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Leadership Academy Norms We will… Begin and end on time Keep the train of thought “on the track” Actively participate and process throughout the entire session Respect the ideas and learning needs of others Assume positive intent
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Leadership Academy Norms We will… Begin and end on time Keep the train of thought “on the track” Actively participate and process throughout the.

Jan 18, 2016

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Shauna Watkins
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Page 1: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Leadership Academy Norms

We will… Begin and end on time Keep the train of thought “on the track” Actively participate and process throughout the entire session Respect the ideas and learning needs of

others Assume positive intent

Page 2: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Six Shifts in ELA/Literacy

Shift # 1: Balancing Informational Text and

Literary TextsStudents read a true balance of

informational and literary texts. Elementary school classrooms are, therefore, places where students access the world – science, social studies, the arts and literature – through text. At least 50% of what students read is informational.

Page 3: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Learning Targets I understand that this year’s focus is

to align instructional practice to the requirements of the Common Core Standards. (NOT implemented) I will incorporate more informational text

related to fictional text I already use to build students’ contextual knowledge

I will use a balance of informational text and fictional text in Science, Social Studies and Math.

Page 4: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Table Talk

What does your literacy instruction look like?

Page 5: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Video

As the video is playing, complete the key points on the handout.

Video link

Page 6: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Table Talk

Compare your responses with your group

What else did you find to be valuable or important?

Page 7: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Experiences lead you to background knowledge and an increase in reading comprehension.

Example:

Charlotte’s Web – fictional text

What nonfictional text could we have used to support it?

Page 8: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Table Talk

What is a novel that you read in your school?

What informational text could you use to support it?

Capture these ideas for your school to create lessons during your PLC.

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Guided Reading

Share at your table the strategy that you brought with you.

What are the rest of the kids doing during guided reading? Or the management idea.

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Break time

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Math

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Learning Targets

I can help my students understand the “why” behind the math.

I can help my students be proficient with using the mathematical practices (with a spotlight on Practice 5- Using tools strategically).

I can make connections to my teaching.

Page 13: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

National Mathematics Panel Report 2008: What do students need for

success in Algebra?

Major Findings:

Proficiency with whole numbers, fractions and certain aspects of geometry and measurement are the critical foundations of algebra

Explicit instruction for students with disabilities shows positive effects.

Students need both explicit instruction and conceptual development to succeed in math.

http://www.ed.gov/about/bdscomm/list/mathpanel/index.html

Page 14: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

What’s the Big Idea?

Often lessons are disconnected from each other and / or focus on one Big Idea for that lesson.

We use the Components of Number Sense to connect every part of the curriculum in almost every lesson, thus, making our lessons more powerful and more efficient.

Outcome equals stronger teachers and stronger math students.

Page 15: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Components of Number Sense © 2007 Cain/Doggett/Faulkner/Hale/NCDPI

LANGUAGE

Algebraic and

Geometric Thinking

Quantity/ Magnitude

Numeration

Equality

Base 10

Form of a

Number

Proportional Reasoning

Page 16: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Understanding the Math

The “Why” behind the math- students need to know why and be able to explain why!

Develop the concept then teach the procedure that goes along with that.

Concrete Representational Abstract

Page 17: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Prototype for Lesson Construction

Quantity Concrete display

of concept

Symbols Simply record keeping!

Mathematical Structure Discussion

of the concrete

V. Faulkner and DPI Task Force adapted from Griffin

12

“One”

“Two”

“Three”

+ -

1 2 3

X=

Page 18: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Prototype for Lesson Construction

225 could also be 22 tens plus 5 ones or

1 hundred, 12 tens and 5 ones

225

Quantity Concrete display

of concept

Symbols Simply record keeping!

Mathematical Structure Discussion

of the concrete

V. Faulkner and DPI Task Force adapted from Griffin

12

Page 19: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Subtraction Problem

2001- 19

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Expanded Form – What is it good for?

44

-17

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Approach to the Problem

American Teachers Chinese TeachersProcedural approachOnce the student can take a ten from the tens place and turn it into 10 ones, then they can address the problem correctly. Problem solved.Manipulatives suggested to explain this step only and does not actually demonstrate process of regrouping.

