evidence based observation lead evaluator training part 2 – welcome back!
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Evidence Based Observation Lead Evaluator Training Part 2 – Welcome Back! Have you signed the roster?. “ Homeplay ”. Practice collecting evidence of “engaged learners.” Examine an observation that you have completed, looking for evidence and bias/opinion. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Evidence Based Observation
Lead Evaluator TrainingPart 2 – Welcome Back!
Have you signed the roster?
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“Homeplay” Practice collecting evidence of “engaged
learners.”
Examine an observation that you have completed, looking for evidence and bias/opinion.
Identify the presence or absence of “engaged learners” in your current observation tool.
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Your goals and questions…
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1. What would be evidence of “engaged learning?”
2. What are the attributes of engaged learning?
3. What is the difference between an engaging teacher and students being engaged?
Questions everyone in the room should be able to answer about engaged learners…
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1. I will pay more attention to who is “doing” in the classroom.
2. I want to incorporate what I have learned about engagement into my observations.
3. Prior to the next session, look for engaged learners in at least three classrooms.
4. Encourage teachers to refocus on engaging all learners.
5. Conduct walkthroughs looking for engaged students.
6. Help teachers recognize engaged learning.
Some of your goals…
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1. You showed that a high level of engagement is possible at the secondary level.
2. Please pull all this together….
3. It’s hard to pay attention to just one thing.
4. Keep showing the videos.
5. Loved looking at rubrics and how they are different..
Your feedback:
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Explain the difference between current practice and evidence based observation
Identify and define criteria for effective instruction around which evidence collection will be focused
Describe strategies that a district could employ to increase the quality of evaluations and the agreement of evaluators.
Today’s Outcomes:
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Continuum of Engagement
TEACHER ONLY
SIMULTANEOUS ACTIVE
PARTICIPATION
OPTIONAL STUDENT
PARTICIPATION
OCCASIONAL TEACHER DIRECTED
PARTICIPATION
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Ready for more practice?
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4th grade Science Lesson
Students will be able to: identify the components of a series circuit connectioncompare the components of a series circuit with the components of a
circuit connection
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Collection of Evidence
The teacher stated, “Last week, can you tell me what you were building?” “What did we build with a bulb? What did we call it when we had some components?” One student answered , “a circuit.”
The teacher stated, “What were the components in a circuit that you built?” The teacher then called on Eric to respond.
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Collection of Evidence
The teacher stated “What do you think these poles represent?” Students can be heard saying, “North and South”.
The teacher stated “Here’s the challenge for today, can you get two bulbs to light at the same time?” All students took out a graphic organizer and were directed to draw a schematic of their prediction of what the circuit would look like in box one.
Students were seated in pairs or trios. The “getters” collected materials for each group. All students were building circuits to test their predictions.
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What does it mean when we say “Teach to an
Outcome”?
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Find and form a group with those who have the same rubric piece or color you do( pink, white, purple, blue, green, orange, tan)
What does your piece of a particular rubric say about “teaching to an outcome?”
Be ready to share the format of the piece of the rubric you have
Meet in a “rainbow” to take turns sharing the above information about your particular rubric piece.
Rubrics Comparison Jigsaw
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Pink: Danielson’s Framework for Teaching (ASCD)
Orange: Danielson (2011 Revised Edition)
Tan: Marshall’s Teacher Evaluation Rubric
Green: Marzano’s Causal Teacher Evaluation
Blue: NYSTCE Framework for the Observation of Effective Teaching (Pearson)
White: NYSUT’s Teacher Practice Rubric
Purple: Thoughtful Classroom Teacher Effectiveness (Silver Strong & Associates)
Rubric Work…Teach to an Outcome
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The objective of the lesson is clear to the students (Shift from “What do I want them to do today?” to “What do I want them to learn today?”)
All classroom activities are aligned with the objective
What does it mean when we say “Teach to an Outcome”?
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Time is used efficiently to get to the learning objective
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What?
Objectives state what students are expected to learn in that lesson.
Objectives begin with VERBS that identify the level of thinking required in the lesson.
