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Student Learning Objectives: Approval Criteria and Data Tracking September 17, 2013 This presentation contains copyrighted material used under the educational.

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Presentation on theme: "Student Learning Objectives: Approval Criteria and Data Tracking September 17, 2013 This presentation contains copyrighted material used under the educational."— Presentation transcript:

1 Student Learning Objectives: Approval Criteria and Data Tracking September 17, 2013 This presentation contains copyrighted material used under the educational fair use exemption to U.S. Copyright law.

2 HCPSS Teacher Evaluation Model Charlotte Danielson’s Framework For Teaching and Learning Professional Practice (50%) Domain 1 Planning and Preparation 12.5% Domain 3 Instruction 12.5% Domain 2 Classroom Environment 12.5% Domain 4 Professional Responsibilities 12.5% Literacy Reading Writing Speaking and Listening Differentiation Mathematical Practices Overarching Habits Reasoning and Explaining Modeling and Using Tools Seeing Structure and Generalizing Differentiation Creative Problem Solving in Support of MD STEM Standards of Practice Understanding Challenges Generation of Ideas Preparation for Action Application of Technology Differentiation Content Assessments Performance-Based Tasks Differentiation Qualitative Measures Quantitative Measures: Student Learning Objectives and MSA Domain 5 Student Growth (50%) Student Learning Objectives for teachers of grades 4-8 assessed areas – 30%; for others two SLOs from different areas 25%, 25% Student Learning Objectives for high school teachers of state-assessed courses – one 25% SLO; one two-part SLO that is 10% student performance on state assessment and 15% other teacher-selected data points in alignment with course curriculum Maryland School Assessments (for teachers grades 4-8 who are teachers of record for mathematics and/or English Language Arts) 20% Linda T. Wise

3 HCPSS Teacher Evaluation Model Charlotte Danielson’s Framework For Teaching and Learning Professional Practice (50%) Domain 1 Planning and Preparation 12.5% Domain 3 Instruction 12.5% Domain 2 Classroom Environment 12.5% Domain 4 Professional Responsibilities 12.5% Literacy Reading Writing Speaking and Listening Differentiation Mathematical Practices Overarching Habits Reasoning and Explaining Modeling and Using Tools Seeing Structure and Generalizing Differentiation Creative Problem Solving in Support of MD STEM Standards of Practice Understanding Challenges Generation of Ideas Preparation for Action Application of Technology Differentiation Content Assessments Performance-Based Tasks Differentiation Qualitative Measures Quantitative Measures: Student Learning Objectives and MSA Domain 5 Student Growth (50%) For all teachers-- Two 25% SLOs from different areas. SY 2013-2014 Only

4 Literacy 25% Mathematical Practices 25% Creative Problem Solving in Support of MD STEM Standards of Practice 25% Content 25% Student Growth (50%) SLOs

5 Timeline By October 7, 2013 (tenured teachers on plan & nontenured) By October 21, 2013 (all other tenured teachers) Set SLOs in collaboration with evaluator. May be individual or team SLOs. Fall Semester 2013Demonstrate critical attributes through observation. Collect artifacts and evidence. Follow a continuous improvement process. By January 31, 2014Mid-Year Progress Review Confirm and revise SLOs, processes, document progress Spring Semester 2014End of Year Conference and Evaluation Present documentation and reflection to evaluator. Evaluator completes evaluation and provides copy to teacher

6 Identify content focus and set a goal Select or create tasks for pre-teaching assessment Identify and use strategies to meet the goal Use tasks for post- teaching assessment 4 2 1 3 A Process for Developing Student Learning Objectives

7 Identifying Content Focus or “Big Ideas” Concepts essential to the grade level Concepts essential to the content area Concepts that are developed over the course of the year

8 Content Focus or “Big Idea” Possibilities Mathematics: Place value and number concepts Fractions Operations Language Arts: Informational text Literary text Writing Science: Ask questions Analyze/Interpret Data Communicate information Draw Conclusions Social Studies: Developing questions and planning inquiries applying concepts and tools Evaluating sources and using evidence Communicating conclusions and taking informed action

9 Important Points About SLOs… We are in agreement that a good SLO addresses an important subset of what students are expected to know and be able to do, as opposed to addressing the entire curriculum for a grade or course. The skills and/or knowledge included in the SLO should be critical for advancement of future course work.

