Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Good Morning and Welcome to the :

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Good Morning and Welcome to the :"— Presentation transcript:

1 Good Morning and Welcome to the 2013-2014:
Northern Kentucky Leadership Network Meetings!

2 Who Am I? Hallie Booth Special Education (K-12)
Science 6-8 (Gifted and Talented 6th) Science Coach 6-12 CTE LDC Coach 9-12 Middle School LDC 6-8 – T2X Trainer Common Core National Trainer/Advocate LDC National Trainer

3 Introduce the Team Hallie Booth Chris Crouch Renee Yates Robin Hill
Kathy Mansfield Jenny Ray Kelly Stidham Molly Bowen Ellen Sears

4 Who is in the Room??????

5 Beechwood Independent

6 Bellevue Independent

7 Boone County

8 Bracken County

9 Campbell County

10 Covington Independent

11 Dayton Independent

12 Erlanger-Elsmere Independent

13 Fort Thomas Independent

14 Grant County

15 Gateway Community and Technical College

16 Kenton County

17 Ludlow Independent

18 Newport Independent

19 Northern Kentucky University

20 Pendleton County

21 Silver Grove Independent

22 Southgate Independent

23 Walton-Verona Independent

24 Williamstown Independent

25 Group NORMS!!

26 Norms – Learning Forward

27 Network Vision and Goal

28 Vision and Goals of the Network

29 What kind of leader/team member am I?
Competing Values Cards

30 Directions Spend 5 minutes moving around the room and trading cards with other participants in order to find cards that describe you the best. Spend 1 minute deciding which of your cards describes you the best.

31 Break Time/Table Transition
10 minutes to transition and “do” whatever you need to “do”

32

33 Which one are you?

34 Rate Your Familiarity with NGSS
Choose one of the following that best describes your familiarity with the NGSS and explain your choice: I know there are new science standards Know a little about them/I know they have different colored sections on the paper Read some of the framework/standards I have a real deep understanding of standards their meaning and the content taught I could lead a PD or group planning on the standards. Read the choices and decide which one best describes your knowledge level. Close your eyes and on the count of three, raise your hand and hold up the number of fingers that best represents your familiarity with the NGSS. P-12 MSOU of PIMSER

35 Facts and Myths About the NGSS Scientific and Engineering Practices
Place an X next to the descriptions you think are correct. Which of your answers are you least sure about? Explain your thinking. Discuss with a partner. What other questions do you have? Remind to keep handy. Participants will be revisiting several times throughout the day. P-12 MSOU of PIMSER

36 A New Vision of Science Learning that Leads to a New Vision of Teaching
The framework is designed to help realize a vision for education in the sciences and engineering in which students, over multiple years of school, actively engage in science and engineering practices and apply crosscutting concepts to deepen their understanding of the core ideas in these fields. A Framework for K-12 Science Education p. 1-2 The Committee on a Conceptual Framework for New Science Education Standards was charged with developing a framework that articulates a broad set of expectations for students in science. The overarching goal of our framework for K-12 science education is to ensure that by the end of 12th grade, all students have some appreciation of the beauty and wonder of science; possess sufficient knowledge of science and engineering to engage in public discussions on related issues; are careful consumers of scientific and technological information related to their everyday lives; are able to continue to learn about science outside school; and have the skills to enter careers of their choice, including (but not limited to) careers in science, engineering, and technology (Framework, ES 1). P-12 MSOU of PIMSER

37

38 Sean Elkins’ TED TALK

39 What’s Different about the Next Generation Science Standards?

40 Three Dimensions Intertwined
The NGSS are written as Performance Expectations NGSS will require contextual application of the three dimensions by students. Focus is on how and why as well as what

41 Instructional Shifts in the NGSS
Performance Expectations Evidence of learning Learning Progressions Science and Engineering Coherence of Science Instruction Connections within Science and between Common Core State Standards

42 “…students cannot fully understand scientific and engineering ideas without engaging in the practices of inquiry and the discourses by which such ideas are developed and refined. At the same time, they cannot learn or show competence in practices except in the context of specific content.” A Framework for K-12 Science Education, pg. 218 One of the main differences in these standards is the intentional weaving of practices, core ideas, and cross-cutting concepts. The message is that the practices should not be separate from the content and vice versa. P-12 MSOU of PIMSER

