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AP Vertical Teaming: From Theory to Praxis

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Title: AP Vertical Teaming: From Theory to Praxis


1
  • AP Vertical TeamingFrom Theory to Praxis
  • Michele Brannon, Hoover High School, AL
  • Chad Cooley, Hoover High School, AL
  • Dennis Fare, Hackensack High School, NJ
  • Mark Porto, Hackensack High School, NJ
  • Mike Wojcik, Hackensack High School, NJ

2
AP Vertical TeamingFrom Theory to Praxis
Hoover High School
3
How We Got Here
  • Transitioned into the AP classroom
  • Attended College Board AP summer institute and
    half-day / full-day workshops in winter and
    summer 2005 - 2006
  • Proposed a new AP course in spring 2006
  • Wrote curriculum with other teachers in district
    spring summer 2006
  • Implemented new course fall 2006

4
The New AP Teachers First Steps Focus on YOU!!!
  • Training through the College Board
  • On-site workshops and / or summer institutes
  • Online workshops
  • Information gathering
  • Sample syllabi
  • Sample assignments
  • Resource guides / texts / old exams

5
Reasonable Goals
  • Discernment of usable ideas
  • Realistic syllabus for first year
  • Honest evaluation of successes and failures
  • Enjoyment of students and curriculum

6
Building a Vertical Team
  • School / district commitment to AP program
  • Courses offered
  • Personnel assigned
  • College Board training
  • Dedicated curriculum planning time
  • Professional development and leave time granted

7
Building a Vertical Team
  • Teachers take the lead
  • One team for each subject area
  • Team members include all teachers of pre-AP and
    AP courses within the discipline
  • Vertical team leader / coordinator for each team
  • Smaller teams created in grade-level pairs
  • (9-10 / 11-12)
  • All members of each department should be invited
    to join the vertical team

8
Bringing the Vertical Team to Life
  • Year one goals
  • Provide initial training for key team members
  • Establish regular meeting schedule
  • Promote buy-in within core group
  • Determine curriculum goals
  • Common terminology
  • Common assessment tools / practices
  • Transition points for each grade level
  • Benchmarks for each grade level

9
Meeting Structure
  • Meeting topics correlated to curriculum goals
  • Dedicated topic / agenda for each meeting
  • In-house professional development credit
  • Sharing of best practices, resources, lesson
    plans, assessments
  • Sharing and evaluating student work for
    calibration purposes
  • Tangible hands-on end result
  • Collaborative planning devoted to long-term goals
    of the team

10
Long-term Goals
  • AP Training for all vertical team members
  • Expansion of vertical team concept to include all
    members of department, not just AP and pre-AP
    teachers
  • Monthly rotation of curriculum leaders in team
    meetings
  • New teacher curricular support system
  • More teachers teaching pre-AP courses
  • Extension of vertical team to middle schools in
    district

11
Benefits of the Vertical Team
  • Measurable increase in student success on AP and
    college entrance examinations
  • Increased enrollment in AP and pre-AP courses
  • Collaborative planning within a professional
    learning community
  • Collegial atmosphere
  • Trickle-down effect on the regular classroom as
    best practices are brought to more students
  • Higher curriculum standards in all classes

12
AP Vertical TeamingFrom Theory to Praxis
Hackensack High School Changing our
Conversations
13
Barriers photos from Bagdad, Aug 22,
2007-courtesy of my brother, Justin4.5 Billion
spent in Iraq 0670 million spent on US Education
06
14
Barriers
  • One-third of American eighth graders cannot
    perform basic math. That means more than a
    million thirteen-year-olds cant do the simplest
    calculations needed to buy a candy bar or ride a
    bus.

15
Barriers
  • The odds that any given ten-year-old in a large
    American city can read are about fifty-fifty, and
    six in ten for the nation as a whole.

16
Barriers data fromONLY CONNECT The Way to
Save Our Schools by Rudy Crew, 2007
  • Only one in five students entering college are
    prepared for college-level work in math, reading,
    writing, and biology.

