Sunday, April 21, 2013

Lead Learners Update 4.22.13


In their effort to build a single, unified message, effective leaders do the following:
  1. Answer the why question before the how question
  2. Clearly communicating initiatives and priorities
  3. Framing collaborative conversations to ensure shared understanding
  4. Serving as a cultural barometer

    Erkens and Twadell, 2012

Calendar of Events
4.22 Reserved for interviews
4.23 Reserved for interviews
4.24 Reserved for interviews
4.25 Instructional rounds with Liz City (9:00 a.m. at the FFA Enrichment Center on the DMACC campus in Ankeny)
4.26 Reserved for interviews
4.29 K-4 Meeting with Josh (8:00 - 11:30 @ ESC Board Room)
4.29 K-12 Admin Learning (12:00 - 3:30 @ ESC Board Room)
5.2 GT Academy (8:30 - 3:30) in Newton, Iowa
5.6 Simplifying RtI (Point, Crest, Ridge Teams) The other school teams will join September Workshops

Administrative Evaluation (Ying YIng Chen)
The new state code indicates that all administrators should be evaluated annually.  CCSD has revised the district procedures to meet this mandate. The administrative evaluation document was shared with you by John earlier in the year.  Just a quick review:
  • All administrators will have quarterly conversations with his/her supervisor to discuss goals, reflect practice and to monitor progress (same as in the past)
  • All administrators will use the existing PLP tool to house reflections and artifacts that are aligned with the leadership standards (same as in the past).  By the end of year, a summary form will be signed by both the administrators and the supervisors (added procedure to meet the new state guideline).
  • A comprehensive evaluation cycle will happen every third year.  During this cycle, the long form will be used and signed by both the supervisor and the administrator (same as in the past).

PLP Recommendation Review (By Ying Ying Chen)
Several times a year, I bring out the document “PLP recommendations” for the administrative team to review.  The recommendation was done by a PLP task force, and the intent of the document is to:
  • Maintain consistency among all administrators
  • To reinforce the concept that administrators set the tone for a culture of professional reflection
  • To refresh what administrators can do to make the state mandate as meaningful as possible
Please take a few minutes to review this recommendation to maintain system fidelity.

How to prepare teachers for the end-of-year PLP closure?
There is plenty of flexibility in how school principals make the PLP process work in your building.  The PLP task force discovered that teachers appreciate a clearly communicated process throughout the year.  The following is one example about how to close the school year.
  • Review the process in a staff meeting in late April or early May.  Invite one or two teachers to share their PLP reflection from the previous year.  Review the end of year components (USE rubric, final reflection, artifacts, etc.) on PLP.
  • Establish a timeline and offer guidance to teachers. A sample timeline:
    • Team members brainstorm possible PLP end of year reflection points during the 1st week collaboration in May;
    • Have teams invite administrators to have a 10-15 minute dialogue about their reflection during the 2nd week in May;
    • Individually enter PLP reflection during the 3rd week in May;
    • Principals review PLP by end of May.  
  • Note: The state guidelines require principals to conference with each teacher about their PLP annually.  The suggested group process was brainstormed by administrators a few years ago with the intent to save time and still make the process meaningful to teachers.  The administrators suggested the group dialogue process because most teachers work on similar goals in collaborative teams.  One caution is that PLP is an individual reflection based on own learning.  It is not appropriate that one teacher types the reflection and the team members copy it.  We have found this to be an issue occasionally.  When principals review the process with teachers, please clarify what is appropriate to collaborate (i.e. Brainstorm what the team worked on/the impact on student learning) and what should be done individually (the actual USE scale and PLP reflection).

MAP Testing Update:  Craig Barnum

Due to the network disruption the week of April 8th, I’ve extended the MAP testing window to last until Friday, 4/26.  I cannot declare testing complete until after this date.  This means that the earliest full reports will be read on the NWEA reporting site is Monday, the 29th.  I will send out an email to all building offices to let your staff know they can run reports on this date.  Let me know if you have any questions.

Curriculum Matters by Bill Poock
Spring 2013 District Writing Assessment Schedule:
  • Elementary:   April 29 - May 3
  • Secondary:   April 15 – 26
Writing prompts, assessment procedures, and the district writing rubric can be accessed via the Writing Assessment Google site at:  https://sites.google.com/site/ccsdwritingassessment/

For K-6 teaches, time will be allocated during our next PL day on May 6th for teachers to utilize for scoring student writing (similar to last year).  That information should be shared with teachers by the building cadre/building principals once that determination is finalized.  Plans for making copies for scoring rubrics should be handled at the building level.  Teachers in the 7-12 level will follow building leaders’ directions.  This is usually a shared decision between the building principal and the department chairs.

