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Improving student learning Lee Jenkins

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Cooperation builds character, is basic to human nature, & makes learning more enjoyable. ... Use same data to make a scatter diagram. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Improving student learning Lee Jenkins


1
Improving student learning Lee Jenkins
Education has undergone change after change
accompanied by subsequent reversalto former
practices.Continual changes must be
replacedwith improvement.Education can no
longer affordexpensive changes and the ensuing
debatesabout the efficacy of each change.

p. xxv
2
  • as more and more pressure is applied to raise
    test scores, solutions are needed. It seems
    there are several possible responses to this
    pressure
  • Teach only reading and math, which triples the
    time for reading and doubles the time for math.
  • Teach test-taking strategies.
  • Provide student incentives for high scores.
  • Provide staff incentives for high scores.
  • Threaten staff with loss of jobs.
  • Buy scripted programs.
  • Align the curriculum.

3
as more and more pressure is applied to raise
test scores, solutions are needed. Align the
curriculum. Alignment is a great partnerfor
continuous improvement if the alignment
meansalignment of curriculumbased upon best
practices,not merely alignment with test items.


p. 30
4
Aim
  • Without an AIM the parts will never work together
    as a system.
  • 1st Step to Improvement Establish AIM

Demings Overall Aim for Education
  • Increase the positives and decrease the
    negatives so that all students keep their
    yearning joy for learning.
  • Jenkins Increase Success Decrease Failure

5
Change ? Improvement
Improvement Fewer Failures More
Successes Less Variation
6
Improvement ? Redirected Resources ? Higher
Averages
7
How to Improve Processesto AchieveBetter
Results
8
Improvement Process
  • Gather Data
  • Construct Graphs(Post Results)
  • Gain Insight by Studying Graphs(disaggregated
    data)
  • Test Hypotheses
  • Increase Knowledge from Hypotheses Testing

9
Continuous Improvement
  • Early in continuous improvement process, inform
    parents
  • Letter
  • Back-to-School night focus on what going to
    learn
  • Charts communicate results

10
Letter to Parents
  • Dear parents,
  • Attached is a list of the Dolch Basic Sight Words
    (most commonly
  • used words in reading) that we will be learning
    throughout the year. Every two weeks, fifteen
    words will be randomly selected to read aloud.
    The students progress will be graphed
    individually and as a class. The students will
    not be expected to know all of these words when
    we first begin. By the end of the year, our goal
    for the students is to be able to read most or
    all of the words. Many of these words are already
    in our reading vocabulary lists.
  • Thank you very much.

11
Theory of Profound Knowledge
  • Applies to Teachers Administrators
  • Assets Power, Personality,
    Knowledge
  • Knowledge Foundation

12
Profound Knowledge 4 Parts
  • Appreciation for a System
  • Epistemology (Theory of Knowledge)
  • Psychology
  • Variation

13
Demings Management Philosophy1. System 7
Elements
  • Education has customers students
    universities, employers, teachers _at_ next grade
    level, etc. parents
  • Education needs an aim increase successes
    decrease failures
  • Education can improve its supply assign some of
    most talented teachers to helping parents
    preschool teachers better prepare students for
    school success
  • Process Grade levels must be linkedAlignment
    (coordinate education between grade levels)
    Methods to have all students improve.
  • Education has outputImprove education to produce
    fewer unprepared graduates dropouts more
    prepared graduates.
  • Education needs Quality Measurement (not ranking)
    by boards
  • Education has input most controlled by
    legislatures

14
Education as a System
Aim
Use power of feedbackdetails to improve supply,
input,and process
Feedback from customers stakeholderson quality
of graduates and work-in-progress.They may
suggest upgrading of aim.
Some of theinput tosupply
Supply
Some of theinput tok-12system
Process
LegislationFinancesCurriculum
standardsUniversity requirementsEmployer
needsHiring process
Children frombirth to age 5
K-12Support Staff
CustomersFormer current studentswho know
theirattitudes abilities arevalued bysociety
Parent EducationMediaPreschoolChurchEducation
OutputHigh schoolgraduatesvalued by society
15
Demings Management Philosophy2. Epistemology
the study of how people come to know
  • The Best Teacher ? Experience Testing Theory
    (method, policy, rules, plan, education
    law)Collect Data (Deming)

Information (Facts about the Past) ? Knowledge
(about the Future)Jenkins Essential
Information Performance
All school subjects have both Knowledge
Information Both are important need clear aims
16
Demings Management Philosophy3. Psychology
  • All children are born motivated to learn
  • Educators must discover what demotivates them
    stop those processes

We must preserve the power of intrinsic
motivation,dignity,cooperation, curiosity, joy
in learningthat people are born with.All the
qualities that have been traditionally and
erroneouslyapplied to competition actually apply
better to cooperation.Cooperation builds
character, is basic to human nature, makes
learning more enjoyable. --Deming
17
Demings Management Philosophy3. Psychology
  • Jenkins Americas obsession with competition is
    destroying the inborn motivation to learn.