43 Standards: Nexus of 3 Dimensions
Not separate treatment of “content” and “inquiry” (No “Chapter 1”) Curriculum and instruction needs to do more than present and assess scientific ideas – they need to involve learners in using scientific practices to develop and apply the scientific ideas. Crosscutting Concepts Core Ideas Practices P-12 MSOU of PIMSER

44 Science and Engineering Practices
Guiding Principles Students in K-12 should engage in all of the eight practices over each grade band. Practices grow in complexity and sophistication across the grades. Each practice may reflect science or engineering. Practices represent what students are expected to do, and are not teaching methods or curriculum. The eight practices are not separate; they intentionally overlap and interconnect. Performance expectations focus on some but not all capabilities associated with a practice. Teachers often interpret practices as what they are to do not what they are to facilitate students in doing. Want to highlight this to clarify. P-12 MSOU of PIMSER

45 Science and Engineering Practices
1. Asking questions (science) and defining problems (engineering) 2. Developing and using models Planning and carrying out investigations Analyzing and interpreting data 5. Using mathematics and computational thinking 6. Constructing explanations (science) and designing solutions (engineering) 7. Engaging in argument from evidence 8. Obtaining, evaluating, and communicating information Dimension 1 [Scientific and Engineering Practices] describes (a) the major practices that scientists employ as they investigate and build models and theories about the world and (b) a key set of engineering practices that engineers use as they design and build systems. We use the term “practices” instead of a term such as “skills” to emphasize that engaging in scientific investigation requires not only skill but also knowledge that is specific to each practice (Framework, p. 2-5). Science is not just a body of knowledge that reflects current understanding of the world; it is also a set of practices used to establish, extend, and refine that knowledge. Both elements—knowledge and practice—are essential (Framework, p. 3). Similarly, engineering involves both knowledge and a set of practices. The major goal of engineering is to solve problems that arise from a specific human need or desire. To do this, engineers rely on their knowledge of science and mathematics as well as their understanding of the engineering design process (Framework, p. 2-3). The practices include. . . Asking questions is essential to developing scientific habits of mind. Even for individuals who do not become scientist or engineers, the ability to ask well-defined questions is an important component of science literacy, helping to make them critical consumers of scientific knowledge. Questions are the engine that drive science and engineering. Science asks: What exists and what happens? Why does it happen? How does one know? (Framework, 3-6) Engineering asks: What can be done to address a particular human need or want? How can the need be better specified? What tools and technologies are available, or could be developed, for addressing this need? How does one communicate phenomena, evidence, explanations, and design solutions? (Framework, p. 3-6) Conceptual models, the focus of this section, are, in contrast, explicit representations that are in some ways analogous to the phenomena they represent. Conceptual models allow scientists and engineers to better visualize and understand a phenomenon under investigation or develop a possible solution to a design problem. Although they do not correspond exactly to the more complicated entity being modeled, they do bring certain features into focus while minimizing or obscuring others. Because all models contain approximations and assumptions that limit the range of validity of their application and the precision of their predictive power, it is important to recognize their limitations. (Framework, p. 3-8) Scientists and engineers investigate and observe the world with essentially two goals: (1) to systematically describe the world and (2) to develop and test theories and explanations of how the world works. In the first, careful observation and description often lead to identification of features that need to be explained or questions that need to be explored. The second goal requires investigations to test explanatory models of the world and their predictions and whether the inferences suggested by these models are supported by data. Planning and designing such investigations require the ability to design experimental or observational inquiries that are appropriate to answering the question being asked or testing a hypothesis that has been formed. This process begins by identifying the relevant variables and considering how they may be observed, measured, and controlled (constrained by the experimental design to take particular values). (Framework, 3-9 &10) Once collected, data must be presented in a form that can reveal any patterns and relationships and that allows results to be communicated to others. Because raw data as such have little meaning, a major practice of scientists is to organize and interpret the data through tabulating, graphing, or statistical analysis. Such analysis can bring out the meaning of the data—and their relevance—so that they may be used as evidence (Framework, p. 3-11). Mathematics and computational tools are central to science and engineering. Mathematics enables the numerical representation of variables, the symbolic representation of relationships between physical entities, and the prediction of outcomes. Mathematics provides powerful models for describing and predicting such phenomena as atomic structure, gravitational forces, and quantum mechanics. Mathematics enables ideas to be expressed in a precise form and enables the identification of new ideas about the physical world. Although there are differences in how mathematics and computational thinking are applied in science and in engineering, mathematics often brings these two fields together by enabling engineers to apply the mathematical form of scientific theories and by enabling scientists to use powerful information technologies designed by engineers. (Framework, p. 3-13) Engaging students with standard scientific explanations of the world—helping them to gain an understanding of the major ideas that science has developed—is a central aspect of science education. Asking students to demonstrate their own understanding of the implications of a scientific idea by developing their own explanations of phenomena, whether based on observations they have made or models they have developed, engages them in an essential part of the process by which conceptual change can occur (Framework, p. 3-15). In engineering, the goal is a design rather than an explanation. The process of developing a design is iterative and systematic, as is the process of developing an explanation or theory in science (Framework, p & 16). Engineers’ activities, however, have elements that are distinct from those of scientists. These elements include specifying constraints and criteria for desired qualities of the solution, developing a design plan, producing and testing models or prototypes, selecting among alternative design features to optimize the achievement of design criteria, and refining design ideas based on the performance of a prototype or simulation (Framework, p & 16). In science, the production of knowledge is dependent on a process of reasoning that requires a scientist to make a justified claim about the world. In response, other scientists attempt to identify the claim’s weaknesses and limitations. Their arguments can be based on deductions from premises, on inductive generalizations of existing patterns, or on inferences about the best possible explanation. Argumentation is also needed to resolve questions involving, for example, the best experimental design, the most appropriate techniques of data analysis, or the best interpretation of a given data set (Framework, p. 3-17). In engineering, reasoning and argument are essential to finding the best possible solution to a problem. At an early design stage, competing ideas must be compared (and possibly combined) to achieve an initial design, and the choices are made through argumentation about the merits of the various ideas pertinent to the design goals. At a later stage in the design process, engineers test their potential solution, collect data, and modify their design in an iterative manner. The results of such efforts are often presented as evidence to argue about the strengths and weaknesses of a particular design (Framework, p. 3-18). From the very start of their science education, students should be asked to engage in the communication of science, especially regarding the investigations they are conducting and the observations they are making. Careful description of observations and clear statement of ideas, with the ability to both refine a statement in response to questions and to ask questions of others to achieve clarification of what is being said begin at the earliest grades. Beginning in upper elementary and middle school, the ability to interpret written materials becomes more important. Early work on reading science texts should also include explicit instruction and practice in interpreting tables, diagrams, and charts and coordinating information conveyed by them with information in written text. Not only must students learn technical terms but also more general academic language, such as “analyze” or “correlation,” which are not part of most students’ everyday vocabulary and thus need specific elaboration if they are to make sense of scientific text. It follows that to master the reading of scientific material, students need opportunities to engage with such text and to identify its major features; they cannot be expected simply to apply reading skills learned elsewhere to master this unfamiliar genre effectively. In engineering, students likewise need opportunities to communicate ideas using appropriate combinations of sketches, models, and language. They should also create drawings to test concepts and communicate detailed plans; explain and critique models of various sorts, including scale models and prototypes; and present the results of simulations, not only regarding the planning and development stages but also to make compelling presentations of their ultimate solutions. (Framework, p. 3-21) P-12 MSOU of PIMSER

