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Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005
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Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Elementary Principals Institute

Looking Forward to the New Year

August 8, 2005

Page 2: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.
Page 3: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

“It is strange perhaps to realize that most people have a desire to love their organizations. They love the purpose of their school...They fall in love with the identity that is trying to be expressed. They connect to the founding vision.”

Margaret Wheatley and Kellner Rogers

Page 4: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Where have we been?

Year 1 Coaches in buildings for onsite professional development Independent reading and book bags Writing Workshop Classroom libraries New Standards books

Year 2 Avenues for English Language Development Guided reading Writing curriculum materials

Year 3 Writing cycles and writing rubrics Making Meaning

Page 5: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.
Page 6: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Where We Are Now

Page 7: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Where We Are Now

“Transforming professional practice for teaching a culturally diverse population of students requires continuous growth in related craft knowledge and the application of this knowledge in planning and delivering instruction and in developing a supportive context for learning.”

Etta R. Hollins, Culture in School Learning

Page 8: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Where We Are Now

Increase our intentionality with existing curriculumDeepen implementation through use of

coaching and by examining best practices, lesson planning, and co-accountability

Use professional learning communities to talk and learn collectively

Examine assessment data and use tools to support learning outcomes

Page 9: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Where We Are Now: Best Practices

Best practicesHold out the vision of effective practiceSupport teacher self-assessment

in their own implementationProvide foundation for coach-teacher agree-

ments for ongoing coaching-teaching focusProvide context for collaborative conversa-

tions in team and grade-level meetings

Page 10: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Where We Are Now: Professional Learning Communities

Page 11: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Where We Are Now: Professional Learning Communities

Use grade-level and leadership teams to examine best practicesDetermine school strengthsConsider areas of focusProblem solve barriers to implementing

best practicesPlan staff development

Use distributed leadership

Page 12: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Where We Are Now: Professional Learning Communities

“If collective learning is the goal, my authority to command you to do something doesn’t mean much if it is not complemented by some level of knowledge and skill which, when joined with yours, makes us both more effective. Summarily, if we have the same roles, I have little incentive to cooperate with you unless we can jointly produce something that we could not produce individually. In both instances, the value of direction, guidance, and cooperation stems from acknowledging and making use of the differences in expertise.”

Richard Elmore

Page 13: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Where We Are Now: Assessments

AssessmentsBoth summative and formative

Reading assessment toolsStatus of the Class and CBLA assessments

Progress monitoringProfessional dialogueEffective instructional decision making

Page 14: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Where We Are Now: Assessments

Writing assessment toolsWriting rubrics—NCEE and

DPS benchmark samplesUse for both formative and summative

assessment Calibrate student outcomes and

raise expectations Support teachers in knowing what student

outcomes tell us about next steps Inform instruction

Page 15: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Our Commitment to Assessmentin DPS

Page 16: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Assessments

We are committed to learning to use data effectively.

We are committed to developing a process for using data to differentiate instruction.Assessment plan

Current assessments are still the sameAdditional focus for learning

to use progress-monitoring tools

Page 17: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

Assessments

Re-authorization of IDEA requires assessments for:ScreeningDiagnosticProgress monitoring

Page 18: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.

“Positive images of the future are a powerful and magnetic force...They draw us on and energize us, give us courage and will to take on important initiatives.”

William James

“We need leadership that is tough enough to demand a great deal from everyone, and leadership that is tender enough to encourage the heart.”

Thomas Sergiovanni, Leadership for the Schoolhouse

Page 19: Elementary Principals Institute Looking Forward to the New Year August 8, 2005.