m indful t eaching f ramework l evel 2 st. helena parish school district district vision: to develop...

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MINDFUL TEACHING FRAMEWORK LEVEL 2 St. Helena Parish School District District Vision: To develop a productive educational system that increases student achievement, develops educator effectiveness, and builds public confidence. Clif St. Germain, Ph.D.

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MINDFUL TEACHING FRAMEWORKLEVEL 2

St. Helena Parish School District

District Vision:

To develop a productive educational system that increases student achievement, develops educator effectiveness, and builds public confidence.

Clif St. Germain, Ph.D.

OVERVIEW

In schools that meet teachers’ needs for resources, professional development and collegiality, more teachers are likely to be caring and effective.

These teachers are also more likely to give students a feeling of being cared about, promote students’ confidence in their ability to succeed in school and show how academic success is linked to their future success

Student beliefs about their ability to succeed in school has a direct effect on their level of academic engagement

THE PROGRESS PRINCIPLE

Knowing what to do to energize and nourish high levels of positive engagement— and avoiding what does the opposite— turns out to be a key to building high performing organizations.

People are most motivated and energized when they feel that they have the resources to overcome obstacles and make progress.

  The negative effects of butting into obstacles and not

getting anywhere carry three times more negative weight than making progress carries positive weight.

  High priority leadership actions include: creating the

conditions that help people succeed by removing unnecessary obstacles, supporting group development, capacity building, and promoting helping behaviors through competence, trust and accessibility.

 

 

Strengths are characteristics that give us an advantage. A highly competent superintendent with a deep commitment to learning,

raising standards, building a collaborative culture, and learning success for all St. Helena students

A philosophy grounded in promoting across the board capacity building for all

A focus on classroom resources and eliminating negatives to learning A talented and dedicated District Leadership Team that meets monthly to

devise strategies that link leaning initiatives to implementation in schools A seasoned and effective secondary principal and two promising

administrators at the elementary school A cadre of strong master teachers and lead teachers at the school sites A number of partnerships that bring additional resources directly into St.

Helena classrooms including SPDG, Southeastern Louisiana University, President’s Arts Turnaround Program and Regions Bank

Recipient of several Grants for enriching classroom learning 1:1 Technology footprint New and improved school facilities and a number of new academic

programs (i.e. Literacy Initiatives & ACT preparation classes) Opportunity to have a complete K-12 student population

Challenges are characteristics that, unless met, place us at a disadvantage. Assimilating middle school teachers and students into the St.

Helena learning culture A lingering reputation for academic failure despite the facts on

the ground Dealing with the current political firestorm surrounding Common

Core Standards, PARC testing and changes in how teachers are evaluated

Helping students understand and accept the importance of regular attendance, persistent effort and cooperative behaviors in school

Helping teachers embrace the challenges of professional development and teamwork as part of their job description

Winning over skeptics in the St. Helena community Making more efficient use of academic performance data to

improve classroom instruction Building inter-school alliances

.

MULTIPLIER EFFECT Mindful Teaching is a capacity building framework designed to foster the sharing of specific knowledge and skills embedded in the essentials of quality teaching. It provides a context for examining and personalizing

best practices in teaching It illustrates a cyclical teaching progression that

begins with lower levels of cognitive complexity and moves to higher levels of cognitive complexity

It balances taking in information with guided practice, assessment and creative applications of new learning

It fosters teacher-to-teacher consistency regarding the major components of a research-based teaching process- A Multiplier Effect.

MOTION LEADERSHIP

In St. Helena District Schools a key leadership driver is to

promote conditions for learning in every classroom so as to

create a “systemic” multiplier effect with regard to student

academic gains.

Tri-Level Approach to ProfessionalDevelopment

Discussion Topic

TODAY WE WILL: Review the connection between Bloom’s

Taxonomy and the 4 Phases of Mindful Teaching

Review elements of high engagement learning

Explore resources for infusing greater levels of student engagement thru the use of technology

Invite suggestions as to how returning teachers can help new teachers with the implementation of Mindful Teaching in classrooms

THE MINDFUL TEACHING FRAMEWORK

Mindful Teaching is a capacity building framework designed to foster the sharing of specific knowledge and skills embedded in the essentials of quality teaching. It provides a context for examining and personalizing best

practices in teaching (collaborative capacity building tool) It emphasizes the importance of high engagement

learning It illustrates a teaching progression that begins with lower

levels of cognitive complexity and moves to higher levels of cognitive complexity

It balances taking in information, guided practice and creative applications of new learning

It fosters teacher-to-teacher consistency regarding the major components of a research-based teaching process.

.

MINDFUL TEACHING PRACTICES

Level 2

.

Activity

Discretionary Autonomy

How are Bloom’s Taxonomy and the Mindful Teaching

Progression Similar?

MINDFUL TEACHING© THINKING PROGRESSION

Using your Mindful Teaching Progression

Placemat-How could you organize

the 4 Phases to better suit your current teaching

practices?

.

Activity

Promoting Higher levels

of Student Engagement

WHAT DOES HIGH STUDENT ENGAGEMENT LOOK LIKE?

Focused Attention Active Participation Task Persistence Completing Work Enthusiasm and Cooperation Interest and Willingness to ask Questions Seeking Assistance with Difficult Tasks Pride in Success Self-Directed Learning Using Meta-Cognitive Learning Learning Buzz

40 Ways to Leave a Lesson Handout Activity–

Survey the text of the article with a colleague and

note promising engagement strategies.

.

Activity

Greater Infusion of Technology and the

Arts in Teaching

High School: By department, using your 50

ways to Integrate Technology handout-

explore promising sites and prepare to report back

to the larger group.

Elementary School: In grade level groups review

“A School Revitalized Through the Arts and

discuss plans for next year.

Closing Thoughts:

Turn to pages 21-22 in Teaching Up for a closing discussion

In Readiness the instructional intention is …

To create a supportive learning climate that

prepares learners to initiate new learning; to make new

learning interesting and doable ; to provide a context that encourages students to

risk new learning Basics: discussion with

feedback/agenda use and word walls.

In Delivery the instructional intention is…

To explain important ideas in ways that learners can begin to make sense of them, think about them, remember them and prepare to use them in ways that lead to deeper

understanding. Basics: direct teach with probing and

affirming and technology use for illustrations.

In Performance the instructional intention is…

To provide opportunities for learners to apply new

learning in ways that deepen understanding, invite problem solving and

demonstration of knowledge and skill. Basics: guided practice, flexible groups,

pair-share /formative assessments with feedback.

In Transfer the instruction

intention is…

•Readiness is the introductory phase of the learning process… Readiness provides the structure for students to initiate learning?•Delivery is the information gathering phase of the learning process. Delivery is the information exchange segment of the learning process.•Performance is the application phase of the learning process. Performance is practice “doing it right.”•Transfer is the integration phase of the learning process. Transfer provides evidence that students know and can use new learning as a foundation for future learning?

Which classroom practices make the

biggest difference in student learning?

•Reinforcing effort and providing personal recognition•Setting objectives and providing feedback•Using advance and graphic illustrations•Identifying similarities and differences•Probing with questions, using cues •Summarizing and providing feedback•Cooperative learning and group work•Meaningful practice with feedback•Testing new ideas

What can individual teachers do to help each

other teach more mindfully?

•In cluster meetings share craft knowledge about what works (and resources you use) in your classroom•Include management strategies•Agree to serve as a sounding board for new ideas from other teachers•Invite other teachers to visit your classroom