Podcast 27 – Enthusiastically wrapping our brains around the News and Reeves’ Research!

“The Mom” song, sung to the William Tell Overture, by Anita Renfroe What a mom says in 24 hours, condensed into 2 minutes and 55 seconds! Check this out for a good chuckle.

Middle School News & Information:

1.  Ning news:  Works nice, but watch out for the Google ads.  Some may not be suitable depending on the site topics.  Add content to the site to draw Google ads that are appropriate, otherwise, pay the bucks to loose the ads.
2.  U.S. Department of Education website:  Doing What Works – The USDE has a new website for best practices (k-12).  Currently the site has content for helping with ELL students but is planning on best practices across the school improvement spectrum.
3.  School Web Locker:  Is your IT “person” grousing about server space and teacher file space?  School Web Locker may be a solution to the problem.  The San Diego based company provides 100 mbs of space for each student and 1 gb of space for each teacher to use on their servers.  Teachers can create a homework assignment and automatically drop it into each student’s locker.  Students can turn in assignments by dropping it into the teacher’s locker.  There is a file size limit, something to consider in moving to a paperless classroom.
4a.  3 Skills needed to be globally competitive (Alan November)
1. The key to using technology in the classroom, November said, is not to train teachers to use it, but to train them on how to incorporate that technology creatively into lessons in engaging and stimulating ways.
2. The second essential skill requires every classroom to become a global communication center with a more globalized curriculum.
3. The third skill today’s students need is self-direction.
4b.  The Editor Reflects:  “Technology and Young Adolescents: Chance for a Better Future and Source of Anguish”
1.  Did folks recognize the importance and forsee the change of Gutenberg’s printing press?
2.  10 years ago could we see what impact the iPhone, iPod, and Blu Ray technologies would have on education?
3.  Are we teaching to current technology or teaching skills to assimilate new technology and apply it to our needs?
5.  Middle Level Essentials Conference in Minnesota:  April 4-5 is sold out!
6.  Innovative Practices Across the Curriculum    Lakeville, Minnesota    June 24, 2008
7.  Institute for Middle Level Leadership   Colorado Springs, Colorado  July 13-16, 2008 and Charleston, South Carolina  July 20-23, 2008
8.  Best Practices for Student Success  Baltimore, Maryland  July 28, 2008 and Fargo, North Dakota August 6, 2008
9. 
First Annual Schools to Watch Conference—Celebrating Excellence in Middle Level Education
WHEN:       Wednesday, May 7, 2008 8:15 AM – 2:45 PM
                    Eastern Time Zone
WHERE:     Bovee University Center
                    103 East Preston St.
                    Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859
                    USA
FEE:     Individual Registrant   Michigan Schools to Watch Conference $125.00
10. Software Industry Promotes Goals for School Technology from Education Week. (Education Week now includes free articles).


Reversing the Downward Slide of Enthusiasm:
Why do students lose enthusiasm?
Audience responses:

  • Peer pressure
  • Newness wearing off
  • Tired of being wrong  (Nothing breeds success like success?)
  • Lack of home support
  • Lower assessement pressure
  • Lack of Teacher enthusiasm

Presenter Response

  • No encouragement
  • Boring
  • Family issues (student becomes surrogate parent to younger siblings)
  • Long day
  • Too different from elementary
  • Rules
  • Other students
  • Teacher strictness/interest/enthusiasm
  • Too much teacher talk
  • Hard work

Academic Life History (Graph this) then ask them why?
Could the student complete a graph of their interest?

Attitude survey
Students do not come to school to be frustrated and unhappy with their assignments.
Ask students why they are here. Have them process that and write it out.

Core Values:

  • Take Risks
  • Question
  • be curious
  • Respect ideas
  • Team work
  • Problem solve
  • Frustration is OK
  • Challege ideas
  • Explore
  • Think diversely

Have the students create the aims (core value) and then sign the poster.

I am the creator of the system but the students are the experts in the system.

When you give students more power, it doesn’t mean that teachers lose theirs. It is not a zero-sum gain.

Plus/Delta
Simple T-chart
Students complete with what I learned and what could’ve been done better.  (Reflection piece for the teacher.)  (What if the teacher had a “locker” on their bulletin board where the students did this on a sticky note and the posted it on the “locker” image on the board where the teacher then can get a quick assessment of the day’s lesson.)

