Thursday, November 5, 2015

ICS Dynamic Learning - Environment

ICS Dynamic Learning -  education that is positive in attitude and full of energy and new ideas
One of the biggest indicators of student success relates to time on task. In short, student academic achievement increases in direct proportion to the amount of time they spend actively engaged in the instructional time. 
This approach makes logical sense. The more time spent dribbling a basketball, the better one becomes at dribbling. The more hours occupied in reading, the broader one's vocabulary. More time spent exercising leads to better fitness. Do something more often and become better at it. 
But, this time spent practicing must be purposeful; it must be worthwhile. Dribbling a basketball with just one hand while standing still will not affect as much improvement in ball-handling as working with both hands while moving. Vary your movement, pace, hand - more actively engage in the activity - and your skill in that area will improve. 
So then, time-on-task entails more than just counting seconds, minutes, hours or days. Instead, it involves making those seconds, minutes, hours and days count.

Flexible / Mobile Seating
*students shouldn't feel trapped in a desk and sitting still shouldn't be a goal in and of itself
Being sedentary leads to health problems including obesity and back problems (https://www.washingtonpost.com/apps/g/page/national/the-health-hazards-of-sitting/750/). Furthermore, being sedentary with our bodies leads to being sedentary with our brains. In his work titled, Brain Rules, Dr. John Medina proposes that our brains work best when our bodies are in motion at a pace of about 1.8 miles per hour (http://www.brainrules.net). In this way, classrooms filled with desks and chairs keep kids both seated and still. While prolonged focus has its benefits, learning - an active process - requires action. 
Photo from http://flaglerlive.com/69536/learnfits-flagler-schools/ 
Students should be presented with more flexible learning spaces allowing for standing and movement to help promote health and a healthy brain. 
Standing desks and bands for students' feet can help to put the body in a posture for greater mental capacity. 
From http://www.nea.org/tools/47003.htm 

360° Classrooms
*education shouldn't be limited to a notebook; space within the classroom should be maximized for student usage
Another way to incorporate movement into classrooms and promote engagement is to have students out of their "seats" and using all available wall space to work. Most typically used in math, 360 degree classrooms make use of dry erase, chalkboard or glass surfaces in order to give students functional and organic work spaces. 360 degree classrooms can allow for teachers to provide formative feedback easily as student work is readily displayed for the teacher's analysis. 

Differentiated Instruction
*time-on-task is most conducive to learning gains when it is appropriately challenging for each student
Photo from http://uprepschool.org/our-program/academic/ 
When academic activities offer too much or too little of a challenge for a student, his/her engaged time-on-task decreases. In turn, his/her learning gains will also decrease. Therefore, classrooms should allow for small group instruction and differentiation. 
A common practice in early childhood and primary classrooms, small group instruction typically wanes in Upper Elementary and Middle and High School classrooms in favor of tracking and one-size fits all instruction. 
Resources available for small group instruction can lead to more specific and individualized plans while at the same time promoting motion and activity within the room. 

Student Autonomy
*one of the best strategies for engaged learning is through choice; this also leads to greater self-awareness and meta-cognition
Providing students with choices as to how they can engage in a classroom is an incredibly motivating strategy. Giving students the ability to self-analyze how they best learn - standing, sitting, using a band for their feet, comfortably sitting in a bean bag chair, etc. - and then affording them the ability to utilize that strategy throughout the learning process can awaken and enliven the educational process. 
Photo from http://mdjonline.com/bookmark/21828760-Students-ditch-desks-for-bean-bags 
This self-analysis can promote self-assessment (one of the most valid assessment strategies) and meta-cognition. A student who is thinking about their thinking and free to choose the setting in which he/she learns best will be more apt to identify their own misconceptions, errors and or gaps in learning. This, in turn, provides formative feedback to both students and teachers, promoting greater differentiation, purposeful instruction and engaged learning. 