46 Crosscutting Concepts
Patterns Cause and effect Scale, proportion, and quantity Systems and system models Energy and matter Structure and function Stability and change Framework 4-1 Heidi’s slide The crosscutting concepts have application across all domains of science. As such, they provide one way of linking across the domains in Dimension 3. These crosscutting concepts are not unique to this report. They echo many of the unifying concepts and processes in the National Science Education Standards [7], the common themes in the Benchmarks for Science Literacy [6], and the unifying concepts in the Science College Board Standards for College Success [9] (Framework, p. 2-5). These crosscutting concepts were selected for their value across the sciences and in engineering. These concepts help provide students with an organizational framework for connecting knowledge from the various disciplines into a coherent and scientifically based view of the world (Framework, p. 4-1). 1. Patterns. Observed patterns of forms and events guide organization and classification, and they prompt questions about relationships and the factors that influence them. 2. Cause and effect: Mechanism and explanation. Events have causes, sometimes simple, sometimes multifaceted. A major activity of science is investigating and explaining causal relationships and the mechanisms by which they are mediated. Such mechanisms can then be tested across given contexts and used to predict and explain events in newcontexts. 3. Scale, proportion, and quantity. In considering phenomena, it is critical to recognize what is relevant at different measures of size, time, and energy and to recognize how changes in scale, proportion, or quantity affect a system’s structure or performance. (Framework, p. 4-1) 4. Systems and system models. Defining the system under study—specifying its boundaries and making explicit a model of that system—provides tools for understanding and testing ideas that are applicable throughout science and engineering. 5. Energy and matter: Flows, cycles, and conservation. Tracking fluxes of energy and matter into, out of, and within systems helps one understand the systems’ possibilities and limitations. 6. Structure and function. The way in which an object or living thing is shaped and its substructure determine many of its properties and functions. 7. Stability and change. For natural and built systems alike, conditions of stability and determinants of rates of change or evolution of the system are critical elements of study. (Framework, p. 4-2)

