P1250095204RwdPK - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 73
About This Presentation
Title:

P1250095204RwdPK

Description:

2nd largest school district in state. 30th largest in nation ... KFC not Baskin Robbins. Sustaining the Initiative. Confront Active Negativity. Eye-rollers ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:68
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 74
Provided by: KMHS
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: P1250095204RwdPK


1
Susangunderman_at_comcast.net
2
Cobb County Schools
  • Just north of Atlanta, GA
  • 2nd largest school district in state
  • 30th largest in nation
  • 106,000 students (2,500/yr)
  • 16 high schools
  • 23 middle schools
  • 68 elementary schools

3
KMHS Profile
  • Opened in 2000 with 1250 students
  • 2006-7 population 3,142
  • 2007-8 3,200
  • 319,000 sq. ft. instructional space
  • on 79 acres
  • 118 core and 165 elective courses on 4x4 block
    schedule
  • 23 AP courses 333 students/520 tests

4
Snapshot of Student Population
  • 300 students enrolled in Magnet Program
  • 350 students served in Educational Support
  • 4 ELL
  • 24 Free and Reduced Lunch
  • 88 Graduation Rate
  • 96 daily attendance rate

5
Teaching is only as good as the learning that
takes place.
6
How are we doing?
How successful are we?
More people will graduate in the United States
with sports-exercise degrees than with electrical
engineering degrees.
Jeffrey Immelt, CEO
of GE
Were becoming a postindustrial society that
specializes in consumption and leisure.
Fareed Zakaria, 2006
7
Causes for Alarm
For every 10 students who enter 8th grade. . .
  • 7 will get a high school diploma
  • 5 will enroll in postsecondary remedial courses
  • 3 will complete postsecondary degree by 26
  • All will expect the same or better lifestyle than
    their parents
  • Gaps in American
    Education
  • achievement, ambition, and numbers

8
How do we promote this kind of learning in our
classrooms?How do we measure these skills?
  • Innovation
  • Openness
  • Flexibility
  • Creativity

9
What we can do is take the best features of the
American systemopenness, INNOVATION, creativity,
and flexibilityand enhance them so that we can
create new industries, new technologies, and new
jobs. Fareed Zakaria, 2006
10
NewsweekJune 12, 2006
  • Its the ability to innovate and be creative
    and build new things that will help us compete.

11
NewsweekJune, 2006
  • No worker from a rich country can equal the
    energy of someone trying to move out of poverty.

People in China and India are starving for your
job.
Do your Homework
12
How do we promote this kind of learning in our
classrooms?How do we measure these skills?
  • Innovation
  • Openness
  • Flexibility
  • Creativity

13
We cannot teach our students the same way we were
taught.
14
21st Century Skills
  • Communication and Information
  • Thinking and Problem Solving
  • Interpersonal and Self-Directional
  • Collaboration

How do we help our students develop
these skills?
15
Vision and Implementation
  • There are no teachers with correct answers,
    only guides with different areas of expertise and
    experience that may help along the way.
  • Peter Senge
    and Fred Kofman, 1995

Flip the funnel
16
21st Century Classroom
  • Interaction with experts
  • Performance-based assessment
  • Virtual Classrooms
  • Writing workshops
  • Primary resources
  • Student focused
  • Engaging project-based activities
  • Integrated curriculum
  • Multiple resources
  • Problem solving

17
Changing the Paradigm of Teaching and Learning
  • Active engagement in learning
  • Primary and dynamic resources
  • Application of knowledge
  • Performance-based assessment

18
Rigor and Relevance Framework
  • Shifts the focus from
  • Teaching to Learning

19
Rigor and Relevance Framework
What do we want students to know and be able to
do?
20
Rigor/Relevance Framework
Knowledge
High
Application
Low
Low
High
21
(No Transcript)
22
Knowledge Taxonomy
  • 1. Awareness
  • 2. Comprehension
  • 3. Application
  • 4. Analysis
  • 5. Synthesis
  • 6. Evaluation

23
Knowledge Taxonomy Verb List
24
(No Transcript)
25
Application Model
  • 1. Knowledge in one discipline
  • 2. Application in discipline
  • 3. Application across disciplines
  • 4. Application to real-world predictable
    situations
  • 5. Application to real-world unpredictable
    situations

26
Rigor/Relevance Framework
Knowledge
Application
  • 1. Recall Knowledge
  • 2. Comprehension
  • 3. Application
  • 4. Analysis
  • 5. Synthesis
  • 6. Evaluation

