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WalkThroughs: An Effective Strategy for Increasing Student Achievement

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Title: WalkThroughs: An Effective Strategy for Increasing Student Achievement


1
Walk-Throughs An Effective Strategy for
Increasing Student Achievement
  • Based on the work of
  • Dr. Susan Villa,
  • Carolyn J. Downey and
  • Larry E. Frase

2
Ultimate Goal To Influence
  • Reflective, self-directed, self-analyzing
    interdependent teachers who examine their own
    practices even those who initially are at the
    dependent level.
  • Teachers who are continually willing to improve
    their teaching.
  • Teachers who are committed to working for ever
    higher student achievement.

3
Purpose
  • To provide advisors with strategies for using a
    structured walk-through approach and reflective
    feedback as a vehicle for maximizing student
    achievement.

4
Steps in Observation
  • INSTRUCTION Engagement of Students
  • CURRICULUM Determine curricular objectives and
    alignment to district curriculum and identify
    possible growth area(s)
  • INSTRUCTION Note instructional practices used
    and identify possible growth area(s)

5
Steps in Observation, continued
  • WALK THE WALLS for more curricular objectives
    and instructional practices (if time)
  • SAFETY FACILITIES Happens naturally

6
Observation Structure 5 Step Process
  • ENGAGEMENT (Student time on task)
  • CURRICULUM (content standards)
  • TEACHING STRATEGIES
  • WALK THE WALLS
  • SAFETY

7
Step One Student Engagement
  • Determine student engagement the moment you walk
    into the room.
  • Boston Scan scan the room.
  • Where are the students eyes?
  • On the teacher, on work, on each other?
  • Ballpark it what percentage of students are
    engaged?

8
Step Two Curriculum Focus
  • Determine the curriculum objectives being taught
  • Content what students are learning
  • Context how are students learning
  • Cognitive Level i.e., Blooms taxonomy
  • Compare curriculum objectives listed or stated
    with observed curriculum

9
Step Three Instructional Strategies
  • Determine generic teaching practices taking place
  • Feedback, examples, student error, wait time,
    checking for understanding, prior knowledge
  • Identify strategies being used with a specific
    district and/or school focus
  • Process guided reading, writers workshop,
    reciprocal teaching, question-answer relationships

10
Step Four Walk the Walls
  • Specify other objectives and teaching practices
    observed
  • Artifacts on walls, charts, student
    work, centers, white/chalk board,
    posters, etc.
  • Use the walls to inform instruction

11
Step Five Safety
  • Identify any safety and/or facility issues

12
Keeping Track of Ideas
  • Develop a very simple way of recording ideas.
  • 3 x 5 card
  • Do record enough of what happened when you are in
    the room to use when giving feedback.
  • The notes are for you not formal.

13
One Way 3 x 5 Card
  • Name of BT
  • Date Time
  • CURRICULUM
  • Content
  • Context
  • Cognitive level
  • District check
  • Grade/subject
  • INSTRUCTION
  • 2 or 3 ideas

14
  • Ima Newby
  • 2-10-03 1035
  • CURRICULUM
  • Content
  • Reasons why people left their homelands to come
    to the US
  • Common experiences hardships immigrants had to
    overcome while traveling to and upon arrival in
    US
  • Context
  • Text book
  • Oral student response
  • Cognitive level Knowledge
  • District check 9th

9th grade World Geography
  • INSTRUCTION
  • Prior knowledge
  • Wait time
  • Prediction
  • Primary source documents
  • Posters of Ellis Island
  • Pie Charts Immigration patterns

15
  • CURRICULUM
  • Content
  • Writing a 3 paragraph personal experience essay
  • Pre-writing organizing ideas
  • Context
  • Prewriting worksheets
  • Cognitive level Application
  • District check 3rd

2-10-03 900 3rd Grade Writing
INSTRUCTION Modeling Review Individual
assistance Scoring guide rubric Chart Steps
in the Writing Process
16
Walk-Through Practice
  • Watch the video.
  • Follow the observation structure.
  • Use a 3 x 5 card to record your information.
  • Identify a topic for a reflective question.

17
Feedback and the Reflective Question
  • What do we know about effective feedback?
  • Discuss with a partner.
  • Share with the group.

18
A Mentoring Conversation A Protocol
  • Assess the Beginning Teachers Needs by
  • Making connections and building trust
  • Identifying successes and challenges
  • Establish a Focus for Work by
  • Paraphrasing (In other words So )
  • Clarifying (Tell me a little more about
  • Itd help me understand if youd give me an
    example of )

19
Stay Away From
  • Why did you do .?
  • Have you considered doing ?
  • You might want to
  • How come you
  • How might you do it differently?
  • What might you do differently next time?
  • How did you decide?
  • Do you think it would have been different if you
    ..

20
Will these stems fit? Revise as needed.
  • Tell me how you did that
  • What went on in your mind when ?
  • When have you done something like this before?
  • What would be your criteria for ?
  • What do you think the problem is?
  • How did you know ?
  • What might you do next?
  • Whats another way you might approach this?

21
Support the Teachers Movement Forward
  • Direct teaching
  • Collaborative problem solving
  • Reflective questioning
  • Promote Accountability by
  • Identifying specific next steps
  • Agreeing to follow up

22
Mentoring Strategies
Listening Clarifying Encouraging
Reflecting Presenting Problem
Negotiating Directing Standardizing
Reinforcing

Solving
23
Coaching Practice
  • Prepare a conversation that is reflective in
    nature for this teacher in the video. Use the
    topic you identified earlier.
  • Pair off in teams of two and orally rehearse the
    reflective conversation with one another. One
    person be the advisor and the other the teacher
    in the video. Change roles.

24
Reflection
  • What are your thoughts about the experience you
    have just had with the walk-through observations
    and the reflective conversations?
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