school improvement planning: student learning spring, 2012

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School School Improvement Improvement Planning: Planning: Student Student Learning Learning Spring, 2012

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Page 1: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

School Improvement School Improvement Planning: Student Planning: Student LearningLearning

Spring, 2012

Page 2: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Let’s get started…

Opposites Card Sort: Teamwork

•As a team, match the opposites. One card represents best practice, the other less effective practice.

Page 3: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Some teachers resist working with you. You go ahead and do good work.

Some teachers resist working with you. You decide you can’t move ahead until everyone is compelled to work with you.

Page 4: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Your team understands that sometimes it must “go slow to go fast” and proceeds accordingly.

Your team writes an aggressive plan with expectations of large gains in student learning in one year.

Page 5: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

You help everyone in your group understand individual meeting preferences and styles, and together, analyze the capacity of the group to work together.

You take charge of the group and plan meetings based on your preferences and style.

Page 6: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Your faculty collects and analyzes data in four categories (demographic, perception, student learning, and school processes) to determine the focus of the student learning action plan.

Your team reviews standardized test data and determines the focus of the student learning plan.

Page 7: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Your team uses a consensus process to reach decisions, respecting the opinion of those who initially dissent.

Your team experiences conflict among the faculty but decides to ignore it.

Page 8: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Your team plans for quality meeting time in August to allow for full collaboration in writing/revising the school improvement plan for student learning.

Your team completes the school improvement plan for student learning without input from all faculty members.

Page 9: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

You regularly review student progress, celebrate results, and make adjustments as needed.

You review standardized test results once a year.

Page 10: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

You communicate your school improvement goals to parents/boards/parish community.

Your school improvement goals are only shared /discussed with faculty.

Page 11: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

You explore a variety of professional learning options to assist teachers in preparing for the CCSS.

Teachers are directed to implement new instructional strategies and assessments that support the CCSS.

Page 12: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Your team, in collaboration with the faculty, maps out all professional learning for the year to support the student learning goal(s) and implementation of the CCSS.

You plan the use of your in-service days for the year as you go along, not being intentional about supporting teacher and student learning.

Page 13: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Let’s get started…

• When all cards are matched, determine which card most accurately reflects your current practice as a team.

Page 14: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Let’s get started…

• Reflection questions:–How many of the cards we

selected reflect best practice?–How can we move from our less

effective practices to best practice?

Page 15: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Learning from Leadership Study

Effective data-use schools:

•Actively use data to monitor the outcomes of School Improvement Plans

•Use formative assessments at regular intervals throughout the year

Page 16: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

• Use data in making decisions about professional development planning

• Use data in conversations with parents about students performance and programming

• Use data to move from problem identification to problem solving

Page 17: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

What Data Do We Need to Pay Attention

To?Looking Back

Page 18: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Multiple Measures

Demographics Perceptions

Student Learning School Processes

Page 19: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

What Data Do We Need to Pay Attention To?

Multiple Measures Worksheet:

•Determine which measures you are currently using to evaluate student learning. You may have additional data sources to list.

Page 20: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

What Data Do We Need to Pay Attention To?

Discussion: •Have you considered data from multiple sources?

•What additional data sources could you use to inform our planning?

Page 21: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

What Data Do We Need to Pay Attention

To?Looking Forward

Page 22: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

The Numbers are in…

Data Review Worksheet:Growth

ConsistencyEquity

Standards

Page 23: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Break Out Session

High School Teams:

Discussion and review of data sources for growth,

consistency, equity, and standards.

Page 24: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Break Out Session

Elementary School Teams:

Discussion and review of ECRA data.

Action Plan Feedback Discussions

Page 25: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Snapshot: Retention DataGrade 3 Grade 5 Grade 7

# of Students Tested

2,495 2,485 2,465

Number and % of Gr. 5 Class of 2014 students since Gr. 3

2,138 = 86%

Number and % of Gr. 7 Class of 2012 students since Gr. 3

1,825 = 74%

Page 26: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Snapshot: Student Achievement Cohorts

READING TOTAL Spring Testing Grade 3 (2012)

Results

Spring Testing Grade 5 (2012)

Results

Spring Testing Grade 7 (2012)

Results

Number of Above Average Students (75-99)

905 886 989

Number of Average Students(25-74)

1,193 1,234 1,171

Number of Below Average Students (1-24)

397 365 305

Page 27: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Growth – Matched Students

READING TOTAL Spring Testing Grade 3 (2008)

Results

Spring Testing Grade 5 (2010)

Results

Spring Testing Grade 7 (2012)

Results

Number of Above Average Students (75-99)

764 798 835

Number of Average Students(25-74)

898 862 847

Number of Below Average Students (1-24)

165 166 143

Page 28: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

ConsistencyReading Total

Grade 3 Grade 5 Grade 7

2008 2,618 66 59 2,681 68 60 2,737 66 59

2009 2,681 64 58 2,694 65 58 2,650 64 58

2010 2,558 63 57 2,580 66 58 2,468 66 59

2011 2,550 62 57 2,638 65 58 2,550 66 59

2012 2,495 62 57 2,485 63 57 2,465 66 58

NP NCE

NPNP NCE

NCE

Page 29: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Break Out Session

Discussion and review of ECRA data.