Reeves Research:
Core Research:
1.Defeating the “failure of hypothesis”
2.The 90  90  90 schools
3.The collaborative imperative
4.Impact of nonfiction writing
5.From the bell curve to the mountain
6.The Pygmalion Effect for adults (expectations)
7.The futility of format
8.Critical mass of implementation
9.Neworks beat hierarchies
10.Accountability is more than test scores

Stephen White – Pygmalion effect is 3 times more effective in terms of student achievement.
Belief system has a huge impact on teacher effectiveness
Critical mass: unless the majority of teachers are implementing the work, it won’t truly make a difference.

Collegue to collegue is most impactful than anything else.

Rich kids get interventions and extras.

Keys to Monitoring

  • Monitor adult actions, not just test scores
  • Monitor frequently – once a month is an absolute minumum.
  • Monitor constructively – it’s a treasure hunt, not a witch hunt. Find out what the teachers are doing right. Don’t focus on the negative. Focus on the positive.

Laughter is the common thread throughout effective teams video taped by Reeves.

Long-Term Memory:
From Dr. Robert Greenleaf:
Check out his web site for more information:

WAIT ~ PAUSE ~ REFLECTION TIMES
Defined: Short, intermittent pauses in the instructional flow designed to provide time for learners to recall, think,process, discuss, and organize current knowledge and ideas with prior understandings and information.
Researchers: Mary Budd Rowe (1987) ~ First Wait-Time; Robert J. Stahl (1990) ~ “Think-time”; Kenneth Tobin &
Capie  (1987),  William W. Wilen (1987) ~ Question Techniques
 
Research The average teacher pause after a query is 0.7 to 1.4 seconds, before comment, redirect, prompt, continuation, or redirect.

Strategy 1st WAIT TIME (after a teacher question)

  • Method ~ Allow 3-5 seconds of uninterrupted silence after a prompt to allow students to consider/recall responses.
  • Caution ~ Too much time after imprecise questions can increase confusion. More often this is a period for “recall” requiring less processing. Strategy 2nd WAIT TIME (after a student response)
  • Method ~ Provide uninterrupted silence after a prompt to allow students to consider/recall responses. Allows other students to consider whether to add to the response or offer a response of their own. This provides an opportunity for the brain to process, search, connect, organize. Strategy REFLECTIVE “PAUSE” TIME (before, after, or within commentary)
  • Method ~ Deliberately pause for 3-5 seconds after a student question, before  responding or in the middle of a statement… allowing students to consolidate thinking – requesting no input from them. This provides time to consider information in a smaller “chunk” rather than in mass.
  • Method ~ Extend the pause time to 1-2 minutes, asking students to think an idea carefully through or to write ideas down. Reflection is vital to long term memory and understanding. Strategy WORK-WAIT TIME (brief think/do task)
  • Method ~ Individuals or pairs to remain on task to complete a 30 second to 2 minute activity (silently or quietly in pairs). For Example: pairs interactions ask learners to apply skill, concept, or knowledge immediately after explanation or discussion.

MSM #26 MAMSE Reduex and You

Michigan Association of Middle School Educators Conference 
General Items
Attendance:  400 or so
Keynote speakers:  Dr. Monte Selby, Zeitouna
New book using Musical Intelligence and 6+1 Writing Traits.  Look for it May on his web site.

Individual sessions:
Dr. McVey:  Social Networking in the Middle School
Scary factor
Poster school 2.0
What are the tools?
Gcast
Wetpaint
Zimbra
We participate therefore we are.
Linkedin
Bebo
Cyworld
Xanga
Orkut
Friendster
Hi5
Facebook
Ning recommended for educators:  http://www.ning.com/
Example:  dc2008.ning.com
No HTML coding required
Can make it very private.
Librarything
Limited to the first 200 books, there’s a fee for going over that amount.
Imagine virtual book clubs.
Dr. McVey’s email:  mmcvey@emich.edu.

Alternates to Retention:
Dr. Nic Cooper

Tyrany of OR (only this or that)

If we’re asking the question about retention:
We’re assuming that all kids must be at the same place at the same time. Could we look at the systemic reasons?

Look at the system, an analogy:
A rigid ceiling restricting growth
A porous bottom allowing kids to fail and fall through the bottom.

We need to turn the system on it’s head.

How do we address the physical aspects of kids development?

Getting to Got It! Helping Struggling Students Learn How to Learn
BETTY K. GARNER
Compliance vs Understanding. Do kids really understand or do they just say “Uh, huh”?