47 Physical Sciences PS 1: Matter and Its Interactions
PS 2: Motion and Stability PS 3: Energy PS 4: Waves and Their Applications An overarching goal for learning in the physical sciences, therefore, is to help students see that there are mechanisms of cause and effect in all systems and processes that can be understood through a common set of physical and chemical principles. The first three physical science core ideas answer two fundamental questions—“What is everything made of?” and “Why do things happen?”—that are not unlike questions that students themselves might ask. These core ideas can be applied to explain and predict a wide variety of phenomena that occur in people’s everyday lives, such as the evaporation of a puddle of water, the transmission of sound, the digital storage and transmission of information, the tarnishing of metals, and photosynthesis. We also introduce a fourth core idea: PS4: Waves and Their Applications in Technologies for Information Transfer—which introduces students to the ways in which advances in the physical sciences during the 20th century underlie all sophisticated technologies available today. The committee included this fourth idea to stress the interplay of physical science and technology, as well as to expand student’s understanding of light and sound as mechanisms of both energy transfer (see LS3) and transfer of information between objects that are not in contact. (Framework, p. 5-1)

48 Life Sciences LS 1: From Molecules to Organisms: Structures and Processes LS 2: Ecosystems: Interactions, Energy, and Dynamics LS 3: Heredity: Inheritance and Variation of Traits LS 4: Biological Evolution: Unity and Diversity The life sciences focus on patterns, processes, and relationships of living organisms. Life is self-contained, self-sustaining, self replicating, and evolving, operating according to laws of the physical world, as well as genetic programming. Life scientists use observations, experiments, hypotheses, tests, models, theory and technology to explore how life works. The study of life ranges over scales from single molecules, through organisms and ecosystems, to the entire biosphere, that is all life on Earth. It examines processes that occur on time scales from the blink of an eye, to those that happen over billions of years. Living systems are interconnected and interacting. A core principle of the life sciences is that all organisms are related by evolution and that evolutionary processes have led to the tremendous diversity of the biosphere. There is diversity within species as well as between species. Yet what is learned about the function of a gene or a cell or process in one organism is relevant to other organisms because of their ecological interactions and evolutionary relatedness. Evolution and its underlying genetic mechanisms of inheritance and variability are key to understanding both the unity and the diversity of life on Earth. The first core idea, LS1: From Molecules to Organisms: Structures and Processes, addresses how individual organisms are configured and how these structures function to support life, growth, behavior, and reproduction. The first core idea hinges on the unifying principle that cells are the basic unit of life. (Framework, p. 6-1) The second core idea, LS2: Ecosystems: Interactions, Energy, and Dynamics, explores organisms’ interactions with each other and their physical environment. This include show organisms obtain resources, how they change their environment, how changing environmental factors affect organisms and ecosystems, how social interactions and group behavior play out within and between species, and how these factors all combine to determine ecosystem functioning. The third core idea, LS3: Heredity: Inheritance and Variation of Traits across generations, focuses on the flow of genetic information between generations. This idea explains the mechanisms of genetic inheritance and describes the environmental and genetic causes of gene mutation and the alteration of gene expression. The fourth core idea, LS4: Biological Evolution: Unity and Diversity, explores “changes in the traits of populations of organisms over time” [1] and the factors that account for species’ unity and diversity alike. It examines how variation of genetically-determined traits in a population may give some members a reproductive advantage in a given environment. This natural selection can lead to adaptation, that is, to a distribution of traits in the population that is matched to and can change with environmental conditions. Such adaptations can eventually lead to the development of separate species in separated populations. (Framework, p. 6-2)

