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Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell
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Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Dec 27, 2015

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Page 1: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Sara MorrisJanell Cleland

Carol Porter-O’Donnell

Page 2: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Step 1 – Establish Targets and Assessment Instrument

Step 2 – Collect Baseline Data Step 3 – Provide Direct Instruction on

Qualities of Effective Readers Step 4 – Self-Assessment Step 5 – Provide Feedback Step 6 – Set Goals, Reflect, and Celebrate

Growth Step 7 – Direct Instruction Based on Goals

Page 3: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

“The assessor needs to have a clear picture of what achievement he or she intends to measure. If we don’t begin with clear statements of the intended learning- clear and understandable to everyone, including students- we won’t end up with sound assessments.”

Stiggins 2009

Page 4: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

“When used effectively, assessment FOR learning always triggers an optimistic response to assessment results from within the learner. It starts by providing students with a clear, student-friendly vision of the achievement target to be mastered, including models of strong and weak work. These examples reveal to learners where we want them to end up.”

Stiggins 2005

Page 5: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Targets = the core (the essence) of a course agreed upon by all teachers who teach course. These targets are written in student-friendly language .

Naming and sharing core targets is a step in assuring that each and every student has equal access to core knowledge.

Core targets allow students to know where they are headed, wherethey are in relationship to the target, and what they need to donext to progress toward the target.

Teachers can design feedback to align with targets. They canassess both mastery of target and growth toward target.

Target Sheet

Page 6: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

We wanted our students to:Approach reading as an active, meaning-making process that requires the flexible use of different types of thinking to make sense of a variety of types of texts for different purposes.

We wanted to help our students:See the invisible process of reading.

Page 7: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Read a short story: “Man Who Had No Eyes”.

Mark it up or annotate to help them understand. Students are given no further instruction.

Write a response. Introduce students to the many different

ways they can be active readers. Student Sample of Baseline

Page 8: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Determine students’ strengths and weaknesses (diagnostic)

Plan instruction and support Provide a starting point for monitoring and

assessing students’ literacy growth (progress monitoring)

Page 9: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

“Interventions focused on developing meta-cognition and comprehension skills have repeatedly shown to be more likely to accelerate reading development than decoding emphasis interventions.”

Richard Allington

Page 10: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Knapp, Shields, and Turnbull (1995, 1991, 1992) in their two year study of 140 classrooms found that:

Students in schools that taught reading with an emphasis on meaning scored significantly higher on standardized tests of reading and writing than students who received skills-emphasis reading instruction.

Page 11: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Identify and examine categories/characteristics (ways of thinking used to comprehend text)

Predictions Connections Opinions Questions Summary Author’s Craft Reflection/Evaluation

Page 12: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Continue to make the reading process visible (some examples):

Read aloud and direct thinking Read aloud and model thinking Read aloud and show thinking with

annotations (overhead, Elmo, etc.) Show student samples of work that contains

the ways of thinking (a wide range of high quality, average, and low quality work)

Page 13: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Sample Bookmark

DURING READING

Mark in the text: Characters (who) Ο When (setting) ☐ Where (setting) ☐ Vocabulary ~~~~~ Important information

or ✓

Write in the margins: Summaries Predictions Opinions Connections Questions Analyze the Author’s

Craft Reflections/

Reactions/Comments

Page 14: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

The tools we have access to will determine what we learn.

Page 15: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Teach the concepts of Surface and Deep

Iceberg (Sample)

Student Interviews Me Boxes (Sample)

Page 16: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

The best artists, writers, actors, and athletes are capable not only of being coached but also of internalizing the coaching. The ability to accurately self-assess and self-adjust is critical to maximizing performance, and the same principle applies to school learning.

Understanding can be attained only by regular reflection, self-assessment, and self-adjustment in trying to apply prior learning to new situations and tasks via activities and assessments that demand such reflection and transfer.