Environment
*it is said that every classroom has three teachers - the teacher, other students and the room 
Classrooms must be structured in a way that promotes engagement. Time spent actively engaged leads to learning gains. Learning gains brings knowledge. Knowledge brings power. 
Unleash it. 
Photo from: http://www.fastcodesign.com/1637619/redesigning-education-why-cant-we-be-in-kindergarten-for-life 


Resources:
http://educationnorthwest.org/sites/default/files/EducationalTimeFactors.pdf

http://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED192454.pdf

http://www.marzanocenter.com/files/Teaching-for-Rigor-20140318.pdf

http://thethirdteacherplus.com


Monday, March 2, 2015

21st Century Learners and Lesson

Four Topics to Address with Designing a Lesson
 Stamina
Making Meaning
Multiple Intelligences
Technology

Stamina
Noun: Strength of physical constitution; power to endure (Dictionary.com)

Stamina in Classroom
GOAL: Change it up every ten minutes...
Get students out of their seats, talking with one another, brain breaks, WHATEVER.



Making Meaning
Psychologists Piaget and Anderson suggest a key ingredient to students’ learning is making meaning and building on preexisting knowledge.

Whiteboard talks, KWL, Drawing pictures, Partner pictures.

Essential Questions… Real life purpose why this matters to my life



Multiple Intelligences: Avenue for Differentiation, Multiple Mediums for Reaching All Students
8 Intelligences – by Dr. Howard Gardner
1.    Linguistic
2.    Logical/ Mathematical
3.    Spatial
4.    Bodily/ Kinesthetic
5.    Musical
6.    Interpersonal
7.    Interpersonal
8.    Naturalistic



Components to Include in a Lesson
·      Video
·      SmartExchange/ PowerPoint
·      Independent Work
·      Partner/ Small Group
·      Whole Group
·      Movement
·      Direct Instruction

Links/ Work Cited
Marc Prensky 2001 Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants

Friday, February 27, 2015

Brain Based Learning and STEM

Bethany Center
February 27, 2015

presented by: Fredy Padovan http://www.iteachacademy.org

"Brain Rules" by Dr. John Medina
-Exercise - endorphins, heart rate, oxygen, stimulation
-Motion can increase production - 1.8 miles per hour is the ideal rate of movement for productivity - movement - active learning environment - mobile furniture
-the brain works well when in motion

-Survival - brain works well in survival mode - figuring out how to survive
-we are programed to work in community, with others, to enhance our chances of survival
-importance of relationships - between students, teacher / student

-Wiring - regions of the brain develop in different parts at different times for different people - not everyone is hard wired the same way

-Attention - multi-tasking makes it harder to focus
-social-emotional intelligence is key - we can't focus if we're emotional
-we don't pay attention to things that are boring

-Short-Term Memory - we can only hold 7 pieces of info in our STM for 30 seconds
-STM requires repetition - scaffolding - importance of spiraling the curriculum - continuing to repeat and reinforce concepts

-Long-Term Memory - in order of LTM to take root, we need to spiral concepts and continue to go deeper with them - something learned in 2nd grade takes until 10th grade to really become solidified in LTM
-it should be expected that we reteach things from year to year

-Sleep - we need sleep
-26 minute nap, performance improved by 34%
-movement may help to have a similar effect when we can't afford time / resources for a nap
-incorporate short brain breaks every 20 minutes or so

-Stress - stressed brains don't learn the same way that non stressed ones do
-we can only handle acute stress for 30 seconds before it has damaging effects
-the emotional stability of the home is the biggest indicator of student academic success as it pertains to stress

-Sensory Integration - memory recall can be affected by sensory engagement
-learning links are powerful - our brain is wired to connect pieces of information - stimulate the senses

-Vision - our brains are really good at remembering pictures
-relevant pictures can boost memory

-Gender - the male and female brains are different - we are wired differently
-women handle stress better because of the ability to give birth
-men are more prone to depression

