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NAESP Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014 4:00pm EST
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NAESP Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014 4:00pm EST

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NAESP Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014 4:00pm EST. Kathleen Sciarappa, EdD Webinar Host. Background. Mimi. Principal Consultant/Trainer NAESP NHASP Plymouth State University UPenn (NAESP). Essential Questions. What is the relevance of rigor? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

NAESP Academic Rigor

Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014 4:00pm EST

Page 2: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Kathleen Sciarappa, EdDWebinar Host

Background

PrincipalConsultant/Trainer

NAESPNHASP

Plymouth State University

UPenn (NAESP)

Mimi

Page 3: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Essential Questions1. What is the relevance of rigor?2. How does the NAESP rigor rubric work?3. What does research reveal about best practice and

rigor?4. How can you coach teachers to employ rigor in

instruction?

Page 4: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Academic Rigor Rubric

Page 5: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Set Goals and Monitor

InstructionBeginning

(1)Developing

(2)Accomplished

(3)Exemplary

(4)STUDENT RESPONSES:

SET GOALS AND MONITOR INSTRUCTION

Students do not set goals related to the class’s content and skills.

Students may refer to goals that they have set previously. Goals that students set during the period may or may not be appropriate.

Most students set appropriate goals.

Not only do students set goals related to the class’s content and skills and monitor progress towards those goals, but they also discuss that progress with their teacher and peers.

Page 6: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

What Do We Know About…

Page 7: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

A rigorous curriculum develops self-directed students!

Resourcefulness

Higher level thinking

Perseverance

Reflection

Efficacy

Independence

Self regulation Capacity to set goals

Page 8: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Kids in the Thinking Game

Page 9: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Rubric Framework: High Expectations

I. Metacognition

IV. Solving II. Deep problems understanding

III. Higher level thinking

Page 10: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Annotated Bibliography

Page 11: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Barbara Blackburn & Ron Williamson

Page 12: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Rigor DefinitionBarbara Blackburn

• Expected to learn at high levels• Supported while learning at high

levels• Demonstrates learning at high

levels***

Page 13: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Mid Continent Research for Education and Learning (McREL)

Expectations“Our Kids”

Warm Demanders

Source: Stupski Foundation, Pedagogy 72 page report

Page 14: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Rigor, Relevance, Relationships

Source: Willard R. Daggett, International Center for Leadership in Education

Page 15: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Stephen King“The thought process can never be

complete without articulation.”

Page 16: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

What is Metacognition?The process of planning/assessing/monitoring

one's own thinking.

Page 17: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Rigor Rubric: MetacognitionYour Experiences; Your Examples

TEACHERMetacognitive ModelingPlanning (DI)Reflective feedbackGoal settingRequests self-evaluation

STUDENTMetacognitive responsesStudent self knowledgeStudent reflectionGoal settingEngages in self-

evaluation RATING SCALE ___beginning ___developing

___accomplished ___exemplary

Page 18: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Lessons Imagined

Page 19: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

The Teaching ChannelMetacognition

Gaze Aversion (3:31)

https://www.teachingchannel.org/videos/improve-student-focus

Page 20: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Webinar PollRate “gaze aversion” as a metacognitive technique.

______beginning ____developing ____accomplished ____exemplary

Rating Scale

Page 21: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

The Teaching ChannelMetacognition

My Favorite No: Learning From Mistakes (5:46)https://www.teachingchannel.org/videos/class-warm-up-routine

Page 22: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Webinar PollRate “My Favorite No” as a metacognitive technique.

______beginning ____developing ____accomplished ____exemplary

Rating Scale

Page 23: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Webinar Survey What tip might you suggest to

strengthen the lesson?

Page 24: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

George S. Patton

“If everyone is thinking alike, then somebodythen somebody isn’t thinking.”

Page 25: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

What is Deep Understanding?Using information to solve problems,

create new ideas, generalize, reflect, hypothesize etc.

Page 26: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Rigor Rubric: Deep Understanding

TEACHERTeaching for understandingMultiple and varied

perspectivesMultiple representationsMisconceptionsContent knowledgeRelevance21st Century knowledge & skills

STUDENT

Multiple and varied perspectives

MisconceptionsContent knowledgeExpertise21st Century knowledge & skills RATING SCALE ___beginning ___developing

___accomplished ___exemplary

Page 27: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

The Teaching Channel Deep Understanding

Games for Games for Decimals (4:38)

https://www.teachingchannel.org/videos/elementary-math-lesson-plan

Page 28: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Webinar PollRate the “Fill Two” lesson as a deep understanding technique.

______beginning ____developing ____accomplished ____exemplary

Rating Scale

Page 29: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Webinar Survey What tip might you suggest to

strengthen the lesson?

Page 30: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Helen Keller“People don’t like to think. If one thinks, one must

reach conclusions. Conclusions are not always pleasant.”

Page 31: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

What is Higher Order Thinking?Asking questions and implementing strategies to ensure

analyzing, evaluating, and creating.

Page 32: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

What is Solving Problems?Understanding and resolving problems independently;

generating and testing hypotheses.

Page 33: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Rigor Rubric: Solving Problems

TEACHERProblem complexityProblems without

solutionsProblem solving

processes

STUDENTProblem complexityProblems without

solutionsProblem solving

processesRATING SCALE ___beginning ___developing

___accomplished ___exemplary

Page 34: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Relevant Problem SolvingThe Shot: Math Made Real (4:15)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jRMVjHjYB6w&feature=related

Page 35: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Webinar Poll

______beginning ____developing ____accomplished ____exemplary

Rating Scale

Page 36: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Webinar Survey What tip might you suggest to

strengthen the lesson?

Page 37: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

Thomas Edison5% of people think;

10% of people think they think; and the other85% of people would rather die than think!

Page 39: NAESP  Academic Rigor Dr. Kathleen Sciarappa Thursday February 6, 2014   4:00pm EST

You Are Appreciated!