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Faculty Presentation on Block Scheduling
1. Please, find your name and sit in your assigned seat.
Thank you for your cooperation!
Talk at your tables about one student you had tremendous success with
during 1st semester and one who struggled in your class.
Why do you think Student 1 was successful, and why was Student 2
unsuccessful? Name 1—2 things that would have helped Student 2 be more
successful in your class.
OO ND W
2. Presented By: Y. Brown, M. LaCerte & S. Ross
January 3—4, 2013
Scotlandville Magnet High School Teacher Retreat
5. B L O C K
BACKGROUND
INFO:
What do you already
know about
Common Core and
Block Scheduling?
WHAT I LEARNED
FROM THE
LESSON:
Take notes
throughout the
presentation
MY OPINIONS:
List your thoughts
and feelings about
anything you hear
during the
presentation
PERSONAL
CHANGES:
As you listen to the
presentation, list
things you plan to do
in order to
successful transition
to the 90-minute
class period.
KNOWLEDGE
CHECK:
Look back at what
you listed under
―Background Info‖.
Was all of your
information correct?
Add to what you
now know about
Common Core and
Block Scheduling.
6. THE BODY OF OUR
SCHOOL
Head: one dream or goal you have for our school
Ears: something you have heard about our school (positive or negative)
Eyes: what you would like to see happen at our school
Shoulders: one school-wide/classroom problem that weighs you down
Hands: something you did 1st semester that you wish you would have
―hand‖led differently
Stomach: something that makes you sick about some of your students
Heart: something you love about our school
Right foot: one new thing you plan to do to move your students in the right
direction
Be prepared to share!!
7. GOALS FOR OUR TIME
Teachers will be able to explain the connection between the
instructional shifts required by the transition to the Common Core
and the adoption of Block Scheduling.
Teachers will examine the advantages and disadvantages of the
block schedule and begin working together to develop plans to
maximize the positives and minimize the negatives associated with
this transition.
Teachers will engage in activities that help foster their
understanding of each part of the block and increase their
repertoire of strategies for implementing each component.
9. What is the Common Core State Standards Initiative?
The Common Core State Standards Initiative is a state-led effort to establish a shared set
of clear educational standards for English language arts and mathematics . These
standards are designed to ensure that students graduating from high school are
prepared to go to college or enter the workforce and that parents, teachers, and students
have a clear understanding of what is expected of them. The standards are
benchmarked to international standards to guarantee that our students are competitive in
the emerging global marketplace.
10. Until now, every state has had its own set of academic
standards, meaning public education students at the same
grade level in different states have been expected to achieve
at different levels. This initiative will allow states to share
information effectively and help provide all students with an
equal opportunity for an education that will prepare them to go
to college or enter the workforce, regardless of where they
live.
11. T H I N G S A R E C H A N G I N G !!!
Ready or not, things are changing… we have to change too!
Lets take a look at a few things that significantly impacting the
state of education in our countryhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XVQ1ULfQawk
12. THINGS ARE CHANGING!!!
If this is the world our children are living in and the one we are
preparing them for, what does this mean for the structure and
work of our schools??
13. ACT‘S ‗FIRST LOOK‘ AT THE COMMON CORE
STANDARDS – ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS
38
51 53
reading writing language
16
Percent of 2009 11th graders scoring at college-career ready benchmark
SOURCE: ACT, Inc., A First Look at the Common Core and College and Career Readiness, December 2010
14. ACT‘S ‗FIRST LOOK‘ – ACHIEVEMENT GAP
ELA
47
60 63
11
24 26
19
33 32
reading writing language
White African American Latino
17
Percent of 2009 11th graders scoring at college-career ready benchmark
SOURCE: ACT, Inc., A First Look at the Common Core and College and Career Readiness, December 2010
16. COMMON TYPES OF BLOCK SCHEDULE
Fall Semester Spring Semester
Course 1 Course 5
Course 2 Course 6
Course 3 Course 7
Course 4 Course 8
Monday
A Day
Tuesday
B Day
Wednesday
A Day
Thursday
B Day
Friday
A Day
Monday
B Day
Course 1 Course 5 Course 1 Course 5 Course 1 Course 5
Course 2 Course 6 Course 2 Course 6 Course 2 Course 6
Course 3 Course 7 Course 3 Course 7 Course 3 Course 7
Course 4 Course 8 Course 4 Course 8 Course 4 Course 8
Finish an entire course in
ONE semester. See the same
kids every day. Teach 3
blocks, off 1 block.