-Exploration - Google's 80/20 rule - 80% of the time employees are working specifically at their job, 20% spent on something that interests them that is job related

Resource for online quizzes - https://getkahoot.com

STEM
-Science, Technology, Engineering and Math

-21st Century learning - http://www.p21.org -



-Success beyond the test
*core academics - achievement of standards in core content
*stretch learning - demonstration of rigorous and relevant learning beyond the minimum requirement - can students relate the learning, connect it to other areas, new environments
*learning engagement - the extent to which students are motivated and committed to learning; have a sense of belonging and accomplishment; relationships with peers, adults, and parents that support learning
*person skill development - leadership skills, interpersonal skills, presenting, working together, etc.

Rigor / Relevance Framework
-acquisition needs to lead to adaptation
-through assimilation and application - knowledge - apply in discipline - apply to other disciplines - apply to real world - apply to unknown circumstances
-High rigor and high relevance - student working and thinking
-Low rigor and low relevance - teacher working and thinking

Achievement Zone
Too Easy = get it right away
On Target = I know some things
Too Hard = I don't know where to start, I can't figure it out

21st Century Learning - students working in teams to experience and explore relevant, real-world problems, questions and challenges and then presenting their findings to others


21st Century Skills
-7 C's
1. Critical thinking and problem solving
2. Creativity and innovation
3. Collaboration and teamwork and leadership
4. Cross cultural understandings
5. Communication and media literacy - we need to get students to understand the application between  what they can do on their phones and devices and what they need to do in school / work
6. Computing and technology literacy
7. Career and learning self-direction

Project Learning Classroom is...
*project oriented
*open ended
*real world
*student centered
*constructive
*collaborative
*creative
*communication based

Teacher's role in Project Learning Classroom is to guide

Relationships are essential in a 21st Century classroom

Six A's
-authenticity
-academic rigor
-applied learning - students must be engaged in multiple ways
-active exploration
-adult connections
-thoughtful assessment practices

Projects vs. PBL (project based learning)
-teacher directed vs. inquiry based
-highly structured vs. open ended
-summative vs. ongoing
-thematic vs. driving question / challenge
-fun vs. engaging
-answer giving vs. problem solving
-de-constructing school world vs. real world

Optimal learning environment
-3 ideas for improving learning:
*see the whole before practicing the parts
*study the content and apply it to authentic problems
*make schoolwork more like real work

PBL - connect to real life, incorporate problem solving, relevant research, presentation

Managing PBL
-orient students to goals of the project on a regular basis
-group students appropriately
-organize project on a daily basis
-clarify everything
-monitor and regulate student behavior
-manage flow of work - draw a storyboard of the work, checkpoints or milestones
-evaluate success of project - by teacher and student - debriefing sessions - what did we learn, effective collaboration, what skills were learned?

-Portfolio - artifact - reflection - abstract (abstract = overall summary of the entire work)

Challenge-Based Learning - students working together in multi-grade teams to solve year long problems

STEAM
-Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts (technical fine arts) and Math
-developing a program:
*use every space - all surfaces as whiteboards
*$10,000 to start a STEM program for 20 students - computers, robotic kits, 3D printers
*expose entire faculty to the approach - training for all
*integration across the curriculum
*CAD programing - Computer Aided Design - 3D printing

Resource: E.O. Wilson "Life on Earth" - biology curriculum: http://eowilsonfoundation.org/e-o-wilson-s-life-on-earth/

Resources:
-Glogster: http://edu.glogster.com/?ref=com -for creating educational content online

-iStopmotion: http://boinx.com/istopmotion/mac/ -picture by picture movies

-Garageband: https://www.apple.com/mac/garageband/ - use songs

-Pocket Anatomy: http://www.pocketanatomy.com - 3D images of the body

-Geohunt: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/geohunt/id477345786?mt=8 - go to the physical location of a geographic point

-Sparkvue HD: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/sparkvue-hd/id552527324?mt=8

-Procreate: http://procreate.si -allows for small writing / drawing that can still be seen - super high def

-Lego Movie Maker: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/lego-movie-maker/id516001587?mt=8

Creativity requires influence

Robots:
Drones - flight : http://ardrone2.parrot.com
Jump Sumo - rolling with jump capability : http://www.parrot.com/usa/products/jumping-sumo/

18 inch structure made to hold more than 20 pounds! 









