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Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

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Page 1: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Team Solutions Professional Development

WASIP Cluster PLC

Year 1 and 2 teachers

Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator

10th May 2011

Page 2: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Purpose

• To bring teachers together to network, share, understand and continue to inquire into the effectiveness of their literacy practices – developing powerful Professional Learning Communities (PLCs).

• To build new knowledge about what our students need to understand and do to increase their ability in reading through the identification of effective literacy practices.

Page 3: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Teaching as Inquiry

What do you remember from Claire Sinnema’s workshop?

Page 4: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Opportunity to practice

Groups of three teachers (Teachers you from another school)

• Use the evidence you have brought with you (e.g. Running record, Observation Survey, writing book, modeling book) for one target student to practice the inquiry process

• Use the Inquiry Speaking frame to share in your groups (5 minutes per teacher)

• Share with your group something you have tried or changed as a future action from the Teacher Only Day presentations

• Group sharing - effective practices

Page 5: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Inquiry speaking frameFocus Inquiry• My target student demographics are as follows…• Current achievement (best fit) Level -

Standard - • The evidence shows the student is able to…• Their next steps for learning include …• I decided to focus on…..because• My learning intention was…• The success criteria were…Teaching Inquiry• The strategy I wanted my students to learn in this

lesson was…• I used the following deliberate acts of teaching…Learning Inquiry• I noticed…• As a result of this I am thinking about…• Something that worked well was…Why?• Something I need to change is… Why?

Page 6: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Things to think about

• Do I expect to notice shifts in every lesson?

• What am I going to need to do to support the students who are not shifting?

• In what ways has the professional reading changed my practice?

• What did “student voice” tell me

Page 7: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Running Records

What can they tell us?

Page 8: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Purpose

To model a process that uses running records to inform teaching and

learning.

We will do this using 3 levels of analysis.

Page 9: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Prior knowledge activation

K – What I Know?

W – What I Want to know? L – What I have Learnt?

Professional reading

• • What is the pu rpose of a runn ing record?

• • P. 4 Using Runn ing Reco rds; A resources for classro om teachers (Learn ing Media, 2000)

• P.49 -51 An Observat ion Surv ey; Marie Clay (2005 , second ed it ion )

• • What in format ion d o runn ing record s g ive us?

• • P.7 Using Runn ing Recor ds; A resources for classro om teachers (Learn ing Media, 2000)

• Which student s need runn ing records?

• • P.6 Using Runn ing Recor ds; A resources for classro om teachers (Learn ing Media, 2000)

• • When d o we use seen/unseen texts? Why?

• • P.13 Using Runn ing Recor ds; A resources for classro om teachers (Learn ing Media, 2000)

• P.10,11,1 6 Read in g and Wr it ing Standards

• • Other? • •

What do we already know about running records?

Page 10: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Emergent texts

1.No minimum requirement to move students from emergent to red and beyond

2.Making rules about how long you stay on emergent only hinders progress

3.Emergent texts are about early reading concepts

4.There is very little problem solving at emergent texts

5.We read to make meaning and build knowledge as we go

6.We have to consider what we want learners to learn from emergent texts and what are the opportunities /challenges in these texts

Page 11: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Emergent textsLearners do not have to look at emergent levels and the longer they are on emergent the longer they persist with unhelpful ways of working.

Red TextsAt red we need to show the learner how to look, where to look, what to look for-all enclosed in making meaning. Reading is a meaning making problem solving activity.

Page 12: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Professional reading

“Getting it Together” by Ian Morrison

Page 13: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Level 1 analysis

Child 1 Child 2

Running words 56 56

Errors 4 4

Self-corrections

2 2

Accuracy 94% 94%

Self correction rate

1:3 1:3

Analyse the number of errors, self corrections and accuracy.

What is a desirable ratio for self corrections?

Page 14: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Level 2 Analysis

ErrorsM

ErrorsS

ErrorsV

SCM

SCS

SCV

Child 1

5 4 3 0 1 2

Child 2

2 2 0 0 0 2

Total each cueing system - MSV

(ELP Pages 28-30, An Observation Survey-Marie Clay, P.69)

Are they (MSV) being used in an integrated way?

Page 15: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Level 3 analysis

Attending and Searching: Word level? Analogy use? Illustrations?Predicting: Attempts? Guessing? Using MSV knowledge?Cross-Checking/Confirming/Self-Correcting: Notices mismatches? Reruns? Reads on? Multiple attempts? Using MSV knowledge?

Analyse for processing strategies

What reading behaviours are these children using/not using?

Page 16: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

What can/can’t these children do?

Child 1 Child 2

•Can do -

•Can’t do -

•Can do -

•Can’t do -

Page 17: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

What can/can’t these children do?

Child 1 Child 2

•Can do - re-runs when a mismatch occurs, re-reads after being told a word, Nearly always predicts when unsure•Can’t do - Endings

•Can do -use pictures and first letter sounds sometimes to self correct

•Can’t do - doesn’t re-read when T tells the correct word, doesn’t predict/attempt when unsure - just appeals

Page 18: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Analyse for comprehension

• Can they retell all the key information?• Is the retell coherent?• Are they able to retell in sequence?

When using Benchmarks or Probe • Variation in ability to answer different types of questions?

• Use of comprehension strategies? e.g. Visualisation? Prediction/re-prediction? Summarisation? Identifying main idea?

Connecting to prior knowledge? Inference?

Page 19: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Analyse for fluency

• Finger pointing?• Voice pointing?• Phrasing?• Expression?• Using punctuation?

Page 20: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Next steps/Future action

Back in your schools;

• Use the three levels of analysis on one target student’s running record

• Identify what the child can do/can’t do

• Prepare your next Inquiry speaking frame to share at the Week 7 PLC

• Identify your challenge of practice from the reading

Page 21: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Professional Reading for Week 7 PLC

• To find or to fix:Effective teacher response to error in early literacy learning by Pauline Smith

• “Early - reading teachers typically focus on fixing student errors, rather than helping students notice them.”

Page 22: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

Reflection time

• What is one new thing I learnt today?

• What are my next steps?

Be prepared to share these at your next team meeting.

Page 23: Team Solutions Professional Development WASIP Cluster PLC Year 1 and 2 teachers Debbie Martin; Primary Literacy Facilitator 10th May 2011

“Every child is ready to learn more than he or she already knows…Teachers must find out what children already know and take them from where they are to somewhere else.”

Dame Marie Clay