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The following presentation juxtaposes the research and practices found in the areas of problem and project based learning, organizational leadership and change, and Visible Learning to enhance leaders at all levels to substantially enhance the learning of students.
Citation preview
Bringing PBL to Scale
Michael McDowell, Ed.D.
Structure of Presentation
• Presentation Launch (20 min.)• Workshop (90)• Know/Need to Know Review (10
min)
Khan
• What are the key findings from the following research?
• What inferences/assumptions emerge for you? (Learning, Teaching, and Professional Development)
• What are the implications from the research to the field?
• What do you see are next steps in relation to the inferences drawn?
This is a common reaction to professional development that does not provide teachers with sufficient opportunities to study the difference between their current practice and the alternative that is being proposed by the professional development provider. Robinson, Viviane (2011-06-24). Student-Centered Leadership (Jossey-Bass Leadership Library in Education) (p. 50). Wiley. Kindle Edition.
Driving Question
• How do we bring problem and project based learning to scale within a school or educational system to substantially increase near and far transfer of learning?
Know Need to Know
Connections
• Include your knowledge and skill on our todaysmeet backchannel
• Tweet, handle @mmcdowell13– Hashtag #pblny
• Take the following survey http://mmcdowell13.polldaddy.com/s/effects-on-student-learning-survey-2
Theory of Action
• If educators utilized a problem or project based approach within a system-wide professional learning community framework then students will show substantial rates of progress and exceed levels of proficiency within the knowledge, skills, and dispositions areas identified as necessary to be prepared for academic, vocational, societal, and familial expectations.
Our Story
Learning System Infrastructure
Daily operation
Clear Message
Why?
How?
What?
Defining Features
Systemic Professional Learning Community Framework
Project Design
Assessment for Learning
Differentiation
Learning Centered Culture and Climate
Expectations
McDowell, Ed.D.
• “Its unbelievable how much you don’t know about the game you’ve been playing all your life”
- Mantle
Few points of reference
- 915 Meta-analysis - 60,155 studies- 245 million students- 159,570 effect sizes reported- This data set is for the purpose of
discussion- There are moderators
Why?
An example
• Homework- effect size = .29• Rank 88th
• Number of Meta-analysis 5• Number of studies 161• Number of effects 295• Number of people 105,282
• Exploring each variable-
• High school twice as large• Short time periods are important• Direct parent involvement had a negative
effect• Lack of monitoring• Difficulty• Prescribing homework does not help in time management skills
What’s the story?
• Teachers are among the most powerful influences on learning
Teachers need to be directive, influential, caring, and actively engaged in the passion of teaching and learning
“Teachers don’t teach.” – They
• Teachers need to be aware of what each and every student is thinking and knowing, to construct meaning and meaningful experiences in light of this knowledge, and have proficient knowledge and understanding of their content to provide meaningful and appropriate feedback such that each student moves progressively through the curriculum levels
• Teachers and students need to know
Where are we going?, How are you going, and what’s next?
• Teachers need to move from the single idea to multiple ideas, and to relate and then extend these ideas such that learners construct and reconstruct knowledge and ideas. It is not the knowledge or ideas, but the learner’s construction of this knowledge and these ideas that is critical.
• School leaders and teachers need to create school, staffroom, and classroom environments where error is welcomed as a learning opportunity, where discarding incorrect knowledge and understandings is welcomed, and where participants can feel safe to learn, re-learn, and explore knowledge and understanding.
Factor influence on achievement (Hattie, 2009)Birth weight (.54)Lack of Illness (.23)Diet (.12)Drug interventions (.33)Exercise (.28)Socioeconomic status (.57)Family structure (.17)Home environment (.57)Parental involvement (.51)
teacher student relationships (.72)P.D. (.62)teacher clarity (.75)microteaching (.88)feedback (.73)Goals (.56)Mastery Learning (.58)Providing formative evaluation (.90)Spaced vs. Massed Practice (.71)
Effect sizes from teaching or working conditionsQuality of Teaching (.77)Reciprocal Teaching (.74)Teacher-Student relationships (.72)Providing Feedback (.72)Meta-cognition strategies (.67)Direct Instruction (.59)Mastery Learning (.57)
Ave (.68)
Within class grouping (.28)Adding more finances (.23)Reducing class size (.21)Ability grouping (.11)Multi-grade/age (.04)Open v. trad (. 01)summer vacation (-.09)Retention (-.16)
Ave (.08)
Effect sizes for teacher as activator and teacher as facilitator
Reciprocal Teaching (.74)Feedback (.72)Direct Instruction (.59)Problem Solving teaching (.61)Mastery Learning (.57)Goals-Challenging (.56)
Average activator (.63)
Simulations and gaming (.32)Inquiry-based teaching (.31)Individualized instruction (.20)PBL (.15)Web-based learning (.09)Whole language-reading (.06)
Average facilitator (.17)
Effect sizes for teacher as activator and teacher as facilitator
Reciprocal Teaching (.74)Feedback (.72)Direct Instruction (.59)Problem Solving teaching (.61)Mastery Learning (.57)Goals-Challenging (.56)
Average activator (.63)
Simulations and gaming (.32)Inquiry-based teaching (.31)Individualized instruction (.20)PBL (.15)Web-based learning (.09)Whole language-reading (.06)
Average facilitator (.17)
What are the key difference between these methods?The key is the role of the teacher…We go back to the story
Variables that don’t have a substantial impact- THE POLITICS OF DISTRACTION
• Attributes of students have a low effect on student learning (gender, parental employment, adoption, personality, labeling of students) (less than .18)
• Deep Programs matching styles of learning, inquiry based methods, individualized instruction, distance education (less than .22)
• School and Class Structure Summer school, finance, class size, ability grouping, retention, multi-grade/age classes, changing school calendars (less that .10)
Research Guidance
Strategy EffectTeachers working together to evaluate their impact and responding to that impact 0.93
Teachers conduct pre-assessments, utilizing data to inform instruction, and providing students with a clear understanding of expectations for meeting learning outcomes (Where are we
going?, where are we now?, and what’s next?