17
Tangible Barriers
  • Illiteracy
  • Poverty
  • Disability
  • Illness
  • Abuse
  • Oppression

18
Intangible Barriers
  • Low or unreasonable expectations
  • Close-mindedness
  • Cynicism or bitterness or jealousy or anger
  • Prejudice or disdain
  • Fundamentalism
  • Inability to deal w/ ambiguity or change
  • Inability to accept life-long learning

19
Education in 21st CenturyBreaking Down
Barriersphotos from HHS SY 06-07
20
Change the ConversationsThere is a direct
correlation between student achievement and
teacher attitudes and beliefs.
21
Two Essential Messages for Success
  • SY 06-07
  • Change
  • Your
  • Conversations!
  • SY 07-08
  • TALK about
  • Math Science
  • College
  • What you do
  • TODAY
  • affects you
  • NOW
  • and
  • in the future.

22
CHANGING CONVERSATIONSRethink, Rephrase, Reap
Rewards!
  • Too difficult I will try
  • Not for me Maybe for me
  • At risk In training
  • Not possible Probable
  • Lower level Still learning
  • Not capable Will learn in time
  • Unskilled Becoming
  • AP is elite AP is a possibility
  • Maybe Bergen What 4-year college?
  • Wont do work How will I motivate?

23
Using Grants to Implement Reform
SLC Grant
TAH Grant
Title 1 Funds
CSRGrant
24
Using Grants To Implement Support
Programs Services
Title 1 Funds CSR Grant
Extensive Tutoring Before School - During School
- After School Saturdays
Summer Institute of Advanced Studies
Algebra 1 Geometry
Core Math/EngHSPA Prep
Writing Prep English/ELL
25
Using Grants Local Funds To
Implement Support Programs
SLC Federal Grant Local Funds
Extensive Tutoring Before School - During School
- After School Saturdays
Summer Institute of Advanced Studies
Core AcademicsPre AP AP Courses
Adv Math Science for Credit Courses
Pre AP Prep AP Prep
26
Using Federal Discretionary Grant To
Prepare for NCLB Testing
Teaching American History Federal
Discretionary Grant

Preparation of CrossCurriculum Writing
Lessons In Preparation of NCLB Test


27
Partnerships with Colleges to Implement
Reform (Currently Implemented or Under
Consideration)
FDU University
Bergen Community College


Montclair State University


Dual Credit College Programs BCC
Health Careers Program FDU Middle
College Program UMDNJ Pre Med Honors
ProgramNJCU College Placement Pilot Program


New Jersey City University
Univ Medicine Dentistry New Jersey
28
Partnership with College Board to
Implement Reform
College Placement Testing
Professional Development
AP Test Preparation For Students
Validation Of Success
29
Partnerships with Community
Organizations To Implement Reform



New JerseyChamber of Commerce
Hackensack Educational Foundation


DiscretionaryGrant Proposals To Private
Foundations
Learn More Now Do More Now,Earn More Later
Program
On-LineInstructionPilot Program
30
DATA Hackensack High School
  • Student Population SY 07-08
  • 1804 students
  • 40.5 Latino
  • 28.5 African- or Caribbean-American
  • 25.5 White
  • 5.5 Asian
  • More students from sending districts than in past
    5 years
  • 15 Maywood, 8.3 Rochelle Park, 4 So. Hackensack

31
HSPA Language Arts 05-07
32
HSPA DataLanguage Arts, Writing
  • Our Writing Initiative
  • has been very SUCCESSFUL!!
  • HHS Grade 11 students are AT or ABOVE state
    and District Factor Group (DFG CD) means for
  • Open-Ended Writing
  • Narrative Writing
  • Persuasive Writing

33
SIGNIFICANT Improvements in Language Arts
  • gt 5 increase in general education students
    reaching proficiency over last SY AND
  • gt91 first time ever since state testing
  • Consistent increase in students reaching advanced
    proficiency in ALL student populations
  • Significant increases in ALL subpopulations
  • Significantly higher mean scores in ALL
    subpopulations (except females!) compared with
    state and District Factor Group (DFG) CD means

34
SIGNIFICANT Improvements in Language Arts
  • These dramatic results indicate
  • SUCCESSFUL REFORMS!!!!
  • Detracking in English and Social Studies
  • Vertical Teaming among English/Social Studies
  • School-wide Writing Initiative
  • Mainstreaming 74 of Spec Ed students
  • New ESL/Bilingual Reading/Writing Program

35
HSPA DataLanguage Arts, Reading
  • We need to work on READING!
  • HHS Grade 11 students are BELOW or AT state and
    DFG CD means for all Reading Tasks on HSPA for
  • Interpreting Text
  • Analyzing/Critiquing Text
  • Overall Reading Tasks
  • NOTE Except LEP subpopulation which was above
    or at state and DFG CD means in overall reading
    tasks and analyzing/critiquing texts!