Project Based Learning Through Negotiating and Differentiating the Curriculum
Suzanne Hopkins  hopkinss@saline.k12.mi.us
Backwards planning first:  What is it that I want to teach?
Wide variety of examples.
Key thought:  They’re going to do the project, its just a matter of choice A presentation of mastery of the material, or choice B presentation of mastery of the material.  “Red Cup/Blue Cup”


The X-Factor
Kids earn their way to rewards.
Have someone be in charge of the naming of the teams and theme.
Use theme words in the hallway
Based off of the “Joy Factor” by Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Merits: Each student starts with 5 per day and then can lose them. They did this for paperwork reasons, easier to count by deletion rather than addition.

Must keep 90% to participate in the reward.
Rules of the classroom are cause for merit loss.
School rules can also be the cause of merit loss.
Merits are only through core classes and the hallway for the team.
Team has allowed the students to “earn” back merits for some kids (depending upon the reason for Merit loss).

Rewards (try to keep the reward (what it is) a secret until it happens):
Miss one class period per month.
Students not participating are supervised by a teacher. (There is no “punishment”, they are just missing the reward. Basically a study hall)
Sundae Monday
Movie Madness (Movie & Popcorn)
White Elephant
PinBall (dodge ball with a bowling pin behind)
Card Games (different card games in different rooms)
Capture the flag
Duck Races – bought plastic ducks
Musical Plates (spin on Musical chairs) – decorate a paper plate, went outside, put plates in a circle, throw plate in the air, walk around, when the music stops, they had to find their plate.

It’s only an hour, once a month.

What we’d like to see developed at MAMSE:

  1. Non-compete clause with MRA.
  2. Conversation opportunities with peers built in to the schedule so that folks don’t have to miss a session to verbally process what they’ve seen and learned.
  3. Some time to interact with the vendors outside of session time.
  4. No sessions during lunch.

Resources from our Presentation at MAMSE

  1.   Skype:  www.skype.com
  2.   Required t-shirt:  http://www.thinkgeek.com/tshirts/generic/991e/
  3.   Hardware:  we recommend www.apple.com/store
  4.    Software: WordPress, PodCast Maker, PodPress
  5.    Free Options: Gabcast, Gcast, Blogger.

MAMSE Exhibits/Vendors

There was an impressive supply of vendors and exhibitors at this year’s Michigan Association of Middle School Educators’ Annual Conference. I didn’t get a chance to visit with all of them but here’s a sampling of some of the ones that caught my eye.

Michigan Environmental Education Curriculum – Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ): The DEQ has five curriculum modules they can send to your classroom for mini-units or curriculum support (GLCE/MCF). Ecosystems, Land Use, Water Quality, Energy Resources, and Air Quality kits include a binder, a CD-ROM, extension lessons, background information for teachers, hands-on activities and experiments, MEAP style unit assessments (not useful in October), and colorful posters and worksheets. The kits incorporate both science and economic sustainability as well as the role of government in environmental decision making. If you’re interested in more information on the kits and free workshops and materials, contact the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality at: www.michigan.gov/deq-meecs. I’d even try if your school isn’t in Michigan.

Michigan Art Education Association: The MAEA holds an annual conference for art teachers and advocates for the arts in Michigan. They also sponsor an art contest for art students and are affiliated with the National Art Education Association. Through them the National Junior Art Honor Society is made available for middle school students. Students have the opportunity to participate in the Middle School State Exhibit and award winners from the Michigan Youth Arts Festival are made part of the Governor’s Traveling Show which is shown around the state for one year. For more information contact them at www.miarted.org.

The Ann Arbor Hands-On Museum: This is a hands on science museum with a particular emphasis placed on physics. Students get to handle objects and see how science describes the real world. Field trips can be arranged through the museum at a cost of $5.00 per student and an additional student lab can be arranged for $3.00 more per student. There is a small fee for use of the lunchroom if your group is eating on site. An additional experience to consider in conjunction with a trip to the museum is an Amtrack trip. The museum is two blocks up and two blocks over from the train station in Ann Arbor. Outreach programs that come to the school are also available for things like parent nights and crime labs. They also maintain a distance learning program. You can reach the Ann Arbor Hands-On Science Museum at (734) 995-5439, education@aahom.org, or at www.aahom.org. This is a nice alternative to Toledo, Ohio’s COSI Science Museum which has closed their building but maintains their distance learning program.

mimio Portable Interactive Whiteboard System: The mimio company was present with a demonstration of their smartboard system. The number of templates and resources from the company is growing which makes the mimio a serious choice for teachers and principals in expanding classroom learning to the internet and reaching into the home or after school hours. If you’re interested in looking at the product wander over to www.mimio.com. You can also reach the Michigan representative at jenni.molnar@mimio.com.