49 Earth and Space Sciences
ESS 1: Earth’s Place in the Universe ESS 2: Earth Systems ESS 3: Earth and Human Activity Earth and space sciences (ESS) investigate processes that operate on Earth and also address its place in the solar system and the galaxy. Thus earth and space sciences involve phenomena that range in scale from the unimaginably large to the invisibly small. Earth consists of a set of systems—atmosphere, hydrosphere, geosphere, and biosphere—that are intricately interconnected. These systems have differing sources of energy, and matter cycles within and among them in multiple ways and on various time scales. In addition, Earth is part of a broader system—the solar system—which is itself a small part of one of the many galaxies in the universe. Earth’s Place in the Universe describes the universe as a whole and addresses its grand scale in both space and time. This idea includes the overall structure, composition, and history of the universe, the forces and processes by which the solar system operates, and Earth’s planetary history. Earth’s Systems encompasses the processes that drive Earth’s conditions and its continual evolution (i.e., change over time). It addresses the planet’s large-scale structure and composition, describes its individual systems, and explains how they are interrelated. It also focuses on the mechanisms driving Earth’s internal motions and on the vital role that water plays in all of the planet’s systems and surface processes. (Framework, p. 7-1) Earth and Human Activity, addresses society’s interactions with the planet. Connecting the earth and space sciences to the intimate scale of human life, this idea explains how Earth’s processes affect people through natural resources and natural hazards, and it describes as well some of the ways in which humanity in turn affects Earth’s processes (Framework, p. 7-1 & 2).

50 Engineering, Technology and Applications of Sciences
ETS 1: Engineering Design ETS 2: Links Among Engineering, Technology, Science and Society Engineering Design: Although there is not yet broad agreement on the full set of core ideas in engineering [1], an emerging consensus is that design is a central practice of engineering; indeed, design is the focus of the vast majority of K-12 engineering curricula currently in use. The components of this core idea include understanding how engineering problems are defined and delimited, how models can be used to develop and refine possible solutions to a design problem, and what methods can be employed to optimize a design. Links Among Engineering, Technology, Science, and Society (ETS2): The applications of science knowledge and practices to engineering, as well as to such areas as medicine and agriculture, have contributed to the technologies and the systems that support them that serve people today. Insights gained from scientific discovery have altered the ways in which buildings, bridges, and cities are constructed; changed the operations of factories; led to new methods of generating and distributing energy; and created new modes of travel and communication. Scientific insights have informed methods of food production, waste disposal, and the diagnosis and treatment of disease. In other words, science-based, or science-improved, designs of technologies and systems affect the ways in which people interact with each other and with the environment, and thus these designs deeply influence society. In turn, society influences science and engineering. Societal decisions, which may shaped by a variety of economic, political, and cultural factors, establish goals and priorities for technologies’ improvement or replacement. (Framework, p. 8-1)

51 INSTRUCTIONAL SHIFTS FOR MIDDLE SCHOOL
What is different for you?

52 NGSS Conceptual Progressions Model for Middle School
This model reflects an integrated approach that includes life, earth and physical science concepts in every grade SHIFT - Address MS conceptual model. Presented to KBOE Recommended model Districts have final decision See Appendix K of NGSS for more information.

53 NGSS Connections to Another shift of NGSS- think differently about instruction. Interconnections between contents-just like the 3 domains are integrated, so are the learning experiences we need to provide for our students. Look at connection box of the standards page I handed out.

54 Practices in Mathematics, Science, and English Language Arts*
M1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. M2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively. M3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. M4. Model with mathematics. M5. Use appropriate tools strategically. M6. Attend to precision. M7. Look for and make use of structure. M8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning. S1. Asking questions (for science) and defining problems (for engineering). S2. Developing and using models. S3. Planning and carrying out investigations. S4. Analyzing and interpreting data. S5. Using mathematics, information and computer technology, and computational thinking. S6. Constructing explanations (for science) and designing solutions (for engineering). S7. Engaging in argument from evidence. S8. Obtaining, evaluating, and communicating information. E1. They demonstrate independence. E2. They build strong content knowledge. E3. They respond to the varying demands of audience, task, purpose, and discipline. E4. They comprehend as well as critique. E5. They value evidence. E6. They use technology and digital media strategically and capably. E7. They come to understanding other perspectives and cultures. We have previously thought of these capacitates or practices as separate, isolated components…if you look at them more closely you will see how they share many commonalities. * The Common Core English Language Arts uses the term “student capacities” rather than the term “practices” used in Common Core Mathematics and the Next Generation Science Standards.

