teacher leaders: leading change in difficult times

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Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times Bobby Ashley, Educational Consultant [email protected]

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Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times What will schools look like 20 years from now? What role should teacher leaders play in this process? Come hear a national presenter discuss lessons learned from the nations’ most rapidly improving schools. This presentation looks at moving to CCSS using high levels of rigor for student learning and preparing classrooms for high student engagement. Presenter: Bobby Ashley - Jefferson, NC

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Page 1: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Bobby Ashley, Educational Consultant

[email protected]

Page 2: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Learning Targets:• Understanding the change process• Teacher Leadership – The Quadrants• Using common core state standards as a

‘driver’ for positive change• Making lessons relevant to the students’

world• Building positives relationships• Understanding and using neuroscience

Page 3: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

“If You Can Google it, You should not be

teaching it”Do you agree or disagree?

Why or Why Not?One minute to “turn and talk”

Page 4: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

“Whoever is doing the work is doing the

learning”Do you agree or disagree?

Why or Why Not?One minute to “turn and talk”

Page 5: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

6

Examining Rigor

Page 6: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

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Examining Relevance

Page 7: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

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Examining Learner Engagement

Page 8: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

9

Examining Literacy

Page 9: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

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Examining Literacy

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Examining Literacy

Page 11: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Change

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1

1 – INCREMENTAL CHANGE -Improving Core Practices

2 – INNOVATIVE CHANGE -Fundamental Change of Core Practice

3 – TRANSFORMATIONAL CHANGE – Affect Entire System

Change

Page 13: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Shoes 1974

Page 14: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

1994 Bag Phone—Car Phone

Page 15: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

…a few years later

• New I phone

16

Page 16: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

1950’s School Building

Page 17: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

1970’s School Building

Page 18: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

2000’s School Building

Page 19: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

2010’s School Building

Page 20: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Books

Page 21: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Navigation and Live Traffic Info

Page 22: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Engagement

Page 23: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Education

Page 24: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Does this classroom exist in your school?

Page 25: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Or do your classrooms look like this

• Collaboration

Page 26: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Or this• Virtual Learning

Page 27: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

The ShiftTraditional Teaching Frameworks 21st Century Teaching

What teachers should do What the entire system should do

Teacher-focused Student-focused

Teachers deliver instruction Teachers facilitate learning

Vision is set by top leaders Vision is built more inclusively

Define vision primarily in terms of academic measures

Define vision as strong academic and then personal skills and the ability to apply them

Rigid structures support adult needsFlexible structures support student needs

Focus on teaching Focus on learning

Page 28: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

“Whoever is doing the work is doing the

learning”

Page 29: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

® Rigor/Relevance Framework

Page 30: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

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Examining Rigor

Page 31: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Essential Question:

What is the role of the teacher in creating positive

change?

Page 32: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Rubric for Evaluating North Carolina Teachers

Standard I: Teachers demonstrate leadership•Teachers lead in their learning environments•Teachers demonstrate leadership in the learning environment•Teachers lead the teaching profession•Teachers advocate for learning environments and learners•Teachers demonstrate high ethical standards

Page 33: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

34

KNOWLEDGE

A B

DC

AuthoritativeLeadership

Four Quadrants of Leadership

Collaborative Leadership

VisionaryLeadership

Adaptive Leadership

HighLow

Low

High

APPLICATION

Page 34: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

AA BB

DDCC

Quad D Leadership FrameworkQuad D Leadership Framework

High

HighLow

Low

Page 35: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Quadrant A – Authoritative

• Traditional Teaching

• Manages the Classroom

• Leaders decide – They act

• Authoritarian – Keeper of

Knowledge

• Teachers is Working Hard

Page 36: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Quadrant B – Collaborative• Knowledge is Shared Among All

Stakeholders • The Classroom Works in a Highly

Collaborative Setting• Group Work is the “Norm”• Students are Engaged with their

Learning

Page 37: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Quadrant C – Creative(Research and Best

Practices) • Teacher and Students are

Reflective and Innovative

• Vision is Discussed

• Anticipation of the Future• Student Needs Drive Action

Page 38: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Quadrant D - Adaptive(Disposition)

Reflective and InnovativeTeacher and Students are Empowered to Take a Significant Leadership RolesCollaborative and AdaptiveSolving Real World Problems

Page 39: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Three Question Exercise• What will the world be like 20

years from now?

• What skills will students need to be successful in that world?

• What would learning look like if it was designed around your answers?

Page 40: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Essential question:

What is different in your school this year…as

compared to last year?

Page 41: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

What can we do? How do we begin?

