12/5/12 Meeting #6
Please get your public speaking data in as soon as you can. Thanks.
1. Check-In
2. 21st Century Offering: Invention
"Applying new ways to solve problems is an ideal in reading and writing instruction. Invention is one of the key components of creating an exemplary writing piece or synthesizing information from multiple sources. Invention takes students to a higher level of metacognition while exploring literature and writing about their experiences."
Form to fill out for Leah:
Info about these definitions
3. Selfish discussion for Spare about the presentations on A Long Way Gone--loosely connected to our ELO on speaking...
4. Let's figure out a 3rd ELO to work on. Keep the momentum going.
Possible way to frame conversation: What are we already planning on doing during semester 2 that would fit with #3 or #4?
Here are our "revised" ELO's
“Adjusted” ELOs
ELO #1 Students will write thesis statements that are clear, specific, debatable and provable. Through this process students
ELO #2: Students will develop the ability to speak formally to their peers by presenting information concisely and logically, supporting presentations with evidence, and integrating technology effectively, and interacting with an audience actively.
New ELO #3: Students will display the ability to read and interpret literature by evaluating literary elements such as motif, theme, symbol and figurative language.
Macbeth or any shakespeare (figurative language and motif) Annette, Tom
New ELO #4: Students will display the ability to synthesize two sources in a formal literary essay.
Synthesis with F 451 and film
(Steve, Kristin, Rob) Truman Show, Pleasantville
Next meeting is January 30th. Let's make sure we have our third set of data by then.
Feedback form:
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Meeting 11/14/12
11/14/12 Meeting (#5)
21st Century Goals Sheet (from Leah)
Topic: Self-Direction ("Definition" below)
Self Direction (Reading, Writing, and Communicating)
Students who read, write, and communicate independently portray self-direction by using metacognition skills. These important skills are a learner’s automatic awareness of knowledge and ability to understand, control, and manipulate cognitive processes. These skills are important not only in school but throughout life, enabling the student to learn and set goals independently.
Discussion of Speaking ELO
Spare talks about Kite Runner Speeches.
Kristin discusses book talks.
Check-in with everyone else. Where are you, what help do you need, etc.
Finally, which ELO do we want to tackle next....
ELO #1: Students will develop the ability to speak formally to their peers by presenting information concisely and logically, supporting presentations with evidence, and integrating technology effectively, and interacting with an audience actively.
ELO #2: Students will develop the ability to speak formally to their peers by presenting information concisely and logically, supporting presentations with evidence, and integrating technology effectively, and interacting with an audience actively.
New ELO #3: Students will display the ability to read and interpret literature by evaluating literary elements such as motif, theme, symbol and figurative language.
New ELO #4: Students will display the ability to synthesize two sources in a formal literary essay.
Feedback Form for Meeting #5
21st Century Goals Sheet (from Leah)
Topic: Self-Direction ("Definition" below)
Self Direction (Reading, Writing, and Communicating)
Students who read, write, and communicate independently portray self-direction by using metacognition skills. These important skills are a learner’s automatic awareness of knowledge and ability to understand, control, and manipulate cognitive processes. These skills are important not only in school but throughout life, enabling the student to learn and set goals independently.
Discussion of Speaking ELO
Spare talks about Kite Runner Speeches.
Kristin discusses book talks.
Check-in with everyone else. Where are you, what help do you need, etc.
Finally, which ELO do we want to tackle next....
ELO #2: Students will develop the ability to speak formally to their peers by presenting information concisely and logically, supporting presentations with evidence, and integrating technology effectively, and interacting with an audience actively.
New ELO #3: Students will display the ability to read and interpret literature by evaluating literary elements such as motif, theme, symbol and figurative language.
New ELO #4: Students will display the ability to synthesize two sources in a formal literary essay.
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
meeting 4: 10/24/12
10/24/12
"21st Century" Definition of Collaboration (Reading, Writing and Communicating)
Reading, writing, and communicating must encompass collaboration skills. Students should be able to collaborate with each other in multiple settings: peer groups, one-on-one, in front of an audience, in large and small group settings, and with people of other ethnicities. Students should be able to participate in a peer review, foster a safe environment for discourse, mediate
opposing perspectives, contribute ideas, speak with a purpose, understand and apply knowledge of culture, and seek others’ ideas.
Collaboration Discussion: Link to Document
2. Plan a common assessment on Public speaking ELO:
The ELO reads like this:
Feedback Form #4https://docs.google.com/document/d/1LiDMMhjSRN1cFmhKgpUw13k--5mO4o08X9qYPBE_ezc/edit
From Leah:
From Leah:
1. At PLC meetings #2 and #3, you discussed and answered questions about the 21 st
Century Skills of Critical Thinking and Reasoning and Information Literacy that
are embedded in your standards. Today, take a short time at the beginning of your
meeting to explore the 21st Century Skill of Collaboration.