0.77
Teachers using practices in the classroom that values errors and trust 0.72
Teachers receive feedback on their impact on student learning 0.72
Teachers are providing an appropriate proportion of surface and deep level knowledge 0.71
Providing students with challenge and practice at the right level 0.60
Research Guidance
Strategy EffectTeachers working together to evaluate their impact and
responding to that impact 0.93Teachers conduct pre-assessments, utilizing data to inform
instruction, and providing students with a clear understanding of expectations for meeting learning outcomes (Where are we
going?, where are we now?, and what’s next?
0.77
Teachers using practices in the classroom that values errors and trust 0.72
Teachers receive feedback on their impact on student learning 0.72
Teachers are providing an appropriate proportion of surface and deep level knowledge 0.71
Providing students with challenge and practice at the right level 0.60
Why PBL?
Assessment for Learning
LearningCenteredCultureand Climate
IMPACT
Backwards Design
Differentiation
System-Wide PLC Framework
Systemic Professional Learning Community Framework
Professional Learning Community Framework
• Quality project or problem based learning as an instructional approach to enhance learning is developed, implemented, and improved upon only when anchored in a system-wide professional learning community framework that routinely reviews and acts upon student progress and proficiency data with respect to content literacy and 21st Century outcomes.
#vlconf2014
• Developing a backbone
• Embracing Customization
• Developing a support system
Know thy Impact
What do we want all students to know and be able to do?
How do we know when students are learning?
What do we do based on such results?
How do we work together to review and respond to student learning?
What do we want all students to know and be able to do?
What do we do based on these results?
How do we work together to review and respond to student learning?
Common Outcomes
Common Scales
Common Intervention Criteria
Common Culture and Work
How do we know when students are learning?
Common Outcomes
Common Scales
Common Intervention Criteria
Common Culture and Work
High Reliability Educational Organization
“Backbone”
Our approach
Culture and Climate
Teaching [and learning] in the dark is a questionable practice” (Taba, 1966)
Where are we?
What’s next?
Where are we going?
Where are we?
What’s next?
Where are we going?
How are we ensuring voice and choice?
What’s working? What needs improvement?
Where are we going?
Build a Guaranteed and Viable Curriculum• Identify key criteria• Select possible content outcomes that meet
criteria• Select possible skill outcomes that meet
criteria
Example Criteria
• Endurance. Standard includes the knowledge, skills, and dispositions students are expected to retain over time as opposed to those they merely learn for a test (Reeves, 2002).
• Curriculum Leverage. Standard includes the skills, knowledge, and dispositions that will assist the student in becoming proficient in other areas of the curriculum and other academic disciplines (Reeves, 2002).
• Essential learning. Standard includes the critical skills, knowledge, and dispositions each student must acquire as a result of each course, grade level, and unit of instruction.
Assessment Exercise
• Section A: Ten multiple choice items that are factual in nature but important to the topic
• Section B: Four short constructed-response items that require students to explain principles or give examples of generalizations as presented in class.
