...Running head: INSTRUCTIONAL PRACTICES FOR STANDARD-BASED CURRICULUM Instructional Practices for Standard-Based Curriculum EDA 561 Grand Canyon University September 11, 2013 The Department of Education has implemented a rigorous set of core standards to improve the public school system. Since then teachers and administrators have been planning strategically to improve the efforts of their organization. In order to meet the needs of each individual learner, stakeholders have had to improve on their practices and rely heavily on data. Teachers are being asked to get creative with their teaching practices in order to appeal to each student. There are many instructional practices that are intended for students to engage in high level learning while incorporating a standard-based curriculum. Effective instructional strategies are the solution to obtaining high achievement in students (MacGregor, R., 2007). Effective administrators know that in order for their school to succeed they must convince their teachers’ to incorporate rigorous instructional approaches. One proven effective method is teacher reflection. Research has shown that the reflecting on lessons taught improves teaching (MacGregor, R., 2007). If teachers stop after every lesson and reflect on the effects of their lesson, whether it was engaging, interesting, purposeful they can get to know they students needs. Teachers should assess their own practices when students do not perform as expected....
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...ETT4/5 - Effective Teaching Practices: Instructional Presentation and Follow-Up Course of Study Your competence for this course of study will be assessed as you complete the 10 tasks that make up the ETT4/5 performance assessment and the EIO4/5 objective assessment. Introduction Welcome to Effective Teaching Practices. Effective teaching depends on effective planning. Teachers need to devote systematic thought to what they want students to learn and to how students will best acquire knowledge and skills. You will learn how to select, develop, and evaluate instructional materials as well as strategies to use to accomplish specific learning goals. You will plan for effective instruction, and then implement those plans. Interactive teaching includes appropriately responding to all of the details that emerge during the presentation of lessons. Teaching is a process. Teachers plan lessons and then present them. They use information about the lesson presentation to make appropriate changes to improve both student achievement and lesson presentation. Outcomes and Evaluations There are 10 competencies covered by this course of study; they are listed in the "Competencies for Effective Teaching Practices: Instructional Presentation and Follow-Up (ETT4/5)" page. The list of competencies is a good overview of precisely what you will know and be able to do at the conclusion of this course of study and demonstrate through assessment. Teaching Dispositions Statement Please review the...
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...Policies For Curriculum Development Ashanti C. Chambers Grand Canyon University 10/30/2013 Policies For Curriculum Development Instructional practices and there implementation are crucial to the success or failure of students. In order to achieve high-level learners based on a standardized curriculum, instructional practices must be examine and analyzed to ensure that all student’s needs are met. There are proven instructional practices that have led to higher level learning and student success that are engaging and allow students to be responsible for their own learning. By aligning these practices with a standard based curriculum, students can be successful at applying their learning to real world problem solving while passing the curriculum-based assessments to determine student growth. Marzano’s High Yield Strategies It has been said that teacher are made, not born. Robert J. Marzano used this premise to start his work on creating instructional strategies that can make any teacher an effective instructor. An important study during the late 1960’s indicated that teachers form expectations about their students’ chances for academic success and then interact with students on the basis of those expectations (Marzano, 2010, p. 82). This basically says that teachers often treats students according to what they expect each can do based on their abilities. With these expectations, students will usually start to act in accordance with the expectation that this treatment...
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...SCHOOL S © AdvancED® 2011 1 Standards for Quality Schools AdvancED Standards for Quality Schools Standard 1: Purpose and Direction The school maintains and communicates a purpose and direction that commit to high expectations for learning as well as shared values and beliefs about teaching and learning. Standard 2: Governance and Leadership The school operates under governance and leadership that promote and support student performance and school effectiveness. Standard 3: Teaching and Assessing for Learning The school’s curriculum, instructional design, and assessment practices guide and ensure teacher effectiveness and student learning. Standard 4: Resources and Support Systems The school has resources and provides services that support its purpose and direction to ensure success for all students. Standard 5: Using Results for Continuous Improvement The school implements a comprehensive assessment system that generates a range of data about student learning and school effectiveness and uses the results to guide continuous improvement. © AdvancED® 2011 1 Standards for Quality Schools Standard 1 Purpose and Direction The school maintains and communicates a purpose and direction that commit to high expectations for learning as well as shared values and beliefs about teaching and learning. IndIcator 1.1 The school engages in a systematic, inclusive, and comprehensive process to review, revise, and communicate a school purpose for...
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...for all children District 4 (Red Spring, North Carolina) Board of Education curriculum and instruction is aligned to the North Carolina Standards to fulfill the goals that are require to improve and share a vision of the changing world in the 21st Century that schools are preparing children to enter. Standards 1: Teacher demonstrates leadership in the classrooms. Teachers demonstrate leadership by taking responsibility for the progress of all student to ensure that they graduate from high school, are globally competitive for work and postsecondary education, and are prepared for life in the 21st century they establish a safe, orderly environment and create a culture that empower students to collaborate and become lifelong learners. • Take responsibility for the progress of all students. • Communicate vision student. • Use a variety of assessment data throughout the year to evaluate progress. • Establish a sage and orderly environment Facilitator demonstrate the value of life long learning and encourage the school community to learn and grow. They are reflective about then practice and promote inclusion and analysis of assessments that are authentic, structured and demonstrate students understanding. Standard 2 Instructional technology Facilitator demonstrate 21st century leadership in school Instructional Technology Facilitators • Provide effective leadership and support for establishing, promoting and sustaining seamless use 21st...