"21st Century" Definition of Collaboration (Reading, Writing and Communicating)
Reading, writing, and communicating must encompass collaboration skills. Students should be able to collaborate with each other in multiple settings: peer groups, one-on-one, in front of an audience, in large and small group settings, and with people of other ethnicities. Students should be able to participate in a peer review, foster a safe environment for discourse, mediate
opposing perspectives, contribute ideas, speak with a purpose, understand and apply knowledge of culture, and seek others’ ideas.
Collaboration Discussion: Link to Document
2. Plan a common assessment on Public speaking ELO:
The ELO reads like this:
Students will develop the ability to speak formally to their peers by presenting information concisely and logically, supporting presentations with evidence, and integrating technology effectively, and interacting with an audience actively.
4 traits?
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
meeting 3: 10/3/12
Agenda
PLC Meeting #3
(From Leah) 1. At PLC meeting #2, you discussed and answered questions
about the 21 st Century
Skill of Critical Thinking and Reasoning that is embedded in
your standards. Today,
take a short time at the beginning of your meeting to
explore the 21 st Century Skill
of Information Literacy.
Information Literacy (Reading, Writing and Communicating)
The student who is information-literate accesses information efficiently and effectively by reading and understanding essential content of a range of informational texts and documents in all academic areas. This involves evaluating information critically and competently; accessing appropriate tools to synthesize information; recognizing relevant primary and secondary information; and distinguishing among fact, point of view, and opinion.
Information Literacy (Reading, Writing and Communicating)
The student who is information-literate accesses information efficiently and effectively by reading and understanding essential content of a range of informational texts and documents in all academic areas. This involves evaluating information critically and competently; accessing appropriate tools to synthesize information; recognizing relevant primary and secondary information; and distinguishing among fact, point of view, and opinion.
2. How might you integrate this skill more explicitly in your
lessons?
3. What will you do to help students become better with this
skill?
Thesis common assessment:
- 30 minutes of data entry
- Data driven dialogue with examples and data:
1. Observations
2. Inferences, implications.
3. Action
Common Assessment #2? Set a date or window for
administering the assessment? Plan to have the data collected by your next
meeting on October 24th?
7. Complete the yellow sections of the PLC Feedback Form #3
and the PLC Progress Report #3. Keep these for your records and please send a
copy of each to Leah Latta by Friday, October 5th.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Meeting 9/12/12
Agenda
PLC Meeting #2
September 12, 2012
- Set goals for the meeting using this agenda as a guide.
- A short time at the beginning of this PLC meeting and each of the remaining four PLC meetings this semester will be devoted to exploring the 21st Century Skills embedded in your standards. The 21st Century Skill to explore today is Critical Thinking and Reasoning. Review the definition of this skill for your content (see attached document) and discuss the following three questions:
Critical thinking and reasoning are vital to advance in the technologically sophisticated world we live in. In order for students to be successful and powerful readers, writers, and communicators, they must incorporate critical thinking and reasoning skills. Students need to be able to successfully argue a point, justify reasoning, evaluate for a purpose, infer to predict and draw
conclusions, problem-solve, and understand and use logic to inform critical thinking.
- How does the skill of critical thinking connect to something you already do in your classroom?
- How might you integrate this skill more explicitly in your lessons?
- What will you do to help students become better with this skill?
- Students will write thesis statements that are clear, specific, debatable and provable. Through this process students
- Students will display the ability to read and interpret literature critically by evaluating such literary elements as plot, characterization, motif, and conflict.
- Students will develop the ability to think abstractly about such literary elements as theme, symbol, and figurative language.
- Students will develop the ability to speak formally to their peers by presenting information concisely and logically, supporting presentations with evidence, and integrating technology effectively, and interacting with an audience actively.
Which one do we want to use? Is the thesis a slam dunk, or are there other options?
Which Rubric?
If time: Coolest English Teacher Ever (link)
Note: Next Meeting is 10/3. We need to have data for a common assessment
Which Rubric?
If time: Coolest English Teacher Ever (link)
Note: Next Meeting is 10/3. We need to have data for a common assessment
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Meeting 8/29/12
TO DO (from Leah):
List your PLC facilitator’s name with an asterisk (*), all PLC members’ names, and your meeting location on the attached PLC Feedback Form #1. (DONE)
Create a list of norms to help your PLC work effectively as a group. (DONE)- (From Leah--can you help?)Last year, PLC members worked hard to align their curriculum with the new standards. This semester, we will examine the five 21st Century Skills that are embedded in the standards to ensure that we are providing opportunities for all students to progress toward mastery of these skills. The skills are Critical Thinking and Reasoning, Information Literacy, Collaboration, Self-Direction, and Invention. You can find content specific descriptions of these skills in your standards and also on the attached document from the Colorado Department of Education. At each of the remaining five PLC meetings this semester beginning at PLC Meeting #2, we will focus on one of these skills. Please include this work in your PLC goals for the year.