• Section C: Two short constructed-response items that require students to make inferences and applications that go beyond what was presented in class
• Points for Section A:_______• Points for Section B: _______• Points for Section C:_______• Total: __100___
Student Performance
• The student...• Answered all of Section A correctly• Answered two of four correctly in Section
B correctly• Answered all questions in Section C
incorrectly• What is the student’s overall score: ____
Proficiency ScaleScore Description
4 More Complex
3 Target
2 Less Complex
1 With Support,
0 Even with support,
Proficiency ScaleScore Description
4 More Complex
3 Target
2 Less Complex
Student Performance
• The student...• Answered all of Section A correctly• Answered two of four correctly in Section
B correctly• Answered all questions in Section C
incorrectly• What is the student’s overall score: ____
Assessment UseRight/Wrong -3
provide correct answer 8.5
Criteria understood by student v. not understood 16
explain 20
student reassessed until correct 20
Public viewing and discussion 26
Evaluation by rule (Tight Logic) 38
Bangert-Drowns, Kulik, Kulik, & Morgan (1991)
Fuchs and Fuchs(1998)
Marzano (2010)
Creating Progressions: Learning Hierarchies
• Learning progressions (also known as learning sequences and learning hierarchies) are attempts to organize academic content into a progression of increasingly more complex and generalizable knowledge.
• Each element in a learning progression is necessary to understand the next element or a natural developmental stage of understanding subsequent to the next level.
TUHSD
SOLO- Structure of the observed learning outcome
• Extended- Requires a learner to transfer their understand of single, multiple, and relational content to outside contexts.
• Relational- Requires a learner to relate single/multiple ideas together to further understand core content
• Single/Multiple- Requires a learner to understand single or multiple ideas related to the core content standards
TUHSD
A tale of two toolsRubric 1.0 Rubric 2.0 (scale)
Multi-dimensional Uni-dimensional
Context-rich Context-poor
Task oriented Learning orientedSubstantial criteria per
level minimal criteria per level
Progression levels dictated by rubric
purpose
Progression levels dictated by learning
taxonomy
Limits autonomy Enhances autonomy
Compliance orientation Performance orientation* This is typical , not always the case
“If we are to understand how teaching relates to learning, we have to begin at the closest point to that learning, and that is
students’ experience.”- Nuthall (2001)
Score Description
4 ExtensionApplying Understanding
3 RelationalMaking Meaning
2 Single/MultipleBuilding Knowledge
1 Direct Support
Proficiency
Not Yet Proficiency
Score Description
4 ExtensionApplying Understanding
3 RelationalMaking Meaning
2 Single/MultipleBuilding Knowledge
1 Direct Support
DEEP
SURFACE
Connections
Limited Growth (0.0-0.39)
Expected Growth (.40 +)
Not Yet Proficient (0.0-2.25)
Proficient (2.5-4.0)
Limited Growth (0.0-0.39) Expected Growth (.40 +)
Not Yet Proficient (0.0-2.25)
Make A Change!
• Review & Make Changes to Instructional Strategies
Keep it up!
• More Time • Same Instructional
Program• Celebrate Success
Proficient (2.5-4.0) Cruising
• Review & Make Changes to Instructional Strategies
Success
• Capture Instructional Strategies
• Celebrate Success• Continue Practices
Limited Growth (0.0-0.39) Expected Growth (.40 +)
Not Yet Proficient (0.0-2.5)
Make A Change!
• Review & Make Changes to Instructional Strategies
Keep it up!
• More Time • Same Instructional
Program• Celebrate Success
Proficient (2.5-4.0) Cruising
• Review & Make Changes to Instructional Strategies
Success
• Capture Instructional Strategies
• Celebrate Success• Continue Practices
Capture Success/Replicate
Change
What? So What? Now What?
Moving from Data Analysis to Response
Common Outcomes
Common Scales
Common Intervention Criteria
Common Culture and Work
Customized Instruction
Customized Assessment
Customized Collaborative Structures
Customized Intervention
• Driver of customization is impact• Impact is identified through progress and
proficiency• Impact is discussed by all stakeholders• All stakeholders have degrees of voice and
choice in showing, celebrating, and improving upon their impact.
Customized Instruction
Customized Assessment
Customized Collaborative Structures
Customized Intervention
Innovation
What do we want all students to know and be able to do?
How do we know when students are learning?
What do we do based on such results?
How do we work together to review and respond to student learning?
What do we want all students to know and be able to do?
What do we do based on these results?
How do we work together to review and respond to student learning?
Common Outcomes
Common Scales
Common Intervention Criteria
Common Culture and Work
How do we know when students are learning?
Common Outcomes
Common Scales
Common Intervention Criteria
Common Culture and Work
Common Outcomes
Common Scales
Common Intervention Criteria
Common Culture and Work
Learning System “Backbone”
Common Outcomes
Common Scales
Common Intervention Criteria
Common Culture and Work
Customized Instruction
Customized Assessment
Customized Collaborative Structures
Customized Intervention
Professional Development
“Backbone” Innovative Leadership
• Year I New Teacher Professional Development
• Grading P.D. • Facilitative
Support
• ITTC• New Tech
Network • Buck Institute
of Education
• TL Bootcamp• TLC on-going
P.D. • Administrative
Support (personal, team, organizational)
Tipping Point
August 2012 - March 2014• ITTC- 5 Teachers enrolled to approximately 98 (33
SLC)• Student Impact- (direct= 810) (indirect= 1,500)• Teacher request for additional support creating a
collaborative learning environment, teaching and assessing content and 21st century skills through SBG, utilizing PBL, and effectively using technology grew exponentially.
