welcome to our miller / craddock parent curriculum night

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Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night Thank you for coming!

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Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night. Thank you for coming!. Evening Goals. I can list several reasons for the shift to the new curriculum. I can explain some of the key shifts for the new standards . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Welcome to ourMiller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Thank you for coming!

Page 2: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Evening Goals

• I can list several reasons for the shift to the new curriculum.

• I can explain some of the key shifts for the new standards.

• I can share with my child the “big ideas” in his/her grade level curriculum for Math and Language Arts.

• I can utilize the resources presented tonight and those that will be available on the Aurora City Schools website to assist my child (academically successful & less stress).

Page 3: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Why did Ohio shift to the new Common Core standards?

•In a word- RIGOR

Page 4: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Why the change in

rigor.

Present Conditions

+Future Challenges

Page 5: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Why did Ohio shift to the new Common Core standards?

• College and Career Ready• 40% of the students in the U.S. need to take a

remedial class to attend college. HS Dropout rate is too high.

• Current Curriculum is too broad (Deep vs. Wide)• The former curriculum had double the number of

standards as the common core. The emphasis was on skills and knowledge; shifts to an emphasis on higher order thinking skills.

• Global Competition (Internationally Benchmarked)• US ranking on international tests is flat or falling.

Page 6: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Jobs Require More Education & Training

72%

28%

1973

38%

62%

2018

NO COLLEGE REQUIREDCOLLEGE REQUIRED

Source: Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce, 2010.

Page 7: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Are Ohio Students Ready for College?

Percent of Ohio Students Ready For:

College Biology:

College Algebra:

College Social Studies:

College English Composition:

35%

49%

58%

71%Source: ACT, “The Conditions of College & Career Readiness, Class of 2011: Ohio.”

Page 8: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Are Ohio Students Ready for College?

Only 28% of Ohio students

are ready in all four

content areas

Source: ACT, “The Conditions of College & Career Readiness, Class of 2011: Ohio.”

Page 9: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

ACT Composite Mean-AHS

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 201318.0

19.0

20.0

21.0

22.0

23.0

24.0

25.0

26.0

ACT Composite Mean

Aurora State Mean National Mean

ACT

Mea

n

Page 10: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Total AP Exams 2000-2013

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 20130

50100150200250300350400450500550600650700750800850

Total AP Exams

Num

ber o

f Exa

ms

Page 11: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

# AP Exams Passed 2000-2013

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 20130

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

# AP EXAMS-PASSED

# of

Tes

ts

Page 12: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

How will the changes affect instruction?

• The Common Core standards define what all students are expected to know and be able to do, and it aligns in it progressions or scaffolds.

• Lessons will be designed to allow students more time to practice and explore new knowledge/skills (less breadth/more depth).

• Students will have opportunities to apply their knowledge to “real-world” problems.

Page 13: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Report Card Revisions

• Here is our statement of purpose:The purpose of our report card is to communicate with parents and students the achievement of specific learning goals and behaviors. It identifies students' levels of progress with regard to those goals, areas of strength, and areas where additional time and effort are needed at home and in school.

• Changed from reporting at a higher level to the specific standard level.

• Reporting progress using a four point rubric versus a three point rubric.

• Added the Standardized Assessment scores.

Page 14: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Third Grade Reading Guarantee• For the 2013-2014 school year, a student

must reach at least a 392 on the Grade 3 Reading Ohio Achievement Assessment (OAA) to move on to the fourth grade. If a student does not reach that score, the student may still move on to fourth grade if they qualify for a retention exemption.

Page 15: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Third Grade Reading GuaranteeThese exemptions apply to:• Limited English proficient students who have been enrolled in

U.S. schools for less than three full school years and have had less than three years of instruction in an English as a Second Language program;

• Special education students whose IEPs specifically exempt them from retention under the Third Grade Reading Guarantee;

• Any student who has received intensive remediation for two years and was previously retained in kindergarten through the third grade; and

• Students who demonstrate reading competency on a Reading OAA Alternative approved by the Ohio Department of Education.

Page 16: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Math

Page 17: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Objectives for Tonight

• Inform parents of our new standards for grades K-2

• Inform parents of research-based math instruction and our district vision of math instruction

• Inform parents how they can support learning from home

Page 18: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Common Core•Increased Rigor•More Depth •K-2 Heavy in Number Sense•Process Standards

Page 19: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Mathematical Practices

Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them

Reason abstractly and quantitatively

Construct viable arguments / critique the reasoning of others

Model with mathematics

Use appropriate tools strategically

Attend to precision

Look for and make use of structure

Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning

Page 20: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

What can parents do- help build “habits of mind” (strategies, personal traits)?

• Habits of Mind for Math• Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them• Reason abstractly and quantitatively• Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning

of others• Model with mathematics• Use appropriate tools strategically• Attend to precision• Look for and make use of structure• Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning

Page 21: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Research• Ball, D. L., Hill, H. C. & Bass, H. (2005). Knowing

mathematics for teaching. American Educator. 14-22; 43-46.