Eastern Michigan UniversityMaster of Arts in Middle Level Education: EMU has a masters program centered around NMSA’s Standards and focused on preparing teachers for the middle level classroom. No GRE or Thesis is required for the program. Fall and winter, classes are in the evenings and assignments are classroom based for incorporation into your curriculum. Cohort classes include Middle Level Theory & Practice, Issues in Middle Level Curriculum, and Effective Teaching in Middle Schools. If you’re looking at developing and enriching your teaching you should consider this program. Contact Dr. Pat Williams-Boyd at either patwilliamsboyd@aol.com or call (734) 417-9947.

I ‘d love to hear about the vendors and exhibitors you visited at the conference. Post a message and tell us!

Ohio Middle School Association 2008

OMSA logo

I gave a presentation to the Ohio Middle School Association’s Annual Conference in Columbus this year and promised folks I’d post the link to the presentation at Middle School Matters. The presentation contains video and may take a while to download. To advance through the presentation, click the presentation. This way you can spend as much time as you like going through the presentation. Please drop us a line here if you attended the presentation or the conference.

Ohio Middle School Association Presentation 2008

Backward Design and You

Upcoming Events:
Literacy and Learning, March 8, Seattle, WA
Michigan Association of Middle School Educators, March 13-14 in Saline, MI
Middle Level Essentials, April 4-5, Minneapolis, MN

National Schools to Watch/The National Forum to Accelerate Middle Grades Reform: June 21-23
Innovative Practices Across the Curriculum: Rick Wormeli, June 24, Lakeville, MN

Advisory Activity:

Newspaper Tent:
Materials: newspaper and cellophane tape.
Task: build a freestanding tent that their entire group can fit into.

Frustrations Give Rise to New Push for Science Literacy

Education Week

What is science? The answer to that question is part of what is traditionally defined as “scientific literacy,” or the ability to understand science, its role in society, and make informed decisions as citizens, based on scientific evidence and knowledge. Scientists and educators have long recognized the importance of that skill. Today, many of them are pressing to make sure that science literacy occupies a more central place in standards and curricula, as well as in textbooks and teaching materials.45rtedfghbn

Backward Design

Understanding by Design: The Backward Design Model

“To begin with the end in mind means to start with a clear understanding

of your destination. It means to know where you’re going so that you

always in the right direction.” (Covey, 1994)

The backward design model is comprised of the following three stages:

I. Identify desired results

  • Worth being familiar with: What do we want students to read, view, research and otherwise encounter?
  • Important to know & do:

    Mastery required at this level. Important knowledge (facts, concepts,

    & principles) and skills (processes, strategies, & methods).

  • “Enduring” understanding: What we want students to “get inside of.”

Wiggins & McTighe offer four criteria, or filters, to use in selecting ideas and processes to teach for understanding.

Filter 1

To what extent does the idea, topic, or process represent a “big idea” having enduring value beyond the classroom?

Filter 2

To what extent does the idea, topic, or process reside at the heart of the discipline?

Filter 3

To what extent does the idea, topic, or process require uncoverage?

Filter 4

To what extent does the idea, topic, or process offer potential for engaging students?

The Six Facets of Understanding

In

the Understanding by Design model, there has been developed a

multifaceted view of what makes up a mature understanding, a six-sided

view of the concept. The six facets are explanation, interpretation,

application, perspective, empathy, and self-knowledge. They are most

easily summarized by specifying the particular achievement each facet

reflects.

When we truly understand we:

can explain: provide thorough, supported, and justifiable accounts of phenomena, facts, and data

can interpret:

tell meaningful stories; offer apt translations; provide a revealing

historical or personal dimension to ideas and events; make it personal

or accessible through images, anecdotes, analogies, and model

can apply: effectively use and adapt what we know in diverse contexts

have perspective: see and hear points of view through critical eyes and ears; see the big picture (connecting prior knowledge to new material?)

can empathize: find value in what others might find odd, alien, or implausible; perceive sensitively on the basis of prior direct experience

have self-knowledge:

perceive the personal style, prejudices, projections, and habits of

mind that both shape and impede our own understanding; we are aware of

what we do not understand and why understanding is so hard (Wiggins and

McTighe, 1998)

II. Determine acceptable evidence

How

will we know if students have achieved the desired results and met the

expectations? What will we accept as evidence of student understanding

and proficiency? What is evidence of in-depth understanding as opposed

to superficial or naive understanding? What kinds of assessment

evidence will anchor our curricular units and thus guide our

instruction? This approach

encourages teachers and curriculum planners to first

think like an assessor before designing specific units and lessons, and

to consider up front how they will determine whether students have

attained the desired understandings.