Thursday, February 5, 2015

A Professional Review of Assessment Practices, Part II

A Professional Review of Assessment Practices
Professional Development for Diocese of St. Petersburg Teachers
Thursday February 5, 2015
Higgins Hall, St. Lawrence

Standards - are the driving force in assessment

Assessment  = What students know / don’t know = Learning / Relearning = = back to Assessment
 
Summative Assessment
-Purpose: to measure students’ depth of knowledge
-When: @ end, periodically throughout the unit
-How teachers use: to evaluate grades, promotion, programs
-How students use: long-term growth, improvement toward standards

Formative
-Purpose: measure progress, provide feedback
-When: all-the-time
-How teachers use: impact instruction
-How students use: gauge progress, what still needs to be learned or relearned

Striking a balance between formative and summative assessment:
-Current balance of time (realistically):
            -Formative: probably around 50%
            -Summative: probably around 50%

-Ideal balance of time:
            -Formative: 80%
            -Summative: 20%

Grading formative assessment is dangerous
-misinterprets the learning process – making errors is cause for punishment rather than opportunity to learn
            -focuses more on grades than learning
            -makes classroom unsafe for some students
            (Carol Ann Tomlinson and Tonya Moon, 2013)

-the issue of motivation for students still lingers – will they do the formative work if it’s not graded in some way – how can teachers ensure that students provide work on which teachers can provide feedback to students

-effort and learning-to-learn skills can play a role in “marking” students on formative assessment
–give a scaled mark for effort
-separate learning-to-learn skills / approaches to learning into a separate grade 

Four Core Considerations for the Quality of Assessment Tasks
-Alignment – does the task require students to engage with objectives / standards
-Complexity – what DOK level is the task? What level of mastery will the assessment allow students to demonstrate?
-Evidence – must students provide enough work, reasons, interpretation, etc. to give you ample evidence of their strengths and needs?
-Clarity – are the directions as clear as possible?

Complexity of Assessment – Quality of Assessment
Norman Webb

Depth of Knowledge (DOK) Level 1: Recollection and reproduction – something that can be learned through practice

DOK Level 2: Application of Skills / Concepts – a change of context requiring a choice of procedure, a simple decision, a straightforward problem, organization or interpretation

DOK Level 3: Strategic thinking – both abstract, complex or non-routine contexts as well as a degree of reason, conclusion, argument, decision or planning

DOK Level 4: Extended thinking – deep investigation, research, integration of knowledge, multiple conditions, a great deal of insight or problem solving

Evidence of Learning – Quality of Assessment
Multiple choice and other similar assessment types don’t necessarily give students enough opportunity to demonstrate evidence of their learning
-in some cases, this would mean they are asked to justify their answers or thinking, not just give a response

Assessment Formats vs. Types of Learning
Olivia, Gordon, Verlag (2012) conducted research which demonstrated the strength of the following types of assessment format for just about any type of learning:

-performance tasks
-student self –assessment

In other words, these assessment formats elicit the best evidence of student learning

Forced choice formats (multiple choice, matching, labeling), and short response formats provide the lowest amount of evidence of student learning

Metacognition is a key component to eliciting student learning – finding ways to incorporate metacognition (self-assessment, justification of processes / lines of thinking) into assessment is an effective way to promote learning

This research also demonstrates that multiple choice formats for assessments are grossly ineffective at gauging student learning