Wiggins and McTighe

Page 17: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

When – 4 ½ Weeks

How Share Target Sheets with Students (Sample)

Color-Code Annotations and Written Responses (current A and WR and baseline)

Rank Use of Types of Thinking (Sample Student Goals)

Continue self-assessment every 9 weeks

Page 18: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Purpose or Prompt:  Title or subtitle Source of picture (e.g. newspaper,

scientific journal, photograph book, etc.)

People – Who, Clothing, Facial Expression, Actions

Setting – When, Where Positioning of people and objects

within the frame Interaction between people or

people and objects Angle from which photo is taken or

picture is drawn Use of color Details that are repeated and/or

stand out Connections between ideas in

document and purpose – So What?

Page 19: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Learners require regular, timely, and user-friendly feedback in order to understand goals, to produce quality work, and to meet high standards.

Wiggins and McTighe

Feedback has been shown to be one of the most significant activities a teacher can engage in to improve student achievement.

Hattie, 1992

Page 20: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Meet Individually with Students Students guide teacher through their

analysis of annotations and written responses, speaking the common, “target language”

Teacher engages in conversation with student regarding areas of success, challenges with text, etc..

Together students and teacher set goals for future encounters with text

Page 21: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

9 Weeks – Annotations Page 1 9 Weeks – Annotations Page 2 9 Weeks – Written Response Goal Sample

Page 22: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Engaged, self-regulated readers are those who set realistic goals, select effective reading strategies, monitor their understanding of the text, and evaluate progress toward their goals.

Students’ self-efficacy beliefs are related to their achievement and their level of self-regulation.

Student Reflection

Page 23: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Author’s Craft: Cisneros’s The House on Mango Street

Predictions: “By the Waters of Babylon”, outcome of an experiment

Summary: Non-Fiction “Texts” Opinions: Jodi Piccoult, Editorials, Opposing

Viewpoint Articles Connections: Media, news, film Questions: Inquiry Board Reflection/Evaluation: Generate reflection

questions, read texts where author reflects on process and/or where a character reflects

Page 24: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Step 4 – Self-Assessment Step 5 – Provide Feedback Step 6 – Set Goals, Reflect, and Celebrate

Growth Step 7 – Direct Instruction Based on Goals

Page 25: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Progress Monitoring Diagnostic Testing Tier 1 and Tier 2 Interventions

Page 26: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Teachers must provide results in a way that helps students move forward. Specific, descriptive feedback linked to the targets of instruction and arising from the assessment items or rubrics communicates to students in ways that enable them to immediately take action, thereby promoting further learning. - Stiggins

Annotation Rubric Written Response Oral Conference

Page 27: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

We’re still experimenting with different formats for:

◦Self-assessment

◦Documenting and expressing thinking about text

◦Target sheets

Page 28: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Websitehttp://dhs.dist113.org/Faculty/MorrisSR/Pages/default.aspx

Sara Morris – Deerfield High [email protected]

Janell Cleland – Schuler Family [email protected]

Carol Porter-O’Donnell – Elk Grove High [email protected]

Page 29: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Allington, R. (2009). What Really Matters in Response to Intervention Research Based Designs. Pearson.

Chappuis, S. Chappuis, J. Stiggins, R. (2009). The Quest for Quality. Educational Leadership, 14 – 19.

Knapp, M. S., Shields, P. M., & Turnbull, B. J. (1995). Academic challenge in high-poverty classrooms. Phi Delta Kappan, 76, 770-776.

Porter-O'Donnell, Carol. “Beyond the Yellow Highlighter: Teaching Annotation Skills to Improve Comprehension. (2004). English Journal 93, no. 5, 82-89.

Page 30: Sara Morris Janell Cleland Carol Porter-O’Donnell.

Stiggins, R. (2005). “From Formative Assessment to Assessment FOR Learning: A Path to Success in Standards-Based Schools.” Phi Delta Kappan.

Wiggins, G. and McTighe, J. (2007). Schooling by Design: Mission, Action, and Achievement. ASCD.