  • Performance Based
  • Multiple Choice

III. Plan learning experiences and instruction

Clearly,

we want our designs to be engaging but engaging work is insufficient.

The work must also be effective, must promote maximum achievement, and

must demonstrate that students have achieved the targeted

understandings. An engaging design stimulates students to actively

participate whereas an effective design includes appropriate evidence

that desired results have been achieved.

The big picture of a Design approach

Key Design Question

Design Construction

Filters

(Design Criteria)

What the Final Design Accomplishes

Stage 1:


What is worthy and requiring of understanding?

National Standards.


State Standards.


PGCPS Standards.


Regional topic opportunities.


Teacher expertise and interest.

Enduring ideas.


Opportunities for authentic, discipline-based work.


Uncoverage.


Engaging.

Unit framed around enduring understandings and essential questions.

Stage 2:


What is evidence of understanding?

Six facets of understanding.


Continuum of assessment types.

Valid


Reliable.


Sufficient.


Authentic work.


Feasible.


Student friendly.

Unit anchored in credible and educationally vital evidence of the desired understandings.

Stage 3:


What learning experiences and teaching promote understanding, interest, and excellence?

Research-based repertoire of learning & teaching strategies.


Essential & enabling knowledge and skill.

WHERE is it going?


Hook the students.


Explore and equip.


Rethink and revise.


Exhibit and evaluate.

Coherent learning experiences and teaching that will evoke and develop

the desired understandings, promote interest, and make excellent

performance more likely.

http://xnet.rrc.mb.ca/glenh/understanding_by_design.htm

Podcast #24 Free, Tech and Class Size

This Week in the News:

Class-Size Reduction of Limited Value on Achievement Gap, Study Finds

Reviewing data from Project STAR—a longitudinal research study on class-size reduction in Tennessee and the most famous experiment on the topic—Spyros Konstantopoulos, an assistant professor of education and social policy at Northwestern University, in Evanston, Ill., said that it’s a “tempting” idea to think that having fewer students assigned to a teacher will reduce the achievement gaps between students.

Researchers Want NAEP to Measure More Than Academics

Reassessing the Achievement Gap: Fully Measuring What Students Should be Taught in School” argues that NAEP results offer a “distorted” picture of student achievement because of their exclusive focus on academic skills and shift attention away from nontested areas that often fall under the purview of schools.

“When you focus only on basic academic skills, you create incentives to redirect all the attention and resources away from broader goals to narrow academic skills,” said Richard Rothstein, a research associate at the Washington-based think tank Economic Policy Institute. “What gets measured gets done. The idea is that we’re not going to restore balance to our schools unless we measure all those things that we expect schools to do.”

Our Take on the Future of Education:

Digital Natives vs Digital Immigrants (Prensky)
Ohio Middle School Association Presentations that tie in with this topic:
Misty O’Connor – Point, Click, Learn, CEO www.mistyoconnor.com (877) 592-2617 (Mention you heard/saw it on Middle School Matters!)
Skype: www.skype.com
Second Life: http://secondlife.com
You Tube: www.youtube.com
Jing Project: www.jingproject.com
Teacher Tube: http://www.teachertube.com
Crappy Graphs: http://crappygraphs.com
http://mistysdigitaldigressions.blogspot.com

The Tech-10! by Paul Gigliotti (gigliotti11@hotmail.com) and Nancy Rundell (marundell@yahoo.com)
1. The Force Multiplier
2. Customized Lessons for Students
3. Facilitate Active Learning
4. Greater Accessibility
5. Learning Communities
6. Motivate Students
7. Content Literacy
8. At-Risk Intervention
9. Special Education
10. Anchored Assessment

#23 Special NCLB Innovation

Events & News

1.  The Ohio Middle School Association’s Annual Conference in Columbus, OH meets this week.  (Conference Program)
2.  Middle Level Essentials Conference, April 4-5, 2008 in Minneapolis
3.  The Michigan Association of Middle School Educators Conference in Saline, MI, March 13-14.

