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FOR THE 1ST TIME IN HISTORY, THE PITTSBURGH PUBLIC SCHOOLS MADE AYP. 11 ... AYP status will be based on the school's PSSA results in grades 6, 7, and 8. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EMBRACING THE CHALLENGE: SUPPORTING ALL STUDENTS TO BE PROMISEREADY


1
EMBRACING THE CHALLENGE SUPPORTING ALL STUDENTS
TO BE PROMISE-READY
  • August 31, 2009

2
  • In 2006-2007 the District made modest growth in
    student achievement.
  • In 2007-2008 the District made substantial
    progress across the board.
  • In 2008-2009 the District continued to make
    substantial progress in student achievement at
    almost all grade levels.

3
THE DISTRICT HAS IN PLACE THE CORE ELEMENTS FOR
RAISING STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT
  • New rigorous curriculum
  • Nationally recognized system to train, support,
    evaluate and reward principals
  • Use of diagnostic assessments and interventions
    to get help to students quickly
  • Instructional coaches in every school to deepen
    the work
  • Teaching and Learning Teams
  • Expansion of early childhood education

4
2009 DISTRICT-LEVEL MATHEMATIC RESULTS
5
Grade 6 Math Proficiency Student performance
increased by 3.2 points (5.5) from last year.
6
Grade 7 Math Proficiency Student performance
increased by 5.1 points (9.1) from last year.
7
Grade 8 Math Proficiency Student performance
increased by 2.5 points (4.4) from last year.
8
Grade 11 Math Proficiency Student performance
decreased by 9 points (17.2) from last year.
9
REPORT ON ADEQUATE YEARLY PROGRESS (AYP) FOR THE
DISTRICT AND SCHOOLS
10
NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND REQUIRES DISTRICTS SCHOOLS
TO DEMONSTRATE ADEQUATE YEARLY PROGRESS (AYP) ON
SPECIFIC TARGETS THAT ASSESS
  • Attendance rates must be higher than 90 (or
    show growth)
  • Graduation rates must be higher than 80 (or
    show growth)
  • PSSA Participation for both Reading and
    Mathematics, 95 or more of the currently
    enrolled students must take each test
  • PSSA Performance at least 63 of the students
    must score proficient or advanced in Reading, and
    at least 56 must score proficient or advanced in
    Mathematics.

11
FOR THE 1ST TIME IN HISTORY, THE PITTSBURGH
PUBLIC SCHOOLS MADE AYP
12
THE 2009 DISTRICT AYP STATUS IS
MAKING PROGRESS
  • Making Progress means that the District passed
    AYP for the first year of a 2 year period.
  • If the district fulfills its AYP for a second
    year, it will exit the improvement system and
    will be classified as Making AYP.

13
For the District to make AYP in performance at
least one grade band must meet Reading targets
and at least one grade band must meet
Mathematics targets for all students and all
subgroups.
14
THE DISTRICT IS HELD ACCOUNTABLE FOR 8 SUBGROUPS
IN GRADE SPANS 3-5 AND 6-8, AND 5 SUBGROUPS IN
GRADE SPAN 9-12.
Currently, there are less than 40 students, but
this may change over time.
15
Over the past four years, the District increased
the percentage of AYP targets met even as the
number of targets increased.
16
PERFORMANCE TARGETS REMAINED THE SAME IN 2009
  • In 2008, Reading Target increased to 63 and
    Mathematics
  • Target increased to 56.
  • Next increase will be in 2011, followed by annual
    increase until it reaches100 in 2014.

