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Game-changing Practices Inspire Deep Learning

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Presentation team: Susan Close, SD40 retired Heather Brown, SD6/61 Sonia Kraljevic, SD34 Donna Schelter, SD54 Paul Kopf, SD67 Ann Nottingham, SD40 retired – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Game-changing Practices Inspire Deep Learning


1
Game-changing Practices Inspire Deep Learning
  • Presentation team
  • Susan Close, SD40 retired
  • Heather Brown, SD6/61
  • Sonia Kraljevic, SD34
  • Donna Schelter, SD54
  • Paul Kopf, SD67
  • Ann Nottingham, SD40 retired

2
Welcome and overview
  • Connecting
  • The power of inquiry
  • A system game-changer
  • A goal
  • 2. Processing
  • Chunk 1 The framework
  • Chunk 2 K-12 applications
  • Chunk 3 Implementation and Q A
  • 3. Transforming
  • Your take-aways
  • 4. Reflecting noticing strengths

3
Over 25 years of collaborative inquiry
4
Studies over time
  • The Genelle Project BCTF study
  • Young Writers K-12 provincial initiative
  • WRIT E in Langley K-12 cross-grade teams
  • ReadWriteThink Maple Ridge-Pitt Meadows
  • Learning for Success multi-district (1994-2001)
  • SD40 district research teams (2000-2005)
  • SmartLearning (2012-2013) 7 B.C. 1 Alberta
    district

5
The Power of Inquiry
  • We shall not cease from exploration
  • And in the end of our exploration
  • Will be to arrive where we started
  • And know the place for the first time.
  • T.S. Eliot, The Gidding

6
Guiding Principles
  • Vision compelling goal
  • Hone our skills learn from each other from the
    literature
  • Put ourselves in the place of most opportunity-
    the classroom relentless focus on practice
  • Keep our eyes on the prize Is what we are doing,
    giving us what we want? How do we know?
  • Open invitations with structures for
    support

7
What is a game-changer?
  • For us a game-changer is
  • something that has the potential to alter the
    overall outcome for students and teachers
  • an AH-HA moment where you see something in the
    learning that shifts your thinking, your beliefs
    your understandings

8
Breakthrougha head-turning moment
9
Our game-changer
10
The system game-changer Competency-based
learning
  • The ultimate goal is for learners to employ
    core competencies every day for core
    competencies to be an integral part of the
    learning in all curricular areas.
  • Ministry of Education, 2014

11
Competency-based Learning
  • What challenges do you see or what questions do
    you have about the implementation and assessment
    of competency-based learning across the
    curriculum?
  • Ministry of Education, 2014

12
2 minute What challenges do you see what
questions to do have about implementing and
assessing competency-based learning?
13
Predict
  • What do you predict you will see when you say "we
    did it?"
  • Generating has the effect of making the mind
    more receptive to new learning when you are
    asked to struggle with solving a problem before
    learning how to solve it, the concept or solution
    is better learned and more durably remembered.
  • Brown, Roediger III, McDaniel, 2014.

14
Todays goal
  • Find practices that will support the
    implementation and assessment of competency-based
    learning.

15
Chunk 1
  • The Framework

16
Learning Round Context one cycle
develops multiple competencies in Gr.6/7
learners brand new to the practice
17
Task Explain an important message or lesson
and how you might use the message in your life
Lesson 1 Connecting Processing Transforming Reflecting
Whole-class Competencies personal social Confidence Self-awareness Self-monitoring Thinking Communication ELA reading and critical thinking, metacognitive strategies before, during and after reading Brain-talk A/B in a thinking-way Establish criteria for powerful learning Set personal s-t-r-e-t-c-h goals Weaving with Clues Image Analysis Walk-to-talk Set the Image Write to predict a message or lesson Noticing learning students in writing teachers reflecting to the learners
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A/B in a thinking-way___ and I decided who
would be A and who would be B by __, therefore I
am ___ because _____.
  • Criteria for Powerful Learning
  • Focus
  • Concentration
  • Asking lots of questions
  • No negative side-talk
  • Important ideas

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Weaving with Clues
  • Feathers
  • Two eggs
  • Broken arrow

24
Thinking like an observer predict a big idea
or message that might unfold in the text
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Learning Round lesson 2Task Write to send an
image of the situation
Lesson 3 Connecting Processing Transforming Reflecting
Applying Skills Knowledge during Guided Independent Reading Goals personal social use reading to develop writing Set the goal Read to find what is important to remember Set personal stretch goals Model Interviewing partners Use criteria to set personal s-t-r-e-t-c-h goals Tools ImageDetailTagline A/B with RASA Guess my Tagline Review criteria Review goals Tool Set the Image Write to send an image Find evidence of meeting goals Notice strengths Set a new goal Reflections students teachers
30
Using samples to build criteria for powerful
writing
  • What works? What is powerful?

31
Gap Analysis
  • rambling garden
  • pride of magnificent peacocks
  • rushes and reeds
  • elegant swans
  • look ridiculous
  • fear the swans
  • great strength
  • No home! No happiness! No life!

