Monday, July 26, 2010

curriculum and assessment 2010

Level 1 (ten hours)
1. Examine and reflect on the World Language Seminar model and tweak it. We did a survey, and sixty kids gave us feedback we will use.

2. Specifically, re-organize the Seminar to be a list of tasks instead of calendar-based. Started this.
Done!

3. Create project sheets for each task and make them into .pdfs for the wiki (ETA we created these as we went along last year--not a huge timesucker) A lot of this has to do with me cleaning out my laptop before it gets re-imaged. 

4. Isolate the essential skills. Here they are.

5. Create a metalanguage master definition page with tons of examples. I plan on making them like this: Kirsten's page.

6. MAKE BINDER GUIDELINES with STUDENT SAMPLE
(colors for different tasks, etc?)

7. Make 1 page plan with essential skills, unit themes, metalanguage, translation guidelines, and contact info.

8.  Make Metalanguage Flap Posters for level 1

Level 2 (ten hours)

1. Create a metalanguage list Here they are!

2. Create a task-based list to meet Maine Learning Results. (Worry about project sheets as we go--at least create the first few). Here they are!

3. Isolate the essential skills. Here they are!

4. Create a metalanguage master definition page with tons of examples.

5. Create binder guidelines for students with student samples.

6.  Make graphic organizer for ¿siete qué? 

7.  Make Metalanguage Flap Posters for level 2


Level 3 (ten hours)
1. Make a list of units by semester.
2. Make project sheets for each one. WIP
3. Isolate essential skills.
4. Create a metalanguage list.
5. Create Google sites for each student.

Level 4 (ten hours)
1. Create list of potential tasks for students to choose from. Each task must incorporate reading, writing, listening, and speaking. Students will choose one task for each quarter and the last quarter will be student-created task based on my model.
2. Isolate essential skills.
3. Create a metalanguage list.
4. Create Google sites for each student.

Based on this list, the biggest investment to be made is time.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Why I make those work lists I do...

Notes for Adobe Connect meeting

# What is the need? How did you uncover it?

The need for an aligned curriculum came about because of an “end of an era”—the French teacher who had taught at Dirigo for her entire career (and by all accounts producing French-speaking students by year 4) retired, leaving me as the “head” of the department.  There had been no strong Spanish teacher (or one that stayed more than 2 years).  The first year without Mme Murray at the helm there was a crisis with the long term sub since we did not find a qualified teacher in time—finally we hired the current French teacher.  By this time, about a year and a half on the job, I discovered the curriculum could be adjusted, as long as we were willing to do the work of alignment.   We discussed options, what we liked, what we didn’t like. We looked at the numbers in the beginning of language instruction (9th) and at then end (12th).  We decided we could re-articulate why and how languages are learned and we decided to collaborate on all themes, units, and assessments, starting at level 1 and working our way up.  That was last summer and we initiated the brand new World Language Seminar to freshmen last year.  Our goal was to provide rigorous, dynamic instruction that would serve as a foundation year for the rest.

# What is your goal?
The goal now is to put the time in to levels 2, 3, and 4—to discuss assessment, align to the MLR’s, integrate technology especially based on my findings from my research project—the end goal being a higher than 12% retention rate at the highest level.

# How do you plan on addressing this need?

This need is being addressed though hours of curriculum work with my colleague.  We set goals, make lists, and “attack” our curriculum time with very focused energy.  This year level 2 should be making its aligned debut.  Next summer level 3 is slated to be aligned, and in 2012 we should finished with level 4 and know the result of this four year initial period.  Ultimately we want to move from 12% in advanced instruction to 30%.

# And, how will you assess the intervention?

The easiest way to see if what we are doing is working is to see how many kids end up in level 4, and if they can compare on a national test of Spanish or French.  The issue currently is non-rigorous, poorly designed sequencing of instruction that neglects the basics.  We want to equip kids with the basics but go far beyond that in advanced study.  Currently our advanced level students are still of the cohort that had another teacher besides us. 

pecha-kucha



source

cool, right?  this presentational format is 20 slides/20 seconds per slide, and is a Japanese form of presenting a focused presentation.  I chose this for its visual richness, the fact I cannot understand him yet am delighted by the illustrations.  I am truly a visual learner--rich, gorgeous colors and images delight me.

So how do this translate to my grad class?  I think I might do one of these to talk about World Languages at Dirigo.

Friday, July 16, 2010

PD Needs Assessment, Goal, and Plan

I am using a situational gap analysis to precede my PD needs assessment, goal, and plan (taken from EDU572 Blackboard).

Situational Gap Analysis

The situational gap is the distance between today's reality and our vision for tomorrow.

Exercise 1: Focus on the current reality without making a value judgment about it (just the facts).