17
THE DISTRICT MADE AYP IN GRADE SPAN 3-5 IN
READING AND MATH
18
32 of 60 schools in the District (53.3) made
AYP.
19
2009 AYP STATUS K-8 SCHOOLS
Identifies schools meeting 2009 AYP but
classified as Making Progress
20
2009 AYP STATUS ALAS
Identifies schools meeting 2009 AYP but
classified as Making Progress
21
2009 AYP STATUS MIDDLE SCHOOLS
Identifies schools meeting 2009 AYP but
classified as Making Progress
22
2009 AYP STATUS HIGH SCHOOLS
The district performance in Reading and
Mathematics in Grade 11 (for all students) was
used to determine the AYP status for Milliones
(feeder school model). As more grades are
added to Milliones, the feeder school model will
not be needed. Next year, Milliones AYP status
will be based on the schools PSSA results in
grades 6, 7, and 8.
23
INTRODUCTION
  • Taught Pre-Algebra through Calculus BC in
    Maryland High School.
  • Taught and supervised pre-service secondary
    teachers at University of Maryland.
  • Taught graduate courses in Math Education,
    focusing 6-12.
  • Taught graduate undergraduate Math courses at
    Maryland and Pitt, focusing K-12.
  • Planned/conducted research in urban settings,
    her dissertation was around 6-12 teachers as
    learners/inquirers in mathematics.
  • Focused on upper level mathematics inquiry.
  • Edited Pittsburghs Middle School Curriculum and
    worked with 6-12 Coaches.
  • Eden M. Badertscher
  • B.A.
  • Princeton University
  • M. Ed. Ph. D. University of Maryland

24
WE ARE FOCUSED ON
  • High School Performance has remained flat over
    the past 4 years, reaffirming the need to
    continue with dramatic changes in our high
    schools.
  • African American Achievement While many are
    high-achieving, a disproportionate number are not
    achieving at high levels.
  • Special Education We want to ensure that the
    Districts curriculum is accessible to our
    students with exceptionalities.

25
DISTRICT FOCI FOR THE 2009-2010 SCHOOL YEAR
  • FORMATIVE PRACTICES
  • STUDYING STUDENT WORK
  • INFUSING PROMISE-READINESS

26
PROMISE-READINESS IN CORE CURRICULUM
  • ACT research shows that students should begin
    planning for college as early as 6th grade
  • Tasks are inserted into the core curriculum
    grades 6-11 that cover topics such as
  • 1. The importance of a college education and the
    benefit of the Pittsburgh Promise
  • 2. How to calculate grade point average and why a
    high GPA is important
  • 3. Standardized testing such as the SAT
  • 4. The economic, health, and social benefits of
    earning a college degree

27
MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENT RELATED FOCI
  • Rigorous Share-Discuss-Analyze
  • Struggle in math is positive!
  • Struggle in teaching is positive!
  • Middle School Algebra Readiness Studying
    Student Work
  • High School Collaborative Lesson Design, and
    using all PD periods for learning and growth

28
EFFORT-BASED LEARNING AND SELF-THEORIES
  • CAROL DWECK HOW DO OUR BELIEFS ABOUT
    INTELLIGENCE AFFECT WHAT AND HOW WE LEARN?

29
BELIEFS ABOUT INTELLIGENCE SHAPE LEARNING
  • Take 20 minutes to read the article The Secret
    to Raising Smart Kids by Carol S. Dweck in
    Scientific American Mind, Nov. 28, 2007
  • Respond individually and then share with a
    partner on the following questions
  • What are the big ideas of this article?
  • Review the article again and identify three
    phrases or sentences that you found particularly
    significant to the overall argument of the
    article. Write down the phrases and why you found
    each one significant share these.

30
MINDSETS
- www.brainology.us
31
WHAT MINDSETS DOGOALS
- www.brainology.us
32
WHAT MINDSETS DOEFFORT BELIEFS
- www.brainology.us
33
WHAT MINDSETS DOSTRATEGIES AFTER FAILURE
- www.brainology.us
34
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41
IMPLICATIONS OF THE GROWTH MINDSET
  • Whole Group Discussion on Mindsets
  • What are the implications for our practice?
  • Teachers are also learners. How might the growth
    and fixed mindsets shape how teachers view their
    own professional development?