36
HSPA Math 05-07
37
AP Enrollment Growth Test Scores

38
AP and Middle College Enrollment SY 0708
  • Total of AP Enrollment 594
  • (-3.5 from SY0607)
  • Students in 1 or more AP Courses 398
  • (29 from SY 0607)
  • 22 of students are in an AP course compared with
    17 SY 0607
  • Students in 1 or more Middle College 109
  • 28 of students in college level work

39
AP Tests SY 05-06 vs SY 06-07
  • 132 students took AP exams (7 of total student
    population)
  • 247 tests in 13 AP courses
  • 42 earned 3, 4, 5
  • 257 students took AP exams (14 of total student
    population)
  • 500 tests in 21 AP courses
  • 32 earned 3, 4, 5

40
AP Scores are one indicator of the academic
health andculture of the school.AP English
Language Composition
  • A course that began only TWO YEARS AGO!

41
Growth in AP English Lang/CompSY 05-06 vs SY
06-07
  • 61 students in SY 05-06
  • 28 earned 3, 4, 5
  • 62 earned 2
  • 10 earned a 1
  • 92 students in SY 06-07 (66)
  • 49 earned 3, 4, 5
  • 46 earned a 2
  • 5 earned a 1

42
Classroom Enrollment SY 01-02
43
School Enrollment vs AP Enrollment SY 06-07
School Enrollment White 31 Hisp
37 Black 32
APEnrollment White 36 Hisp
38 Black 26
44
Using Data to Measure Success
AP Enrollment
475 increase over 4-yr period (Total
school population) 235 increase over 4-yr
period (African-American subgroup)
335 increase over 4-yr period
(Economically disadvantaged)
45
SAT Data SY 05-06 vs SY 06-07
  • SY 05-06
  • SY 06-07
  • 316 students from HHS
  • (state mean)
  • Reading Mean 444 (495)
  • Writing Mean 437 (494)
  • Math Mean 462 (510)
  • 238 students from HHS
  • (state mean)
  • Reading Mean 438 (496)
  • Writing Mean 432 (496)
  • Math Mean 461 (515)

46
SAT Data GOOD NEWS!SY 05-06 vs SY 06-07
  • 75 increase of HHS students taking SATs
  • Despite more students taking SATs, there are
    SIGNIFICANT increases in Reading and Writing Mean
    Scores (even though state means for reading and
    writing decreased!)

47
Our Data PROVEN RESULTS
  • We must not stop the momentum.

48
College Board Equity Policy StatementThe
College Board and the Advanced Placement Program
encourage teachers, AP Coordinators, and school
administrators to make equitable access a guiding
principle for their AP programs. The College
Board is committed to the principle that ALL
STUDENTS DESERVE AN OPPORTUNITY TO PARTICIPATE IN
RIGOROUS AND ACADEMICALLY CHALLENGING COURSES AND
PROGRAMSThe Board encourages the elimination of
barriers that restrict access to AP courses for
students from ethnic, racial, and socioeconomic
groups that have been traditionally
underrepresented in the AP Program my
emphasis
49
Expectations and Challenges
  • Expectation 1 All students can perform at
    rigorous academic levels and are consistently
    being challenged to expand knowledge/skills.
  • (The AP Vertical Team Guide for English, p.xiii)
  • Challenge Each student in our classrooms will
    be at a different academic level, based on
    knowledge/skills.

50
Expectation 1 is possible only if
  • All teachers have and work together in
    maintaining this expectation
  • All teachers know that all students are being
    challenged to improve skills/build knowledge at
    each grade level
  • All teachers know that upcoming students will
    have agreed upon skills, knowledge base, with
    excitement to continue!

51
Expectations and Challenges
  • Expectation 2 We can prepare every student for
    higher intellectual engagement by starting the
    development of skills and acquisition of
    knowledge as early as possible.
  • (The AP Vertical Team Guide for English, p.xiii)
  • Challenge We must align curricula, teaching
    methodology, assignments and assessments with
    rubrics

52
Expectation 2 is possible only if
  • All teachers have and work together in
    maintaining the expectation
  • All teachers must be willing to meet regularly to
    discuss/review curricula and instruction
  • All teachers must be willing to teach aligned
    curricula, implement agreed upon instructional
    strategies, and uphold standards.