• Demand for a community of practice
How?
• Defined Autonomy• Distributed Leadership • Boundary Management• Culture and Climate• Leadership Competency (Model, Model,
Model)
What?
• Five Defining Features– Professional Learning Community Framework– Project Design– Assessment for Learning– Differentiation– Learning Centered Culture and Climate
Systemic PLC Framework
Sub-Features Steps
LSI
•Establish a Guaranteed and Viable Curriculum•Establish reliable and valid assessment instruments•Establish intervention criteria•Develop and improve upon an instructional model•Develop and improve upon critical friends teams
Support System
•Align board priorities•Align and allocate resources•Establish a leadership team
Customization
•Implement high yield approaches•Align to LSI features
Project Design
# 2 Project Design
• Project based learning orients the learner to transfer or application level problems or challenges at the beginning of the learning process and provides opportunities to learn and time to learn pertinent content and 21st Century knowledge and skills along a learning progression to meet such demanding learning expectations. Therefore, teachers must utilize a backwards design process to effectively design projects.
Sub-Features Steps
Outcome IdentificationIdentify all facts, ideas, and concepts that are related to content expected within each essential standard and/or 21st Century skill
Rubric Development•Classify all facts, ideas, and concepts for each outcome into appropriate progression levels•Assign appropriate verbs for each progression level•Develop a scoring scheme that aligns with progression levels and enhances reliability
Driving Question•Identify questions that can be used to guide the students thinking•Identify contexts that can be used to extend student learning within and across disciplines
Assessment Development
•Identify sample tasks that illustrate student knowledge across all progression levels•Identify potential sample obtrusive assessment items that align with all progression levels
Entry Event Planning Construct entry event content
Lecture Activity Quiz Lecture Activity Quiz Review Exam
Project Launch
Entry Event and Rubric Create
“Need to Knows” and Next Steps
PBL Redefined
The Microbial Jungle
Driving Question
Would changing the material of our currency reduce or inhibit the amount of drug-resistant microbe DNA found on dollar bills?
Project-Based Learning Unit:
Project Launch
Entry Event and Rubric Create
“Need to Knows” and Next Steps
Activities
Workshops
Lectures
Homework
Benc
hmar
k
Research
Labs
Simulations
Discussions
Modeling
Reading
Benc
hmar
k
Interviews
Quiz
Refle
ction
on
Lear
ning
PRESENT
Creating
Feedback
Building
Writing
Preparing
Drafts
Lecture Activity Quiz Lecture Activity Quiz Review Exam Project
PBL is NOT the Same as "Doing Projects"
Traditional Unit With Project:
Project-Based Learning Unit:
Project Launch
Entry Event and Rubric Create
“Need to Knows” and Next Steps
Activities
Workshops
Lectures
Homework
Benc
hmar
k
Research
Labs
Simulations
Discussions
Modeling
Reading
Benc
hmar
k
Interviews
Quiz
Refle
ction
on
Lear
ning
PRESENT
Creating
Feedback
Building
Writing
Preparing
Drafts
Verizon Operator Problem
• Provide a clear rationale for whether the operator or the customer is correct in the following situation.
A recent web release on Wikipedia reports that 8 % of all Americans eat at McDonald’s every day. Current data reveals that there are approximately 310 million Americans and 12,800 McDonald’s restaurants in the United States. Make a conjecture as to whether or not you believe the web release to be true, and then create a mathematical argument that justifies your conclusion
Which line would you take and why?
Mathematical Practices
• Make sense of problems • Persevere in solving them • Reason abstractly and quantitatively • Construct viable arguments • Critique the reasoning of others • Model with Mathematics• Use appropriate tools strategically • Attend to precision • Look for and make use of structure • Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning
PBL vs. DOING PROJECTS
PBL: Students are pulled through the curriculum by a driving question or realistic problem that provides a “need to know”. Lectures, readings, and skill building are integrated into the problem as the students need the information.
Know/ Need to Know
WHAT DOES PBL LOOK LIKE?
PROJECTINFORMATION
RESEARCH ANDINVESTIGATIONFORMAL
TEACHING
DRAFT SOLUTIONS
REFLECTION
FINALPRESENTATIONS
GROUPPLANNING
Teachers develop problems based on content standards
that students, working in teams, develop solutions to. Teachers provide coaching,
assignments and direct instruction to address
student needs.
