Monday, January 30, 2017

Connecting Students to Standards

Good morning, 
Hope you had a nice and relaxing weekend. 
We all have our own opinion on standardized testing, most dislike the fact that one test determines so much-it is one snapshot of our students abilities. Whether we agree, or disagree, we must prepare our students to perform at their greatest potential. We have a bigger impact than we think, we need to instill our students with the knowledge they need to be successful. We provide students opportunities to learn and grow by aligning their academics to grade level standards. The standards are our guide, now it's time we connect our students to the "guide". Once this connection is made, students feel more confident and ready for the upcoming tests. 
Here are six important questions that can guide crucial conversations among curriculum leaders, principals, and teachers.

NEW STANDARDS MEAN DIFFERENT GAPS

1. What evidence do you have from daily work and classroom assessments that each student can independently demonstrate an understanding of the content, concepts, and skills associated with each standard? We should celebrate areas of strength in student learning as aligned to the new standards. And we must address areas of need to ensure that curriculum is augmented, revised, or (if warranted) completely changed to turn those areas of need into new opportunities for student learning.

OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN

2. What processes are in place to ensure that each student has the opportunity to learn the content, concepts, and skills associated with each standard? Although there is a significant amount of flexibility afforded by the standards—including how content is taught and how students develop and demonstrate competence in their day-to-day classwork—the rigor of the Common Core standards requires a systematic approach that scaffolds specific student learning needs across lessons, units, and grades or courses.

SHARED LANGUAGE AND VOCABULARY

3. How is the language of the standards incorporated into each student’s learning experiences? Words like recount, determine, distinguish, and interpret are in the 3rd grade standards. A student who has not been exposed to this vocabulary may shine when prompted to “tell what happened in the story,” but that same student might not even attempt to answer when prompted to “recount the main events in the text.” If the standards include academic language to describe the quality, direction, and complexity of student work, we must see that same academic language as a crucial component of our curriculum.

INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES

4. How will students’ learning experiences look different in classrooms that intentionally address the Common Core State Standards? Among other shifts, the standards emphasize interpreting informational text, citing textual evidence to support analysis, and using data to construct viable arguments. So instructional strategies that were efficient for presenting content to students to recall later may not align well to other instructional strategies that address the standards’ new emphasis. Standards implementation requires an intentional alignment process and intentional shifts in classroom practice.

RUBRICS, FEEDBACK, AND FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT

5. How will the learning targets we create and the feedback we provide be aligned to the quality and rigor of the standards? Building a shared, K–12 language of quality that uses words from the standards—such as clear, coherent, relevant, logical, and plausible—on rubrics helps ensure everyone’s efforts are aligned. An effective rubric can be used to guide teachers’ efforts to prioritize the skills and strategies that are most likely to influence and guide students’ efforts to produce quality work.. Each student’s work serves as feedback to the teacher as to the extent that the instruction guided students toward quality while the feedback teachers provide to students guides their efforts to get even better. This formative approach ensures students and teachers see the language of the standards as a tool to guide, rather than judge their shared efforts.

ENGAGEMENT AND AUTHENTICITY

6. How will the system of curriculum, instruction, and assessment that is put into place not only align to the standards, but meet students’ needs to engage in meaningful, authentic learning experiences? Although the Common Core State Standards have been delineated and defined, the standards are not the curriculum. 100,000 curricula could be derived from the standards. Some will be fragmented and didactic, and some will be coherent and meaningful. The challenge—and opportunity—for teachers is to develop a curriculum that tends to the interests and learning needs of their students. Few students wake up in the morning eager to tackle standard W.6.1 and 6.G.A.1 on a Monday morning. However, some students may be thrilled to write a letter to the mayor that explains the feasibility of how a vacant, 12,328 square-foot lot could be converted into a skateboard park.

These six questions can guide classroom, school, and district leaders’ efforts to connect students to the standards. If they are addressed strategically and systemically, they have the capacity to improve student learning. After students have a short chat about how easy the test was, they can move on to even more important conversations about the interesting book they just finished, why their favorite football team will win on Sunday, or maybe even the mayor’s support of their plan to build a new skateboard park. 
Thank you for taking the time to read this article. I hope you will take a few minutes to answer these questions yourself, and reflect on your individual practice as well as your students performance. Thank you for all you do!
Have a great week! 
http://www.nea.org/tools/60429.htm

Monday, January 23, 2017

We LOVE reading, but do all of our students?