Self-assessment helps students to see their own progress and gaps more clearly
            -realize that they need to relearn something and join the teacher on that path
-fill in gaps of teacher assessments of what students know and don’t know (as any form of assessment will only allow a partial view of what students know / don’t know)
-help teachers gauge the quality of their assessments

Performance tasks
–align to the standards
            -engage students at appropriate DOK levels
-elicit ample evidence of whether students have learned, including whether they can transfer this knowledge
-provide clear directions, including a rubric of defining how work will be evaluated
-design PA’s before teaching
-balance them with other assessments – building up to the PA
-solicit student input – what do students want to do – allow for choice
-clarify who can/cannot help – parents, other students, other teachers
-offer strategic support
-allow revision

John Hattie – feedback is key to promoting student learning and growth
-feedback considerations:
-how has the assessment evidence been interpreted?
-be specific about strengths and needs
-pick your battles – what is the most important (1-3 things) area(s) on which to focus
-take into consideration who the kids are
-consider the time / timing of the feedback
-communicate feedback clearly
-consider the format – written, oral, 1-to-1, small group
-build trust – student must feel safe – social-emotional learning
-provoke student action – what should they do with the feedback?

Teachers should also be open to receiving quality and relevant feedback from students – synchronizing the education within the classroom – what do students know, what are their struggles, what do they need to spend more time on, what is working – and incorporate that into how teachers move forward instructionally

Ways to collect and analyze data quickly and effectively
-paper fan – class – at – a – glance – take all of their work and fan them across a table – look for consistent mistakes / misunderstandings – papers can be quickly grouped into differentiated groups

-white boards – each student offers a response and you can give immediate feedback

-technology based assessments – SurveyMonkey.com 

-gallery walk – allow students to put work or responses around room and allow students to comment

-class debate / discussions – allow students to talk it out with classmates

-comparative presentations – allow students to talk about their approach vs. others

-table of data – similar to a grade book format but allows for collection of the data that is accumulated – use in conjunction with any of the above so that data can be stored and analyzed over time

-assessment involves and requires a relationship 



-presented by Dennis Desormier, via Catapult Learning

Thursday, October 30, 2014

A Professional Review of Assessment Practices

October 30, 2014
Professional Development provided for the Diocese of St. Petersburg by Catapult Learning
Bethany Center

Assessment - measurement of progress toward a standard / objective; the art of collecting evidence in order to determine students' depth of knowledge; data and evidence

Formative vs. Summative Assessment
Purpose
-Summative - measure student competency
-Formative - improve instruction and give students feedback

When
-SA - end
-FA - on-going

Teacher use
-SA - grading, promotion, programs
-FA - make changes to instruction

Student use
-SA - gauge progress toward goals (competing with each other)
-FA - self-monitoring

FA adds a purpose "adjusting ongoing teaching and learning to improve students' achievement of intended instructional outcomes" - W. James Popham (2008)

Formative Assessment types:
-lesson question asked before the lesson; essential question before teaching the unit; targeted practice; informal question; essential question asked daily

FA / SA:
-lesson question asked after a lesson, as a journal prompt; homework collected daily; quick quiz before class begins; essential question asked daily

Summative Assessment types:
-Essential Question asked after a unit, Major test, Performance Task, Essay, Project, Oral Report; Big Test (standardized)

When FA is graded for correctness, it becomes summative
*obviously, a difficulty is how do you hold students accountable for it?

FA grades should be for:
-completion / timeliness
-Motivation
-Effort
-Correctness in revising errors
-Metacognitive description of mistakes and relearning

SA grades should be for:
-Correctness
-"The primary purpose of grading is feedback to students to improve performance." -Doug Reeves

Academic behaviors, such as organization, responsibility, neatness, etc. could be evaluated in a different / separate grading category - outside of academic progress
-learning to learn skills
-behaviors that allow for learning - approaches to learning - conduct

It is possible to have a summative assessment transition into a formative one (or at least having an aspect of FA) - metacognitive description of mistakes and relearning

