacher PreparationImprove Teacher Preparation

• Instructional Coaching Research Initiative– KU-CRL coaching model adopted by 28 states and 1500 schools. Only

model supported by IES research funds

• Online Academy -- 54 modules based on evidence-based teaching practices adopted by 183

colleges and universities

Page 11: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

KU-CRL ResearchKU-CRL Research

Restructure Secondary SchoolsRestructure Secondary Schools

• Content Literacy Continuum (CLC) Initiative – Whole school reform model incorporating multiple KU-CRL

interventions and programs. Adopted by 12 state departments of education

– Being considered by Gates Foundation to address “failure” of its educational investments in secondary schools

Page 12: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

KU-CRL PracticeKU-CRL Practice

Curriculum Materials & SupportsCurriculum Materials & Supports• 1500 certified members of International

Professional Development Network– Trained over 800,000 teachers and administrators in nearly 4000 school

districts

• 15 web based resources to enhance classroom instruction (ALTEC)

– 7.3 million pages viewed per month– 515,000 registered teachers

– Of all 108,810,000 distinct web sites on the web, collectively, ALTEC’s web sites are in the top .004% of usage

• 186 curriculum products and implementation supports

Page 13: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

KU-CRL PolicyKU-CRL Policy

Public Policy LeadershipPublic Policy Leadership

• Testimony before U. S. Congress & 17 state legislatures– To help shape legislation, serve as expert witnesses

• Named to key education policy boards– National Institute for Literacy– National Governor’s Association Board on Adolescent Literacy– U. S. State Department Advisory Board on Overseas Schools– Carnegie Corporation of NY Advisory Council on Advancement of Adolescent Literacy– Alliance for Excellent Education– National Center for Learning Disabilities

Page 14: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

KU-CRL Leadership PreparationKU-CRL Leadership Preparation

Preparing Tomorrow’s LeadersPreparing Tomorrow’s Leaders

• Professional Development Plan– To match student learning goals with learning opportunities in KU-CRL

• Accomplishments of doctoral students affiliated with KU-CRL– 17 awarded “Outstanding Dissertation of the Year Award” by national professional organizations– 317 articles in top tier refereed journals– 91 book chapter– 53 books– 57 instructional materials– $49,989,311 external grant funds generate– 8 journal editorships, 37 journal review boards– 85 leadership roles in professional organizations

Page 15: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

#2Some of the challenges

Page 16: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Percent of Population with HS Degree or Equivalent

Notes: 1) Excluding ISCED 3C short programmes; 2) Year of reference 2004; 3) Year of reference 2003. 4) Percent population recieviing a HS degree in each decade is approximated by the age cohort typically recieving diplomas at that time; e.g. 1960s is approximated by the proportion of 55-64 year olds with a high school diploma. Source: OECD 2008

As Others Rise to the Challenge, U.S. Advantage Drops

1313

11 2727

11

1960’s1960’s

1970’s1970’s

1980’s1980’s

1990’s1990’s

Page 17: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009
Page 18: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009
Page 19: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

#3Important

developments

Page 20: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

20+ Reports on Adolescent 20+ Reports on Adolescent Literacy Literacy

Page 21: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009
Page 22: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009
Page 23: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009
Page 24: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

IES Recommendations• Explicit vocabulary instruction

• Direct, explicit comprehension strategy instruction

• Discussion of text meaning & interpretation

• Increase student motivation & engagement in literacy learning

• Qualified specialists for intensive, individualized interventions

Page 25: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009
Page 26: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

COI Recommendations • Explicit instruction and practice to use

comprehension strategies • Increase the amount and quality of open,

sustained discussion of content• Set high standards for text, conversation,

questions, and vocabulary • Increase students’ motivation and engagement

with reading and knowledge engagement• Teach essential content knowledge and critical

concepts

Page 27: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

The key role of fidelity

Page 28: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Positive student outcomes are dependent upon

• Fidelity of implementation of process (at the school level)

• Degree to which interventions are empirically supported

• Fidelity of intervention implementation (at teacher level)

(Pierangelo & Giulia, 2008)

Page 29: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Fidelity Model5 Elements of Fidelity

Dane & Schneider, 1998; Greshem et., al., 1993; O’Donnell, 2008

Page 30: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Adherence• How well do you “stick to the plan”

• How well do you provide interventions as intended?– Example:

• Core: Following the progress monitoring procedure

• Supplemental and Intensive: Making sure all pieces of the intervention have been implemented as intended

Page 31: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Duration/Exposure

• How often a student receives an intervention

• How long an intervention lasts– Example (in elementary schools):

• Core: Providing 90 minutes of reading instruction five days a week

• Supplemental: Progress monitoring every two weeks for academics. Exposure

Page 32: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Quality of Delivery

• How well was the intervention or instruction delivered?

