1 / 23

3rd-5 th Grade ELA PLC September 2014

3rd-5 th Grade ELA PLC September 2014. WELCOME!!!! Remember to sign in! Please make a name tent with your name and campus. Introduce yourselves at your table group. Each person shares out one celebration about the new year.

kaethe
Download Presentation

3rd-5 th Grade ELA PLC September 2014

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 3rd-5th Grade ELA PLCSeptember 2014 WELCOME!!!! Remember to sign in! Please make a name tent with your name and campus.

  2. Introduce yourselves at your table group. Each person shares out one celebration about the new year. Choose one celebration at your table to share out with the whole group.

  3. NORMS We will ….. Be honest and share what we think and feel. Participate in the conversation. Focus on the task. Think creatively and comprehensively. Treat one another as equals. Listen when others speak. Bring humor to the table.

  4. Today’s Agenda • Explore question stems from the newly released Reading STAAR test and SE’s needing focused attention • Discuss implications of text complexity • Examine district summative assessments • Clarify the new NISD Writing Framework • Engage in conversation about Progress Monitoring and Tools

  5. How can we be more purposeful when teaching the low SE’s on STAAR? • Question stems/prompts in weekly scope and sequence • Including STAAR stems in guided reading and book clubs • Including a STAAR formatted question each day or every few days (as appropriate) as part of the closing. Teach test taking skills along the way, vs. cramming it all in a few weeks before

  6. Using STAAR stems is one way to prepare students for the rigor of STAAR. But… what other instructional practices need to be considered for students to be successful on this rigorous assessment? MAD MINUTE – Talk for one minute at your table about the above question.

  7. What about Text Complexity? Exposing students to different levels of text complexity, within multiple genres, and having them grapple with making meaning, is essential to growing effective, proficient readers.

  8. Determining Text Complexity • Text complexity is defined by: • Quantitative measures – readability and other scores of text complexity often best measured by computer software. • Qualitative measures – levels of meaning, structure, organization, language conventionality and clarity, and knowledge demands often best measured by an attentive human reader. • Reader and Task considerations – background knowledge of reader, motivation, interests, and complexity generated by tasks assigned often best made by educators employing their professional judgment.

  9. Text Complexity and The Continuum The Continuum identifies 10 factors related to text difficulty:

  10. Let’s take a look at the District Summative Assessments Examine at your table groups: • What do you notice? • What SE’s are covered? • What is the format of the assessment? • What texts are used? • If this is the summative assessment, what should our instruction look like to prepare students for the assessment?

  11. New NISD Narrative and Expository Writing Frameworks Reminders: -All schools are required to introduce and use the new frameworks with all students. If you need to adjust the framework for a small number of students, you may do so. -Some schools are making the connection between what frameworks students used last year with the new frameworks, to help bridge their understanding to the new framework structure -We value your feedback. Please keep some notes on how the new frameworks helped students, as well as possible tweaks to make it more user friendly for students.

  12. Progress Monitoring Guiding Questions -How do you use assessment information to guide instructional decision making for the individual students, groups of students, and/or the class as a whole? -How do you re-teach and re-assess students who are struggling? What resources do you use? -How are you tracking each student’s progress?

  13. Progress Monitoring Tools Write a list of all the tools in your assessment binder, or that you use for progress monitoring. What tools help you determine what a student knows and can do?

  14. Converse with Colleagues Compare lists. What is different? What is the same? Add what you want to include or what you want to explore based on your conversations. How do you use the information you gather to change your instructional practices? How do you re-teach and re-assess students who are struggling? What resources do you use for interventions? How do you keep track of students’ progress? How do you set goals with students, make sure they are meeting goals, and then set new goals? Create group chart of different tools and/or practices shared.-

  15. Group Discussion Share out – -What did you notice?-What do you learn?

  16. How do I decide what information to gather and/or take notes on, in order to monitor a student’s progress? • District Literacy Assessments BOY, MOY, EOY – (keep paper copies available for easy access for lesson planning, goal setting, parent conferences, and RtI) • ELA Summative & Common Assessments- use data from these assessments to plan instruction for small groups and individual students • Individual Student Goal Setting – use your data and observations to set individual reading and writing goals, and be sure to have a system to check back in to monitor goal attainment and setting new goals • Anecdotal notes-for individual students based on challenging SE’s, student goals, skills/strategies covered in RW & WW, guided reading and book clubs

  17. Spring PLC -Please experiment with and try-out progress monitoring tools/ideas and plan to come back to Spring 2015 PLC to share your success and struggles. -Please plan to bring examples of student writing using the new narrative and expository frameworks

  18. “I almost feel like there should be bells ringing and lights flashing as I describe my assessment notebooks. For without a doubt, they’re my most important teaching tool.” (Taberski, 2000)

  19. Thank you for coming today! Ticket Out:Please complete your ticket out and leave at your table.

More Related