Project Essentials
• Confront significant content and authentic issues• Develop 21st Century skills• Conclude with a public presentation• Organize activities around a driving questions or challenge• Establish a Need to Know or do• Engage students in inquiry• Require innovation• Encourage student voice and choice• Incorporate critique and revision
Project Essentials
• Confront significant content and authentic issues• Develop 21st Century skills• Conclude with a public presentation• Organize activities around a driving questions or challenge• Establish a Need to Know or do• Engage students in inquiry• Require innovation• Encourage student voice and choice• Incorporate critique and revision
Backbone
Customization
Project
Design (content & products)
• Confront significant content and authentic issues
• Develop 21st Century skills• Conclude with a public
presentation• Organize activities around a
driving questions or challenge
Implementation- “habits of practice”
• Establish a Need to Know or do
• Engage students in inquiry• Require innovation• Encourage student voice
and choice• Incorporate critique and
revision
THE OTHER BUMPS IN THE ROAD
Bumps in the road
• Students are rarely involved in the assessment process
• Curriculum design rarely introduces questions, criteria, and tasks for students to solve that require a range of surface and deep level knowledge
• Student thinking is dramatically influenced by context (rubrics and project expectations)
• Voice and Choice in tasks and assessments are rarely accessible or limited in scope to students due, in large part, to clarity.
Suggestions:
1. Create discipline centered questions for surface and deep level understanding
2. Identify a myriad of contexts that can be used to extend student learning across disciplines
3. Determine degree of autonomy related to context and tasks.
Art ExampleGoal- Student understands the relationship between historical events and artistic expression
Extended- Understand how art represents human behavior that stands the test of time.
Relational- Understands the relationship between the creation or expression of art and the events of the time.
Single/Multiple- Understand how compositional principles are identified in famous pieces of art
TUHSD
Art Example
TUHSD
Goal- Student understands the relationship between historical events and artistic expression
Academic Question
Extended- Understand how art represents human behavior that stands the test of time.
Relational- Understands the relationship between the creation or expression of art and the events of the time.
Single/Multiple- Understand how compositional principles are identified in famous pieces of art
How does this painting relate to contemporary time?
How does this piece connect to the time of its creation? Or, What do you consider the author was saying through his painting?
Who created the following piece? What is the name of the piece? What are two compositional principles that the artist used in the piece?
Identify a myriad of contexts that can be used to extend student learning across disciplines
McDowell, Ed.D.
Art ExampleGoal Academic Question Application
Questions
Extended- Understand how art represents human behavior that stands the test of time.
Relational- Understands the relationship between the creation or expression of art and the events of the time.
Single/Multiple- Understand how compositional principles are identified in famous pieces of art
How does this painting relate to human behavior as expressed in contemporary events?
How does this piece connect to the time of its creation? Or, What do you consider the author was saying through his painting?
Who created the following piece? What is the name of the piece? What are two compositional principles that the artist used in the piece?
Should we use art as a way to understand the causes and effects of violent acts in the middle east?
• The student will initiate and participate effectively in a range of collaborative discussions (one on one, in groups, and teacher led) with diverse partners on grade-appropriate topics, texts, and issues, building on others’ ideas and expressing their own clearly and persuasively (SL. 11-12.1)
• The student will draw skillfully across various sources of influence to motivate and enable vital behaviors so that important personal, social, and organization goals are accomplished.
Determine degree of autonomy related to context and tasks.
Units of StudyStage I Desired Results - Where are we going?
Established Goals Driving Question
Stage II Assessment Evidence – Where are we?
Scale2.03.04.0
Tasks
Stage III Learning Plan- What’s next?
Steps Days
Looking at a particular unit
Creating a Driving Question
TUHSD
Crafting a Driving Question
• Problem: Curriculum design rarely introduces questions for students to solve that require ALL levels of knowledge in relevant disciplines AND connects to authentic contexts
• Solution: Develop questions that require learning at ALL levels AND requires students to think about how the subject matter relates to various contexts.
McDowell, Ed.D.
Driving Question 1 2 3 4
Provocative Initial: “How do the beliefs of people influence and impact the rights of others?”Emerging: “How do conservative policies influence women’s rights related to abortion?”
AnswerableInitial: “How has technology affected world history?”Emerging: “Does technology make war more or less humane?”
RelationalInitial: “How does the author use voice and perspective in The House on Mango Street to reflect on his childhood and community?”Emerging: “How can childhood memories show who we are today?
Concrete and challengingInitial: “How do architects use geometry?”Emerging: “How can we design a theater that meets specification with the greatest number of seats?”
Academic & ApplicableInitial: How can changes in the protein synthesis process alter protein development? What treatments enhance patient survival rates with HIV?Emerging: What, if any, antiviral drug treatments increase and maintain normal protein development in patients with HIV over time? Explain the most effective strategy to date.
McDowell, Ed.D.
Science Example
• Questions
Goal- Students are able to describe the flow of information from transcription of ribonucleic acid (RNA) in the nucleus to translation of proteins on ribosomes.
Academic Question
Extended- Understand how various factors may influence protein creation.