Scores must be entered into Campus by May 10th to ensure that data collection procedures are consistent across the district as we prepare end-of-year reports.  Thank you!

Math Curriculum Update:
We have selected enVisions Mathematics by Pearson for our next curriculum adoption for K-6.  The final two vendors were very similar in their offerings, but enVisions was found to be more highly aligned with the CCSS.  There are many components that will be of high value to our teachers:  electronic access to all materials; electronic manipulatives; a built-in RTI system of interventions; ability to create assessments electronically; etc.  K-2 will have no textbook--but will be provided with a lesson by lesson handout for students.  Grades 3-6 will have an actual physical textbook.
In Fall 2013, we will have our first orientation session led by Pearson on Friday, August 16th.  Two sessions will run concurrently in the morning from 8:30 - 11:30 AM and two sessions will run concurrently in the afternoon from 12:30 - 3:30 PM.  More information regarding specific grade levels for AM or PM will be shared, but it is likely that we will have K-2 both in the AM and 3-6 both in the PM.
Later, in mid to late October, we will have a second session with Pearson that will be for our Math Task Force members (K-6) to learn how to more effective utilize the various technological components with the new series.  These members will then provide additional learning at the building level for grade level teams.  This second meeting with Pearson will occur during one of Math Curriculum Council meetings to be announced.
Thank you for everyone who invested in this process.  We had a solid process to select our new curriculum.  Many area schools have also selected enVisions mathematics because of its high degree of alignment to the CCSS.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Lead Learners Update 4.8.13


Professional Capital - Students do very well because they have a series of very good teachers - not by chance, but by design. In other words, you have to transform the entire profession - not just the bottom 20% or the top 20%, but the whole 100%.
Fullan and Hargreaves


Calendar of Events
4.8 Snow Make up and PL Day
Board Meeting
4.10 IOWA ASCD Academy (A K-12 Prairie team will present at the conference)
4.15 Oversight Meeting 12:00 - 3:30 @ Board Room (Read Chapter 6 and 7)
3:30 - 4:00 Ying answer questions about i3 Grant (See more info below)
4.16 Reserved for Interview
4.18 Cadre


Other Interview Days:
4.22, 4.23, 4.24


Also, please reserve 4/29 from 12:00 - 3:30 for an Administrative Learning Meeting.  John will lead a discussion about administrative team purpose, goals and priorities for the 2013-14 school year.


Curriculum Data (Ying Ying Chen)
After working with all curriculum teams prioritized by you, here is the first set of data from Rubicon.  Before you analyze, please read the following bullet points first.

  • Common Core Literacy in grades 9 and 10 share the same set of standards. Therefore, 9th and 10th grade individually will not target all standards.  Between both grades, all standards will be included.
  • Common Core Math in 9-12 is not grade level based, but domain based.  For example Algebra and Advanced Algebra share a same set of standards.  

    Standard Alignment - Literacy
    Assessment Alignment - Literacy
    Standard Alignment - Math
    Assessment Alignment - Math
    1st
    100 %
    56 %
    86 %
    4 %
    2nd
    100 %
    91 %
    100 %
    3 %
    3rd
    100 %
    100 %
    90 %
    56 %
    4th
    100 %
    94 %
    100 %
    28 %
    5th
    99 %
    45 %
    97 %
    96 %
    6th
    99 %
    45 %
    92 %
    77 %
    7th
    68 %
    58 %
    100 %
    0 %
    8th
    100 %
    99 %
    100 %
    69 %
    9th
    84/125=67%
    0 %
    47 %
    43 %
    10th
    54/125=43 %
    81 %
    81 %
    59 %

    Analysis of the above data
    1. First, let’s celebrate the work we have done!  Curriculum alignment work we have done in the past 3 months made a huge difference.  Prior to the work, the standard alignment rate was between 20 - 60 %. Now, it is almost 100% in all grades/courses. Most importantly, teachers fully grasp the concept of guaranteed and viable curriculum and they are confident about how to carry out these units from now on.
    2. Assessment alignment is definitely an area for continuous improvement.  I believe there are a lot of quality assessments being used, but teachers may not check the standards or are lack the confidence to put the current standards on the tool.  Please reinforce that assessments should be entered on the unit even when teachers do not think the assessments are perfect.  Assessment is the base for RtI, analysis of student work and CIC.  Teachers will learn a lot from reflecting upon their current assessments and student results.   We will continue to work on the quality of assessment as we further discuss standards and proficiency.  