42
BELIEFS ABOUT MATHEMATICS AND ITS IMPACT ON
TEACHING AND LEARNING
43
ASSUMPTIONS OBJECTIVES IN TRADITIONAL
MATHEMATICS EDUCATION
  • Mathematics is an unchallengeable body of
    knowledge in which, once something is proven
    true, it is true forever.
  • Arithmetic is needed for all students, but other
    Mathematics is a gate keeper to differentiate
    ability levels (fixed mindset predominated)

44
WHAT MESSAGES DO WE CONVEY?
  • Even when lessons go as planned and appear very
    successful, we often reinforce problematic
    perspectives if we do not ACTIVELY make a point
    of challenging these beliefs in ourselves and our
    students
  • Deductive reasoning is king there is little role
    for experimenting, intuition and creativity.
  • The form of the answer is critical, not the
    substance a correct answer can be wrong if not
    written the right way.
  • Problems should be solved in a few minutes
    encountering difficulties reflects on our
    abilities.
  • Students are to learn mathematics created by
    others their own questions are not important.
  • Mathematics is not is not about making sense it
    is about getting correct answers.
  • -Alan Schoenfeld, 1988

45
THESE MESSAGES REINFORCE THE FIXED MINDSET
46
WHY SHOULD WE CARE WHAT BELIEFS ABOUT MATHEMATICS
WE HOLD?
  • Ones concept of what mathematics is affects
    ones conception of how it should be presented.
  • The issue, then, is not, What is the best way to
    teach? but, What is mathematics really about?
  • Reuben Hersh, mathematician, 1979

47
PRIORITIZING THE PROCESS
48
A THOUGHT EXPERIMENT
  • Can you imagine a triangle with 2 right angles?

49
ROLE OF ASSUMPTIONS IN MATHEMATICS
  • Do Triangles have 180?
  • Some triangles measure 180 lt x lt 540.
  • Some triangles measure 0 lt x lt 180
  • Depends whether the parallel postulate holds!
  • Is the shortest distance between 2 points a
    straight line?
  • Not in taxi-cab geometry (geometry of city
    streets),
  • You also cannot have equilateral triangle that
    meets our current definition!

50
SPECIAL RIGHT TRIANGLES
  • What is special about Special Right Triangles?
  • 30-60-90
  • 45-45-90
  • Are there any other right triangles that have
    such a special relationship?
  • What about 27-63-90?
  • What about 11-79-90?
  • What about 42-21-117?

51
WHICH PAIRS OF FIGURES ARE SIMILAR?
These two sets of figures are not similar.
These two sets of figures are similar.
52
WHAT IS MATHEMATICS ABOUT?
  • Mathematics cannot be about products such as
    whether or not a triangle has 180. Mathematics
    has to be about
  • Under what conditions does a triangle have a
    180?
  • How can I make sense of why altering the
    conditions changes the result?
  • What habits of mind will help me make sense of
    the angle measure in triangles?
  • When should I work with the Euclidean conditions,
    and when should I make other assumptions?

53
THE DISCIPLINE OF MATHEMATICS
  • Mathematicians ask questions and make sense of
    mathematical ideas, and only then do they prove!
  • Cycle of induction-deduction-induction
  • Hard-wired AND a Human Creation
  • Closely tied to culture language
  • Intuition and connections are CRITICAL
  • Creative- verging towards art!
  • Frustration is HONORED!!!!

54
THE MATHEMATICAL PROCESS
  • I conjured or speculated that all three
    manifolds have a certain geometric structure
    this conjecture eventually became known as the
    geometrization conjecture. About two or three
    years later, I proved the geometrization theorem
    for Haken manifolds.
  • Id like to spell out more what I mean when I
    say I proved this theorem. It means that I had a
    clear and complete flow of ideas, including
    details, that withstood a great deal of scrutiny
    by myself and by others.
  • -William Thurston, Mathematician, Fields Medal
    Winner

55
THE DISCIPLINE OF MATHEMATICS REINFORCES THE
GROWTH MINDSET
56
FORMATIVE PRACTICES
57
ASSESSMENTS TO SUPPORT LEARNING
  • Dylan Wiliam talks about the practical
    application of formative assessment in the
    classroom.
  • We will read an article of his and discuss
    formative practices and how this relates to
    learning.