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...Introduction United States legislative changes, such as those described by federal laws such as Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEIA) reauthorized in 2004 (Pub. L. No. 108-466) and the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act of 2001 (Pub. L. No. 107–110), require that students with increasingly diverse learning characteristics have access to and achieve high academic performance in the general education curriculum. The changing demographics of the United States have also played a role in diverse learning characteristics of the American learners in classrooms today. With an educational system that serves approximately 76,355,000 students, 30,982,000 or 40.58% are of an ethnically diverse background and 5% of school age children have a disability (U.S. Census Bureau, 2008). These changing legal requirements and student demographics in United States educational systems combine pointing to the need for increased collaborative planning and teaching among school personnel attempting to comply with these legal mandates to serve all students fairly and equitably in general education classrooms. Co-teaching is an approach that helps educators meet both IDEIA and NCLB mandates, and is defined as “two or more people sharing responsibility for teaching some or all of the students assigned to a classroom” (Villa, Thousand, & Nevin, 2008, p. 5). In schools within the United States, co-teaching often involves general education and special education teachers working...
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...Collaborative Learning Community: ISLLC Standard 2 Gregory Kempton, Brandi Barnes, Alison Hawkins, and Thomas Norman Grand Canyon University: EDA-534 November 12th, 2014 Unwrapping the Standards Template Standard 2:An education leader promotes the success of every student by advocating, nurturing, and sustaining a school culture and instructional program conducive to student learning and staffprofessional growth.Functions:A. Nurture and sustain a culture of collaboration, trust, learning, and high expectations B. Create a comprehensive, rigorous, and coherent curricular programC. Create a personalized and motivating learning environment for studentsD. Supervise instructionE. Develop assessment and accountability systems to monitor student progressF. Develop the instructional and leadership capacity of staffG. Maximize time spent on quality instructionH. Promote the use of the most effective and appropriate technologies to support teaching and learningI. Monitor and evaluate the impact of the instructional program | Knowledge | Skills | Enduring Understandings | Essential Questions | Administrators will know… | Administrators will be able to … | Administrators will understand that… | | how to create and foster student growth and achievement. (North Dakota Council of Educational Leadership, 2008) | collect data and have skills for using data to make instructional decisions (Green, 2013).(ISLLC 2008: 2E) | student learning is the primary purpose of a school and...
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...the instructional innovations and performance requirements of the U.S. educational system. Today the theoretical and empirical bases of the TargetTeach design are established by independent research and program evaluations that demonstrate its capability to provide the support that schools need as they struggle to make Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) under Title I of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB). These evaluations and research verify that TargetTeach negates the socioeconomic and subgroup challenges that schools face in making AYP. THEORETICAL BASE OF ENI’S TURNAROUND & TRANSFORMATION MODEL The TargetTeach Five-Step Process is a design-based intervention program built upon “a „logic model‟ that describes the „theory of action‟” that determines each implementation (Rowan, Correnti, Miller, & Camburn 2009): TargetTeach Five Step Process instructional practice instructional leadership student achievement TargetTeach focuses on both the short-term and long-term results that ENI customers seek as outcomes of their school reform endeavors. A school‟s instructional leadership interrelates with its patterns of instructional practice to comprise a system of transformation, as indicated by the two-directional arrows. * TargetTeach® is a registered trademark of Evans Newton Incorporated for its school improvement model comprising proprietary products and professional services to align curricula to state and local standards, fill gaps in instructional sequences...
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...established a Standard Course of Study in 1898 as an attempt at determining competencies for each grade level and each high school course, with a rigorous set of academic standards that is uniform across the state. Based on a philosophy of teaching and learning that is consistent with current research, exemplary practices, and national standards, North Carolina educators seek to provide the most appropriate education possible for the diverse learners in the public schools of the state in order to prepare all students to become successful, contributing members of a 21st century society and global economy. The Standard Course of Study includes the curriculum that should be made available to every child in North Carolina's public schools. Many public schools in the state presently offer an even more comprehensive curriculum. Therefore, in some curriculum areas, electives were also included. The Standard Course of Study is part of the Department of Public Education's continual improvement efforts. The curriculum will be revised on a regular basis to remain consistent with the changing needs of our nation, state, and local communities. The North Carolina Standard Course of Study sets content standards for what students should know and be able to do. The North Carolina ABCs Accountability Plan establishes performance standards which specify the level of proficiency a student must reach in order to have met specific content standards in specified subject areas. These performance standards are...
