Common Core Professional Development March 2012. Learning Targets Participants will acquire in-depth knowledge of Collaborative Group Work and Literacy.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Addressing Common Core Standards Using
Advertisements

Welcome to College and Career Ready Standards Quarterly Meeting # 1.
The Principal’s Role in Leading College and Career Readiness September, 2013.
Understanding By Design: Integration of CTE and Core Content Curriculum Michael S. Gullett.
Common Core State Standards English Language Arts Overview Liz Smith, ELA Coordinator Heather Love, Reading Coordinator.
CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT DEM Leo G. Adap. PREPARING STUDENTS IN THE 21 ST CENTURY SKILLS.
A Model Program to Integrate Effective Reading Strategies into CTE Instruction Presenter: Betty R. Ware Supervisor of Career and Technical Education, Fine.
E-portfolio in TaskStream (DRF) Signature Assignments Signature Assignments Classroom Community (1 st & 2 nd semesters) Classroom Community (1 st & 2 nd.
Common Core Planning for Content & Practice Preparing Los Angeles Students for College and Career.
Common Core Elementary Symposium Transitioning to the Common Core
Shelee King George Puget Sound Center for Teaching, Learning and Technology.
1. What is it we want our students to learn?
Flexible Scheduling Improving Student Learning Through Expanded Use of the Library Media Center Library Media Center Mr. Brown's class enters Mrs. Smith's.
Reaching and Preparing 21st Century Learners
Moving to the Common Core Janet Rummel Assessment Specialist Indiana Department of Education.
A New Era Begins Common Core: The Future Begins Now.
1 Let’s Meet! October 13,  All four people have to run.  The baton has to be held and passed by all participants.  You can have world class speed.
COMMON CORE Standards and Strategies Flip Chart
Do Now… Think about how you use “effective literacy strategies” in your classroom. After you settle in, move to the best description that fits.
+ What Should I Expect to See During Mathematics Instruction? Helping Secondary Principals Recognize and Support Mathematical Thinking and Reasoning.
Curriculum Update January What are the big projects? Fall 2013 – Math Common Core Implementation Fall 2014 – English/Language Arts Common Core Implementation.
Schoolwide Preparation for English Language Learners: Teacher Community and Inquiry-Based Professional Development.
Common Core State Standards Parent & Student Toolkit.
Leadership: Connecting Vision With Action Presented by: Jan Stanley Spring 2010 Title I Directors’ Meeting.
EEA 2012 – Middle School STEM Day 1, PM Content Session.
Instructional leadership: The role of promoting teaching and learning EMASA Conference 2011 Presentation Mathakga Botha Wits school of Education.
Start Ready, Leave Ready Preparing Ohio’s Students for Post-Secondary Opportunities through Deeper Learning October 2012.
Standards For Teacher Preparation. What do you see in the previous slide? Students who are ready to answer the question? Students who are listening and.
Literacy Partner’s Meeting Wednesday, October 22 nd Moderated Marking: The What, The Why, The How.
A Network Approach To Improving Teaching and Learning Center Point High School Instructional Rounds in Education.
ACADEMIC CONVERSATIONS
Administrators’ Meeting February Learning Targets Participants will acquire in-depth knowledge of Collaborative Group Work and Literacy Groups,
The Why, What, When, How, and How- to of Book Clubs
1. Housekeeping Items June 8 th and 9 th put on calendar for 2 nd round of Iowa Core ***Shenandoah participants*** Module 6 training on March 24 th will.
What is a 21st Century Learner?
Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent “Making Education Work for All Georgians” Making Thinking Visible: Literacy, CTAE, and CCGPS.
Equipping ourselves for the 21 st century Andreina España.
Language Acquisition Part III in a 4 Part Series.
The game is changing. It isn't just about math and science anymore. It's about creativity, imagination, and, above all, innovation.” –Business Week Magazine.
Programming the New Syllabuses (incorporating the Australian Curriculum)
Instructional Rounds Toby Boss ESU 6. Agenda Develop Common Understanding of Rounds Focus on Details – What do we do to prepare? – What do we do during.
Understand the purpose and benefits of guiding instructional design through the review of student work. Practice a protocol for.
Flexible Scheduling Mrs. Smith's class leaves Mr. Brown's class enters Improving Student Learning Through Expanded Use of the Library Media Center Library.
Inquiry Learning and Social Studies College and Career Readiness Conferences Summer
A Signature Tool of The Institute for Learning
 To learn about the ELA modules, especially strategies commonly used in 3 rd - High School ELA modules  To learn good teaching practices all teachers.
Power Point Segment 3 Inserted Following Segs 1-2.
Developing Leaders in Effective Teaching Diane J. Briars President National Council of Teachers of Mathematics 2015 NCTM Minneapolis Regional.
Module 1 Peer Coaching on Paper Peer Coach Training.
Enhancing Implementation of the CEW Standards through the PA SAS (Standards Aligned Systems)
Student Growth Goals Professional Learning Jenny Ray, PGES Consultant (KDE) 1.
Strategic Teaching: Literacy Across All Contents ARI Strategic Teaching: Literacy Across All Contents Every Child a Graduate – Every Graduate Prepared.
Understanding the Common Core State Standards and Literacy Standards.
Denver Public Schools Illuminating the revised framework Taking a Closer Look at I3 Exploring Instructional Methods and Pacing.
A Deep Dive into the Mathematics Curriculum District Learning Day August 5, 2015.
Peer Coaching for Effective Professional Learning.
ACS WASC/CDE Visiting Committee Final Presentation Panorama High School March
PLCs Professional Learning Communities Staff PD. Professional Learning Committees The purpose of our PLCs includes but is not limited to: teacher collaborationNOT-
Building a Framework to Support the Culture Required for Student Centered Learning Jeff McCoy | Executive Director of Academic Innovation & Technology.
Literacy Across Disciplines (LAD)
Incorporating Technology into the Classroom
Developing v. Measuring Teachers A Growth Model
EDU 695Competitive Success/snaptutorial.com
EDU 695 STUDY Lessons in Excellence-- edu695study.com.
EDU 695 Education for Service-- snaptutorial.com
EDU 695 STUDY Education for Service-- edu695study.com.
EDU 695 Teaching Effectively-- snaptutorial.com
PLCs Professional Learning Communities Staff PD
Module 2 Nuts and Bolts of Peer Coaching Peer Coach Training.
February 21-22, 2018.
Presentation transcript:

Common Core Professional Development March 2012

Learning Targets Participants will acquire in-depth knowledge of Collaborative Group Work and Literacy Groups, two of the strategies of the Common Instructional Framework. Participants will apply knowledge of Collaborative Group Work and Literacy Groups by creating learning activities containing those strategies.

Collaborative Group Work (CGW) & Literacy Groups Powerful Teaching and Learning

Collaborative Group Work (CGW) and Literacy Groups “Key ingredient to creating the kind of school culture in which everyone shares a deep commitment to one another’s success” (UPCS). Prepare every student academically and professionally for any college or career. Allow for the use of academic content to teach 21 st century survival skills.

Collaborative Group Work (CGW) and Literacy Group Planning Assigning groups – Teacher selected vs. student selected – Strategic grouping to ensure diversity Change instruction not just the structure – Pre-determining group size Modifying classroom layout Incorporating CGW in the lesson plan Utilizing the CGW Group Monitoring Tool

Group Norms Collectively establishing and posting ground rules for collaborative group work – Importance of adherence – Consequences—conversations tied to the norms 1 st occurrence: Group conference (students only) 2 nd occurrence: Group conference (with teacher) 3 rd occurrence: Student assigned independent work—they leave contributions with the group Sample norms

Group Roles Establishing group roles – Importance of rotating Traditional (Samples) – Group Leader/Facilitator, Recorder, Timekeeper, Materials Manager, Task Master, Reporter Innovative (Samples) – Discussion Director, Vocabulary Connector (Word Wizard), Illuminator (Passage Master), Investigator, Connector (Creative Connector), Artful Illustrator, Summarizer

Collaboration Cubes Activity Discussion Director will record evidence of collaborative problem solving while group discusses the cube. Discussion Director shares out the answer, one “rule” that gave them the answer, and one point from the Group Monitoring Tool. – Rules and skills translate into the types of critical thinking and collaborative discussions that should occur in every classroom.

Literacy Group Activity Play the Role protocol Select and explore group roles Read “Learning as Collaboration: Group Work at University Park Campus School” Take notes based on your role Discussion Director leads the conversation in response to everyone’s comments. – Group discussion not individual presentations Summarizer reports out for each group

Common Instructional Framework Resources Sample lessons/videos – Do you see evidence of the Common Instructional Framework? Remember the “How” not the “What” Visit and the RttT Team Resources website for more exampleswww.newschoolsproject.org Classroom Walk-Through Form

Tuning a Lesson Plan Protocol Focus Question: What evidence exists in the lesson that students will read, write, think, and talk and how might I increase those opportunities during the lesson or unit of study?