Take the entire
year to finish a
course. See
students every
OTHER day.
Teach 3 blocks
and off 1 block.
*More like a
college schedule.
18. OUR FIRST TRIAL RUN
**THIS IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE
January 14, 2013 January 15, 2013
1st Hour 1st Hour (Enrichment)
3rd Hour 2nd Hour
5th Hour 4th Hour
7th Hour 6th Hour
(Gainey & Brucato 27)
19. MODEL A FOR 90 MINUTE CLASS
Time Activity
10 min. Greeting, Announcement of Objectives
25 min. Teacher-directed, whole class instruction, mini-lesson
30 min. Student-centered/teacher assisted activity
15 min. Whole Group Discussion on Student-Centered Work
Could include student presentation
10 min. Formative Assessment, Homework Assignment, Closure of
Day‘s Work
20. MODEL B FOR 90 MINUTE CLASS
Time Activity
10 min. Review, Focus on Objectives/ Warm-up
15 min. Lecture/ Facts review
25 min. Small Group Work
25 min. Small Group Presentation
15 min. Formative Assessment, Homework Assignment, Closure of
Day‘s Work
21. PROS & CONS OF BLOCK SCHEDULING
Divide your poster into FOUR equal sides.
Label like the chart below. List 2—3 advantages and disadvantages of having a 90-
minute class period for both teachers and students.
Teacher PROS Teacher CONS
Student PROS Student CONS
22. TIME TO READ…
Find the article in your folder that discusses the
Advantages and Disadvantages of Block Scheduling.
Compare your answers to those in the article. Add to
your lists. Share with the people at your table. (3
minutes)
As a group, select what you think is the biggest
advantage (*) and biggest disadvantage(X). (5 minutes)
Be ready to share.
23. Block Scheduling will NOT solve all of our
problems…but we must make some
changes. Why?
• Teachers deal with a large number of students every day.
• Teachers teach for 5 or 6 periods/several preps
• Collaboration is non-existent
• Our attendance rate needs improvement
• Students have a large number of classes and too much homework
• CC, ACT, EOC, SLTs (and all those other acronyms)
• Too much stress on teachers and students
26. Words for Number 1’s
1. Teacher Collaboration
2. Improved Student Attendance
3. Extended Learning Time
4. Differentiated Instruction
5. More Checks for Understanding
6. Student-Centered Classroom
7. 4 X 4 Block
27. Words for Number 2’s
1. Time Management
2. Common Core Curriculum
3. A/B Block Schedule
4. Classroom Management
5. Fewer Students to Teach
6. Increase Graduation Rate
7. Student Success
29. CLOSURE: BACK TO THE BLOCK CHART
Fill in the C and K sections of your
B-L-O-C-K Chart. Be ready to share with
the group.
30. TOMORROW‘S FOCUS
Tomorrow, you will actually write a 90-minute lesson to teach on Jan. 14th and 15th. You
will collaborate with peers to create a lesson, and share that lesson with the entire group.
In preparation for our time tomorrow, please do the following:
review the handout on Teaching Strategies for Block Schedules.
Search the Internet for sample 90-minute lessons
Create a possible hook/warm-up/bell-ringer for the 90-minute lesson you‘re going to
teach on Jan. 14th and 15th.
Think about the lesson objective(s) you intend to teach for next week. They will most
likely be the focus of your lesson plan.
Notas do Editor
Start time: 9:00 a.m.
5 minutes (3 for reviewing goals, 2 for turn and talk about the one goal that is most compelling to you) (9:30)We will begin our day by exploring data and some of the instructional requirements that are necessary because of the transition to the Common Core State Standards. We have heard much about what is to come as we move into using these standards as the core of our instructional programs. Today we will look closely at the changing level of cognitive demand that is to come and how transitioning to Block is critical to ensuring that we have the necessary time for instruction that engages our students in thinking critically. Click for next goalThe next goal for our time together is to look closely at advantages and disadvantages of the 4x4 block. While we know this transition is necessary and the right thing to do for our children, we also know that there will be some obstacles in making the transition. It is critical that we begin preparing for this transition now, so we can minimize these challenges and provide the best block experience for our students possible.Click for next goalFinally, we will deconstruct the different components of the block, and work together to build our repertoire of strategies for effectively implementing this type of scheduling. Take two minutes and turn to your shoulder and discuss which of these goals resonates most with you, what you hope to take from today and why.
Emphasize that for our time today we will address the first two goals and tomorrow we will focus I on the last goal.