Learning Objectives
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Why? Instructional objectives narrow what students
focus on in the lesson and help the teacher keep activities, questions and responses to student’s aligned.
Learning Objectives
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Identify and explain the function of each of the organelles in an animal cell.
Use order of operations to solve these two problems.
Describe strategies that a district could employ to increase the quality of evaluations and the agreement of evaluators
Learning Objectives
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Outcomes: Students will be able to:
Calculate unit price by dividing the price of the product by the number of units
Compare unit prices to determine the “best deal”
Explain the mathematical thinking behind what makes it the “best deal”
Video: 6th Grade Math
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Video
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“What is the unit price?” was posted on theinteractive white board.
Teacher said, “Today we are going to learnabout unit price. What is unit price?”
Teacher stated, “Unit price is how much it costsfor each unit.”
“How do you find unit price?” was displayed on the white board.
Evidence Collected:
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The teacher stated to the students, “Make sure your decimals are in the right place.”
The teacher held up two boxes of cereal—different
size boxes.
The teacher said, “You aren’t looking for the better
deal, you are looking for the better price.”
One student worked on the white board solving 420 divided by 5.
Evidence Collected:
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“Homeplay” Practice collecting evidence of “teaching to an
outcome”
Examine an observation that you have completed, looking for evidence and bias/opinion
Identify the presence or absence of “teaching to an outcome” in your current observation tool
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The Keys to Teach to an Outcome
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Thank you!See you January 31st – 5-7 pm
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Evidence Based Observation
Lead Evaluator TrainingPart 2 – Welcome Back!
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“Homeplay” (if you have examples, be prepared to share them)
1. Practice collecting evidence of “teaching to an outcome”. Describe what has changed for you as an observer as a result of this workshop.
2. Examine an observation that you have completed, looking for evidence and bias/opinion. Describe what you notice about the types of evidence you are collecting.
3. Identify the presence or absence of “teaching to an outcome” in your current observation tool
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Your goals and “keys”…
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Keys to Teaching to an Outcome
Make the learning objective clear to the students.
Base the lesson on what it is you want the kids to learn, not do.
Focus on the “bulls eye”/keep focused on the target.
All instruction is focused on the objective of the lesson.
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Practice observing specifically to see if the teacher sets a clear outcome and focuses on it throughout the lesson.
Collect evidence to discuss “teach to an outcome” with the teacher. (Did the activities directly relate to the “target”?)
Help teachers recognize/classify if the objective/lesson activities are congruent.
Your Goals:
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Collect evidence related to “teach to an outcome” and defend why this is quality evidence of this teaching action
Identify the key attributes of “effective questioning”
Collect evidence of “effective questioning” Describe multiple ways for collecting evidence of “effective
questioning
Classify evidence of “questions” as Check for understanding Effective questions Objectives Classroom management/procedural
Today’s Outcomes:
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Ready for more practice?
Teach to an Outcome:
• The objective of the lesson is clear to the students.
• All classroom activities are aligned with the objective.
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Quotations from the teacher
Examples/models
Descriptions of activities in which the students are engaged
Student quotes
What qualifies as “evidence” for “teach to an outcome”?
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Defend WHY you called this evidence of TTO:Collection of Evidence
Teacher stated, “Today I want to talk to you about what writers do to narrow their focus.”
The teacher used a visual of a pizza/pizza slices to illustrate “narrowing the focus”. A whole pizza represented the teacher’s family, a slice represented the teacher’s Grandma Succi, a half-eaten slice represented Grandma’s Succi’s house, and a small biterepresented the teacher’s experience on her grandmother’s swing.
Before the teacher shared a story from her journal, she explained the process she took from deciding to write about her family (a broad topic) down to her decision to write about her experience sitting on her grandmother’s swing (more narrow focus).
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Defend WHY you called this evidence TTO:Collection of Evidence
After reading her story, the teacher asked, “Did I stick to my focus? Is it about my grandmother’s swing and being on that swing—that special time with her?”
