Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Classroom climate!

How do you get to know your students in your classroom? How do they get to know you, your passions, and your style? Do you set aside time from day 1 to build rapport and a sense of community in your class? There are plenty of days to delve into science content. Without establishing a positive climate based on mutual respect and learning first, we miss out on a huge opportunity for a truly successful year for every child. 

Here are some ideas, but I would love for others to share what has worked or things you might want to try. 


  • Student questionnaires
  • Learning style inventories
  • Student interviews with introductions 
  • Scavenger hunts
  • Class icebreakers like inner and outer circles
  • "All About Me" blog posts or brochures for teachers and students 
  • Playdoh creations - build something that represents you
  • Engineering hands-on problem or similar

Have an idea? Please share!

Please remember this - kids need champions! 




-Rebecca


Happy New Year 2013-2014!

I hope your summer was restful and brings you back to school feeling reinvigorated! 

Welcome back to the start of another year of learning together. 

     Congratulations to Zetta Newell at    
     High School South on her summer 
     nuptials. 

     Erin Conrad is back from maternity 
     leave at High School North. 

     Shannon Devine is with us fulltime and shared between HSN and HSS.

     We also welcome Christian Rathbun 
     at GMS and Max Achtau at CMS. 

If you have other news to share, please let me know!

We will have our first department meeting on September 3, 2013. The primary purpose of the first meeting is to discuss SGOs.

    • MS teachers will meet at GMS from 10:30am-noon
    • HS teachers will meet at HSS from 1pm-3pm.

  • All of our meeting dates are listed on the Google Calendar on this blog. They will again fall on Wednesdays. You can add this calendar or manually add the dates in a calendar of your choice. I'll post the meeting agendas under the agenda tab as a running record. If you are a coach or club advisor, please make the necessary arrangements now.

  • The summer orders have been delivered and are awaiting final unpacking in most buildings. If you are short textbooks, please reach out after you have verified with your colleagues that there are no more books in the buildings.

  • Make sure you sign up for the district Twitter announcements as there will be no phone chain! 

  • Check out the blog for updates and information. I will use it as my primary site and way of maintaining clear and consistent communication with everyone. One blog post appears on the main page. Click on older posts to view additional postings. 

Enjoy the final days of your summer vacation and I look forward to an amazing year with everyone!

~Rebecca





District Notices Through Twitter

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To remove your phone from Twitter: Send STOP twice in succession to 40404, which will delete you from Twitter.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Ed Camp Model and Blended Learning for WWP Science Meetings



Please don't think that I don't know just how dreadful meetings can be. You helped me last year when we tried an ed camp model of PD by you leading a meeting and sharing your expertise with your colleagues. I want to see more of that and help you all share your skills as educational leaders. If there is something you want to share with our team, please reach out to me. Be a part of our evolving team and take us to new heights!

Please make sure you fill out the survey under the feedback post!


Friday, August 23, 2013

Common Assessment Info


I know that many of you feel overwhelmed by all of the state-mandated and district initiatives. Please look at these opportunities for us to constantly evolve and improve for our students. Collaboratively, we can achieve new heights and support one another through the process. I know how positive our group can be and it will definitely help our team grow together.

This year, the "midterm" will consist of 3-4 common assessments given over the first semester. The assessments are going to not only call on their content knowledge, but also some aspects of the 21st century competencies. Thankfully, the science department has done a tremendous amount of work in creating common assessments over the past few years, as well as rubric work related to the competencies. We now have to marry the two aspects together in order to determine if we are hitting the mark of whole child, every child. We don't want to over test our students. We want our assessments to be meaningful both for and of learning. We want district consistency in our curriculum and assessments.


As we work to develop any common assessment, the task should be aligned toward the right side of this diagram. Our design focus in common assessments should be authentic and rubric-based. 













In earlier correspondence from my predecessor, there was a statement made about what constitutes a good assessment. Please refer to this with your grade-level and subject team:


          Mirrors classroom instruction – in both content and form;
          Focuses on what students know and are able to do;
          Is meaningful to students;
          Is challenging and integrates a variety of skills so that students can show all that they can do; Reflects clear and concise scoring criteria which are understood by students in order to provide them with meaningful feedback;
          Allows for dialogue between student and teacher to facilitate growth;
          Does not threaten the students’ feeling of self-esteem or psychological safety;

          Improves learning.



Is this just in the science department?
No. Common assessments are going to be used for every department in our school district. It would be great if you met with some of your colleagues from other departments and compared strategies and assessments.

We already have a lot of labs that we are all using in the first semester. Can we use parts of our already existing labs?
Absolutely! As long as the team assessment includes aspects of both content and the 21st century competencies and does not rely on all multiple choice questions, bring it to the table. The goal is to build better assessments that diagnosis and capture student learning. We have plenty of great performance tasks that can be tweaked to include consistent rubrics for grading that work for the team.

Do we all have to use the same assessments as our team? 
Yes. They are all to be the same common assessments and they should all be graded the same way, with the same district curve if needed.

How will we grade these assessments?
We should be grading and discussing the results with our teams. During PLC meetings we should be discussing the results and pull random student responses from the pile to ensure students are all being graded fairly and consistently.

Our PLC conversations should be focused on:
What do we want them to learn? Did they learn it? What are the prevailing misconceptions that still need to be addressed? What can we do to help differentiate for the kids who got it and for those who did not?

Do we have to give the common assessments on the same date as our colleagues?
No, but they should all be used and calculated into the midterm grade.

Can the assessments ask the students to have a conversation about a topic with a peer?
Yes. If you have not observed how the World Language department assesses their students, I strongly encourage you ask a colleague if you can. Their assessments are fully in line with the direction our district is heading. Remember, if a students has memorized everything from the chapter, but cannot articulate an understanding as an effective communicator, they have not demonstrated any application of their knowledge. They have only acquired a lot of facts. What are they doing with this information?

Can we still use a set of questions to test the students individually about content?

Yes. No one is saying that you have to judge the students in groups for all of their common assessment scores. You are welcome to ask the students to individually solve a common problem, create a hypothesis, analyze data, create graphs/charts, etc. You could also ask them to log on to a computer with a given concept/problem and ask them to provide you with a list of sites that are useful in helping them learn about the problem in pairs, and then ask them individually to solve the problem.

Isn't it still important for students to take a comprehensive exam?
Sure. It is important for the students to retain the most important concepts from our classes. It is also important for us to develop a way to test what they can do with this information. I think we have a lot of assessments that are already doing this. Our kids are also already taking high-stakes, standardized tests every time they turn around. If we know that those other standardized tests don't capture everything about our kids, let's work to infuse more of the kinds of assessments that will!

Resources about multiple measures of student learning and performance assessments:

https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B3bU-Lg-UoWSTmdqY3FqMnB2ck0/edit?usp=sharing

http://www.nea.org/assets/docs/PB38beyondtwotestscores2011.pdf

http://www.edutopia.org/comprehensive-assessment-introduction

http://www.guide2digitallearning.com/files/21st_Century_Learn_Assess.pdf

Sunday, August 18, 2013

I need your feedback! Respond by 9/9.

Please help me plan for the year and improve my practice. Please complete this prior to the September 9.



Gratefully,
Rebecca