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Leadership for Rigor, Relevance, and Relationships

Leadership for Rigor, Relevance, and Relationships. Susan Gunderman International Center for Leadership in Education Susangunderman@comcast.net. Change can be scary. “ Some people change when they see the light, others when they feel the heat.” - Caroline Schroeder.

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Leadership for Rigor, Relevance, and Relationships

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  1. Leadership for Rigor, Relevance, and Relationships Susan Gunderman International Center for Leadership in Education Susangunderman@comcast.net

  2. Change can be scary. “Some people change when they see the light, others when they feel the heat.” - Caroline Schroeder

  3. Leadership for Change

  4. Why Change? “The primary aim of education is not to enable students to do well in school, but to help them do well in the lives they lead outside of the school.”

  5. Mission • Prepare students for the world they will inhabit outside the schoolhouse walls. • Engage them in learning • that will develop skills • that are transferable • to the 21st Century • world.

  6. What do we change? Teaching is only as good as the learning that takes place.

  7. Rigor

  8. Rigorous instruction prepares students to think critically so they can solve problems in unpredictable, real world situations. Thinking outside the car.

  9. Relevance My only skill is taking tests.

  10. BBC Survey • 20% believe sun revolves around the Earth • 60% could not locate England on a map • 21% could not locate US • 55% could not name a country that begins with “U” • Bill of Rights: • 1 in 4 could name one • 1 in 5 named “right to own a pet“

  11. BBC Survey • 50% could name at least two members of • the Simpsons Family • 80% knew Fiji is located • in the South Pacific

  12. Intelligence v Relevance Students will remember learning that is connected to their own lives.

  13. Vision and Implementation “There are no teachers with correct answers, only guides with different areas of expertise and experience that may help along the way.” ~ Peter Senge and Fred Kofman, 1995 Flip the funnel

  14. Rigor and Relevance Framework Shifts the Focus from Teaching to Learning

  15. Rigor/Relevance Framework Knowledge High Application Low Low High

  16. Knowledge Taxonomy 1. Awareness 2. Comprehension 3. Application 4. Analysis 5. Synthesis 6. Evaluation

  17. Application Model • 1. Knowledge of one discipline • 2. Application within discipline • Application across disciplines • 4. Application to real world predictable situations • 5. Application to real world unpredictable situations

  18. Rigor/Relevance Framework Knowledge Application 1. Recall Knowledge 2. Comprehension 3. Application 4. Analysis 5. Synthesis 6. Evaluation • 1. Knowledge of one discipline • 2. Application within discipline • Application across • disciplines • 4. Application to real world predictable situations • 5. Application to real world unpredictable situations

  19. Rigor/Relevance Framework Knowledge High D C A B Application Low Low High

  20. From Theory to Practice Moving Rigor and Relevance Into the Classroom

  21. Theory to Practice • Develop a school-wide focus on instruction through RR • Instructional Strategies Handbook • Common vocabulary • Common vision of effective instruction

  22. Collaboration for Best Practices • Give teachers time to talk about their craft. • Use meeting time to talk about instruction. • Share best practices.

  23. Collaboration Snack and Shares • Instructional Strategies by Quadrant • Graphic Organizers • Developing a Rubric • Aligning Instruction and Assessments • Designing Writing Prompts in Content Areas

  24. CollaborationPrincipal’s Roundtable Discussions The World Is Flat Current literature • Brain Research • Learning Styles • Grading Practices • 9th Grade Success Stupid in America Out of India

  25. Collaboration Staff Meetings • Faculty Meetings • Show and Tell • Collaborative Groups • Planning Quadrant D Lessons

  26. Reflective Questionsto Provoke Crucial Conversations • What do you intend students to learn? • What is the level(s) of Rigor and Relevance? • How do you know students understood the lesson? • What data are you using to determine you are meeting the standards? • What can I do as instructional leader to support your efforts?

  27. Reflective Questions • What strategies do you use to address • individual learning styles? • What was the most successful part of • the learning experience and why? • If you teach this lesson again, how • would you change it? • What evidence can you share regarding • achievement of standards? • How do you know learning has occurred?

  28. Benchmarksfor Progress

  29. Instruction with High Expectations

  30. D Quadrant Lesson Creation Standard: Prose and Document Literacy • Select outcome: Be able to synthesize concepts learned in a nonfiction unit. • Select product: Publish a newspaper article based on children’s literature

  31. Required Components • Headline • By-line • Staged photograph • Cutline and pull quote • Map • Continuation headline, if needed • Body (250-400 words) • Interview • Site visit • Archival research

  32. Match to verb and strategy Products Verbs Strategies • inquiry • research • cooperative • learning • presentation • project design • evaluate • validate • justify • rate • referee • infer • rank • dramatize • argue • conclude • evaluation • opinion • estimation • trial • article • adaptation • debate • new game • invention

  33. Provide rubric

  34. All articles presented orally, then published in spiral-bound book and given to each student.

  35. Student Reflection “First of all, I never thought we could get it all together to actually produce a newspaper with all the parts that you wanted. But we did it, and I actually learned a lot. Mostly I learned that I had to pull my load so that we didn’t look like a bunch of slackers compared to the other groups. And I think I know what it might feel like to be a publisher in charge of getting a newspaper to press on time. Definitely not for me!”

  36. Biology II Human Anatomy Project Dr. Joanne Jezequel

  37. Children’s Book ProjectAnatomy & Physiology

  38. Student Reflection “I once had a teacher who said, ‘If you truly understand a concept, you can find at least 5 different ways to retell the information.’ The children’s book helped me think past the memorization of dry textbook material.”

  39. Renewal • Dr. Daggett meets with students and teachers • Responses surprising • “I feel a little sorry for my teacher trying to get to D” • Teachers 4; students 2.5 • Clearly not there yet • The challenge

  40. Answering the Challenge • Each teacher will create a D quadrant lesson • Work in collaborative groups • Present lessons at faculty meeting

  41. Expectations and Resources • Work in collaborative groups 1.5 hours per month Workdays • Peer visits • Snack and Shares Rigor and Relevance 101 Movie Maker, Podcasts, Garage Band Designing Rubrics

  42. Kennesaw Mountain Model Lessons Presentation

  43. Turning Point: Training Students Make them part of expectations and celebrations

  44. Sustaining High Expectations for Rigor and Relevance

  45. Sustaining the Work “Single mindedness” KFC not Baskin Robbins

  46. Sustaining the Work • Collaborative planning • Sharing resources, insights, challenges, success

  47. Sustaining the Work Collect and analyze data to help guide work • “Measure what matters.” • See it through to the end.

  48. Involve Students in the Conversations about Instruction • Talk to the students • Monthly principal’s lunch Enrollment in AP/Honors classes What motivates you in a class? Interpret test data and climate surveys Delta

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