- Examine your course descriptions and flowcharts in the Arapahoe High School Pathfinder. Determine whether the course descriptions and/or the flowcharts need to change as a result of your curriculum alignment work last year. If changes are necessary, please submit the corrected course descriptions and flowcharts to Kevin Kolasa by Wednesday, October 31st.
- Set goals for the year and for the first meeting. (Fill out on Form)
- Use the questions below to guide your discussions of Essential Learnings, Common Formative Assessments, and Supplemental Interventions. Note: What are our essential learnings from last year?
Here's the list we came up at the first meeting:
--Creating thesis statements that are clear, specific, refutable, and proveable. (Synthesis papers)
--Reading comprehension/interpretation: e.g. motif, theme, characterization, figurative lang.
--Grammar/mechanics: e.g. subject/verb agreement, comma splices.
--Formal public speaking: book talks, persuasive speeches.
- Determine the Essential Learnings for your course using these three criteria.
- Endurance – Does the learning address knowledge and skills that will endure throughout a student’s academic career and professional life?
- Leverage – Does the learning address knowledge and skills that will be of value in multiple content areas?
- Necessity – Does the learning provide the essential knowledge and skills that students need to succeed in the next grade level?
- Create Common Formative Assessments for each of your Essential Learnings.
- Which specific students did not demonstrate mastery?
- Which instructional practices proved to be most effective?
- What patterns can we identify from the student mistakes?
- How can we improve this assessment?
- What interventions are needed to provide failed students additional time and support?
- Develop a list of Supplemental Interventions.
- Which interventions are targeted to help failed learners?
- Which interventions are targeted to help intentional nonlearners?
- Are we accurately identifying every student in need of intervention, determining why each student is struggling, and placing each student in the proper intervention?
- How often will we monitor progress and revise student placement?
- Complete the yellow sections of PLC Feedback Form #1. Please send me your completed PLC Feedback Form #1 as well as a list of all of your identified essential learnings from last year by Friday, August 31st. We need to do this.
- After you administer your first common assessment and analyze the data you collect, use the attached PLC Progress Report #1 to record and report your results.
Monday, August 27, 2012
Meeting 8/16/12
Minutes for 8/16 (10th grade PLC)
Who will be our PLC Facilitator this year?
Who will be members of our PLC?
What were our successes and challenges last year in answering the four PLC critical questions listed below?
What are our PLC's goals this year?
What are our norms this year?
What support do we need to accomplish our goals?
The Four PLC Critical Questions
What is essential for students to learn?
How will we know when each student has learned it?
How will we respond when a student experiences difficulty in learning?
How will we respond when a student already knows it?
Notes:
1. Spare is facilitator.
2. Members: Annette, Steve, Tom, Lauren, Kristin, Rob.
2. Spare will use Edmodo to store documents. Join the group if you want to.
3. Challenges:
5. Possible ELO’s:
6. Norms for Tenth PLC:
6. Support: We need more specific directives from leaderhsip about how to proceed.
Who will be our PLC Facilitator this year?
Who will be members of our PLC?
What were our successes and challenges last year in answering the four PLC critical questions listed below?
What are our PLC's goals this year?
What are our norms this year?
What support do we need to accomplish our goals?
The Four PLC Critical Questions
What is essential for students to learn?
How will we know when each student has learned it?
How will we respond when a student experiences difficulty in learning?
How will we respond when a student already knows it?
Notes:
1. Spare is facilitator.
2. Members: Annette, Steve, Tom, Lauren, Kristin, Rob.
2. Spare will use Edmodo to store documents. Join the group if you want to.
3. Challenges:
- directives from admin are not always continuous or consistent, which leaves the group confused as to how to proceed.
- Difficult to make PLCs/DDD’s meaningful to our classrooms.
5. Possible ELO’s:
- Creating thesis statements that are clear, specific, refutable, and proveable. (Synthesis papers)
- Reading comprehension/interpretation: e.g. motif, theme, characterization, figurative lang.
- Grammar/mechanics: e.g. subject/verb agreement, comma splices.
- Formal public speaking: book talks, persuasive speeches.
6. Norms for Tenth PLC:
a. Allow others to finish thoughts before jumping in.
b. Stay focused on the PLC agenda.
c. Be on time and mentally present.
d. If necessary, to avoid circular discussions, call for a vote.
e. Respect the PLC process and seek to make it meaningful/pertinent to our classrooms.
6. Support: We need more specific directives from leaderhsip about how to proceed.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)