1. Knowledge of one discipline 2. Application
within discipline 3. Application across
disciplines 4. Application to real world
predictable situations 5. Application to real
world unpredictable situations
27
Levels
Blooms
HIGH
C D A B
6
5
4
3
2
1 2 3 4 5
1
LOW
Application
28
From Theory to Practice
  • Moving Rigor and Relevance
  • Into the Classroom

29
The Journey Begins
  • 2000-1 KMHS opens
  • Dr. Daggett speaks to fledgling faculty
  • Conversation focused on RRR begins
  • 2001-2 Rigor Relevance Kit and handbook
  • --Common vocabulary used
    consistently
  • - Professional
    Development Groups
  • - Faculty meetings
  • - Snack n Shares

30
The Journey Begins
  • 2002-3 ICLE conducts RR workshop with faculty
  • 2003-4 KMHS selected as Model School
  • 2005-6 Students trained in framework

31
  • Nurture relationships with teachers
  • who show potential
  • Involve students

Make them part of expectations and celebrations
32
D Quadrant Lesson Creation
Standard Prose and Document Literacy
  • Select outcome
  • Be able to synthesize concepts learned in
    a nonfiction unit.
  • Select product
  • Publish a newspaper article based on
    childrens literature

33
Match to verb and strategy
Verbs
Products
Strategies
  • evaluate
  • validate
  • justify
  • rate
  • referee
  • infer
  • rank
  • dramatize
  • argue
  • conclude
  • evaluation
  • opinion
  • estimation
  • trial
  • article
  • adaptation
  • recommendation
  • debate
  • new game
  • invention
  • inquiry
  • research
  • cooperative
  • learning
  • presentation
  • project design

34
Required Components
  • Headline
  • By-line
  • Staged photograph
  • Cutline and pull quote
  • Map
  • Continuation headline, if needed
  • Body (250-400 words)
  • Interview
  • Site visit
  • Archival research

35
Provide rubric
36
Student Reflection
First of all, I never thought we could get it
all together to actually produce a newspaper with
all the parts that you wanted. But we did it, and
I actually learned a lot. Mostly I learned that I
had to pull my load so that we didnt look like a
bunch of slackers compared to the other groups.
And I think I know what it might feel like to be
a publisher in charge of getting a newspaper to
press on time. Definitely not for me!
37
Conceptual Physics
  • Why does pizza dough flatten when it is tossed?
  • Why do golf balls have dimples?
  • What causes high and low tides to occur at the
    beach?
  • How do barrels on interstates lessen the severity
    of a crash?
  • The physics of a piano

38
WORDSEARCH
39
January 2006
  • Dr. Daggett meets with students and teachers
  • Responses surprising
  • I feel a little sorry for my teacher trying
  • to get to D
  • Teachers 4 students 2.5
  • Clearly not there yet
  • The challenge

40
Answering the Challenge
  • Staff development task Create a D quadrant
    lesson
  • Share with colleagues

41
In the beginning. . .
  • Find your comfort zone
  • Snack n Shares to learn tools
  • Work in collaborative groups
  • 1.5 hours per month
  • Workdays
  • Develop a D Quadrant lesson to deliver and share

42
The Plan
  • Each collaborative group would share the lesson
  • Do the math 55 groups in 3 months
  • Please dont make us sit through that!

43
Back to the drawing board.
  • Input from leadership teams
  • They get it dont overwhelm them.
  • Instead, Lets Celebrate!!

44
KM iDOL Survivors of the Academy Awards
  • IDOL Committee
  • New plan
  • February workday Department meetings to select
    best in show
  • Application and Rubric tied to standards and
    Rigor and Relevance Framework
  • Reviewed by committee
  • Four finalists and six cameos
  • March workday Final presentations

45
The Incentives
  • Collaboration
  • Creativity
  • Support
  • Money!!
  • 2500 first prize
  • 1000 second
  • 850 third
  • 500 fourth

46
Judges
  • Superintendent
  • Assistant Superintendent
  • for Curriculum
  • Area Assistant Superintendent

47
Training for Judges
  • Rigor and Relevance Framework by committee
    including students
  • The Rubric

48
(No Transcript)
49
Stretch
Critical Knowledge Student Think
Critical Application Student Work Think
Stretch
Stretch
Core Knowledge Teacher Work
Core Application Student Work Think
50
Kennesaw Mountain Model Lessons Presentation
51
Finalist
Physical Education The Pit Seasonal Sand
Training Coaches
52
Finalist
Biology II Human Anatomy Project Dr. Joanne
Jezequel
53
Childrens Book ProjectAnatomy Physiology
54
(No Transcript)
55
Student Reflection
  • I once had a teacher who said, If you truly
    understand a concept, you can find at least 5
    different ways to retell the information. The
    childrens book helped me think past the
    memorization of dry textbook material.