Incentives including grades demotivate What
demotivates adults also demotivates kids
18
Demings Management Philosophy3. Demings
Psychological Truths
  • Most people, once discouraged, stay that way.
  • Children dont destroy their own motivation
    adults do.
  • There is no shortage of good people unless people
    create it.
  • Ranking (grades) destroys joy which destroys
    learning.
  • The customer (student) defines joy.

19
Demings Management Philosophy4. Variation
  • Is the enemy of education business
  • Uniqueness is prized
  • Variation is the problem that must be reduced

20
VariationDemings Key Elements
  • Variation is always present.
  • Variation is the enemy.
  • The purpose of statistics is to help decision
    makers reduce variation.
  • Do not set numerical goals, but hold accountable
    for a pattern of improvement.

21
New Way to Manage Learning Deming, 1992
  • Provide students the info they are expected to
    learn by the end of the course
  • Each week, randomly select a sample of the total
    info and quiz students on those items. The
    square root is ample sample size.
  • Correct quiz and make a class run chart of total
    correct for the whole class,
  • Use same data to make a scatter diagram.
  • Make individual student run charts overlay with
    class scatter diagram

100-sided die - http//www.gamescience.com
22
Graphs
  • Allow Teachers to fine-tune instruction
  • Students, teachers, administrators, parents
    see growth improvement
  • Show
  • inclines
  • valleys (discuss absences, other interests
    luck)
  • plateaus (engage students why not gone up
    what can we do? motivating)
  • Students focus on Learning, not grades or
    rewards

23
Review Preview Process
  • Quiz on concepts not yet taught
  • Quizzes not graded
  • Preview narrative hook short intro to new
    topics, what they will learn later

24
Performance without Rubrics
  • Reading Fluency Recommendationsfor Grade Level
    Text

25
Reading LevelsStar Reading
Performance without Rubrics
  • Each Quarter add reading levels of all students
    per grade post for all to see that learning is
    occurring

Accelerated Math Objectives or - Star Math
26
Performance without Rubrics
  • Typing speed students create Excel graphs
    with own and class typing speeds
  • Editing (English Foreign Language)
  • Voc ed., etc., competencies
  • Music rhythm patterns
  • Fitness sit-ups, push-ups, pull-ups, running

27
Performance ultimate goal of education
  • Norm-referenced tests usually measure info
  • Essential information is important either
  • As a prerequisite to deeper understanding or
  • On its own merit.
  • Begin the Continuous Improvement process with
    essential information, then move on to performance

28
Performance with Rubrics
  • Rubrics Scales of Quality cant be measured
    by counting
  • Add up Rubric scores
  • We can not inspect quality into the process we
    must build in the quality Deming
  • Writing teachers read square root of all papers
    randomly selected
  • Students have more responsibility for their own
    learning
  • Hear students think discuss methods to
    improve learning

Teaching Performance most difficult aspect of
teaching
29
Improving Learning ofEssential Information
  • Placing info in long-term memory
  • Inform students during 1st week the Essential
    Info (facts /or vocab) to know by end of course
  • 100 facts from current, last, next grade(or
    5th, 8th, 11th History)
  • Include facts from all 3 levels on tests
  • End of year students edit writing of facts for
    next years students
  • Essential info should be known for life not
    memorized for a test

30
Weekly Quizzes on Square Root
  • Square root, randomly selected, large enough
    sample size to be accurate (Spanish 900 vocab
    words or 1st grade 25 math concepts)
  • Sample because theres not enough time to
    continually assess students on everything they
    need to know.
  • Frequency informs teachers decisions
  • Frequent sampling takes least amount of class
    time provides most up-to-date info
  • Random selection is accurate because no human
    biases distort the data Excel, graphing
    calculator, random generator, die,
    www.random.org

31
Quiz Goal Know Concepts Vocab
  • Same fact may occur several weeks in a row
  • No duplicates in same quiz
  • Ask questions in different ways each time a fact
    is chosen multiple choice, fill-in-the blanks,
    open-ended questions, true-false

32
1st Quiz Prep
  • Assure students quiz doesnt count for grade
  • Purpose show how they are learning individually
    and collectively
  • Remind Will know the content at the end of the
    year.
  • Thank students for mistakes so all can learn