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Task Write in role to show who was the fool and
why.
  • After finishing work with the texta beginning
    for the final response

37
WHOLE CLASS
INDEPENDENT READING
PERSONAL INQUIRY
38
Learning Round lesson 3Task Write to send an
image of the situation
Lesson 3 Connecting Processing Transforming Reflecting
Independent reading Applying skills in just-right texts Goals Personal social Use reading to develop writing Use writing samples from lesson 2 to refine criteria for powerful writing Use criteria to set personal s-t-r-e-t-c-h goals Independently read and apply skills in just-right texts Tool ImageDetailTagline A/B with RASA Guess my Tagline Teacher conducting individual coaching conferences and/or Small group focus sessions Review criteria Review personal goals Tool Set the Image Write to send an image Find evidence of meeting goals Notice strengths Set a new goal Reflections students teachers
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2 minute What was important to you and why?
43
Chunk 2 What have educators
learned?
  • Heather Brown Senior Science, SD6/61
  • Sonia Kraljevic Middle School, SD34
  • Donna Schelter Grades 4/5, SD54
  • Paul Kopf Grade one, SD 67
  • Participants in the 2012-2013 SmartLearning study

44
  • Heather Brown, SD6/61
  • Senior Science

45
Conceptual Procedural Understanding
46
Effects on learners the teacher
on colleagial learning
  • Sonia Kraljevic
  • Grades 6-8

47
Smart Learning and Students
  • Creates Classroom Community
  • High Time-on-Task
  • Exposed to Multiple Perspectives
  • Meets the needs of ALL students
  • struggling students
  • high achievers
  • English language learners
  • adolescent learners

48
SmartLearning Teachers
  • In the Classroom
  • Ease of classroom management
  • All inclusive
  • Continual formative assessments
  • Meaningful summative assessments
  • Plans easily adapted
  • Numerous competencies developed
  • As a Team
  • Collaboration using common language and tools
  • Multi grade consistency, continuum created across
    grades
  • demonstration, co-teaching and coaching over time
  • co-planning, collegial support, sharing of
    expertise

49
  • As a Team
  • Collaboration using common language and tools
  • Multi-grade consistency, continuum applied across
    grades
  • demonstration, co-teaching and coaching over time
  • co-planning, collegial support, sharing of
    expertise

50
  • Donna Schelter
  • Grades 4/5

51
  • Paul Kopf
  • Grade 1

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53
2 minute What was important to you and why?
54
Strengths/Features of the ApproachPreliminary
findings from a sampling of participants
2012-2013 study of SmartLearning Megan Anakin,
senior researcherOtago University, Dunedin NZ
  • Includes and engages all learners
  • Develops deeper understanding/thinking
  • An approach/framework to address all learning
    outcomes/integrated/interrelated skills/big
    picture/end in mind
  • Students work at their own level/differentiated/in
    dividualised/ student-centred instruction
  • Focused on student achievement/assessment/curricul
    um
  • Guides/scaffolds student learning
  • Students set their own goals and take
    responsibility for their own learning
  • Focused on student achievement/assessment/curricul
    um

55
  • Focused on teaching/learning specific
    skills/tools
  • A brain-based teaching framework
  • Research-based
  • Active/hands-on/partner-work/team-work skill
    development
  • Common language between teachers and
    students/moves from whole group instruction to
    independent practice

56
Chunk 3
  • Lessons on supporting educators

57
  • The Power of Learning Rounds
  • It is so much easier to talk about a bullfight
    than it is to get into the ring with the bull.

58
Reflection following a learning round
  • After planning a lesson with a colleague more
    experienced with the practices
  • Wait until you see our taglines from the
    little postcard we chose! The experience truly
    knocked my socks off. And the work showed me who
    could and who couldnt generate a summary
    statement for a picture! Yet!!!! I even had them
    send the image they drew into their partners
    thinking, and had them invite their partners to
    try to guess taglines. It was so great!!!!

59
Structures that worked
  • Open invitations join a
    project with a compelling goals
  • Identifying practices successes from the
    past what research is saying to implement and
    study common assessment
  • Learning Rounds classroom-based
    contexts to see and learn from promising
    practices
  • Scheduled focus sessions sharing successes
    challenges learning from each others
    applications new learning
  • Collaborative planning, co-teaching and coaching
  • Skill competency-focused workshops
  • Learning round where we

60
Q A 9 minutes
61
TASK
  • What practices did you find to support the
    implementation and assessment of competency-based
    learning?

62
ReflectionsStrengths you see in the
practicesGoal 72 hour rule
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If we dont search for more well never find
itGalen Weston
65
If nothing ever changed, there would be no
butterflies
author unknown

66
Thank you for joining us today.
  • Susan Close
  • Heather Brown
  • Sonia Kraljevic
  • Donna Schelter
  • Paul Kopf
  • Ann Nottingham
  • Two documents to access
  • Insights into the Brain and Learning
  • Game-changing Practices Inspire Learning
  • BCSSA Website or www.smartlearning.ca
  • _at_susanclose5
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