58
FORMATIVE AND SUMMATIVE ASSESSMENT
Formative Assessment (Assessment for Learning)
  • Purpose Improve learning and inform instruction
  • Who is responsible? Both the teacher and the
    student

Summative Assessment (Assessment of Learning)
  • Purpose Grading, placement, promotion,
    accountability, competence
  • Who is responsible? The teacher and external
    tests are primarily responsible

59
RESEARCH ON FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT
  • Findings
  • Of the 20 to 30 relevant studies found
  • All show significant learning advantage with
    formative assessment
  • Effect sizes range from 0.4 to 0.7
  • Several studies show that low attainers show
    the largest gains
  • Several involve emphasis on self- and
    peer-assessment by pupils
  • Most of these studies lacked detail of the
    classroom methods and criterion tests used. YET,
    they show a variety of ways of enhancing
    formative assessment, indicating that the gain
    effect is robust.

Black Wiliam, 1998
60
BUTLER
  • Findings

Butler, R. 1988. Enhancing and undermining
intrinsic motivation The effects of
task-involving and ego-involving evaluation on
interest and performance. British Journal of
Educational Psychology, 58, 1-14.
61
BUTLER
  • Findings

Butler, R. 1988. Enhancing and undermining
intrinsic motivation The effects of
task-involving and ego-involving evaluation on
interest and performance. British Journal of
Educational Psychology, 58, 1-14.
62
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63
FIVE KEY STRATEGIES FOR FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT
  • Clarifying and sharing learning intentions and
    criteria for success
  • Engineering effective classroom discussions,
    questions, and learning tasks that elicit
    evidence of learning
  • Providing feedback that moves learners forward
  • Activating students as instructional resources
    for one another (distributed disciplinary
    authority, learning communities)
  • Activating students as the owners of their own
    learning (meta-cognition, interest, motivation,
    attribution).

Leahy, S., Lyon, C., Thompson, M., Wiliam, D.
(2005, November ). Classroom assessment Minute
by minute, day by day. Educational Leadership,
63(3), 19-24.
64
LEARNERS AS OWNERS
  • Attribution
  • Personalization (internal v. external)
  • Permanence (fixed v. dynamic)
  • It is ESSENTIAL that learners (teachers and
    students) attribute success and failure to
    internal, dynamic causes. In such cases, the
    learner recognizes that he/she has control over
    changing the outcome.

65
TEXT DISCUSSIONDYLAN WILIAM
  • Take 20 minutes and read Classroom assessment
    Minute by minute, day by day by Leahy, S., Lyon,
    C., Thompson, M., Wiliam, D., Educational
    Leadership, 2005, November 63 (3), 19-24.
  • In what ways does it differ from what we normally
    consider assessment?
  • Where do you see the types of formative practices
    that Wiliam espouses in the Core Curriculum in
    Mathematics?
  • How does Formative Assessment connect to the
    Growth Mindset?

66
CONDITIONS FOR FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT
  • It must be established and communicated where the
    learners are in their learning
  • It must be established and communicated where
    learners are going
  • The learner obtains information about how to
    close the gap through effective feedback and
  • The learner is motivated to and actively uses
    this information in his/her own learning and thus
    in closing the gap.

Wiliam, 2009, Pittsburgh Public Schools
Leadership Week
What does this mean for teachers in terms of
professional development and improving practice?
67
FORMATIVE PRACTICES IN THE CLASSROOM
  • A goal in developing a formative assessment
    classroom culture is to counteract students
    obsession with grades and to redirect interest
    and effort toward learning.
  • Shepard,L.A. (2008). Formative Assessment Caveat
    emptor. In C. A. Dwyer (Ed.), The Future of
    Assessment Shaping teaching and learning (page
    279-303). New York Taylor and Francis Group LLC.