55

56

57

58 Coherent Science Instruction
The framework is designed to help realize a vision for education in the sciences and engineering in which students, over multiple years of school, actively engage in scientific and engineering practices and apply crosscutting concepts to deepen their understanding of the core ideas in these fields. Framework pg. 8-9 Stress role of practices in deepening understanding. Practices must be taught throughout the year in context of the content. P-12 MSOU of PIMSER

59 Instruction Builds Toward PEs
Performance Expectations

60 Implications NGSS Curriculum Instruction Assessment
P-12 MSOU of PIMSER

61 Lots of work completed, underway, and left to do
Assessments Curricula Instruction From Heidi Schweingruber’s slides—the notes below are a bit out of date, but this slide is here to help everyone understand where we are in the process and what still needs to come (will help us to ward off questions about assessments—we need some canned responses to questions about what the assessment will look like—similar to CCSS math assessments? Or…) The Carnegie Corporation has taken a leadership role to ensure that the development of common science standards proceeds and is of the highest quality by funding a two-step process: first, the development of this framework by the National Research Council (NRC) and, second, the development of a next generation of science standards based on the framework by Achieve, Inc. (Framework, p. viii). This framework is the first part of a two-stage process to produce a next-generation set of science standards for voluntary adoption by states. The second step—the development of a set of standards based on this framework—is a state-led effort coordinated by Achieve Inc. involving multiple opportunities for input from the states’ science educators, including teachers, and the public (Framework, p. 1-2). As our report was being completed, Achieve’s work on science standards was already under way, starting with an analysis of international science benchmarking in high-performing countries that is expected to inform the standards development process (Framework, p. 1-8). Recommendation 3: Standards should be limited in number. The framework focuses on a limited set of scientific and engineering practices, crosscutting concepts, and disciplinary core ideas, which were selected by using the criteria developed by the framework committee (and outlined in Chapter 2) as a filter. We also drew on previous reports, which recommended structuring K-12 standards around core ideas as a means of focusing the K-12 science curriculum [3, 4]. These reports’ recommendations emerged from analyses of existing national, state, and local standards as well as from a synthesis of current research on learning and teaching in science (Framework, p. 12-3). Basically, a coherent set of science standards will not be sufficient to prepare citizens for the 21st century unless there is also coherence across all subject areas of the K-12 curriculum (Framework, p. 12-8). Teacher Development

62 Table Talk - What is your role?
What do the new standards tell us about the shifts in instruction and what will your role be in supporting your teachers in your districts? Respond on your personal response sheet

63 How do I read this document?

64 Inside the NGSS Box Title and Code The titles of standard pages are not necessarily unique and may be reused at several different grade levels . The code, however, is a unique identifier for each set based on the grade level, content area, and topic it addresses. Performance Expectations A statement that combines practices, core ideas, and crosscutting concepts together to describe how students can show what they have learned. Clarification Statement A statement that supplies examples or additional clarification to the performance expectation. What is Assessed A collection of several performance expectations describing what students should be able to do to master this standard Assessment Boundary A statement that provides guidance about the scope of the performance expectation at a particular grade level. Engineering Connection (*) An asterisk indicates an engineering connection in the practice, core idea or crosscutting concept that supports the performance expectation. Scientific & Engineering Practices Activities that scientists and engineers engage in to either understand the world or solve a problem Foundation Box The practices, core disciplinary ideas, and crosscutting concepts from the Framework for K-12 Science Education that were used to form the performance expectations Disciplinary Core Ideas Concepts in science and engineering that have broad importance within and across disciplines as well as relevance in people’s lives. Crosscutting Concepts Ideas, such as Patterns and Cause and Effect, which are not specific to any one discipline but cut across them all. Connections to Engineering, Technology and Applications of Science These connections are drawn from the disciplinary core ideas for engineering, technology, and applications of science in the Framework. Connection Box Other standards in the Next Generation Science Standards or in the Common Core State Standards that are related to this standard Connections to Nature of Science Connections are listed in either the practices or the crosscutting connections section of the foundation box. Codes for Performance Expectations Codes designate the relevant performance expectation for an item in the foundation box and connection box. In the connections to common core, italics indicate a potential connection rather than a required prerequisite connection. Based on the January 2013 Draft of NGSS

65 Inside the Box Activity
Within your table group read the given part of the Inside the Box and summarize what your part of the performance expectation is Make sure to summarize Put into simple everyday terms Why is this important to the whole?