Relational- Understands how transcription and translation relate to one another to create proteins
Single/Multiple- Understands that transcription, translation, RNA, and DNA are involved in creating proteins.
How can changes in the protein synthesis process alter protein development?
How are proteins made through the transcription and translation process?
What is translation? What is transcription? What is RNA?
McDowell, Ed.D.
21ST Century Skills
• QuestionsGoal: Student builds relational trust with peers while addressing technical project issues
Academic Question
Extended- Understands how open to learning conversation strategies can be used in closed to learning environments
Relational- Understands the relationship between between open to learning conversation values and strategies
Single/Multiple- Understands how values are expressed in open to learning conversation
How do facilitators create the conditions necessary to engage participants who are unfamiliar with open to learning conversations?
How do facilitators utilize strategies to express their understanding of the embedded values of open to learning conversation?
What are two values that are common in “open to learning” conversations?
Art ExampleGoal- Student understands the relationship between historical events and artistic expression
Academic Question
Extended- Understand how art represents human behavior that stands the test of time.
Relational- Understands the relationship between the creation or expression of art and the events of the time.
Single/Multiple- Understand how compositional principles are identified in famous pieces of art
How do painting relate to contemporary time?
How do paintings connect to the time of their creation? Or, What do you consider the painter was saying through their paintings?
Who created the following piece? What is the name of the piece? What are two compositional principles that the artist used in the piece?
TUHSD
TUHSD
McDowell, Ed.D.
SOLO
• Questions
Goal Academic Question Application Questions
Extended- Understand how various factors may influence protein creation.
Relational- Understands how transcription and translation relate to one another to create proteins
Single/Multiple- Understands that transcription, translation, RNA, and DNA are involved in creating proteins.
How can changes in the protein synthesis process alter protein development?
How are proteins made through the transcription and translation process?
What is translation? What is transcription? What is RNA?
What is the most effective antiviral drug treatment to increase and maintain normal protein development in patients with HIV over time? Explain.
How do immune cells relate to the HIV virus?
What is the structure and function of HIV? What is the structure and function of T-Cells?
McDowell, Ed.D.
21st Century Skill ExampleGoal: Student builds relational trust with peers while addressing technical project issues
Academic Question ApplicationQuestions
Extended- Understands how open to learning conversation strategies can be used in closed to learning environments
Relational- Understands the relationship between between open to learning conversation values and strategies
Single/Multiple- Understands how values are expressed in open to learning conversation
How do facilitators create the conditions necessary to engage participants who are unfamiliar with open to learning conversations?
How do facilitators utilize strategies to express their understanding of the embedded values of open to learning conversation?
What are two values that are common in “open to learning” conversations?
How do we handle the following group situations using appropriate facilitative strategies?
McDowell, Ed.D.
Art ExampleGoal Academic Question Application
QuestionsExtended- Understand how art represents human behavior that stands the test of time.
Relational- Understands the relationship between the creation or expression of art and the events of the time.
Single/Multiple- Understand how compositional principles are identified in famous pieces of art
How does this painting relate to human behavior as expressed in contemporary events?
How does this piece connect to the time of its creation? Or, What do you consider the author was saying through his painting?
Who created the following piece? What is the name of the piece? What are two compositional principles that the artist used in the piece?
Should we use art as a way to understand the causes and effects of violent acts in the middle east?
Teaser
• What elements are critical for developing and implementing problems?
• What stood out for you in the film?
Three Acts: Act One
• Act One- Introduce the central conflict of your story/task clearly, visually and viscerally.
Three Acts: Act Two
• Act Two: The protagonist overcomes obstacles, looks for resources, and develops new tools
Three Acts: Act Three
• Act Three: Resolve the conflict and set up a sequel.
Design: Develop Assessments
• Problem: Assessments rarely address ALL progression levels AND are rarely diverse in type to represent student progress and proficiency.
• Solution: Design assessments that represent the varying progression levels AND represent a diversity in typology to ascertain student progress and proficiency.
Does it have to be paper and pencil?
• Student interviews (probing)• Performance based tasks• Unobtrusive assessments• Student generated• Observation • Projects• Re-do of specific items on a test• And….
Assessment Types
Unobtrusive Obtrusive Student Generated
Applying Understanding
Making Meaning
Building Knowledge
Assessment Types
Unobstrusive Obtrusive Student Generated
Applying Understanding
Making Meaning
Building Knowledge
ExampleAssessment
More Complex
Target
Less Complex
Design: Craft an Entry Event
• Problem: When introducing curriculum to pupils we rarely focus student learning on the driving question & the essential learning outcomes
• Solution: Introduce curriculum with a driving question that requires student understanding and application within and across disciplines.
Assessment for Learning
Assessment for Learning• To meet project expectations, teachers
utilize targeted inquiry to articulate expectations, identify current progress, and enable learners and teachers to co-construct next steps in the learning process.