Data Review Worksheet

Page 30: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Break Out Session

Action Plan Feedback Discussions

Page 31: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Lunch!

Page 32: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Common Core State Standards

Implications for Instruction and Assessment

•The Common Core Standards emphasize student outcomes at higher levels of cognitive performance/critical thinkingthinking.

•Instruction must expect higher levels of critical understandingunderstanding.

Page 33: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012
Page 34: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

English Language Arts/Literacy

• Building knowledge through content-rich nonfiction and informational texts

• Reading and writing grounded in evidence from text

• Regular practice with complex text and its academic vocabulary

Page 35: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

ELA Percentage of Informational and Non-fiction Text

Page 36: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

ELA Percentage of Writing Type

Grade To Persuade To Explain To Convey Experience

4 30% 35% 35%

8 35% 35% 30%

12 40% 40% 20%

Page 37: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Text Complexity

We must systematically expose students to increasingly complex texts.

Page 38: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Text Complexity Grade Bands and Associated Lexile Ranges

Text Complexity Grade Band in the Standards

Old Lexile Ranges

Lexile Ranges Aligned to CCR expectations

K-1 N/A N/A

2-3 450-725 450-790

4-5 645-845 770-980

6-8 860-1010 955-1155

9-10 960-1115 1080-1305

11-CCR 1070-1220 1215-1355

Page 39: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Mathematics

• Less content but at a much deeper level of understanding and application

• Coherent progression from grade to grade.• Focus on conceptual understanding,

procedural skill and fluency, and application with equal intensity.

Page 40: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Standards for Mathematical Practice

1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them.2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively.3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of

others.4. Model with mathematics.5. Use appropriate tools strategically.6. Attend to precision.7. Look for and make use of structure.8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.

Page 41: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012
Page 42: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Mathematics Common Core State Standard Clusters by Grade

K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 High School

Counting and Cardinality

Number Operations in Base TenRatios and

Proportional Reasoning

Number and Quantity

Number and Operations - Fractions The Number System

Algebra

Expressions and Equations

Operations and Algebraic Thinking Functions Functions

Geometry

Measurement and Data Statistics and Probability Statistics and Probability

Modeling

Page 43: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

K – 12 DomainsDomains K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9-12

Counting and Cardinality                  

Operations and Algebraic Thinking                  

Number and Operations in Base Ten                  

Measurement and Data                  

Geometry                  

Number and Operations - Fractions                  

Ratios and Proportional Relationships                  

The Number System                  

Expressions and Equations                  

Statistics and Probability                  

Functions

Algebra

Number and Quantity

Modeling

Page 44: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

15 MinuteBreak

Page 45: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Problem Solving vs. Problem Identification

Problem Identification:We have concerns about the CCSS and don’t feel our teachers are ready to implement them.

The CCSS are coming, whether we’re ready or not.

Page 46: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Problem Solving vs. Problem Identification

Problem Identification:We have concerns about the CCSS and don’t feel our students can handle the content demands.

There are no CCSS for those who need extra help.

Page 47: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Problem Solving vs. Problem Identification

Problem Identification:Our students continue to struggle in goal areas.

Who?Why?

Page 48: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Problem Solving vs. Problem Identification

Problem Identification:We lack the resources to support teacher and student learning initiatives.

It’s all about collaboration.

Page 49: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Planning Professional Learning

Reflection: 2011-12Did our in-service time support our student learning plan?Did we make the best use of our professional development resources?Did we manage our time to provide frequent and job-embedded professional learning?

Page 50: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Planning Professional Learning

Office for School Professional Development Timeline

CCSS Mathematics Professional Development Timeline

Page 51: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

2012-13 Professional Learning Plan

• Using the 2012-13 Professional Learning Plan worksheet, begin drafting your plan.– List the dates of your 10 calendared PD days– What days are already planned? (For example,

Sustaining the Mission dates)– Add any dates from the Office for Schools PD

timelines that apply

Page 52: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Next Steps

School Improvement Planning Document

•Revised to allow for an Annual Review

•Document that will be used for all School Improvement Goals related to accreditation

Page 53: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Next Steps

• Plan a day in August to collaboratively write/revise your student learning action plan. The day should be facilitated by the team.

• Submit the plan electronically to Sue Nelson by September 30, 2012

Page 54: School Improvement Planning: Student Learning Spring, 2012

Feedback appreciated..

• Please complete the evaluation - one per school – and leave it on the table as you leave.

Thank you!