68
FORMATIVE PRACTICES IN THE CLASSROOM
  • However...
  • We CANNOT advance students learning if we dont
    understand the conceptions they are using to make
    sense of the mathematics!
  • A Managed Curriculum ensures access to rigorous
    mathematics, but only the professional teacher
    can ensure that learners advance from where they
    are.

69
PRESSING CORRECT/INCORRECT RESPONSES
  • Which fraction is smallest?
  • Which fraction is largest?
  • a) b) c) d)
  • Success rate 88
  • a) b) c) d)
  • Success rate 46
  • 39 chose (b)

70
PRESSING ON RESPONSES
These two sets of figures are not similar.
These two sets of figures are similar.
71
CONNECTING TO OUR PRACTICE
72
THINKING THROUGH A LESSON PROTOCOL
  • Read through pp. 30-31
  • How does the TTLP build in the disciplinary
    perspective and focus attention on mathematics
    for understanding?
  • How does the TTLP reflect an effort based
    perspective on learning?
  • How does the TTLP focus attention on formative
    assessment?

73
TEACHING AND LEARNING TEAM FEEDBACK TOOL AS
FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT
  • Examine the new tool on p. 169.
  • How does the tool carry the philosophies of
  • The Disciplinary Approach to Mathematics?
  • Growth v. Fixed Mindsets?
  • Formative Assessment?
  • Focus on the 3 questions at the bottom. How can
    you use these to help you understand where you
    are in your practice and toward what you should
    be working?

74
STUDYING STUDENT WORK PROTOCOL
How can this support formative practices?
74
75
WHAT WILL WE LOOK TO SEE IN CLASSROOMS?
  • Rigorous Share-Discuss-Analyze
  • Students wrestling with challenging mathematics
  • Sharing and pushing on both correct and incorrect
    responses
  • Teachers wrestling with how to manage a rigorous
    share-discuss-analyze
  • Teachers wrestling with implementing formative
    practices

76
NATIONAL BOARD STANDARDS
  • Proposition 1 Teachers are Committed to Students
    and Their Learning
  • Proposition 2 Teachers Know the Subjects They
    Teach and How to Teach Those Subjects to
    Students.
  • Proposition 3 Teachers are Responsible for
    Managing and Monitoring Student Learning.
  • Proposition 4 Teachers Think Systematically
    about Their Practice and Learn from Experience.
  • Proposition 5 Teachers are Members of Learning
    Communities.

77
NCTM HS FOCAL POINTS- REASONING AND SENSE-MAKING
  • The development of a productive disposition
    (Kilpatrick, Swafford Findell, 2001) is a high
    priority of school mathematics. When students
    achieve this goal, they view mathematics as
    reasoning and sense-making enterprise. This goal
    can only be achieved if students personally
    engage in mathematical reasoning and sense-making
    as they are learning mathematics content.
  • --NCTM Public Draft 8-29-2008

78
AMERICAN DIPLOMA PROJECT
  • K-12 Benchmarks were written to describe the
    skills needed for success in postsecondary
    education and work.
  • Our curriculum as written, with its rigorous high
    level tasks, generally meets these standards.
    However, we still have a little work to do in
    terms of meeting all the standards, and we have a
    great deal of work to do to ensure that the
    implementation meets or exceeds these standards
    to support ALL students to be Promise-Ready.

79
FINAL NOTES
80
  • Pick up all papers, etc. around your table
  • We will be in curriculum-based groups at Peabody.
    Please select ONE curriculum to focus on. Algebra
    AB teachers must attend the Algebra AB sessions
  • DO NOT try to pick up curricula for colleagues
    today or for your other classes they will be
    available tomorrow!
  • You will need to sign-up for the breakout
    sessions you want to attend before the end of the
    day today. You can do this as you sign in at
    Peabody this afternoon.
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