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Published byJoella Hodges Modified over 8 years ago
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What is the 90/90/90 Research? The Original 90 90 90 Research 169 schools in high-poverty, high minority system 21 schools broke the mold – 90% poverty, 90% minority, and 90% meeting or exceeding state standards Interviews and on-site visits to identify common elements
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What was the SAME in High and Low Performing Schools? Same union contract and teacher time Same budget Same facilities Same teacher assignment policies Same principal assignment policies Same attention for the central office Same textbooks, curriculum, and standards Same profound social and home challenges
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What was DIFFERENT for the High Poverty, High Minority, High Performing Schools? A laser-like focus by everyone in the school on academic achievement and continuous improvement Clear curriculum choices that emphasize essential content Frequent formative assessments of student progress and multiple opportunities for improvement An emphasis on nonfiction writing across subject areas Collaborative scoring of student work to determine a common agreement about what proficiency looks like See: Reeves, D.B. (2004). Accountability in action: A blueprint for learning organizations (2nd. Ed.). Englewood, CO: Advanced Learning Press.
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What do the 90/90/90 characteristics have in common? Practices, not programs Not dependent upon budget Collaboration is… “the way we do business” Collective responsibility for students Relentless pursuit of success Consequences right for failure
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Evidence of Sustainability National replication at elementary, middle, and high school level Wide variety of “programs” and curricula Consistent application of core 90/90/90 practices Gains significant over 2 years; sustained over more than ten years Gains often persist even when teaching and leadership changes
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Expectations… Teacher Leadership Not a title Not an extra duty Genuine influence – the single greatest impact on teaching practice is the direct modeling by other teachers Administrative Leadership Create and sustain conditions for success Time Efficacy (teacher impact on results) Feedback Expectations Nonfiction Writing Formative assessments
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3 Year Partnership with Leadership & Learning Center Year 1 Decision Making for Results and Data Team Development Accelerating Academic Achievement for English Language Learners Year 2 Write Tools (Nonfiction Writing Development) Common Formative Assessment Development Year 3 Effective Grade Strategies (Grading for Learning) Prioritizing Standards Development
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Items needed for 2011-2012 school to begin work… Instructional Coaches – will support teachers by providing support, resources, modeling and direction on best practices as learned through the Leadership & Learning Center Professional Development 2 – hired for 2011-2012 school year for the elementary schools 1 – LMS Literacy Coordinator 1 – LHS Instructional Coach Time for Professional Learning Communities Late start every Thursday to meet as building PLC’s and/or district grade level PLC’s. Initial Training in Decision Making for Results and Data Team Development Move first day of school to Thursday, August 18 th and provide all LPS teachers training on Monday, August 15 th & Tuesday, August 16 th and provide a workday for teachers on Wednesday, August 17 th.
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Professional Development Cost The cost of the Professional Development piece through the Leadership & Learning Center is $251,249.40 This amount has been included in the 2011-2012 Professional Development budget. The budgeted amount for the 2011-2012 school year is approximately $320,000 less than the previous year.
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