Decomposing and Composing a Higher Value Unit Saw this problem as connected to addition through composing and decomposing unitsDemonstrated multiple ways of regrouping Found the opportunity to explore the basics of our base ten system

Page 22: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Connections to your Classroom

Discuss why it is important to develop the concrete (manipulate numbers or to know how subtraction works) first and then move to the abstract.

Concrete Representational Abstract

Page 23: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Multiplication Problem - 1

15 x12

Page 24: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Is there another way?Multiplication Problem - 2

15 x12

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You do it!Multiplication Problem - 3

44 x 91 =

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Approach to the ProblemAmerican Teachers Chinese Teachers

Lining Up correctly American teachers saw this as a problem of alignment and thus addressed with systems or tricks for alignmentTeacher‘s understanding reflects the way they were taught multiplication

Decomposing and Composing a Higher Value UnitReinforce concept of Base 10 system Develop concept of distributive propertyPlace Value as a logical system (not so much a place)Developing foundation and connections for higher thinking in mathematics

Page 27: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Connections to your Classroom

Think of a concept you teach in math, where the traditional procedure doesn’t make sense to students. How can you help students to understand the “why” behind the concept?

Discuss at your tables

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Understanding and Instruction

The better we understand the math, the better decisions we will make regarding what the student needs to achieve and how to instruct the student!

Page 29: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

“The value of the common core is only as good as the

implementation of the mathematical practices.”

--Jere Confrey

Page 30: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Spotlight: Math Practice 5

“Use tools strategically”

Activity

Page 31: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Connections to your Classroom

What tools do your students already use to learn the math in your classroom?

What tools do teachers struggle with?

What tools could you use to help students with an upcoming math concept?

Page 32: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Math Practice 5

Mathematically proficient students in Grade 5 consider the available tools (including estimation) when solving a mathematical problem and decide when certain tools might be helpful. For instance, they may use unit cubes to fill a rectangular prism and then use a ruler to measure the dimensions. They use graph paper to accurately create graphs and solve problems or make predictions from real world data.

Page 33: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Ideas to take away

Need to explain the “Why” behind the math to kids to help them make sense of the concept

It’s all about decomposing and composing numbers

Begin teaching the conceptual, then move to the representational, and lastly to the abstract. Without conceptual understanding, abstract procedures, algorithms, and formulas will never make sense to kids.

Try to make connections between math concepts for kids. Can’t just teach things in isolation.

Page 34: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

Exit for Today

2 Things 1st – For me, write down on a sticky note how I

did or things I can work on.

2nd – On an index card answer these two questions and place on your sign in sheet

What was an Aha! From today? One thing you’ll implement in your classroom. Our PLC would like to focus more on

_________________ (related to guided reading) in our PLC time between now and Dec. ERPD.

Page 35: Leadership Academy Norms We will…  Begin and end on time  Keep the train of thought “on the track”  Actively participate and process throughout the.

References Chris Cain Assisting Students Struggling with Mathematics”: Response to

Intervention (Rti) for Elementary and Middle Schools” IES National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance, NCEE 2009-4060, U.S. Department of Education

Ball, Deborah (1992) “Magical Hopes: Manipulatives and the Reform of Math Education”, American Educator, Summer 1992

Ball’s Website: http://wwwpersonal.umich.edu/~dball/ Fuchs, Lynn “The Prevention and Identification of Math Disability Using

RTI”, September 18, 2008 Presentation Gersten, Russell, Clark, B, Jordan, N, Center on Instruction, “Screening for Mathematics Difficulties in K-3 Students” 2007. Gersten, Russell, Jordan, N, Flojo, J., “Early Identification and

Interventions for Students with Mathematical Difficulties”, Journal of Learning Disabilities, Volume 38, Number 4, July August 2005

Gickling, Edward, PhD, Instructional Assessment in Mathematics, March 2003, Presentation at Exceptional Children’s Conference

Griffin, Sharon. (2003). Mathematical Cognition, Royer, ed. Greenwich, CT.: Infoage Publishing.

Ma, Liping (1999) Knowing and Teaching Elementary Mathematics. Edison, NJ, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

Mayer, Richard (2003). Mathematical Cognition, Royer, Ed.. Greenwich, CT.: Infoage Publishing.