53
Essence of PreAP/AP Vertical Team
  • The essence of the concept AP Vertical Team
    is that the skills taught in the AP program are
    important to all students in all English classes
    at all grade levels.the instruction is important
    because thinking, analyzing, and problem solving
    are fundamental skills for every career. (p. 3)

54
Why the PreAP/AP Team?
  • To increase standards
  • To foster inclusion (Literacy Equity)
  • To encourage innovation TOGETHER
  • To coordinate instruction and curricula
  • To empower both teachers and students
  • To stimulate enthusiasm for learning.
  • (pp. 4-5)
  • All of these goals will recreate HHS into
    Professional Learning Community!

55
What do we align? (Horizontal and Vertical)
  • Content (continually reinforced)
  • Skills (continually reinforced)
  • Strategies when teaching writing in social
    studies
  • Strategies when teaching reading in social
    studies
  • Regular, coordinated use of nonfiction/primary
    sources
  • Texts
  • Summer assignments, homework, other assignments
    (research papers?), creative projects
  • Extracurricular activities and tutorials
  • Rubrics

56
Align Instructional Strategies Writing
  • Teach thesis development and writing
    particularly in responding to DBQs
  • Assign essays and DBQs weekly
  • Coordinate writing instruction with English
    teachers
  • Use open-ended questions to assess content
    knowledge
  • Require textual support for all open-ended
    questions
  • Assign writing in every class
  • Use same editing marks at all grades
  • Use similar rubric for editing (HSPA?)
  • Peer edit regularly.

57
High School Teaching and College Expectations in
Writing and Reading(Patterson and Duer, English
Journal 95(3) January 2006, pp. 81-87)
  • The study demonstrates statistically significant
    differences in reading and writing expectations
    of students in classes for college-bound vs.
    non-college bound.TRACKING LEADS TO INEQUITY!!!!
  • The study demonstrates the need for grammar and
    usage in high school instruction.
  • Some seemingly important higher-order reading
    skills have a questionable status in high school
    teaching

58
High School Teaching and College Expectations in
Writing and Reading(Patterson and Duer, English
Journal 95(3) January 2006, pp. 81-87)
  • The positives.
  • High school teachers and instructors of common
    first-year college courses already agree on what
    many of the most important skills in writing and
    reading are.
  • For example Using rhetorically effective
    subordination, coordination, and parallelism
  • (QUESTION Do we teach subordination,
    coordination, parallelismespecially parallelism
    with participles, gerunds, infinitives?)

59
High School Teaching and College Expectations in
Writing and Reading(Patterson and Duer, English
Journal 95(3) January 2006, pp. 81-87)
  • Key Point for Social Studies Teachers.
  • High school teachers and instructors of common
    first-year college courses already agree on what
    many of the most important skills in writing and
    reading are.

60
Use passages to teach syntax (balanced structure,
parallelism, anaphora, antimetabole,
stichomythia see pp. 38-39), diction (overtly
religious), literary devices (juxtaposition,
paradox)
  • It was the best of times, it was the worst of
    times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age
    of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it
    was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season
    of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was
    the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair,
    we had everything before us, we had nothing
    before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we
    were all going direct the other way- in short,
    the period was so far like the present period,
    that some of its noisiest authorities insisted on
    its being received, for good or for evil, in the
    superlative degree of comparison only.There
    were a king with a large jaw and a queen with a
    plain face, on the throne of England there were
    a king with a large jaw and a queen with a fair
    face, on the throne of France. In both countries
    it was clearer than crystal to the lords of the
    State preserves of loaves and fishes, that things
    in general were settled for ever. -- Dickens, A
    Tale of Two Cities

61
Align Instructional Strategies Reading
  • Model making connections as you read (i.e., as
    you read X, you thought about Y and why)
  • Read Aloud Encourage students to make
    connections between current and historical
    events
  • Shared Reading Teacher and students share
    passages they appreciate from the text, book,
    article
  • Reciprocal Teaching (frequent strategy at HHS)
  • Shared Vocabulary Lists (from texts) Vocabulary
    is used by next grade level teacher.