Assessment for Learning
Sub-Feature Steps
Targeted Inquiry
•Clarify learning intentions•Identify progress and proficiency•Provide targeted feedback•Leverage self, peer, and teachers in AfL process•Review and respond to efficacy of AfL practices
Where we are going? Where we are? Where to next?
Where are we?
What’s next?
Where are we going?
Where are we?
What’s next?
Where are we going?
How are we ensuring voice and choice?
What’s working? What needs improvement?
Be honest with where I am at on learning progressions. I definitely am honest with where I am in this class. This way of assessment has completely made me feel alright with being in the pit because I know that I am not stuck there and that I can get myself out of it. I really appreciate all that you have done to make us feel comfortable with progress.
Be open to struggling. What I said above encompasses this. Before this class I was not open to struggling at all, so this took me a while to get used to. Now I know that I can get myself out of the pit, so I feel comfortable being in it! I just wish it was this way in the rest of my classes. ):
My annotations and thoughts on written pieces were at about a 1 level at the beginning of the semester, but with guidance in class and a lot of practice I have grown to getting a four on the last annotation. Next semester I hope to grow further.
Where are we?
What’s next?
Where are we going?
How are we ensuring voice and choice?
What’s working? What needs improvement?
Differentiation
# 4 Differentiation
• Implementation of a project-based learning approach is complex due to the range of instructional strategies and resources that are utilized to substantially impact student learning across a learning progression. Throughout the project process, instructors must utilize progress and proficiency data to target instruction in order to enhance student learning.
Differentiation
Sub-Feature Steps
Targeted Instruction
•Develop workshops for content and skill progression levels•Align workshops to problem solving process•Develop a project calendar
Resource Utilization
Access technology, maximize adult connections, and utilize collaborative tools
Questions to consider:
• What strategies yield a high effect at the far transfer “applying understanding” level?
• What strategies yield a high effect at the near transfer level?
• How do we arrange workshops to match student learning needs
• Identifying efficiency and effective means for leveraging teacher practice
Aligning “High Probability Strategies” from the Art and Science of Teaching to Progression Levels.
Outcome Questions Activities
Applying understanding What do I typically do to engage students in cognitively complex tasks involving hypothesis generation and testing?
Experimental-inquiry tasksProblem-solving tasks
Making meaning What do I typically do to organize students and deepen knowledge?
Venn diagramsComparison matrix
Building knowledge What do I typically do to identify critical information?
Identifying critical input experiences
Progression Level
Single/Multiple Ideas- What instructional approaches will support students in understanding foundational knowledge (e.g. facts, vocabulary terms) related to learning outcomes? Relating ideas- What instructional approaches support students in connecting and contrasting ideas? What are generalizations and principles that can be made about these ideas? Extending ideas- What instructional approaches support students in applying the learning outcomes to other contexts
Next Steps- Teachers
Single/Multiple Ideas- What strategies am I using that will support me in building knowledge and skills (e.g. facts, vocabulary terms) related to learning outcomes? Relating ideas- What approaches appear to be working or I should attempt to connect and contrast ideas? How am I going as related to making generalizations and principles? Extending ideas- What approaches support me in applying the learning outcomes to other contexts?
Next Steps- Students
Math StrategiesBelow Average
• Counting all 22%• Counting on 72%• Known facts 6%• Derived facts/Number
Sense 0%
Above Average
• Counting all 0%• Counting on 9%• Known facts 30%• Derived facts/Number
Sense 61%
Simplistic Model
Project Launch/PreAss
essment
“Building Knowledge”
Workshops/AfL
“Making Meaning”
Workshops/AfL
“Applying Understanding
” Project Presentation
Sequel- Context Switch
More realistic “messy” model
• All models are wrong, some are useful- George Box
Learning Centered Culture and Climate
# 5 Learning Centered Culture and Climate
• Project based learning requires a unique set of classroom strategies to support all students in meeting content and 21st Century skill knowledge and skill based transfer level requirements.