• Baroody, Arthur J. (2007). An alternative reconceptualization of procedural and conceptual knowledge. Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 38 (2), 115-131.

• Cornelius-White, Jeffrey (2007). Learner-centered teacher-student relationships are effective: A meta analysis. Review of Educational Research, 77(1), 113-143.

• Fennema, Elizabeth, Carpenter, Thomas P., & Franke, Megan L. (1991) . Cognitively Guided Instruction . Wisconsin Center for Education Research.

• Fennema, Elizabeth, Carpenter, Thomas P., Franke, Megan L., & Carey, Deborah A. (1992) . Learning to use children's mathematics thinking: A case study. In R. Davis & C. Maher (Eds.), Schools, mathematics and the world of reality (pp. 93-117). Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon.

• Frankenstein, Marilyn (1987). Critical mathematics education: An application of Paulo Freire's Epistemology. In I. Shor (Ed.) Freire for the classroom: A sourcebook for liberatory teaching. Portsmouth: Heineman.

• Freire, Paolo (1973/1989). Pedagogy of the oppressed. New York: Continuum.

• Gutstein, Eric & Peterson, Bob. (2005). Rethinking Schools: Teaching Social Justice by the numbers. Milwaukee, WI: Rethinking Schools, Ltd.

• Hiebert, J., Carpenter, T., Fennema, E., Fuson, K., Wearne, D., Murray, H., Oliver, A., & Human, P. (1997). Making sense: Teaching and learning mathematics with understanding. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.

• Pace, Judith L. & Hemmings, Annette. (2007). Understanding authority in classrooms: A review of theory, ideology, and research. Review of Educational Research, 77(1), 4-27.

• Star, Jon R. (2007). Research commentary: A rejoinder foregrounding procedural knowledge. Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 38 (2), 132-135.

Page 22: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Findings

• Knowledge of student thinking highly correlated with success

• All children can learn• Increase in confidence• Students sharing promoted development of more

efficient strategies• Lecture less – Learn more• Students create strategies• Students know more facts• Students that were not doing well start to succeed

Page 23: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Food for Thought

WE LEARN• 10% read• 20% hear• 30% see• 50% see/hear• 70% discussed• 80% experienced• 95% what we teach

Page 24: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Fluency• The NCTM Principle and

Standards of School Mathematics (2000) defines computational fluency as having efficient, flexible and accurate methods for computing. The key thing to note is that it does not say compute using paper and pencil methods.

• Procedural Fluency is defined as the skill in carrying out procedures flexibly, accurately, efficiently, and appropriately.

Page 25: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

FluencyPrinciples and Standards for School Mathematics states, “Computational fluency refers to having efficient and accurate methods for computing. Students exhibit computational fluency when they demonstrate flexibility in the computational methods they choose, understand and can explain these methods, and produce accurate answers efficiently. The computational methods that a student uses should be based on mathematical ideas that the student understands well, including the structure of the base-ten number system, properties of multiplication and division, and number relationships”

Page 26: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Ten Guiding Principles for ELA CC Instruction:

1. Make close reading of the texts central to the lesson.

2. Structure majority of instruction so ALL students read grade level complex texts (do critical reading and analysis of text).

3. Emphasize informational texts from earliest grades on (exposure and access).

4. Provide scaffolding that does not preempt or replace text.

5. Ask text-dependent questions.

Page 27: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Ten Guiding Principles for ELA CC Instruction:

6. Provide extensive research and writing opportunities (claims, arguments and evidence).

7. Offer regular opportunities for students to share ideas, evidence, and research (prep, evidence, perspectives).

8. Offer systematic instruction in vocabulary.9. Provide explicit instruction in grammar and

conventions.10. Cultivate students’ independence.

Sue Pimente, ODE

Page 28: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

What can parents do- help build “habits of mind” (strategies, personal traits)?

• Habits of Mind for ELA• Demonstrate independence as learners• Build strong content knowledge• Respond to the varying demands of audience, task,

purpose and discipline• Comprehend as well as critique• Value evidence• Use technology and digital media strategically and

capably• Come to understand other perspectives and cultures

Page 29: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Classroom Presenters

English/Language Arts MathJannine Mason Cyndi HaugheyAshley Tyler Judy DolezalKim ArmbrechtCourtney KohanskiJodi Roscoe Lisa LeoneValli Stauffer Kelly WilkLaura ArtersStephanie Quinn

Kathy Christian

Page 30: Welcome to our Miller / Craddock Parent Curriculum Night

Breakout Sessions• Kindergarten

Math (Last Name A-L) Room 110Language Arts (Last Name M-Z) Room 109

• 1st GradeMath (Last Name A-L) Room 214Language Arts (Last Name M-Z) Room 215

• 2nd GradeMath (Last Name A-L) Room 104Language Arts (Last Name M-Z) Room 103