Parents 1. Quizzes not graded 2.
Eliminates cramming 3. Quizzes are practice
for graded end-of-year final
33
Weekly Quizzes
  • Half the time Week 2 will be worse than Week 1
  • Leader of classroom (teacher) says it will
    continue
  • Once students capture the intrinsic joy of both
    individual and collective growth, they beg for
    quizzes.
  • Learning becomes more important than grades

34
Time
  • Giving the quiz, correcting the answers, giving
    30- to 45-second explanations on items not yet
    taught, and recording results takes about 15
    minutes per week after about 5 weeks.
  • Takes longer at beginning of year.
  • Most of the time is spent teaching either
    review of prior content or preview of upcoming
    content (saves time later)

35
Tips
  • HS Add up total or correct for all like
    classes is valuable.
  • K-8 Most math texts are 33 review
  • Begin year with new content
  • Quiz 5 items from current grade, 3 from prior
    grade, 2 from two years past (or 7/2/1)
  • Give masters to all teachers (Appendix Y 5th
    Grade example)

36
Preview
  • Teacher gives quick 30- to 45-second explanation
  • Tell students what month they will learn the
    specific content

Students who want to know NOW Tell students which
chapter contains the explanation
37
Testing Out
  • 7 Consecutive weeks of Perfect Scores evidence
    Essential Info is mastered
  • Acceleration or
  • Enrichment
  • Then perfect scores credited so Class graph
    doesnt go down
  • Student can chooseto continue taking tests

38
Scores
  • Group monitors collect scores
  • K Add totals with Base 10 Blocks
  • Mental math adding group totals
  • Computer, individual, wall graphs
  • Elementary color their Column or Bar graphs
  • Run Chart more accurately shows movement over time

39
Goal
  • NOT Perfection no perfect weeks
  • Score higher than they ever have before
  • Most numerical goals are arbitrary
  • Not meet goal discouraged
  • Meet goal early slow down
  • Celebrate successes
  • Compare correct of year that is complete
    (25, 50, etc.)

The motivation seems to come naturally with the
processof testing, checking, learning from
mistakes, improving,being able to see the
visible evidence of growth on the graphs. p.93
40
Graphs
  • When people are absent, production goes down in
    the world in school - kids can see this on
    the graphs
  • Blanks on Run Charts are powerful to show parents
    attendance patterns.
  • Put graph in school foyer for all to see
  • Graphing correct is good
  • Graphing the average correct causes harm

41
Cincinnati Findings p.91
  • Students have accepted responsibility for
    learning goal
  • Students are ready anxious to help one another
    reach the learning goal
  • Student ideas about how to reach the learning
    goal are plentiful
  • Students have become active teachers of one
    another
  • Intervention is much more successful now
  • Teachers have a clearer picture of where they
    need to improve
  • Students have a much more accurate sense of their
    progress.
  • Parents with no backgrounds in our subjects
    (music calculus in this example), can walk into
    our rooms and immediately feel good about the
    progress being made.
  • Parents with continuous improvement background in
    industry are anxious to offer ideas and
    reflections
  • Various aspects of continuous improvement
    motivate different students class run chart
    (team player) student run chart (own growth)
    scatter diagram (competition of keeping up)

42
Teaching Tips
  • Math Triangle flash cards (cover 1 - do
    multiplication or division) also Foreign
    Lang.Math 72 fact families for - /
  • 34___ 3412, 4312, 12/43,
    12/34
  • Character Education definitions
  • History Put Quiz Item marker on person who
    was president when that event occurred
  • Special Ed Baseline average of 1st 7 tests
  • All students need regular feedback to know
    theyre learning even more important for
    Special Ed because many students have given up

43
Performance vs. Essential Info
  • Dr. Demings theories largely rejected by U.S.
    business leaders 1950 - 1980 because he insisted
    higher quality lower prices are possible at the
    same time (save rework, warranty, repair,
    returns) Japanese successes
  • Educational false dichotomy take time from
    performance to improve info learning
  • Not giving permission to forget saves time wasted
    in review

44
Eliminate Irritants Time Wasterswhich detract
from the central missionof schoolswith a dot
on the wall
  • A graph shows that there is a problem
  • Discipline color code misbehaviors
  • Students graph attendance, interruptions, trash
  • Random Selection - Graphing - Hypotheses for
    Improvement

45
Student Perceptions
  • Preview questions cause students to want to know
  • Students can see they are learning
  • Remember with repetition
  • Cant memorize have to know info

46
Continuous ImprovementMess Ups
  • Doesnt Work- Continuous Improvement is NOT a
    teaching method- Graphs inform students
    teachers if methods are working- Not all
    hypotheses are correct please help me establish
    a new hypothesis.