Learning Centered Culture and Climate
Sub-Feature Steps
Group Parameters
•Create and implement agreements, roles and intervention processes•Establish a language of learning and empathy•Inspect culture and climate through an intervention process•Structural devices and processes for conversations
Organization Organize room, meetings, and teams to leverage collaboration
Relational
Tactical
Project
Relational
• “We are change agents”• Talk more about learning
than teaching• Engage in dialogue not
monologue• Enjoying the challenge• Positive relationships
Tactical
• Evaluate the effects of their teaching
• Assessment as feedback regarding their impact
• Inform all about the language of learning
#vlconf2014
• “We are change agents”
• Talk more about learning than teaching
• Engage in dialogue not monologue
• Enjoying the challenge
• Positive relationships
#vlconf2014
• “We are change agents”
• Talk more about learning than teaching
• Engage in dialogue not monologue
• Enjoying the challenge
• Positive relationships
• Hiring Practices• Creating a CIA defined
autonomy Infrastructure• Meeting Structure and
Function• Codifying Capacity
Building• Developing a
Distributed Leadership Team
Model, Model, Model
#vlconf2014
Mental Models
Ready, Fire, Aim
Ideal
Professional culture
Existing
• Create an agreed upon decision-making process• Use that process to check for disagreements and to discuss
“undiscussables”• Use questions to address potential conflicts and to explore ideas• Always check in on each member of the group to make sure they
understand group process• Each group member will explain their actions or beliefs to the group• Each group member is responsible for all other group members in
understanding the task and coaching each other to perform at a high level• Each group member will explain important words and provide specific
examples when needed• All group members will question other members when they encounter
“jump to conclusion” comments• When sharing ideas all members will advocate their ideas and ask
questions about other ideas.
Seven guideposts:• Be behaviorally specific (e.g. look fors) , e.g. each group member will explain their actions or beliefs to the group.
• Stay small, stay focused: test drive a few agreements, 2-3
Seven guideposts:• Focus on conversational agreements- no need for “be on time”, everyone knows that
• Create roles- create a viewpoint coach (summarizes what folks are saying) and a process observer (reviews agreements and monitors process)
.
Seven guideposts:• Use agreements to intervene: The strategy I’ve seen work the best is the following: state facts, test assumption, ask if assumption is correct, discuss infraction OR move on.
• Call out “critical moments”- think of those moments where the use of agreements are critical, did you or your teammates take action? Process these critical moments, they are usually in the undiscussable range.
• Arrange meetings for tough conversations, nuts and bolts go into memos or in short 5-10 minute sequences.
Seven guideposts:• Be behaviorally specific (e.g. look fors) , e.g. each group member will explain
their actions or beliefs to the group. • Stay small, stay focused: test drive a few agreements, 2-3• Focus on conversational agreements- no need for “be on time”, everyone
knows that• Create roles- create a viewpoint coach (summarizes what folks are saying) and
a process observer (reviews agreements and monitors process)• Use agreements to intervene: The strategy I’ve seen work the best is the
following: state facts, test assumption, ask if assumption is correct, discuss infraction OR move on.
• Call out “critical moments”- think of those moments where the use of agreements are critical, did you or your teammates take action? Process these critical moments, they are usually in the undiscussable range.
• Arrange meetings for tough conversations, nuts and bolts go into memos or in short 5-10 minute sequences.
Unhealthy Motives Motives of Dialogue
Be rightLook good/safe face
WinPunish, blameAvoid conflict
LearnFind the truth
Produce resultsStrengthen
relationships
#vlconf2014
• “We are change agents”
• Talk more about learning than teaching
• Engage in dialogue not monologue
• Enjoying the challenge
• Positive relationships
SystemsApproach
Leading by understanding the infusion process
Know thy Impact
Leading by modeling/living
Boundary Management
Progress
Proficiency
Novice – short items focused on skills and routines
Apprentice – medium performance tasks with scaffolding
Expert – long tasks with high cognitive load and/or complexity.
Types of Tasks on SBAC
Culture
Review
Stories of Change
• What are the key stories that emerge when facing second order changes?
Stories of Change
I. Look like an extension from the past (We have done this before).
II. Things become worse, people are uncomfortable (e.g. communication has broken down)
III. Ready, fire, aim (what’s needed in process is opposite to the perception of buy in)
IV. Assumptions, mental models, are challenged (sacred cows)
Underlying Assumptions
• The ability to learn at high levels• The actual causal and correlational variables
that influence high levels of learning• The burden of responsibility for learning• The aspects to be learned; the culminating
deliverables of an education• The structure and function of delivery and
inspection
Our perception of material advantage
Reality
How does the conversation shift?
1.We have material advantage (we can reduce class size)2.We have maximized such an advantage yet perpetuate the same story
(we don’t see the U shape curve) 3.We have political, social, and personal investment to reinforce past
practice (we were successful in this game)4. Focusing on finance and class size moves us away from difficult
conversations (we can’t say “we can’t”. We have to say “we won’t” and then provide a rationale)
5.The much more difficult change efforts required (Lawrence of Arabia) is taxing and difficult to execute over time
6. Facts are funny things. Paradoxes (both/ands) exist in student achievement, leadership, and change. These complexities are hard to understand and challenge current many times “collective” thinking.
Stay small
Stay
focused
#vlconf2014
Dialogue: https://todaysmeet.com/VLMindframe
Twitter: @mmcdowell13 ; #VLConf2014
Email: [email protected]
"Every teacher needs to improve, not because they are not good enough, but because they can be even better.”- Dylan Wiliam
Eugene o Neil
The people who succeed and do not push on for a greater failure are the spiritual middle classers