Advisory:  Origami
So caught between the Reading Committee’s demand for dropping everything and keeping Advisory moving and active?  What about taking the pages of an origami book, offering several selections based on level of difficulty, and allowing the students to pick a project to produce and then teach others in the advisory?  Scale it to teaching another advisory (preferably another grade level).

Place it in order:
8,5,4,1,9,7,6,3,2,0
Why do these numbers belong in this order?

Get kids to think in different ways. This comes from a 16 year old in New York. He rode the bus for 2 hours a day. He started a “logic class” in the back of the bus. In order to join the class, a student had to present a logic problem. This one comes from a 13 or 14 year old.

Special Ed must Give way to NCLB:

http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2008/02/20/24nclb.h27.html?tmp=820046599
A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, in Chicago, ruled unanimously on Feb. 11 that even if the NCLB law was at odds with the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, the special education law “must give way” because NCLB is the newer statute.
But the 7th Circuit panel quickly moved on to conclude that, on the merits, the Illinois suit “is too weak to justify continued litigation.”
“There are many school districts that are missing AYP only because of special-needs children, and only because they are being required by the regulators to measure [such students’] progress by standardized tests, in a manner that is inconsistent with their” individualized education programs, Mr. Izzo said.

Reading List:

Innovate Like Edison:  The Success System of America’s Greatest Inventor  Innovation Literacy

“We’ve got to get every member of the organization, from top to bottom, literate in innovation just like we make them literate in finance, or literate in marketing, or literate in an other management disciplines.  Innovation is not about ideas and creativity, it’s a whole discipline about how you turn an idea into reality.  Innovation literacy has to be across the board.  It’s got to be done.”

Edison’s Five Competencies of Innovation:
1.  Solution-centered Mindset:  Setting the goal and defining success at the outset.
2.  Kaleidoscopic Thinking:  Making creative connections between ideas and concepts.
3.  Full-spectrum Engagement:  Balancing work and play, solitude and collaboration, concentration and relaxation.
4.  Mastermind Collaboration:  The “… coordination of knowledge and effort in a spirit of harmony, between two or more people, for the attainment of a definite purpose.”  -Napoleon Hill
5.  Super-value Creation
See a sample here:
“He formed multidisciplinary teams to develop his products.”  – Curtis R. Carlson

Commenters Criticize Spellings After Homecoming

dh-02_13_08.spellings.jpg

Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings, at right, is barnstorming states trying to improve NCLB’s image. The press coverage of her stops so far has been rather favorable, leaving out some of the voices of the law’s most strident critics. See, for example, this story in the San Diego Union-Tribune.

But when the secretary stopped in her hometown of Houston last week, commenters on this Houston Chronicle story weren’t buying her message. One pointed out the logical inconsistency of all students reaching grade level if that term is defined as the 50th percentile. Another calls her a name that my sons (ages 10 and 7) like to use on each other, and then adds that the secretary enrolled one of her daughters in a Catholic school. (That’s news to me. Send me an e-mail if you know this to be true). All in all, not a good hometown reception.

But I doubt Spellings will be deterred by these remarks. She’s been using pseudo-religious language about NCLB’s achievement goal, calling it “righteous” in interviews and public appearances. Maybe she’ll find comfort in Matthew 13:57.

http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/NCLB-ActII/

NCLB for Lawyers & Advocates:
Questions for the Attorney and Advocate

  • Is the child proficient in reading?
  • Is the child proficient in auditory processing?
  • Does the child have phonemic awareness?
  • What is the child’s grade equivalent level when reading aloud as measured by the Gray Oral Reading Test?
  • What is the child’s grade equivalent level when reading silently as measured by the Woodcock Reading Mastery Tests Revised or the Gates MacGinitie Reading Test?
  • If the child is not proficient in reading, what steps has the school taken to bring the child to proficiency?
  • Has the school administered a screener? If so, what were the findings?
  • Has the school administered a diagnostic reading test? If so, what were the findings?
  • What reading program is the school using to teach the child to read?
  • Is this program a research-based reading program? Does this reading program include the “essential components” listed in 20 U. S. C. § 6368(3)?
  • What research supports the use of this program?
  • What assessments does the district use to identify children who may be at risk for reading failure or difficulty learning to read? Has the district used such an assessment with this child? What were the findings?
  • What “additional educational assistance” is the district providing to this student?
  • Is the child’s teacher qualified to teach reading?