When you consider technology integration in your school-
  1. What is creating that gap today? Time is the biggest factor in the gap between integration and my department at school. This is a gap created by value placed on time in the system.
  2. Is it technical, cultural, and/or instructional? This is a cultural issue as it has to do with the value of time and how teacher spend non-instructional time.
  3. What can we do to bridge that gap? Create a specific plan for developing curriculum and request the time to do so with clear goals and measurable results. Ask for meetings to be focused and on task. Respect and value the time of colleagues, administrators, and students.
  4. What is your vision for your department? For your school? My vision is to have a four-year World Languages curriculum in place that is dynamic, integrated, and rigorous. My vision for my school is to become a healthy, robust network of connected learners in a more transparent learning environment.

Exercise 2: .
  1. What do you see as your primary role(s) within your department? Within your school? Within my department I work in tandem with the French teacher to create units and align curriculum to the Maine Learning Results. Within my school I am a part of a leadership team that is currently undergoing revision.
  2. What is the vision for your department as it relates to your school? The World Languages department seeks to empower students as communicators, which directly ties in to the Expectations for Learning at Dirigo High.
  3. Why is this vision important? I recently heard a great quote that is posted to this blog that says, "It's not our job to make you happy, but rather to make you strong." This may sound a little harsh but I love the fact that it is my job to help students learn how to communicate and understand language, which will help them in every other area of life.
  4. What difference will it make in student achievement? World Language instruction improves literacy across the board. A rigorous program will empower students in other content areas as they make connections between words and meanings. Cultural awareness is also a key outcome of World Language instruction and that adds value to a student's education.
  5. How will you go about achieving this vision? What are some of the specific enabling strategies you intend to use in the next few years? My colleague and I dedicate curriculum time to making goals, working toward them, testing out new ideas, reviewing them and refining them. I see this continuing until we complete the four years of curriculum. Right now we have the first year aligned with specific steps for summer work, the majority of summer work being the development of year two.
The final goal of a situational gap analysis is to identify what the outputs/results are for each area. This activity forces participants to go BEYOND thinking about the activities as the results. It helps us focus not on the what is delivered (staffing, money, training, time, equipment, etc) but instead on what this resource does (results/outputs).


More time with my department ---> Curricular development that is dynamic, integrated, and rigorous ---> increased communication and literacy skills among students in the program


Needs Statement
World Languages at Dirigo include French and Spanish. Instruction begins in 9th grade. Students enter with varying skills. In the past 3 years, only 12% of students who completed level 1 matriculated to advanced instruction (level 4). Of those students, many lacked basic skills and consistency in communication. In addition, the number of students who studied Spanish was disproportionate to the number of French students, with no clear reason why.

If these trends continue, advanced study of World Languages may dwindle to a degree that requires cutting the department. That would certainly inhibit the endurance of advanced skills. In addition, students need instruction that allows them to go beyond high school studies for leverage. Essential skills must be retained in order to advance to higher levels of study.

The World Language program has begun to shift practice from disjointed curricula to collaborative teaching and design. As a result of intense focus on essential skills at level 1, World Language Seminar was devised. Presently, the gap exists between levels 2-4 in terms of collaborative teaching and design to mitigate the problems addressed above.

The need to solve the problem has become evident as the department re-establishes itself after many years of constant change.


Goal and Proposed Plan
In order to successfully change the outcome of the past three years which has been very low numbers in advanced classes with students that lack essential skills, levels 2 through 4 must undergo substantial review and revision to become more dynamic, integrated, and rigorous. Based on how long it took to design Level 1 as a team, run it, review it and tweak it, the time period needed to implement proficiency level changes is 15 to 24 months per level, which can overlap. We are in month 19 of World Language Seminar (level 1) and are in the revise stage after reviewing the data from last year. Beyond level 1, lever 2 must be addressed this year in a focused, in-depth review. Levels 3 and 4 will be the subject of intense focus in subsequent cycles. The overall "overhaul" time period will probably be 4 years total.

A list of objectives that I created in June adequately states next steps for curriculum work in my department. The list is by level.

Level 1 (ten hours)
1. Examine and reflect on the World Language Seminar model and tweak it. We did a survey, and sixty kids gave us feedback we will use.

2. Specifically, re-organize the Seminar to be a list of tasks instead of calendar-based. Started this.
Done!

3. Create project sheets for each task and make them into .pdfs for the wiki (ETA we created these as we went along last year--not a huge timesucker) A lot of this has to do with me cleaning out my laptop before it gets re-imaged.

