benchmarking the change process: where are we now?

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Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

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Page 1: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

Page 2: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

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Page 3: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

Ron Heifetz

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TECHNICAL PROBLEMS ADAPTIVE CHALLENGES

1. Easy to identify 1. Difficult to identify (easy to deny)

2. Often lend themselves to quick and easy (cut-and-dried) solution

2. Require changes in values, beliefs, roles, relationships, & approaches to work

3. Often can be solved by an authority or expert

3. People with the problem do the work of solving it

4. Require change in just one or a few places; often contained within organizational boundaries

4. Require change in numerous places; usually across organizational boundaries

5. People are generally receptive to technical solutions

5. People often resist even acknowledging adaptive challenges

6. Solutions can often be implemented quickly—even by edict

6. “Solutions” require experiments and new discoveries; they can take a long time to implement and cannot be implemented by edict

Page 4: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

What have we shifted?

6 Shifts in Mathematics

FocusCoherenceFluencyDeep UnderstandingApplicationsDual Intensity

6 Shifts in ELA/Literacy

Balancing Informational and Literary Text

Building Knowledge in the Disciplines

Staircase of ComplexityText-based AnswersWriting from SourcesAcademic Vocabulary

Page 5: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

Reading Targets

EngageNY.org5

CCSS goal: students leave the lesson having read, analyzed and understood what they have READ.

Current goal: Students leave the lesson knowing the details of the narrative and the way a particular “element” is playing out.

Page 6: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

“Students living in poverty often have a gap in their knowledge of words and knowledge about the world.”

-David Liben

EngageNY.org6

Page 7: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

• Fluency allows the brain to focus on comprehension

• Breadth of vocabulary increases comprehension

• Background knowledge increases fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension (Shanahan and Duffett 2013)

Implementing curriculum that considers these linking factors involves exposing students to grade level text, with appropriate support.

BACKGROUND KNOWLEDGE

VOCABULARY

READING

Page 8: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

[email protected]

The Complex Text Dilemma

• Understanding complex texts depends on rich understanding of many, many words.

• Comprehension fails unless the reader understands at least 95% of the words in a text.

• Richly understanding a word depends on having encountered and understood it many times in a variety of contexts.\

• One cannot learn what one doesn’t understand.

• Ideally, such scaffolding would begin on the very first day of school, with prekindergarten and kindergarten teachers reading aloud stories and nonfiction texts that build on each others’ vocabulary and ideas.

Page 9: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

Poverty + 2 Common Disabilities

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Rapid Naming

Deficit• How quickly we

link stimuli to words

Phonological Deficit

• Connecting letters and letter combos to sounds

Poverty

• Massive Language Gap

• Deliberate skills instruction (Lisa Delpit was right!)• Frequent opportunities for oral comprehension, rich language

experiences, background knowledge to keep students’ comprehension progressing

• Frequent exposures to coherent texts which are connected to the primary materials.

• Exposure to varied, spiraled, and sophisticated syntax, content knowledge, and vocabulary.

• Guided Reading with Grade Level Complexity• Leveled text structure does not prohibit domain specific

Acceleration• Consumption of a volume of text

Page 10: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

Argument vs. Persuasion

• Argument is not about trying to get others on your “side.”

• Not everyone is an renown/established expert on something

• “A logical argument…convinces the audience because of the perceived merit and reasonable-ness of the claims and proofs offered rather than either the emotions the writing evokes in the audience or the character or credentials of the writer.” (CCSS ELA appendix A)

Page 11: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

Argument vs. Persuasion

• Argument as required by the CCSS means not resorting to tabloid appeals to get attention, nor does it require broadcasting your expertise to appeal to audiences. (This isn’t fox news and it isn’t Paul Krugman.)

• Argument as required by the CCSS means using considering multiple perspectives, thinking beyond surface knowledge, critiquing the validity of one’s own thinking , anticipating counterclaims.

Page 12: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

Ron Heifetz

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TECHNICAL PROBLEMS ADAPTIVE CHALLENGES

1. Easy to identify 1. Difficult to identify (easy to deny)

2. Often lend themselves to quick and easy (cut-and-dried) solution

2. Require changes in values, beliefs, roles, relationships, & approaches to work

3. Often can be solved by an authority or expert

3. People with the problem do the work of solving it

4. Require change in just one or a few places; often contained within organizational boundaries

4. Require change in numerous places; usually across organizational boundaries

5. People are generally receptive to technical solutions

5. People often resist even acknowledging adaptive challenges

6. Solutions can often be implemented quickly—even by edict

6. “Solutions” require experiments and new discoveries; they can take a long time to implement and cannot be implementedby edict

Page 13: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

Curriculum

• Ensure that lesson design, planned scaffolding, supports, and interventions maximize student thinking, analysis, and problem solving and constantly target the standards.

• Collaborate with colleagues on the best ways to adapt lessons plans to meet the needs of all students while still targeting grade level standards.

• Make curricular planning decisions for any English Language Learners (ELLs) using the Bilingual Common Core Progressions.

Page 14: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

Data Driven Instruction

• Conduct test/task/ student-work-in-hand analysis meetings that follow a protocol such as the Analysis Meeting Protocol.

• Carefully discuss appropriate scaffolds/ supports for any students who are struggling against specific standards and push each other’s thinking to ensure student growth during all planned activities.

• Re-teach/ adjust teaching practice based on analysis of student progress against the Common Core State Standards

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Page 15: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

Culture of Safety & Development

• Communicate and foster an environment in which growth is a process that involves risk taking, making mistakes, and perseverance for students and colleagues

• Work with parents/families to help them to understand the Common Core State Standards and assessments. Provide access points for parents/families to understand shifts in instruction/ math progressions/ expectations for students like the ideas and resources accumulating on the parent page on EngageNY.org.

• Communicate specific, standards based areas of growth and development so that parents/families can track their students’ learning.

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Page 16: Benchmarking the Change Process: Where Are We Now?

Persistent Practice

• Here’s the analysis (theme, tone, character) find the evidence

• By the end of the lesson, students will know…• Oh they can’t read that because…• I want them to appreciate…• We’re supposed to read ___ texts in ___ grade.• Hermione Granger Syndrome• Buckets of Books• Disparate, disconnected pieces of knowledge

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