Time for this section: About 2.5 hours (allow for a 15 minute break around the 1100 hour. Keep teachers engaged until finished– which should be at about 1215– lunch time)Let’s get into or first goal which is looking at the relationship between the CCSS and block scheduling.
Intro by stating that we are getting ready to embark upon the next big wave in education– unlike NCLB this one gets at the core of our practice– in addition to the outcomes of it. We want to begin our discussion about transitioning to block here because– what we do relative to instruction in our schools MUST be reflective of what is happening in the broader society around education. Click slide to make the words appear– pose the question and have them answer it..Presenter soap box:Nothing– in my opinion– shows what is at the heart of the current curriculum, instruction and assessment trends in education than the assessment samples the show what children will ultimately need to be able to do by the end of a unit, semester, or school year. So– lets look at a few. In your folders, I have placed two assessment items– both from grade 10. I want you to take a moment and with your table group, discuss what you see in these assessment items and chart what would need to happen instructionally to prepare students for these types of assessments. Bring the group back to attention after 10 minutes and have them share what they came up with at their tables. As they share chart a few things that they say– esp as it relates to how these assessment items will require a different level of teaching and thinking for students (this is what you want to illicit from the group– that in order for kids to be successful in completing these types of assessments what we teach, how we teach and how much time we take to engage students in thinking must shift).
These changes that are coming with our curriculum and the move in to the CCSS are reflective of a broader shift happening in our country, and most of the times the trends in education are. We just looked at samples that closely resemble how our students will be assessed beginning in 2014, lets take a look at the impetus for this shift in education by exploring some of the factors that have gotten us to this place. Play video at this link: (will need to have this up and ready in a separate window– make sure you have internet access or download and save the vide using Real Player)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XVQ1ULfQawk After the video have teachers discuss the prompt at their tables. Take two minutes for group share– make sure the end impression left is that we are preparing our students for a high, tech, fast paced, transitional world. Draw contrasts between this world and the one that we have grown up in which was characterized by security.) Key point: The world we are preparing our students for is different for the one we grew up in– so teaching must be different. As stated earlier, often the shifts that we see in the world of ed are related to shifts we see in our world. These are the shifts our educational leaders considered along with data that we are going to review that has taken us into this era of the common core
We talked shift in the world– now lets talk about the data that really ramped up the impetus and support for this movement.
Take a moment and read this quote. A quick note, the nations that have asterisks next to them are ones that have similar if not greater percentages of students living in poverty when compared to the US. So…why are we so behind (take group responses)– get them to the place where they understand that we are trailing countries in education that we once called “third world”. Help them understand that some of this is because of reforms such as NCLB that pushed teachers away from engaging students in deep instruction and instead focused on preparing kids to be successful on “functional assessments” Our focus changed– as a nation and subsequent to that our children’s performance has declined. Let’s look at additional data relative to this
In reviewing the national data– we see that low percentages of our students are able to perform well on the ELA portion of the ACT– which is one of our two benchmark exams in this nation that assess college readiness.
This ELA data becomes even more bleak when you look at groups and how children are performing comparatively. Not only are children in this country not fairing as well as they should, black and brown children are showing significantly low levels of college readiness.
While I do not have the disaggregated data for math, the low scores over all show that we also need to make significant strides forward in math as well.
So… the worlds is changing. Our data says that we must do a better job of preparing our students. As your tables, process (read prompt). Give teachers 2 minutes to discussThis is a good stopping point for a break.
Show prompts– don’t address them (they are for the teachers to read and consider)Presenter soapbox: Given all we have discussed, it is important to think about our clients, our students, and what they will need to weather and succeed in this changing world. We have to think about the product we well to them everyday– that product being our teaching and the opportunity to learn– whether and how we need to upgrade our product to better suit their needs and the mode to deliver it in.
This is what our product, our teaching must focus on. This is what our kids are looking for– engaging experiences that challenge their minds and keep them engaged. If we want to be relevant– if we want them to be successful in this world, if we want our college and career readiness to improve-- we have to know how to get this product to themNOTE: you are transitioning into teaching critical thinking which is what the common core is all about. BE SURE TO MAKE THIS POINT AND MAKE IT OFTENCCSS=CRTICAL THINKING !!!
For the next hour or so I want us to spend some time getting crystal clear on what the classroom looks like where critical thinking is being cultivated and work from this place to organize our recent learnings and knowledge around the shifts we have to make for the purpose of prioritizing our workTo get to this– I want to use a body of knowledge that is familiar to all of us but to have us take a different look at it, as in its revised state it can be used as a foundation for clarifying what the thinking classroom looks like and help us get a better grasp of the level of cognitive demand our teaching much reach with the implementation of the Common Core….