Proficiency towards standards as a year long process - keeping tabs and giving feedback to students and families and allowing for progress up until the end of the year

Measuring Depth of Understanding
Why is deep understanding so important?
-Deep understandings can lead to:
1. greater appreciation of knowledge
2. ability to apply learning
3. foundation for later learning
4. happier, more successful kids

Depth of Knowledge (Norman Webb)
Level 1 - recall or reproduction of process or skill - recollection of a fact, term, principle, or concept or performance of a procedure that can be learned through practice...basic understanding

Level 2 - basic application - a change of context requiring a choice of procedure, a simple decision, a straightforward problem, organization, or interpretation...enough understanding to apply

Level 3 - strategic thinking - both abstract, complex or non-routine contexts as well as a degree of reason, conclusion, argument, decision or planning...deeper understanding allowing flexibility

Level 4 - extended thinking - deep investigation, research, integration of knowledge, multiple conditions, a great deal of insight or problem solving...very deep understanding

Blending Webb's DOK with Bloom in light of Common Core State Standards: http://www.crecnow.info/blendedsolutions/docs/docs/Webbs_Depth_of_Knowledge.pdf

Level 4 DOK takes much time, therefore, it cannot be used very frequently

A difference from Bloom - verb usage does not dictate depth of understanding

Repeating a task tends to lower the DOK level, often all the way to DOK1

Simple strategies to increase complexity: Justify your answer, cite evidence in your summary, explain how an outcome would have changed given a different variable

Quality of Assessment Tasks
Alignment - does task require students to engage with the objective / standard
Complexity - what is the deepest DOK that could be revealed by this assessment
Evidence - must students provide enough work, reasons, interpretation, etc. to give ample evidence of student strengths and needs
Clarity - are directions as clear as possible

Other considerations for quality assessment tasks:
-necessity, tools, time, grading, context, stimuli, rubric

Assessment formats vs. types of learning
-Student Self-Assessment and Performance Tasks elicited the highest evidence of learning among the following: forced choice formats, short response, essay / oral reports, informal observations
-Types of learning included: informational topics, processes, thinking and reasoning, communication

Self-Assessment
Self-assessment is a valid form of assessment which can...
1. fill in gaps in your assessment of what students know and don't know
2. help teacher gauge your own assessments through comparison - what I measured in my students vs. what students thought about their own learning
3. promote metacognition - this generally takes a long time to develop and a great deal of time for students to master

Performance Task
Aligns to standards; engages students at appropriate DOK levels; elicits ample evidence of student learning; provides clear directions, including a rubric defining how work will be evaluated

Components of a performance task: http://www.smarterbalanced.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/TaskItemSpecifications/PerformanceTasks/PerformanceTasksSpecifications.pdf

Feedback
Feedback is one of the most valuable ways to promote student learning

But, feedback must be timely, informative, positive and specific

It should align to the standards and be specific about the progress toward that goal

Feedback about student performance on an assessment should also supply feedback to the teacher

Key strategies for effective feedback:
1. Interpret the evidence - point out both strengths and weaknesses
2. Allow for a 2nd attempt
3. Prescriptive feedback will help dictate what needs to happen in order to improve
4. Use an effective media - written on the assessment or rubric may not always be the best format - and be sure to get students to understand the feedback
5. Learning / re-learning is the responsibility of the student - what does the student need to do?
6. Be clear in your feedback
7. Build trust

Analyzing Data
To do it quickly on HW or other FA:
-Look at an entire class at the same time - spread out all of the papers and look for common errors, one particular item that is indicative of the overall lesson
-Dry erase boards
-Tech based surveys / quizzes - www.surveymonkey.com
-Gallery walk - write work on chart paper - one piece of paper per item / concept
-Class debate
-Comparative presentations
-Table of data
-Signals - thumbs up / down / middle

The word "assess" means "to sit beside" (French and Latin origins)

-presented by: Dennis Desormier, Catapult Learning Consultant

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Teaching and Assessing Depth of Understanding in Math

Notes from Grade 3 - 5 Math Teaching and Assessing for Mastery Workshop
Bethany Center, Diocese of St. Petersburg and Catapult Learning
October 16, 2014

Skill Fluency and Deep Understanding - balance between these through coherence (conceptual velcro)

"Understanding is not just about coverage of knowledge...but about 'uncoverage' - being introduced to new ideas and being asked to think more deeply and more carefully about facts, ideas, experiences, and theories previously encountered and learned" (Grant Wiggins).