Page 42: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Teacher leaders need to:• understand change process

Page 43: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

32

1

1 – INCREMENTAL CHANGE -Improving Core Practices

2 – INNOVATIVE CHANGE -Fundamental Change of Core Practice

3 – TRANSFORMATIONAL CHANGE – Affect Entire System

Change

Page 44: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Teacher leaders need to:• understand change process• adopt rigor relevance framework• use common core state standards as a

‘driver’ for change• make lessons relevant to the students’

world• build positives relationships• understand and use neuroscience

Page 45: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Rigor/Relevance FrameworkTM

Knowledge

Taxonomy

Relevance

Makes Rigor

Happen! Application Model

Evaluation 6

“Judge the Outcome”

Synthesis 5

“Putting Together”

Analysis 4

“Taking Apart”

Application 3

“Making use of Knowledge”

Comprehension 2

“Confirming”Knowledge 1

“Information Gathering”

1

Knowledge in ????

Discipline

2

Apply Knowledge in ????

Discipline

3

Apply Knowledge Across

Disciplines

4

Apply Knowledge to Real

World Predictable

Situations

5

Apply Knowledge to Real

World Unpredictable

Situations

Assimilation

Students extend and refine their knowledge so they can use it automatically and routinely to analyze and solve problems and create solutions

Student Thinks

(Relationships Important)

Acquisition

Teacher Works

(Relationship of little Importance)

Students gather and store bits of knowledge and information and are expected to remember or understand this acquired knowledge.

Application

Student Works

(Relationships Important)

Students use acquired knowledge to solve problems, design solutions, and complete work. The highest level of application is to apply appropriate to new and unpredictable situations.

Adaptation

Student Thinks and Works

(Relationships Critical)

Students have the competence, that when confronted with perplexing unknowns they are able to use their extensive knowledge base and skills to create unique solutions and take action that further develops their skills and knowledge.

Page 46: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Rigor is… Scaffolding thinking Planning for thinking Assessing thinking

about content Recognizing the level of

thinking students demonstrate

Managing the teaching/ learning level for the desired thinking level

Rigor is not… More or harder

worksheets The higher level

book in reading More work More homework

Page 47: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Performance Tasks  •students must create, construct, or produce some product real world contexts 

•deep understanding and/or reasoning skills are needed and assessed 

•more than one standard/concept is assessed through the task 

•requires students to explain, justify AND defend 

•involves engaging ideas of importance and substance - real world contexts 

•typically, there is no single “correct” answer 

•very difficult to cheat on a performance task 

•emphasis is on what students will do, as opposed to what they recall 

•scoring criteria and standards are made public and transparent

•learning occurs while students complete the task

•feedback can be provided as task is completed

 

Page 48: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

® Rigor/Relevance Framework

Page 49: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

50

Examining Rigor

Page 50: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

The Flipped Classroom

Page 51: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Teacher leaders need to:• understand change process• adopt rigor relevance framework• use common core state standards as a

‘driver’ for change• make lessons relevant to the students’

world• build positives relationships• understand and use neuroscience

Page 52: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

www.corestandards.org

Page 53: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Next Generation of Assessments

http://www.parcconline.org/parcc-assessment

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Page 54: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Teacher leaders need to:• understand change process• adopt rigor relevance framework• use common core state standards as a

‘driver’ for change• make lessons relevant to the students’

world• build positives relationships• understand and use neuroscience

Page 55: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Kids TodayLearn anywhere, anytime, with and from

anyoneAlways on, always connected, expecting

collaborationNeed to be engaged and involvedDemand personalized learning

experiences

Page 56: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Technology Connections

“Our students are living and learning in a wireless,

interconnected,

“immediate” world—except when they are in school.”

-Bill Daggett

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Page 57: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Schools are Improving

School Improvement

Page 58: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

The World is Changing Faster

School Improvement

Changing World

Page 59: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Findings

Teachersare our greatest resources, our

greatest hope.

Page 60: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

“It is not the strongest that survives, nor the most intelligent. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change.”

- Charles Darwin

Page 61: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Teacher leaders need to:• understand change process• adopt rigor relevance framework• use common core state standards as a

‘driver’ for change• make lessons relevant to the students’

world• build positives relationships• understand and use neuroscience

Page 62: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

relevance = pathways

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Page 64: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

The synapse is the place where chemicals (neurotransmitters) cross over from one

brain cell to the next

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Relationships Make Learning Possible

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serotonin & dopamine pathways

Page 67: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Positive Relationships...

increase feelings of safety, motivation and risk-taking

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red and orange = high degree of activitypurple and blue = low degree of activity

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purple and blue = low degree of

activity

red and orange = high degree of

activity

Page 70: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

B

DC

A

RIGOR

RELEVANCE

Rigor/Relevance Framework

High

HighLow

Low

Relationships

Relationships of Little Importance

Relationships EssentialRelationships

Important

RelationshipsImportant

Page 71: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

® Rigor/Relevance Framework

Page 72: Teacher Leaders: Leading Change in Difficult Times

Planning

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