10 Important Points About SLOs… The SLOs are samples and teachers are encouraged to customize them through collaboration with the administrator. Teachers are not required to use the samples. They can create their own from scratch.

11 Instructional Resources https://teach.hcpss.org/share/page/site/instructional-resources-pre-k--- 12/dashboard

12 SLO Libraries https://teach.hcpss.org/share/page/site/instructional-resources-pre-k--- 12/documentlibrary#filter=path|%2FSLO%2520Libraries|&page=1

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14 HCPSS Criteria for Approval of Teacher SLOs

15 SLO Approval Criteria Student Learning Objective (SLO) The SLO addresses the academic growth of all students in a naturally occurring group (e.g., single class, all students in a given course, all students assigned to a team). Population The teacher clearly identifies the students who will be covered by the SLO. (NOTE: Small groups mean that one student may have a greater impact on whether or not the teacher attains the target.) Learning Content The SLO is clearly aligned to the Maryland Common Core State Curriculum, Maryland curriculum, or HCPSS curriculum. The content focus of the SLO is essential knowledge and/or skills that students must know and be able to do to succeed at the next level.

16 SLO Approval Criteria (continued) Instructional Interval The SLO describes the total interval of time the teacher will be instructing the students (i.e. one quarter, one semester, one year) Evidence of Growth The SLO identifies multiple measures that will be used to monitor student growth. (The teacher can describe the assignments/performance tasks/assessments that will be used to measure students’ growth toward meeting the target.) Baseline The teacher has/will have baseline data for current student performance levels and a class roster that lists students’ scores on beginning-of-the-year assignments/performance tasks/assessments. Rationale for Student Learning Objective The reasons for selecting the learning content and the group of students are sound. Target The target is anchored in baseline data and represents an appropriate amount of student learning for the interval of instruction. If appropriate, the SLO differentiates targets for individuals or groups of students based on baseline data so that all targets are rigorous, yet attainable. Students with significant cognitive disabilities have individual targets. If a rubric is identified in the SLO, it is attached/provided.

17 SLO Approval Criteria (continued) Target The target is anchored in baseline data and represents an appropriate amount of student learning for the interval of instruction. If appropriate, the SLO differentiates targets for individuals or groups of students based on baseline data so that all targets are rigorous, yet attainable. Students with significant cognitive disabilities have individual targets. If a rubric is identified in the SLO, it is attached/provided. Criteria for Effectiveness Full Attainment of Target More than 90% of students meet agreed upon learning targets. Partial Attainment of Target Between 75% and 90% of students meet agreed upon learning targets. Insufficient Attainment of Target Less than 75% of students meet agreed upon learning targets. Strategies The key instructional strategies selected for implementation to support students in reaching the growth target for this SLO are pedagogically sound.

18 Approving an SLO Look at the SLO. Look at the HCPSS Criteria for Approval of Teacher SLOs. Go to Teachscape Reflect where the components of the SLO need to be checked as either Acceptable or Unacceptable. Notice how the criteria are aligned to Teachscape Reflect

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20 Points to Keep in Mind… A teacher can copy and paste components from an SLO in the Library and put the components into the text boxes in Teachscape Reflect. A roster of students who are part of the SLO and/or the rubric used to assess the SLO can be uploaded to Teachscape Reflect.

21 Elementary Mathematics and Language Arts

22 Remaining SLO Support Sessions September 10 3:15-4:15 September 25 3:15-4:15


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