• Good teaching practice– Examples:

• National Board for Professional Teaching Standards

• Teacher enthusiasm

• Time for student questions and feedback

• Effective management of student groups and transitions

Page 33: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Program Differentiation• How well do you differentiate one

intervention from another?

• Not inserting

• Staying true to the intervention and not drifting away from the core elements.

Page 34: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Student Responsiveness• How engaged are the

students in this intervention or activity?

• Student engagement and involvement in the intervention or instructional activities– Examples:

• Amount of time students spend on task• Levels of enthusiasm for activity• Extent students feel they learned what

was expected

Page 35: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

#4What leadership behaviors and

mechanisms promote literacy

improvement?

Page 36: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Questions to Consider…• Do we have a culture of encouragement?• Is there a shared sense of purpose?• Is there a deep commitment to each of us

improving our craft? • How transparent is our instruction?• Is there a culture of individual and group

accountability?• What characterizes our interactions with

each other?

Page 37: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

This is what we want in terms of instruction!

Page 38: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

1. Lecture/read2. Give directions3. Listening4. Ask questions5. Monitor6. Model7. Verbal rehearsal8. Simple enhancer9. Advance organizer10. Role Play11. Content Enhancement (complex)12. Elaborated Feedback13. Write on board14. Describe skill/strategy

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

Observation of Teacher Practice Study

Page 39: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009
Page 40: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

1. Lecture/read2. Give directions3. Listening4. Ask question5. Monitor6. Model7. Verbal rehearsal8. Simple enhancer9. Advance organizer10. Role Play11. Content Enhancement (complex)12. Elaborated Feedback13. Write on board14. Describe skill/strategy

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

1. Lecture/read2. Give directions3. Listening4. Ask question5. Monitor6. Model7. Verbal rehearsal8. Simple enhancer9. Advance organizer10. Role Play11. Content Enhancement (complex)12. Elaborated Feedback13. Write on board14. Describe skill/strategy

Page 41: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009
Page 42: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009
Page 43: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Active

Literacy Leadership

Teams

Page 44: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Fluid Movement Across Services

Improved Literacy

Outcomes

CONTENT CLASSES

Level 1. Enhanced Content Instruction

CONTENT CLASSES

Level 2. Embedded Strategy

InstructionLevel 3. Intensive

Strategy Instruction

• strategy classes

• SES (strategic tutoring)

Level 4. Intensive Basic Skill Instruction

Level 5. Therapeutic Intervention

Foundational language competencies

KU-CRL M. Hock, 2004

Page 45: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

DisciplinaryLiteracy

IntermediateLiteracy

BasicLiteracy

Shanahan & Shanahan (2008)

Page 46: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Basic Literacy

Basic decoding skills, understanding various print and literacy conventions (print versus illustrations), recognition of high frequency words, some basic fluency routines – Mastered in primary grades.

Page 47: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Intermediate Literacy

More sophisticated routines and responses…. Read multisyllabic words quickly and easily, respond with low frequency words with some automaticity. Generic comprehension strategies, cognitive endurance, monitor comprehension, mostly by end of middle school.

Page 48: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Disciplinary Literacy

More specialized reading routines and strategies --powerful for specific situations but not necessarily generalizable.

Page 49: Moving the Needle on Adolescent Literacy Don Deshler University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning Alameda Unified School District October 8, 2009

Disciplinary Literacy

“The disciplinary experts approached reading in a very different ways. We are convinced that the nature of the disciplines is something that must be communicated to adolescents, along with the ways in which experts approach the reading of text. Students’ text comprehension benefits when students learn to approach different texts with different lenses.”

Shanahan & Shanahan (2008)