56
Cameo
AP Music Theory Alma Mater Project David Roth
Jeff Harper
57
Cameo
Earth Science Montage of Tornado Stories John
Schafer
58
Finalist
Algebra II Money Management Graduation
D-cisions Jimmy Whittemore Dana Rogers
59
Overall Project Description
  • These lessons have been designed to provide
    students with an opportunity to explore their
    post high school path of either attending college
    (Hon Alg II project) or immediately entering the
    job market (Money Management project). By
    collecting real world data, both groups of
    students evaluate the consequences of one of
    these decision paths utilizing mathematical
    concepts being explored in their respective
    curriculum.

60
Individual Project Descriptions
  • Money Management students use newspapers, the
    internet, and real life experiences to research
    projected income and cost of living expenses
    based on a chosen career path and self-designed
    lifestyle. Each student must prepare an extensive
    budget that will
  • Demonstrate how each expense decision can be
    justified
  • Validate purchase decisions that are supported by
    mathematical calculations
  • Prioritize the level of investment choices based
    on budget
  • Present conclusions on the challenges faced with
    balancing a budget
  • Honors Algebra 2 students use the web to research
    the cost of a four year college education. The
    information is evaluated and analyzed using
    exponential and logarithmic models. In summary,
    this assignment requires the students to
  • Research real word data
  • Make Computations using mathematical models
  • Predict a variety of financial investments
    options
  • Revise original plan based on imposed real world
    obstacles
  • Organize findings into a Power point presentation
    in a way that validates the investment and
    mathematical models

61
English DepartmentModel Lesson
62
D-Quadrant LessonAdvanced Composition and 9th
Grade LiteratureDramatic Conventions
  • Presented by
  • Skyler Curtis and Niki Jaquish

63
Performance standards
  • Performance standards say
  • Use research and technology
  • Participate in student-to-student and group
    verbal interactions.
  • Deliver focused, coherent
  • presentations.
  • Identify evidence of devices from a
  • variety of texts in a variety of genres .
  • Increase understanding of literary works
  • by relating them to contemporary text
  • or their historical context.

64
ObjectivesStudents Will
  • Advanced Composition
  • Analyze dramatic conventions
  • Evaluate film clips and text
  • Synthesize information
  • Present conventions to 9th grade students
  • 9th Grade Literature
  • Analyze dramatic conventions
  • Evaluate film clips and text
  • Discuss information
  • Recreate a scene from a selection of text

65
Dramatic Conventions
  • Divided Lovers
  • Aside
  • Monologue
  • Clown
  • Mistaken Identity
  • Magic/Supernatural
  • Foil
  • Tragic Flaw
  • Central Symbol

66
Procedures
  • Senior groups assigned conventions
  • Find examples in film, television and literary
    works
  • Present information to Freshman class
  • Presentations will include
  • Definition of term
  • Examples in Romeo and Juliet and Othello
  • Presentation of film and television clips
  • Evaluation of the development of the convention
    over time

67
Procedures Continued
  • Culminating activities
  • The freshmen will work with the seniors to find
    examples of the conventions in a clip of The
    Simpsons Hamlet episode. They will later be
    expected to recreate a scene from another work of
    literature illustrating four of the conventions.

68
D-Quadessence???
  • Knowledge Taxonomy
  • Discussion-student to student, teacher to student
  • Analysis- Film clips, literary works
  • Synthesis-Literary works and conventions
  • Evaluation- Development of conventions
  • Real world predictable and unpredictable
    situation application-Presenting work to other
    students

69
Sustaining the Initiativefor Rigor and Relevance
70
Sustaining the Initiative
  • Keeping the Foundation Strong
  • Revisiting the research (ICLE Briefings)
  • Reconfirming the commitment
  • Bridging the Gap
  • Time
  • Turnover
  • Avoid educationese
  • Buzz words
  • Name Dropping
  • KFC not Baskin Robbins

71
Sustaining the Initiative
  • Confront Active Negativity
  • Eye-rollers
  • BMG
  • Toxic Dumpers
  • Involve students and community

72
Lessons Learned
  • Cant always be in D use as culminating activity
  • Stretch from application across disciplines to
    predictable real-world and unpredictable
    real-world
  • Continuous evaluation and reflection
  • to ratchet it up to a higher quadrant

73
Lessons
  • John Antonetti and Bob Marzano Standards and
    state tests will take care of themselves because
    youre not changing fundamentals of good
    teaching, just changing focus from teacher to
    student
  • Authentic work requires authentic audience
  • Find ways for others in building or community to
    provide feedback
  • Let creative juices flow
  • Relax and have fun!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com