http://www.harborhouselaw.com/articles/nclb.reading.research.htm

MSM #22 Advisory, News and You

Teaching Ambassador Fellowship
http://www.ed.gov/programs/teacherfellowship/index.html

Margaret Spellings is asking teachers with three years or more classroom experience to apply to be an “Ambassador” teacher and consult with the Department of Education on the application of No Child Left Behind. There are three levels of participation. Twenty-Five Teacher Ambassadors will be selected from applicants who are highly qualified and paid an hourly rate. 20 Classroom Fellows will be selected and paid a stipend on an hourly rate and 5 will be Washington Fellows and work on a one year contract for the Department of Education out of Washington D.C. itself. The participants will put together a project for them to complete during the year and the U.S. Department of Ed. will provide resources to finding funding through grants and other sources. Collaboration will be encouraged after the program is over in June of 2009. Applicants have to demonstrate an impact on student achievement, potential for contribution to the field and leadership qualities.

Teams that Make a Difference Award – NMSA

Know a team that has done an outstanding job implementing the middle school concept, give ’em some NMSA recognition!

Advisory Idea: Teaching Moments – Educational Ownership – Homework Help
http://www.teachingmoments.com/ (a curriculum)

Goal Setting for Students is divided into eight sections:

  • What is Success
  • Principles of Goal Setting
  • Samples & Practice
  • Investing in Yourself
  • Measuring Your Progress
  • Meeting the Challenges
  • How to Get Started
  • Summary

The website promotes their book with the above sections. In addition to the book, there is an email component that provides regular features and topics. I love the initial sentence on the Teacher page, “Teachers want you to succeed but YOU have to help them!” On the website are free resources called “Teaching Moments” and many are archived for quick usage. Here’s what a sample looks like:

10 Ways to Help Your Teacher

Your teachers want you to succeed, but YOU have to help them.
They teach you about a particular subject like science, math, or English. And they do much, much more.

In combination with your parents, teachers show you how to take responsibility, how to get along with others, how to handle stress, how to improve your communication skills and how to believe in yourself. They teach you how to manage your time, how to set goals, and how to make better personal decisions. So how can you help them?

10 Ways to Help Your Teachers

  1. Listen – really listen – in class
  2. Improve your note-taking skills
  3. Take part in the class discussions
  4. Review your subject notes before class
  5. If necessary, change your seat assignment
  6. Do an extra-credit project
  7. Ask questions
  8. Double check your homework and test material before handing them in
  9. Hand your homework in on time
  10. Two days before a test, do some additional studying in that subject area

Teachers have goals, called lesson plans, for each of their classes. For example, how do you teach students about the metric system if they have never been exposed to the concept? A lesson plan is a step-by-step breakdown of how the teacher plans to accomplish this task. Then, how do teachers measure how well you are learning the material?

You guessed it. Tests, quizzes, class participation and term papers are the tools they use to measure their success. They tell the teacher if your class needs further review or can move to a new topic.

Here’s the key. The above ten rules will help your teacher succeed. The bonus – you will succeed also.

Ideas for implementation:
Take one item for the week and work to improve in that area.
Show your teachers what you are doing and ask for their help.
As a student who is good in note taking to give you a couple of pointers.

Taken from: Teaching Moments at http://www.teachingmoments.com/Teaching-Moments-10-Ways-to-Help-Your-Teacher.html

Transitions: Smoothing the Way for Students and Parents –
In combination with your parents, teachers show you how to take responsibility, how to get along with others, how to handle stress, how to improve your communication skills and how to believe in yourself. They teach you how to manage your time, how to set goals, and how to make better personal decisions. So how can you help them?

What kids are concerned about:

  • Changing classes
  • Having multiple teachers
  • Not having recess
  • Peer Pressure
  • New Friends
  • Lockers & Locks
  • Finding the Bathroom
  • Changing into P.E. Clothes

Note: Survey your students to find their particular concerns and needs.

How to help:

  1. During Spring have 6th grades go back to the elementary schools
    1. Take work samples
    2. Explain how things really work
    3. Reassure the students
  2. Allow students to tour the building and ask questions
  3. Have a Parent Night to allow parents to tour the building and ask questions
  4. Distribute student schedules just before school starts

Wisconsin moves to Avert Court Shutdown of Virtual Schools:
From Education Week – January 30th edition:

Wisconsin lawmakers announced a compromise this week that would allow virtual schools to remain open and receive the same amount of state aid as they do now.
“Allowing parents to choose virtual schools helps keep Wisconsin a national leader in education policy,” said Mr. Davis, the chairman of the education committee in the state Assembly, the legislature’s lower chamber.
Virtual schools allow students to learn from home under the guidance of their parents and instructors who teach over the Internet.