Approaching 13 x 7 with deep understanding that recognizes place value, multiplication as repeated addition, multiplying 7 x 10, not 7 x 1 in the "tens column"

Multiplying is totaling equal groups, a number's digits represent different place values
-Key steps: multiply via place value

Teach with fidelity for deeper understandings

What does deep understanding really mean?
-ability to justify why a particular mathematical statement is true or where a mathematical rule comes from (from CCSS)

What happens to students without deep understanding?
-they memorize more than they need to
-students can't apply
-"jumping through hoops" to get the answer / receive the grade
-"fed" steps as opposed to discover how to do things themselves
-use approaches in situations where they don't actually apply
-lose sight of the beauty of mathematics

Deep Understanding can lead to:
-appreciation of beauty in the math world
-transfer to applications
-support for later learning

Conceptual velcro - making connections between and among knowledge and skills to deepen understandings
-instruction must support the connection of ideas and rooting knowledge to other pieces of information

Coherence - connect related ideas, connect facts and skills to key concepts, memorize for application

Direct Instruction (I do), Guided Practice (We do), Independent Work (You do)

Mathematical practices - by CCSS math lessons should have as many of the mathematical practices as possible:

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

-These Mathematical Practices describe what mathematicians do
-Get students to see themselves as mathematicians
-See ourselves in this way, too
-These MP standards usually "live" together and are intertwined
-Connection to Literacy standards about reading and writing (writers / authors)
-Valuable skills in math and life

Resource for Mathematical Practices Posters:
http://elemmath.jordandistrict.org/mathematical-practices-by-standard/

Take time throughout lessons to allow students to reflect on their learning
-slow down and afford them time to reflect on their understandings / misunderstandings / cloudy spots
-give students time to self-assess

How do you assess depth of understanding?
-it does not need to be a formal test
-Webb's Depth of Knowledge components (DOK)

1. Recollection and reproduction
*recollection of a fact, term, principle, concept OR performance of a routine or procedure that can be learned through practice

2. Basic application of skills / concepts
*Using information or concepts to choose a procedure, make a decision, solve a routine problem, organize and interpret information, or make a simple decision

3. Strategic thinking
*Use deeper understanding and analysis in abstract, complex, non-routine contexts to reason, draw conclusions, develop arguments, make decisions or develop a plan

4. Extended application and thinking
*An investigation or application of deep understanding requiring time to research, integrate knowledge, process multiple conditions, solve problems, draw conclusions

Webb's Depth of Knowledge does not correlate with Bloom's Taxonomy of Learning
-Webb's DOK have "Bloom" verbs in most of the four components of DOK - it is richer, more rigorous
-DOK is more concerned with the challenge behind an assessment, not just the verb being used - i.e. a DOK level 4 can use the verb explain or draw depending on the depth at which you are challenging students to demonstrate their understanding
-In DOK, even those application problems, if repeated with students enough, can become level 1 tasks

When using manipulatives, allow students time to "play" before asking them to use them to learn
-also ensure that policies and routines are clearly established and enforced

Florida has moved from FCAT to AIR testing to address CCSS (DOSP has not yet moved)
-Site for details about the new testing: http://www.fsassessments.org/resources/?section=1-students-and-parents