Good morning, 

I hope everyone had a nice weekend. Happy 100th day of school!! 

We are starting something new this week, and will continue it throughout the school year. Every Friday, you will receive the upcoming weeks agenda, in addition to the monthly agenda that will be sent out once a month. On Mondays, you'll receive a link with our Monday Morning Message. The message may be an article, interesting facts or helpful information related to our vision and mission within our school and district. We hope you are able to walk away with one new piece of information that you can apply in your teaching career, immediately. We all grow from learning, so we hope this provides you a bit of "learning." As always, thank you for all that you do. 

We've all had those students, the ones that HATE reading... Those students who wander around the room during silent reading time, browse half-heartedly in the library, complain about reading groups and abandon one book after another because each one, it turns out, is “boring.” What to do with students who say “I hate reading”? Below are a few ways to change our reluctant readers perception on reading!

We asked the awesome educators in our WeAreTeachers Helpline group to share some tips:


1. The Right Book Makes All the Difference.  

“I just tell them they haven’t found the right book yet. Then we go on a hunt. It might be a year-long hunt, but I help that student find their ‘hook’ book.” —Anika V.

“I’m a librarian and I tell students that they should find books that they ‘want’ to read, not what they think they ‘should’ read.” —Kristy S.

“Books students choose HAVE to be about topics they are interested in. Gauge that first, and then select your reading. It’s okay for students to be reading different things. Make it more of an individual reading plan vs. everyone reads the same thing. That’s how we lose kids with reading.” —Chris F.

“I ask them what they like to watch on TV. Then I look for books that have similar themes and characters.” —Amy Y.

2. Use Everything You’ve Got.

“Magazines with high-interest, short articles may help because they have lots of pictures. Graphic novels are also good. Audiobooks are a great choice.” —Bailey S.

“Hand them a recipe, comic book, play, box of cereal with games on the back, a kid’s menu, anything with words! Then once they’ve found their ‘thing,’ show them that it’s reading.” —Megan B.

“Old school…Choose Your Own Adventure books…they rock! My students are in love with them.” —Erin G.

3. Recognize and Validate Their Challenges.

“As a moderate needs Special Ed teacher, I really believe you need to acknowledge the struggle. Too often, adults shrug this off, which makes children feel even worse.”  —Diana M.

“Be sensitive to their feelings. I have heard from struggling readers and their parents many stories of being made to read aloud in class and feeling deeply embarrassed and humiliated. Just yesterday, a mom told me that happened to her child in 1st grade and now, as a 7th grader, her child still hates reading.” —Kristy B.

4. Teach Each Reading Skill Carefully and Explicitly.

“Make sure your small group reading instruction is skill-targeted. Identify the real reading level of every student you have and make sure they have access to the books they need.”  —Diana M.

“Reluctant readers are often struggling readers, so it’s important to know what is really going on with your students. Is it a comprehension issue? Can he or she read the words, but not quite pull it all together? Is it a decoding issue (sound, letter and word recognition)?  Know where your students’ deficits are so that you can address them directly.”  —Mary M.

“Instead of focusing on content instruction, focus on processing skills: word attack, sight-word recognition, contextual fluency, oral vocabulary and comprehension.” —Lindamood-Bell.

5. Model the joy of reading.

“Reading is one of the greatest pleasures in life! I share my love of reading with enthusiasm and exuberance and find that my attitude sets the tone for my whole room with good feelings about reading. For my kids, reading is a treat and the best part of the day.” —Stephanie I.

“Encourage parents to embrace reading with their children. Provide them with research that substantiates the benefits (emotional as well as academic) of reading on a regular basis with their kids. Make it a fun time to get lost in a story together, to ask questions and wonder.” —Emily J.

“In my classroom we have weekly book talks where students can share a book that they are loving with the class. The kids love it! They get so excited as they share details about the characters and the story. I don’t have to do the work—they get each other excited about reading! I’ve found my students are more likely to read a book that is recommended by a friend than by any other source.” —Carrie P.
http://www.weareteachers.com/what-do-you-do-when-a-kid-says-i-hate-reading/

Have a great week!