growing mathematical minded students

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Growing Mathematical Minded Students Supporting Math Teachers to Grow Students 1

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Growing Mathematical Minded Students. Supporting Math Teachers to Grow Students. Reflecting on Current Practice. Questions for administrators and teachers. Hand Out. Your Task:. Independent Work: Respond to the questions on the Principal and Administrator Reflection. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

1

Growing Mathematical

Minded Students

Supporting Math Teachers to

Grow Students

Page 2: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

2

Reflecting on Current Practice

• Questions for administrators and teachers

HandOut

Page 3: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

3

Your Task: 1. Independent Work: Respond to the questions on

the Principal and Administrator Reflection.2. Table Talk: Discuss your responses and ideas

with others at your table.

Page 4: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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SGG Criteria• The SGG is congruent with KCAS and appropriate

for the grade level and content area for which it was developed.

• The SGG represents or encompasses an enduring skill, process, understanding, or concept that students are expected to master by taking a particular course (or courses) in school.

• The SGG will allow high- and low-achieving students to adequately demonstrate their knowledge.

• The SGG provides access and opportunity for all students, including students with disabilities, ELLs, and gifted/talented students.

HandOut

1

DISTRICT

CEP

Page 5: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Defining ENDURINGLearning that • ENDURES beyond a single test

date,• is of value in other disciplines, • is relevant beyond the classroom,• is worthy of embedded, course-long

focus,• may be necessary for the next level

of instruction.

HandOut1

Page 6: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

Critical Areas- Where math practices are vehicles for

reaching intent of standards.

HandOut1 Enduring Skills in

KCAS - Mathematics

Page 7: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Rigor & ComparabilityRigor (of the goal)

• Congruency to the standards

• Proficiency and growth components are defensible based on base-line data.

Comparability (of the assessments)• Agreement on what

‘meeting standards’ looks like when assessed

• Assessments are comparable in terms of the criteria used to determine progress toward attainment of the standard

HandOut1

DISTRICT

CEP

Page 8: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Resources to Help

1. Illustrative Mathematics2.  Achieve the Core3.  Formative Assessment Lessons (Middle and High School)

4.  Formative Assessment Lessons (Elementary)5.  PARCC Math Practice Assessments

Page 9: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Practice the Process: Is this goal ‘good enough’?

Using the 8 standards for mathematical practice, all of my 3rd grade math students will develop their ability to understand multiplication and division conceptually over the course of the school year. All students will grow at least one level on the 3rd grade critical area standards mastery rubric and 80% of students will reach proficiency (level 4 on the rubric).

What questions would you need to ask this 3rd grade teacher to

determine if this goal is ‘good enough?

Page 10: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Third Grade Critical Area

In Grade 3, instructional time should focus on four critical areas: (1) developing understanding of multiplication and division and strategies for multiplication and division within 100; (2) developing understanding of fractions, especially unit fractions (fractions with numerator 1); (3) developing understanding of the structure of rectangular arrays and of area; and (4) describing and analyzing two-dimensional shapes.

(1) Students develop an understanding of the meanings of multiplication and division of whole numbers through activities and problems involving equal-sized groups, arrays, and area models; multiplication is finding an unknown product, and division is finding an unknown factor in these situations. For equal-sized group situations, division can require finding the unknown number of groups or the unknown group size. Students use properties of operations to calculate products of whole numbers, using increasingly sophisticated strategies based on these properties to solve multiplication and division problems involving single-digit factors. By comparing a variety of solution strategies, students learn the relationship between multiplication and division.

Page 11: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Which Standards?

1.OA.1, 1.OA.22.OA.3, 2.OA.4,3.OA.1, 3.0A.2, 3.OA.3, 3.OA.43.OA.5, 3.OA.6, 3.OA.73.MD.7C, 3.MD.7D, 3.MD.7A, 3.MD.7B

Page 12: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Using Baseline Data to Create a Rubric

Page 13: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Developing the Rubric

Page 14: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Practice the Process: Using Baseline Data

Your Task: Analyze the baseline data on the handout and the SGG you just read to determine if the growth and proficiency components of the goal are appropriate for the current data.

HandOut

2

Page 15: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Revised StudentGrowth Goal

Using the 8 standards for mathematical practice, all of my 3rd grade math students will develop their ability to understand multiplication and division conceptually over the course of the school year. All students will grow at least two levels on the 3rd grade critical area standards mastery rubric and 70% of students will reach proficiency (level 4 on the rubric).

Page 16: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Connections to CEPSample District-Determined

Rules

DISTRICT

CEP

Page 17: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Connections to CEPSample District-Determined

Rules

HIGH

DISTRICT

CEP

Page 18: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Practice the Process: Determining Low, Expected, High

Growth RatingUsing the revised SGG, the sample district decision rules and district-designed matrix, make a determination for this teacher’s overall growth rating.

(Reminder: These samples may or may not represent your district’s decision rules. The sample is designed to allow for an experience to apply data to a set of rules to determine an overall rating.)

DISTRICT

CEP

Page 19: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Practice the Process• Teacher’s Revised Growth Component

of SGG:o Target: 100% of students grow at least 2 levelso Actual: 86% of students grew 2 or more levelso District Rule:

Page 20: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Practice the Process• Teacher’s Revised Proficiency

Component:o Target: 70% of students reach level 4 (or 5)o Actual: 54% of students reached level 4 (or 5)o District Rule:

Page 21: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Practice the ProcessDetermining Overall SG

Rating

HIGH

DISTRICTCEP

Page 22: Growing Mathematical Minded Students

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Online Resources:

Contact Information:Teresa Emmert

[email protected]

KDE’s PGES Resources

www.jennyray.net