    Changing Landscape of Instructional Coaching (Ying Ying Chen)
    I am wondering if you are aware of the changing landscape of “coaching” and the interconnectedness among the three following resources:

    1. i3 Grant (Full Release Model New Teacher Mentor/Induction) - We just received notification from GWAEA that CCSD, along with 17 other AEA 10 school districts, will be part of the Full Release New Teacher Mentor program called i3 Grant.  This will change significantly how we mentor new teachers.  The mentor job has been posted by GWAEA, and one of our district teachers could be potentially hired on loan to carry out the responsibility.  This means, our current new teacher coaches will be phased out in the next year or two. If interested, I will be happy to answer questions in person on 4/15, after the Oversight meeting (3:30)
    2. District instructional coaches and facilitators (no further explanation needed)
    3. State proposal for the four tier career plan (If this is passed at the legislative level, then more teachers from the district will be released to coach.)
    We are keeping you posted so that you can begin to think about how to coordinate various coaching services, build coherence and distribute resources.
     
    Digital Literacy Update (Craig Barnum)
    Over the past few weeks, I’ve been trickling out  on my blog a number of digital literacy professional development opportunities this summer.  I thought it might be convenient to see all of these (to date) in one place:

    ITEC Summer Workshop Tour
    July 27th
    Grant Wood AEA
    Fee: $99

    Google Apps Iowa Mini Summit
    July 25th
    Van Meter CSD
    Fee: $40

    iPad U
    July 11th - 12th
    Grant Wood AEA
    Fee: $100 non-credit

    iLife and Mac OS X Basics
    June 6th and 7th
    ESC Boardroom and PHS Study Hall
    Fee: none

    On a somewhat related note, I will be judging the Eastern Iowa ITEC Tech Fair on Wednesday, April 10th.  The Tech Fair is a great place for students to showcase their work and staff to make connections with other like minded teachers.  Think of it as a something similar to our Celebration of Learning we had last January.  Kids present project work that is reviewed.  There are grade spans, so it’s open to all kids, K-12.  While it’s too late to send any students this year, I will send out word when applications are available for next year.  I would encourage each of you to encourage your staff to send some students.  Events like this are not only a great place for students to find authentic audiences for their work, but it’s also a powerful networking tool for staff.  They can see what other teachers and kids are doing as well as to make connections to grow their PLN.  


    Student Sevices  (Cheryl Kiburz)

    4.16 Building Bridges-Eastern Iowa Technology Conference 8:00-4:30
    Iowa Memorial Union, Iowa City, IA

    Extended School Year Services-The target date for all Extended School Year Services (ESYS) meetings was April 1.  I believe most teachers have conducted the additional meetings, or determined if ESYS services were necessary at the most recent annual IEP review meeting.  There will be 4 programs on campus this summer with 2 being located at Ridge, 1 at Prairie Creek and 1 at Prairie Point.  The dates for ESYS (M-TH, 8:30-11:30,student contact time) is listed below:

    June 10-13
    June 17-20
    June 24-27
    July 22-25
    July 29-August 1

    In addition, due to this being an individualized service,  there are also some individualized plans.

    TEACCH-Structured Teaching Training-A TEACCH training is being held May 14,15 and 16 at GWAEA.  If you have certified or classifed staff that must have this training due to their assignment, please contact me no later than April 15.


    Curriculum Matters  (Bill Poock)
    We are in the process of negotiating for a new math curriculum.  The Math Task Force K-6 Textbook Adoption Team narrowed down to two sets of curriculum to include:

    • enVisions Mathematics (by Pearson)
    • Go Math! (HMH)
    Each curriculum offers its own unique spin on how mathematics is taught, what intervention materials are included, and how the teacher is supported to teach mathematics most effectively.  Basically, though, the two textbook companies offer similar components and both are a vast improvement from our current math curriculum in Everyday Mathematics.  I will present an update to the Board of Education at the April 8th Board Meeting in which I update them on the following:

    • process we’ve used to build capacity for maximum learning about CCSS and alignment to new textbooks
    • report that we are close to making a decision