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Visual Thinking Strategies


Visual Thinking Strategies,
the Common Core State Standards,
Critical Viewers 

Gospel Passage
A reading for the Gospel according to Matthew: Matthew 25:38-46(NRSV)
And when was it that we saw you a stranger and welcomed you, or naked and gave you clothing? And when was it that we saw you sick or in prison and visited you?’ And the king will answer them, ‘Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me.’ Then he will say to those at his left hand, ‘You that are accursed, depart from me into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels; for I was hungry and you gave me no food, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink, I was a stranger and you did not welcome me, naked and you did not give me clothing, sick and in prison and you did not visit me.’ Then they also will answer, ‘Lord, when was it that we saw you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison, and did not take care of you?’ Then he will answer them, ‘Truly I tell you, just as you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to me.’ And these will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.”

Objectives:
I can describe what is Visual Thinking Strategies.
I can summarize how to implement it within my classroom.
I can identify at least one reason to incorporate VTS in my classroom 

Visual Thinking Strategies
Visual Thinking Strategies (VTS) is a student-centered curriculum in which the student examines and discusses works of art, prompted by questions selected to support careful, evidentiary looking.
VTS questions are:
1. What is going on in this picture?
2. What do you see that makes you say that?
3. What more can we find?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=aVzcknOWpaE


Visual Thinking Strategies
3 Facilitation Techniques:
Paraphrase comments neutrally
Point at the area being discussed
Linking and framing student comments

Visual Thinking Strategies
Students are asked to:

Look carefully at works of art

Talk about what they observe

Back up their ideas with evidence

Listen to and consider the views of others

Discuss many possible interpretations


Visual Thinking Strategies and the Common Core State Standards
One of the major shifts in the Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts demands that students "produce and use evidence in a text to justify their views" (Santos, Darling-Hammond & Cheuk, 2012).
By using the VTS method on a regular basis, teachers can develop evidence-based reasoning habits in their students.


Visual Thinking Strategies and
CCSS ELA Anchor Standards
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.SL.3.1
Engage effectively in a range of collaborative discussions (one-on-one, in groups, and teacher-led) with diverse partners on
grade 3 topics and texts, building on others' ideas and expressing their own clearly.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.SL.3.1.a
Come to discussions prepared, having read or studied required material; explicitly draw on that preparation and other information known about the topic to explore ideas under discussion.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.SL.3.1.b
Follow agreed-upon rules for discussions (e.g., gaining the floor in respectful ways, listening to others with care, speaking one at a time about the topics and texts under discussion).
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.SL.3.1.c
Ask questions to check understanding of information presented, stay on topic, and link their comments to the remarks of others.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.SL.3.1.d
Explain their own ideas and understanding in light of the discussion.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.SL.3.2
Determine the main ideas and supporting details of a text read aloud or information presented in diverse media and formats, including visually, quantitatively, and orally.
CCSS.ELA-Literacy.SL.3.3
Ask and answer questions about information from a speaker, offering appropriate elaboration and detail.

Visual Thinking Strategies and
English Language Learners
The CCSS guidelines for working with English Language Learners explicitly states that teachers should:
- Provide opportunities for classroom interactions (both listening and speaking) that develop concepts and academic language in the disciplines.
- Provide opportunities for ELLs to build on their strengths, prior experiences, and background knowledge.


Gospel Passage
A reading for the Gospel according to Matthew: Matthew 25:38-46(NRSV)
And when was it that we saw you a stranger and welcomed you, or naked and gave you clothing? And when was it that we saw you sick or in prison and visited you?’ And the king will answer them, ‘Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me.’ Then he will say to those at his left hand, ‘You that are accursed, depart from me into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels; for I was hungry and you gave me no food, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink, I was a stranger and you did not welcome me, naked and you did not give me clothing, sick and in prison and you did not visit me.’ Then they also will answer, ‘Lord, when was it that we saw you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison, and did not take care of you?’ Then he will answer them, ‘Truly I tell you, just as you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to me.’ And these will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.”





What do you see?