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Don’t Take OSE-EIS for Granted – Part 2 OEAA 2006 Conference Sessions 34 and 40.

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Presentation on theme: "Don’t Take OSE-EIS for Granted – Part 2 OEAA 2006 Conference Sessions 34 and 40."— Presentation transcript:

1 Don’t Take OSE-EIS for Granted – Part 2 OEAA 2006 Conference Sessions 34 and 40

2 Presentation will include: Introductions Overview –GLCEs (4X6) and Extended GLCEs –Learning Sequence –Diagnostic Inventories –Implementation Issues Selected Activities

3 State Improvement Grant to address Adequate Yearly Progress (SIG-AYP) www.michiganmathematics.org Michigan Department of Education Office of Special Education and Early Intervention Services ******* United States Department of Education

4 State and Federal Guidance No Child Left Behind Education Yes! Grade Level Content Expectations MEAP Grades 3-8 Adequate Yearly Progress

5 GLCEs by Grade by Strand GLCEsK12345678 Number and Operations10162221372320911 Algebra1413 Measurement58111311103 Geometry367757569 Data and Probability33334247 Total183343445644 3240

6 NCLB % Proficient Requirements

7

8 Fall 2005 MEAP Mathematics

9 District Curriculum Guide Content: What students should know and be able to do Instruction: How to best engage students in learning content Performance expectation: What we expect students to do – based upon incremental improvement Assessment: A measure of meeting performance expectations

10 SIG Program and Instruction Current Project Focus –MEAP component of AYP Program Components –Instructional Sequence, Diagnostic Inventories, and Instructional Planning Instructional Components –Symbolic v Visualization Materials

11 Three Program Components Diagnostic Inventories Instructional Sequence Instructional Planning

12 Three Instructional Components Symbolic / Number Verbal / Words Concrete Pictorial Manipulatives

13 Introduction Chapter 1Program and Instruction Chapter 2Place Value and Numeration Chapter 3Whole Number Addition & Subtraction Chapter 4Whole Number Multiplication & Division Chapter 5Decimals (Basic) Chapter 6Fractions (Basic) Chapter 7Fractions & Decimals (Intermediate) SIG-AYP PD Book – Table of Contents

14 Chapter 8:Geometry Chapter 9:? Chapter 10: Resources: Files & Graphics (CD&Web) Chapter 11: Michigan Grade Level Content Expectations Chapter 12: MEAP Grades 3 through 8 Chapter 13: MI-Access

15 SIG Project Focus Teachers of Underachieving Students Special Education Students Who Will Take the MEAP Test Continuing Support Diagnosis of Student Performance Implications for the IEP Instructional Interventions Assessment of Impact

16 Unit Structure Overview Meaning Instructional Sequence Activities –Manipulative –Pictorial –Basic Facts –Algorithms –Computation Diagnostic Inventory

17 Diagnostic Inventories Numeration and Place Value (1) Whole Number Concepts and Operations (4) Basic Decimal and Fraction Concepts and Operations (2)

18 Numeration and Place Value Inventory Contextual Problems Concept –Number (Position and Quantity) –Place Value Representations (models and symbol) Counting Forward and Backward Comparing Word/Numeral Translations

19 Whole Number Inventory Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication, and Division Concept of the Operation in Context Pictorial Representation of the Operation Using the Number Line to Compute Fact Families, Inverse Operations, and Identities Computation Format Computation –Facts –With and Without Regrouping (Embedded Zeros) –Multiple Digits (Up to 4 – Digit)

20 Decimals Inventory: Basic Level Concept –Equal Partitioning –The Role of Zero and the Decimal Point –Decimal Place Value and Trading –Translate among Representations (models and symbol) Counting Reading and Writing Decimal Words and Numerals Equivalence, Comparison, and Ordering Basic Computation (Tenths and Hundredths – No Regrouping)

21 Fractions Inventory: Basic Level Concept –Equal Partitioning –The Role of Numerator and Denominator –The Whole as the Referent –Translate among Representations (models and symbol) Counting Reading and Writing Fraction Words and Numerals Equivalence, Comparison, and Ordering Basic Computation (Like Denominators)

22 Our Charge! To focus on the role of a teacher working with underachieving students To assist colleagues working with underachieving students –Instructional models and strategies –Diagnostic tools –Instructional planning models

23 References National Research Council Adding It Up: Helping Children Learn Mathematics (2001) How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience and School (1999) How Students Learn Mathematics in the Classroom (2005)

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25 How Students Learn Mathematics in the Classroom 1.Engaging Prior Understandings 2.The Essential Role of Factual Knowledge and Conceptual Frameworks in Understanding 3.The Importance of Self-Monitoring

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27 Adding It Up: Helping Children Learn Mathematics 1.Conceptual understanding 2.Procedural fluency 3.Strategic competence 4.Adaptive reasoning 5.Productive disposition

28 2004-5 Saginaw ISD Wayne County RESA 2005-6 Clare-Gladwin RESD Genesee ISD Kent ISD Macomb ISD 2006-7 ?


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