47
Continuous ImprovementMess Ups
  • Goal Perform better than ever before-
    Artificial goals ?
  • a) Not meet goal - discouragement b)
    Reach goal once c) Meet goal quit working
  • Average Correct- When class total is displayed,
    students see how they contributed- If average
    displayed, ½ students see they are below average
    not very smart

48
Continuous ImprovementMess Ups
  • Offering rewards changes motives- Teachers ask
    for student input on how to improve learning
  • Graphing only student or class run charts-
    Continuous improvement is about both individual
    class effort combined
  • Not being a cheerleader- No team effort in
    traditional classroom- Teacher brings class
    together to focus on the class goal- Celebrate
    successes

49
Continuous ImprovementMess Ups
  • Standards too Low
  • No Preview
  • Not dropping some routines- like chapter tests
    that measure short-term memory
  • Grading Weekly Quizzes- Content not yet taught-
    Students need extrinsic motivation (grades) to
    cram, but only need intrinsic motivation to learn

50
Continuous ImprovementMess Ups
  • Not Thinking Systems Long-Termfor all
    Routines- Goal J curve at years end- Each
    ¼ test should be a version of the year-end final
    to keep end in mind

51
Maintaining/Restoring Enthusiasm for Learning
  • Children are born and enter Kindergarten
    motivated to learn invaluable asset which must
    be protected
  • Loss of enthusiasm levels off after Grade 8
  • Deming Western society continually destroys its
    people, creating a shortage of good people.
  • Educators are responsible to maintain enthusiasm
    while increasing learning.

52
Enthusiasm Rubric
Graph MonthlyStudents give written suggestions
on how to make next month betterAll suggestions
discussed with class Some suggestions always
implementedTeacher listen very carefully
regarding1) practices that demotivate2)
students hypotheses for improving enthusiasm
53
  • When there is no systemof measurements in
    placeto gauge student satisfaction,can a school
    district genuinely saythat its students are its
    top priority?

54
Celebrations vs. Rewards/Incentives
  • No parents send their children to school to
    continually be losers.
  • Same 15 receive awards recognitions
  • Awards assemblies produce dropouts first in
    the heart and mind, next with the body
  • Everyone Contributes Everyone Celebrates

55
Histogram Graph 4
  • 3 basic graphs - class run chart
  • scatter diagram- student run chartshow movement
    over time.
  • Histograms display a moment in time.- how many
    students answer each question correctly

56
HistogramL to Bell to J
  • L J Curves more important than Bell-shaped
    Curve (appropriate for middle of year)
  • Move from L at beginning (standards are probably
    appropriate students have much to learn) to J
    at end (high success most students met
    expectations for year)
  • The real work to bring a class to the J occurs
    after standardized testing (April)

57
High Standards inPerformance Essential
Informationwith Continuous Improvement ? More
As
  • This is NOT
  • Inflation higher cost with no improvement in
    quality
  • Grade Inflation higher grades without more
    learning
  • Some teachers are sorters, some developers
  • Administrative support and understanding
    crucial

58
Disaggregate Datato Gain Insight
  • Break down data (age run charts, scatter
    diagrams)into subsets to identify address
    achievement gaps potential insight for future
    improvement
  • Gender
  • Ethnicity
  • Reading level
  • Disability
  • Attendance
  • Socioeconomic level
  • Other subgroups

59
Data Disaggregation Sequence
  • Gather the numbers and disaggregate the data.
  • Graph the data.
  • Study the graphs for insight.
  • Use the insight to establish hypotheses (ask
    students for help).
  • Carry out the hypothesis in order to gain
    knowledge.

60
Lets see . . .
  • Run Charts Is learning being produced at an
    acceptable rate is it likely year-end standards
    will be met?
  • Histogram J shape documents success
  • Disaggregated run charts scatter diagrams ?
    insight to assist educators in increasing
    learning
  • Item Analysis provide direction in attempts to
    improve learning

61
Item Analysis
  • Provide insight to increase learning
  • Both individual and class
  • Students use tools to gain report their
    insights
  • Tally Marks how many times each error was made
  • Histogram - of each type of error
  • Pareto Charts most informative tool for item
    analysis

62
Pareto Chart
  • Organize histogram in descending order of total
    errors per item for whole class
  • Compute running percentage what of total
    class errors were contributed by each error
  • Helps focus on the few errors contributing the
    most to student difficulty
  • Pareto Monitors 3 students with calculator 6
    weeks, 1 replaced every 2 weeks

QI Macros
63
Statistic Reporters
  • 2nd Committee
  • Calculate Report
  • Mean
  • Median
  • Mode
  • Range
  • Display learning steps on wall near charts
  • Students need real data on an ongoing basis to
    internalize these basic statistical terms.
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