66 Exploring a Performance Expectation
Choose a PE for a concept you are least familiar with, but one that connects to a big idea in your current curriculum. Find the Disciplinary Core Idea (DCI) for that PE, and work your way through the NGSS to find the other connections in the TOP of the chart. If you finish one PE, try repeating the process for another PE. This is the AM activity.

67 Lunch Break !

68 Break Out Session!

69 Exploring the Performance Expectation Scavenger Hunt
Consider the PE you chose in the morning activity. Now, find a PE for each of the four boxes at the bottom half of your chart. There may be one PE that works for more than one box. Or, there maybe a different PE in each box. The PE in each box should connect to the PE at the top of the chart.

70 Performance Expectation Scavenger Hunt -Discussion
Share at your table what you learned about the PEs as a result of mapping it this way. How will this inform your teaching? What was the most useful thing about doing this mapping? How can you incorporate this mapping in your own school?

71 Table/Discussion of the activities
At your tables groups discuss your findings and what were the: Areas of concern Ahha moments Common findings Overall arching discussion points from the group

72 Building Capacity Around the 4 Pillars

73 Four Pillars of Network Meetings
Kentucky’s Core Academic Standards Characteristics of Highly Effective Teaching and Learning Assessment/Assessment Literacy Leadership Year 2 is all about implementation: teachers implementing the standards/targets during instruction and assessment through HETL while building leadership capacity among their peers. January 2012 Math Network Meeting

74 Kentucky Department of Education Network
1. Kentucky’s Core Academic Standards How are you understanding & implementing the standards in your classroom, school & district? 2. Highly Effective Teaching and Learning How are you emphasizing highly effective teaching and learning characteristics in your classroom, school & district? 3. Assessment Literacy How are you using formative/summative assessment to improve instruction & learning in your classroom, school & district? 4. Leadership How are you using the leadership capacity you are building to share information in your school & district? Kentucky Department of Education Network

75 Self Assessment Please respond to the statements about “Assessment Literacy” using your current confidence level.

76 Share and Discuss Count off at your tables 1 – 5. Move to like number groups and discuss the survey and self assessment. What KEY WORDS and IDEAS do you find important? Chart them.

77 Professional Growth and Effectiveness System
KY Framework for Teaching (adapted from Danielson 2011)

78

79 Assessment Literacy and Kentucky Framework for Teaching
In your groups, read the component, elements, indicators, critical attributes, and possible examples for the Accomplished and Exemplary performance levels. Identify the key words/phrases/ideas that connect with assessment literacy. Choose someone from your group to briefly share the component and the connections to assessment literacy

80 1F: Designing Student Assessments
Congruence with Instructional Outcomes Criteria and Standards Design of Formative Assessments Use for Planning

81 2B - Establishing a Culture for Learning
Importance of the Content Expectations for Learning and Achievement Student Pride in Work

82 3B - Questioning and Discussion Techniques
Quality of Questions Discussion Techniques Student Participation

83 4D - Participating in a Professional Community
Relationships with Colleagues Involvement in a Culture of Professional Inquiry Service to the School Participation in School and District Projects

84 5A – Student Growth Student Growth Goal Setting Results
Rigorous Student Growth Goals Student Growth Goal Setting Process Fidelity Student Growth Percentiles

85 Wrap-Up

86 A-Z Summary Create a one sentence summary of the most important idea(s) from today, beginning your sentence with your assigned letter. Add a second sentence to your summary by completing this sentence starter “This is important because …” Post your summary in the designated area. Letter sentence strips ahead of time. Provide each participant with 2 sentence strips. One with a letter and for “this is important because…” Post on wall and discuss some at random P-12 MSOU of PIMSER

87 Take Home Messages According to the intent of the Framework, the practices are not to be done in isolation. The practices are essential for learning the content. We won’t have to start from scratch on everything! Learning experiences should have the student doing the doing (hands-on and minds-on). P-12 MSOU of PIMSER

88 Take Home Messages 2 Slow and steady
is not an “official” implementation year it is a trial year…..learn and get feet wet Conversations will take place all year long and will encompass topics such as, curriculum mapping, performance based instruction, etc. Begin to use the practices to implement core content in classroom activities

89 Homework Who is on your District Leadership Team and what the plan to scale the Network goals ? 2. Read over and become familiar with “ your” grade level standards

90 Next Meeting October 21st


Download ppt "Good Morning and Welcome to the :"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google