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Collaborative Teaching. This Session Collaboration Matters Realities Teachers Face Analyzing Student Assessment Data Technology Supporting Collaboration.

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Presentation on theme: "Collaborative Teaching. This Session Collaboration Matters Realities Teachers Face Analyzing Student Assessment Data Technology Supporting Collaboration."— Presentation transcript:

1 Collaborative Teaching

2 This Session Collaboration Matters Realities Teachers Face Analyzing Student Assessment Data Technology Supporting Collaboration This session will address effective strategies for cooperative lesson planning and provide guidance on how to analyze student assessment data to make inferences about instructional practices. Technology is transforming the work of teachers. Teachers are expected to spontaneously work cooperatively, sometimes without formal training on how to work in groups. This session will address effective strategies for cooperative lesson planning and provide guidance on how to analyze student assessment data to make inferences about instructional practices.

3 College-and-Career Readiness Standards & Indicators Ready! Collaboration and Teamwork Citizenship and Personal Responsibility Creativity and Innovation Critical Thinking and Problem- Solving

4 How can math teachers learn what they need to know? “Most mathematics teachers work in relative isolation, with little support for innovation and few incentives to improve their practice. Yet much of teachers’ best learning occurs when they examine their teaching practices with colleagues. Research indicates that teachers are better able to help their students learn mathematics when they have opportunities to work together to improve their practice, time for personal reflection, and strong support from colleagues and other qualified professionals.” National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. (2000). Principles and standards for school mathematics. Reston, VA

5 Move from “pockets of excellence” to “systems of excellence” “Too many teachers of mathematics remain professionally isolated, without the benefits of collaborative structures and coaching, and with inadequate opportunities for professional development related to mathematics teaching and learning.” Actions “Work collaboratively with colleagues to plan instruction, solve common challenges, and provide natural support as they take collective responsibility for student learning.” Principles to Actions: Executive Summary. (2014). Retrieved from http://www.nctm.org/uploadedFiles/Standards_and _Focal_Points/Principles_to_Action/PtAExecutiveSu mmary.pdf http://www.nctm.org/uploadedFiles/Standards_and _Focal_Points/Principles_to_Action/PtAExecutiveSu mmary.pdf

6 Principles to Actions: (2014, page 100)

7 National Board for Professional Teaching Standards Standard X, Professional Community: Accomplished mathematics teachers continually collaborate with other teachers and education professionals… Teachers promote the ideal that working collaboratively increases knowledge, reflection, and quality of practice and benefits the instructional program. Teachers seek to make their teaching an open community activity…. Decision making becomes a collaborative process rather than an isolated process.

8 Discuss Beliefs in PLCs

9 Realities: Teacher Time Collaboration with colleagues carries a time cost Teachers must support one another and be mindful that life happens

10 Mistake Aversion Professional risk and privacy norms must be considered when building communities of teachers our kids Team mentality should prevail: our kids, not your kids or my kids

11 We (Teachers) Must Change Our Mindset Towards Collaborative Work

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14 Everything is Cool… When You’re Part of a Team 1.Is group work fair? 2.Are teachers taught group dynamics in teacher prep? 3.Should teachers be expected to spontaneously cooperate?

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16 Some Things We Do at My School Department Socials Department Socials PLC teacher led PLC (Professional Learning Community) meetings are teacher led Cross-Observation Cross-Observation Instructional Rounds Instructional Rounds Common Assessments Common Assessments Data Analysis Data Analysis

17 Are Our Assessments Meaningful?

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19 Where Do Your Assessments Live?

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21 3 Considerations with Student Assessment Data Does the test measure what it claims to measure? (valid) Will the test return consistent measures across multiple administrations? (reliable) How will I use the data I retrieve in meaningful ways? (applicable)

22 Comparing Exam Performance (using same exam): AP Stats Exam 1, Fall 2014 vs Fall 2013 Fall 2013 Exam 1 Performance Fall 2014 Exam 1 Performance

23 Analyzing Student Work Takes the focus off the teacher and puts it back on the student

24 Analyzing Student Work Takes the focus off the teacher and puts it back on the student

25 Pre-Test Data

26 Post-Test Data

27 Collecting Student Data Immediately ScanSnap Scanner

28 Free PD: Cross Observation & Instructional Rounds Go to another teacher’s classroom Observe their teaching. Only positive feedback NO corrective feedback – is allowed. Have a conversation afterwards Face to face or “positive blast”

29 Collaborative Lesson Planning & Assessment Planning Dropbox www.dropbox.com www.dropbox.com Writing assessments and lessons together Analyzing the student data together Teacher driven, not administrator driven

30 Teaching Channel

31 Video Study https://mathreasoninginventory.com/Home/VideoLibrary


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