4. Isolate the essential skills. Here they are.

5. Create a metalanguage master definition page with tons of examples. I plan on making them like this: Kirsten's page.

6. Create Google sites for each student.

Level 2 (ten hours)

1. Create a metalanguage list

2. Create a task-based list to meet Maine Learning Results. (Worry about project sheets as we go--at least create the first few).

3. Isolate the essential skills. Here they are!

4. Create a metalanguage master definition page with tons of examples.

5. Create Google sites for each student.

Level 3 (ten hours)
1. Make a list of units by semester.
2. Make project sheets for each one. WIP
3. Isolate essential skills.
4. Create a metalanguage list.
5. Create Google sites for each student.

Level 4 (ten hours)
1. Create list of potential tasks for students to choose from. Each task must incorporate reading, writing, listening, and speaking. Students will choose one task for each quarter and the last quarter will be student-created task based on my model.
2. Isolate essential skills.
3. Create a metalanguage list.
4. Create Google sites for each student.

Based on this list, the biggest investment to be made is time.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

make a list

Take a few minutes sometime between now and our chat at 7pm and list 12-15 things you value the most about your current position - anything from the work itself, to your colleagues, to your classroom space, etc. Be as broad in your thinking as possible, but also choose the most critically important factors.


  1. location to my home
  2. location within the campus
  3. actual room is good size good light "good space"
  4. freedom of pedagogy-I align practice to MLR's
  5. great colleague to collab with
  6. WLS -- love this course
  7. one to one
  8. tech tools like projectors and cameras
  9. small school, community school
  10. sports program is entertaining
  11. arts program is entertaining
  12. dr2010 was allowed to happen
  13. grants grants grants
  14. rsu means more resources to my department

Next, prioritize the "job satisfiers" into three groups
  • Important- things that you value, but, if gone, wouldn't cause too much difficulty
  1. sports program is entertaining
  2. arts program is entertaining
  3. rsu means more resources to my department
  4. small school, community school
  5. location within the campus
  6. one to one
  • Very Important- one step up the scale 
  1. location to my home
  2. actual room is good size good light "good space"
  3. great colleague to collab with 
  4. WLS -- love this course
  • Critically Important- things without which the job would be terrible
  1. freedom of pedagogy-I align practice to MLR's
  2. tech tools like computers, projectors and cameras
  3. dr2010 was allowed to happen
  4. grants grants grants




Once you have grouped them write the critically important list inside a circle. Drawing a bulls-eye-like pattern, write the very important list in the circle outside the center and the important list in the outer most circle.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

My perspective

Please respond to these questions in a document (word processor of your choice).

1. How is the technology function structured within your school? How do you staff it? How do you support it? What are the structural elements put into place to make technology happen, in terms of programs and people? What kind of structure are put into place to make things happen?

We are a one-to-one laptop school of approximately 320 kids, 30 teachers, 3 administrators, and support staff. We recently regionalized and became an RSU. The main office of the RSU is located at my campus. I therefore have more access to technology specialists than others in my school or region.

At my school, there is one person in charge of acquisition and installation of hardware and software including the phones. I do not know who controls filtering of the internet, or who troubleshoots Apple issues, because that seems to be a regional office now and not specific to my high school, so different people respond to these queries. I do not know who controls the policies of what to do when a kid disobeys the laptop program.  I do know that there seems to be one person in charge of all the computers for my high school. She checks them in and out and she filters their content. I do know that administrators have had a rough first year with one-to-one integration.

I can’t speak for other people in my school, but I know that having more curriculum time with my colleague in World Languages is key to integration.

Thought in my head that needs to just come out: There is never time to just play and do on the laptops. No time to do whatever we want. That's too fun.  I want to integrate. I need time to create using these marvelous apps and time to tinker and fiddle with these tools.  Who cares how fun it is if it gets the job done?

I think the fear is Farmville. I could be stuck up and say I despise Farmville, but there is a serious lesson in economics there.  Not to mention--if a user changed the language to a World Language, I bet there would be some immersion language learning. The point is the technology we do use, we are not sure how to use in the classroom and there is a fear of it. We are a school in flux—that is the underlying narrative push.

2. How well does your school do the human resource side of technology, in terms of the tech support and tech integration function and also in supporting and empowering non-technology staff (teachers and administrators) to use technology?

The tech support at school has not been what I would call helpful in terms of helping me to access curricular components that are blocked. On the other hand, I have been given things to play with—especially cameras—and we make things with them in the classroom. When I had desktops, support was superb.

Maybe we need to serve the kids at their level? Offer workshops for them, by them—offer hardware and software sessions?  Teachers and kids together, learning how to do cool stuff.

There is very little support at school by anyone for any initiative-there has been in the past, but this year tech presentations on Google, wikis, and other tools fluttered to a standstill as change creeped in and reminded us of how things are different.