They are a growing and popular option for families who want their children to learn from home instead of at traditional public schools.
But critics, such as teachers’ unions, have started to question their quality and complain they drain money from public schools. Some say they amount to taxpayer- subsidized home schooling.

“People are paying attention because online learning is really a growing phenomenon,” Ms. Patrick said of the Wisconsin controversy. “And for us to arbitrarily shut down online learning for students is a very dangerous precedent to set.”

Mr. Lehman said he was proud of the compromise, pointing to new rules that would require schools to provide a minimum number of hours of education per year and have parent advisory boards that meet regularly, among other provisions.

Professional Practice

Middle School Matters Podcast #21

How has professional practice changed over the last 10 years?

  • Medical Model.
  • Teaching ALL (Each and Every) Student
    • Inside-Outside in the Middle Reflective Strategies for Middle Level Teachers by David L. Puckett
    • Drumming to the Beat of a Different Marcher by Dr. Debbie Silver
  • Data
  • Collaboration
  • Expectations
  • Edutainer

How do you tear down the walls of the fiefdom?

  • Establish a relationship with another teacher.
  • Videotape yourself
  • Discuss practice
  • Interdisciplinary units

Observation of another

  • Set up a reciprocal arrangement
  • Agree to the ground rules and norms of observation.

Center the Observation and discussion around observable characteristics:

Observable Characteristics of Effective Teachers

  • Begins class promptly and in a well-organized way.
  • Treats students with respect and caring.
  • Provides the significance/importance of information to be learned.
  • Provides clear explanations.
  • Holds attention and respect of students, practices effective classroom management.
    • “Studium Discendi Voluntate Quae Cogi Non Potest Constat.” – Marcus Fabius Quintilianus
  • Uses active, hands-on student learning.
  • Varies his/her instructional techniques.
  • Provides clear, specific expectations for assignments.
  • Provides frequent and immediate feedback to students on their performance. Praises student answers and uses probing questions to clarify/elaborate answers.
  • Provides many concrete, real life, practical examples.
  • Draws inferences from examples/models and uses analogies.
  • Creates a class environment which is comfortable for students….allows students to speak freely.
  • Teaches at an appropriately fast pace, stopping to check student understanding and engagement.
  • Communicates at the level of all students in class.
  • Has a sense of humor!
  • Uses nonverbal behavior, such as gestures, walking around, and eye contact to reinforce his/her comments.
  • Presents him/herself in class as “real people.”
  • Focuses on the class objective and does not let class get sidetracked.
  • Uses feedback from students (and others) to assess and improve teaching.
  • Reflects on own teaching to improve it

http://www1.umn.edu/ohr/teachlearn/resources/peer/guidelines/index.html

National Middle School Association Standards

  • NMSA standards and guidelines could be turned into observation statements and used to help assess teacher performance.
  • What if we took a snapshot of ourselves as teachers from the viewpoint of the stakeholders?
  • Survey Administrators, Parents, Students, and Teachers.

Other:

  • The Ohio Middle School Association’s Annual Conference, February 21-22, 2008 in Columbus, Ohio (www.ohiomsa.org)
    • Sample of session topics:
      • Dealing with difficult people, Ed. Vittardi
      • Because You Teach, Monte Selby (Keynote)
      • NMSA Toolkit, John Swaim
      • Effective Collaboration Practices, J. Wilson
      • Enhanced Leadership: The Principal’s Role as a Change Agent, D. Major
      • Podcasting: A Creative Hook to Master the Achievement Tests, H. Grunenberg
      • Starting RTI at the Middle Level, B. Kermayner
      • Transescent Transitions to Middle School, S. McGirr (Magnolia Room, Session III 1:45 – 2:45 p.m.)
      • Engage ’em, Assess ’em, … and Watch ’em Achieve: The Classroom Performance System, D. Delaney
  • The Michigan Association of Middle School Educators, March 13-14, 2008 in Saline, Michigan. (www.mamse.org)
  • Japanese Scientists put a camera in a brain!
    • What I could do with this ….
  • Michigan Joint Education Conference, July 25, 2008 (www.mijec.org)
    • Presenters wanted on interdisciplinary education topics.