So… please stand up find a partner you have not talked with today and discuss the three prompts. Note: Have teachers find a partner and stay with them to discus prompts. Given then 4 minutes, raise your hand and bring their attention to you. While they are still standing, present the next two slides
NOTE: Presenter must insert their own Bloom’s story here
Here is what I now know about Blooms– I know that the cognitive dimensions (read slide and expound). I also know that the knowledge dimension exists– and this is critical because…Be very explicit about describing this to the teachers. Here is the big deal about this– in order to ensure thinking is the center piece of the classroom– teachers have to now and be explicit about the thinking they are teaching about the content. Key points6 dimensionsComplexity of thoughtTeaching thinking Not about hard questions– about what happens in the mind– relative to the content being processed (go to RBT page and review)In addition to knowing and understanding the Cog Dimensions– if thinking is to be the center piece of the classroom– we have to make sure we are clear on what the kids are thinking about– this is where the knowledge dimension comes in. There are four domains within the KD--- and they progress in terms of abstractness and complexity. Cant have intersection of every CD with every KD. Cant create factsGive teachers time to processNEXT SLIDE
Blue represents the type of thinking we want students to do about the (blue part) content.
So why does this matter???? So what is of extreme importance as we set our priorities as teachers, is that we are clear on what should be going on in our classrooms– at each of these levels of cog demand so we can consistently employ instructional delivery practices that get our kids to being able to successful in mastering the knowledge and skills so they are able to transfer them to novel/ real world contexts on authentic perf. tasks. That is teaching with rigor. That is teaching that gets kids to think critically. That is what the CCSS will demand of us and our students. This will ensure our students are college and career ready. This will ensure they are able to be successful in this changing world.
What I can say– beyond a shadow of a doubt- is that I did not know very well – when I first became aeacher– what the implications for teaching thinking were – and because I didn’t– I was a teacher who was consistent, had well managed classrooms where the kids were always engaged in doing some activities that I now realize were super effective at missing the mark as it related to teaching the more complex thinking skills that are assessed and necessary for C and C readiness. And I am sad to say that I got pretty good evals from my leaders bc I was in school where what was valued most was managing kids and keep them engaged. I thought that was success. Well.. My first round of test scores said that wasn’t– so I had to go deeper and re-evaluate how I defined effective instruction– and what I came up with is that it is instruction where the thinking aligns with the content and both align with the type of teaching and instructional activities the kids receive is quality instruction.So I want us to define the classroom at each level—to ensure that as we re-enter the school year we are clear about what the thinking classroom is and so we can begin to align our teaching practices towards those at the more complex end of the the cognitive and knowledge dimensions.
Allow processing (quite writing)– let teachers stand and share– then do a quick share with the group (optional)!! Presenter: Close out this section by making sure all understand the necessary shifts and realize that to make thinking the centerpiece of our classrooms will require taking our students deeper into the content and engaging them in rich, authentic learning activities that give them time and space to make meaning. We cant do this in 51 minutes. Teaching that requires a heightened level of cognitive demand will take more time. We must transition to block so that we have the time we need with our students to cultivate their “thinking” capacities.
Please allow 1 hour for lunch (if it is beings served to teachers) and 1 hour 15 minutes if they have to get lunch on their own
For the next section of the day, we are going to dig in and begin the planning to ensure we transition well into the block. We know that this transition will not be without its fair share of challenges, so it is important that we engage you in helping us think through what some of the advantages are of making this transition and what we need to do to ensure we maximize these advantages and what the disadvantages are and how we can plan proactively to minimize those. Each of you has in your folder a group assignment. Please look for your groups number arrange your chairs in a circle and then turn your attention back to me. Presenter: When they get into their groups– have them turn attention to you and take out their articles
Group has 70 minutes for the entire sessionPresenter: Review the slide with the group and explain the three levels of text protocol. Advise the group that if a person finishes their turn before the five minutes is up, they have the opportunity to select a second passage from the text. Prepare a chart as an exemplar that is structured as follows:Chart 1:Advantages Teacher Needs to Maximize Advantage Things for Admin to plan for (if applicable)Chart 2:Disadvantages Solutions to minimize disadvantage Needs from Admin to address disadv.If teachers finish early, they can review the teaching strategies for block packet (pass it out after about 60 minutes of time in the activity have passed)
Give participants five minutes to respond. Let them stand and find a partner to share with.