Students read the story aloud with the teacher. Before reading chorally, the teacher asked the students to think about the story they are working on. She asked them to think about whether their story is narrowed enough or needs more narrowing.
The teacher stated, “In a few minutes I’m going to ask you to talk to each other and decide if your story is narrowed or if you need to do some more narrowing.” Students buddy shared.
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What did you collect?
Defend WHY you called this evidence of TTO:
Collection of Evidence
The teacher worked with two boys during the buddy share time. A discussion took place about the confusion the one student had about the other student’s story. It was decided that the writer needed to work on focusing about the pool—his main topic.
The teacher stated to the class, “Narrowing the focus helps us as writers.” She added “narrowing the focus” to the “How Writers Revise” chart posted in the front of the room.
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What does it look like and sound like when a teacher uses effective
questioning strategies?
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Rubric Language (“Proficient”):NYSUT:Most of teacher’s questions are open in nature and engage students in deeper thinking and further discussion.
Teacher responds to students’ questions/comments.Responses challenge student thinking.
2011 Danielson:While the teacher may use some low-level questions, he/she poses questions to promote student thinking and understanding.
Teacher creates a genuine discussion among students, providing adequate time for students to respond, and stepping aside when appropriate.
Teacher successfully engages most students in the discussion, employing a range of strategies to ensure that most students are heard. Critical Attributes: • Open ended questions• Effective use of wait time
Marzano:Teacher engages student with explicit decision making, problem solving, experimental inquiry or investigation task that requires them to generate and test hypotheses.
Teacher uses wait time.
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Criteria for Effective Questioning
Congruent (relevant) to the learning
Invitation for ALL students to think
A range of questions are used to extend thinking from a base of knowledge to higher order thinking that is more critical and creative
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Continuum of Questioning
High Consensus
Yes/No - FactLow Consensus
Closed Open
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WAIT TIME
What is it?
Why do it?
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Video: 5th Grade Math
Lesson Goal:
“Have them (the students) have a conceptual idea about division of fractions.”
-Bonnie Bushaw
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“How can I get 1/3 of a muffin? Oh-I saw someone draw a picture. That’ll work. Take a minute to do what you need to do to figure this out.”
“Ok. Who can tell me how many muffins with a third muffin serving? What do we have for a 1/3 muffin serving?” Student stated: “72”Teacher: “Can you prove it?”Student: “Yes because if you get 1/3 of a muffin, that’s 3 out of one muffin. 24 X 3 is 72.”
Sample Evidence Collected:
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Teacher: “Figure out my 24 muffins and divide them into ¼ muffin servings.”
Student: “You just add 24 to 72 and get 96.”
Teacher: “She added 24 to 72, the last answer, is that ok?”
Sample Evidence Collected:
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Check for understanding
Effective questions
Objectives
Classroom management/ procedural
Classifying to a Rubric
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Video: 10th Grade Math—Tess KajiLesson Outcome:
Identify the height on an object using trigonometric ratios.
Ready for more practice?
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Question of the day (posted): How can the height of an object be determined using trigonometric ratios?
“Write 1 in the margin. I want you to think about this question: I would like you to predict the height of the ceiling.”
“Does anyone want to share what their prediction is for height of the ceiling?” Two students replied, “15 feet” another student replied, “10 feet.”
Classifying Evidence Collected:
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“How did you come up with that prediction? Write it down.”
Bailey shared, “I’m 5 foot 4, so I’m assuming my feet are on the ground. Another me went on top—if another me stood directly on top of me, we’d reach the ceiling plus a little higher.”
“Did anyone else come up with something like that? You used something else to represent the height? What did you represent? (Asked two students.)
Classifying Evidence Collected:
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Teacher held up “SOH.” “What do you know about this? You may diagram what you know about this or just write it out.”
Classifying Evidence Collected:
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Practice collecting evidence of “Effective Questioning”
Examine an observation that you have completed, looking for evidence and bias/opinion (ongoing)
Identify the presence or absence of “Effective Questioning” in your current observation tool
“Homeplay”:
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Thank You!
See you February 7, 2012
*Submitting Evidence*
Feel free to bring computers/electronics