62
Regular, CoordinatedUse of Nonfiction
  • Use nonfiction or primary documents in
    conjunction with text
  • Use current events regularly to support text
    (preferably from The New York Times)
  • Require regular written responses to nonfiction
    (with clear thesis and text support)
  • Make regular connections with other core content
    How did this event impact social sciences,
    geography
  • Encourage students to make connections with
    nonfiction or other media sources.

63
Example of Use of Nonfiction ArticleIn Ancient
Document, Judas, Minus the Betrayal from The New
York Times, A1, Friday, April 7, 2006.
  • What impact might the discovery of this text
    (like The Gospel of Judas) have on the other
    primary sources that are sacred to Christianity?
  • Why are only certain ancient texts sacred in a
    religious tradition (while other texts from a
    similar time considered apocryphal)?

64
Example of Use of Nonfiction ArticleThe of
Impulse from The New York Times, Tuesday, April
4, 2006.
  • To explore character in Salingers Catcher in the
    Rye With advances in brain study, is the
    character of Holden consistent with the new
    advances in physiology and psychology?
  • Is Holden suffering from impulsivity disorder?
    Why or why not? Use text(s) to support your
    thesis.

65
Using Nonfiction The Worst Hard Time, The
Ground Shook and The Victory of Reason
  • Ask students to identify the premise (key idea)
    of the chapter and how this idea supports or
    challenges the text. Refute or support with
    references to the text.
  • How do disasters impact history (geography,
    cities, populations, economy)? Read about 1906
    San Francisco Earthquake, Black Sunday on April
    14, 1935. Hurricane Katrina?

66
Align Assignments (Summer and Weekly) Homework,
Regular Reading
  • Align summer assignments (consequences of not
    completing summer assignment is consistent) in
    scope and sequence
  • Limit creative projects to vacations
  • Assign essays weekly with variations Timed,
    timed and edited at home, peer edited,
    thesis-statement only, etc.
  • Assign DBQs as one of the essays once a month
  • Provide regular reading schedules for the month
    with text, primary sources, and nonfiction
    articles/chapters mapped out, so students will
    learn to time manage and will be held
    accountable. (BE FLEXIBLE)
  • Create a webpage linked to the HHS AP website.

67
The Dreaded Weekly EssayThere are ways to
cope!!!
  • Assess writing/reading skills in first weeks to
    determine which students need most improvement (I
    can give you ways to accomplish this task)
  • Grade one essay a month in depth
  • With other essays, focus on students who need
    most improvement (and give cursory scan to
    others)
  • Use peer editing after November for grammar
    problems
  • Spend lots of time on thesis development The
    rest of essay can be determined by the thesis!
  • Choose one aspect of essay writing to improve
    each month use of text as support OR essay
    intro OR conclusion OR subordination of ideas OR
    pronoun-antecedent agreement.
  • Require open-ended questions to assess content
    knowledge before assigning an essay
  • Essays should be DBQs.

68
Align Texts
  • What grade should read Guns, Germs, and Steel?
    etc.
  • All teachers should know what students have read
    in previous grades to help students make
    connections with past reading, to build upon the
    continuum of primary sources to prep for AP
    questions to help students with DBQs
  • Use nonfiction and primary sources regularly to
    support the text.

69
AlignExtracurricular Activities and Tutorials
  • Period 10 tutorials addressing writing issues
  • Period 10 discussion groups
  • PreAP and AP US teachers use common text and show
    nonfiction film detailing the event with
    discussion
  • In April and May Period 10 Review of AP Tests
    with PreAP students invited.

70
CHANGE THE CONVERSATIONS
  • Some ideas to think about as we team today and in
    days to come

71
According to Deal and Petersen in Shaping School
Culture, successful schools where students
flourish are those with a primary focus on
student learning, a commitment to high
expectations, social support for innovation,
dialogue, and the search for new ideas.
72
Change the ConversationsThere is a direct
correlation between student achievement and
teacher attitudes and beliefs.
73
Studies demonstrate that writing enhances a
students literacy skills, and reading improves a
students writing ability. The more time
students spend in writing and reading, the
greater their level of achievement. (Wood and
Harmon, p. 26)
74
Classroom teachers (and their attitudes/beliefs)
determine what gets taught and how it gets taught
and ultimately how well students respond and
achieve.
75
Establishing study habits and class routines
areessential for academic reforms that are
lasting.
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