My school is in flux. We regionalized this year and combined three districts. We have a new principal.
This post may be hard to interpret to someone not in my school world. I say things like school, region, district.  My school is 320 kids.  My region is about 1400.  My district is that 1400 plus two more regions, one bigger, one smaller.  When I say my school I mean 320 kids, not 1400 plus....  When I say my campus I mean where I teach which is separate from most of the 320 kids in a satellite building to the main building.  It just worked out that way--and I happen to be in the central office building, close to the tech action.

3. How well does this fear of technology operate within the political dynamics of the school system? Is it successful? Are there power struggles? Do you have troubles getting resources that you need? What are some political issues that surround technology function within your school?

The largest issue is regionalization and a desire to comb through everyone’s policies for “best practice”. The schools are so different in their approaches and so far this process has stymied the urge to grow with technology. The new one to one at the high school had given birth to new culture, one in which the kids are always in trouble for doing something on their machines that is not within the policy. Teachers are becoming enforcers. Learners have left the building and are reading Twitter feeds somewhere off-campus, where it is allowed.

The main issue is control and power. The balance has shifted and still shifts with the change that continues in our school. Combining resources and power structures is process that will happen over time.   I am not saying any one person, group or committee is vying for power, but power is shifting in a very large system.  And, it will take time to develop a new systemic culture.

I am most concerned with my school of 320 kids, and this small community and small culture we are trying to shape of kind, productive, thoughtful, contributing citizens.

The place for the most powerful growth, in my eyes, is to work toward a more open, transparent school.  Sharing tools and ideas and networking like mad would allow a lot of this control to be non-essential because everyone can see what everyone else is doing and there is a flow to work that includes these tools.

In this utopia of open sharing, no one ever has to ask for help. Someone is always there to show and guide. Awards are given out regularly to the best networkers, and they give workshops for how it is done. Average age of winners and subsequent expert presenters: 16.

4. What are the messages sent to your school about the technology? What beliefs do people hold in their heads and their hearts about technology in your school organization? How well is the symbolic function around technology fulfilled in terms of getting buy-in, getting passion, getting people to think that work is meaningful and essential as opposed to marginal and optional?

The message of the previous school year, when the one to one program was brand new, was that kids waste  a lot of time of the computers and often were "caught" doing bad things.  Some things were legit bad, but some things were just common ways of communicating today--through static messages of less than 160 characters.


Marginal and optional seems to be the key phrase in the preceding question.  Tech seems both marginal and optional to teachers and admins but not to learners.  In the times we are in, of flux, of change—no one seeks to buy in to the latest gadgetry and trainings and applications. People want culture to be steadfast, not fluid. People want less to do, not more. People want to teach, quite frankly—the tools don’t matter if the dialog is not there.

When I hear the word marginal I think about poverty.  I think about people living on the edges.  When I read the brilliant blog by John Spencer, it made more sense--we have told a lot of people these white boxes are purely entertainment, and there is no room for entertainment in school, and there certainly isn't time for learning at home since kids spend all their time at home catching up on their entertainment.

The idea behind the dissonance between learning at home, learning at school, entertainment at home, entertainment at school, is the tool can be controlled. Well, the mind can’t. That is the main problem. You just can’t control the mind.

EDU572 #2 SWOT Analysis

summer class

For the first time in a long time I am taking an on-line course. Long ago, learned that my social learning style did not go well with pure on-line coursework. I can't just read and comment! I need real live people to argue with!

Well, this class has promise as it will use Adobe connect to meet 4 times. I had never used Adobe connect before the OER project. The first time I used it, it felt so awkward. After three meetings I felt very comfortable. It is a good example of learning something because it is part of a way of doing things, not learning something just because. My motivation was high, and now that I know the app and am going to use it in another professional venue, I am very happy!!

My next major goal: Tandberg! We own the equipment and I designed a unit a few years ago that requires Tandberg between buildings in the region. Maybe it will happen this year? Maybe not? We'll see.

Back to the online class. It is called Technology as a Change Agent. I will post the sources for reading on the right when I can. This course looks right up my alley as it asks all kinds of great questions about technology in school--who controls, manages, etc. the technology. I think I will learn a lot about the structure of tech at my school and also how to move in a direction with it that makes sense for my learners. We are lucky (we meaning my colleague Mary and I) because in our content area (World Languages) there is so much available to assist learning.

So, back to school for a month. Online, not too bad. My two projects are full swing, OER and grad class. After this class only three left and I have a master's degree with a research focus. My research is in progress right now and I could not be happier about it--researching OER's has been a lot of organizational WORK but now that I am into it, it feels great knowing it will work toward my degree.

So, now on to read some text books and make some notes....

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...