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...I. Self-Assessment Checklist Data Technology Standard VII Professional Growth Self-Assessment Chart Maryland Teacher Technology Standards During the course you completed the Self-Assessment Chart twice to act as a pre-course and post-course measurement tool. The goal of the Self-Assessment Chart is to help teachers determine strengths and areas to further develop. Transcribe the checklist results into the last two columns. (S) personal strength (N) personal need Leave blank if the indicator is neither a strength or need |SEVEN STANDARDS AND OUTCOMES |INDICATORS |Pre-Course |Post-Course | | | |Self-Assessment |Self Assessment | |I. Information Access, Evaluation, |1. Identify, locate, retrieve and | | | |Processing and Application Access, |differentiate among a variety of | | | |evaluate, process and apply |electronic sources of information using | | | |information efficiently and effectively. |technology. | | | | |2. Evaluate information critically and | | ...
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...Improving Instruction for ELLs According the Echevarria, Vogt, and Short (2013), the 44 states that implemented the Common Core Standards these states are working “to ensure the required standards are included and the U.S. Department of Education (USED) is requiring participating states to revise their NCLB assessments” (p.8). While this alignment of standards promotes a unity between states and helps to promote college preparedness (p.8), it fails at considering the needs of English language learners. Some states, like Illinois and Arizona have created standards that help teachers to understand ELLs and consequently develop instruction that can be differentiated for their various proficiency levels. No two ELLs enter school at the same proficiency level or with the same experiences. This diversity makes it quite challenging for teachers to accommodate every learner. Consequently, teachers can use the Arizona English learner standards to supplement the Common Core Standards in an attempt to differentiate instruction for their ELLs. The standards address all proficiency levels, including pre-emergent, emergent, basic, low intermediate, high intermediate, and proficient. Obviously, the strategies that are adequate for general education students and proficient ELLs would not suffice for those at the pre-emergent or even the low intermediate stage. Therefore, differentiation is absolutely necessary. Differentiation would vary at the different stages as well as take into consideration...
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...instruction to the students. After the observation, focus on the differences in their instructional behaviors, quality of their instructional practices, and how they executed teaching techniques to accommodate the diversity within their classroom. First teacher observed was Mr. Wright; he is a second year health and physical education within the school district. The following checklist will give you a look into Mr. Wright’s health class. CAMELOT SCHOOLS CLASSROOM OBSERVATION School: Camden City Accelerated Date: January 30, 2014 Teacher/Class: Mr. Wright; Health Observed Time: 12:40 – 1:10 Domain I – Planning and Preparation Exceeds Expectations Meets Expectations Needs Improvement Unacceptable Not Observed Demonstrates knowledge of core curriculum and student development X Lesson plans current and available X Uses materials, resources and technology to make subject matter accessible to all students X Teachers plan for student assessment is fully aligned with the instructional outcomes X Domain II – Environment Exceeds Expectations Meets Expectations Needs Improvement Unacceptable Not Observed Creates an environment of respect and rapport and establishes a culture for learning X Classroom is safe and the physical environment ensures the learning of all students X Standards of conduct are clear with evidence of student participation in setting them X ...
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...Janeen Watkins Week Six- Standards and Instruction Workshop Assignment April 12, 2014 Dr. Piedra EDU 530 Decision Making for Instructional Leadership Saint Leo University Standards and Instruction Workshop Teachers in Florida are required to complete professional development in order to renew their teaching certificates. School districts have developed professional development systems that provide teachers with opportunities to complete these recertification requirements through inservice trainings, also called continued education (Council, 2008). A principal on the other hand not only has to keep up with their professional development, but is also required to provide continuing education opportunities for the teachers on the staff at their school. At the start of the 2014 school year Florida is required to fully implement the Common Core State Standards (CCSS), a state-led effort to establish a common set of expectations across states for what K-12 students are expected to know and be able to do in English language arts and math (Anderson, Harrison, & Lewis, 2012). School leaders can facilitate a smooth CCSS transition through professional development opportunities. When exploring professional development options a principal should focus on three important areas. These areas are a knowledgeable presenter, student achievement outcomes, as well as best practices (Educational Training Specialists, 2010). Knowledgeable Presenter Quality professional development...
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...Teacher Work Sample Performance Prompt Teaching Processes Standards and Indicators Scoring Rubrics Developed by members of the Title II Renaissance Partnership for Improving Teacher Quality. These materials may be not reproduced and used without citing the Title II Renaissance Partnership for Improving Teacher Quality Project http://fp.uni.edu/itq Prompt for Teacher Work Sample THE VISION Successful teacher candidates support learning by designing a Teacher Work Sample that employs a range of strategies and builds on each student’s strengths, needs, and prior experiences. Through this performance assessment, teacher candidates provide credible evidence of their ability to facilitate learning by meeting the following standards: • The teacher uses information about the learning/teaching context and student individual differences to set learning goals and objectives, plan instruction, and assess learning. • The teacher sets significant, challenging, varied, and appropriate learning goals and objectives. • The teacher uses multiple assessment modes and approaches aligned with learning goals and objectives to assess student learning before, during, and after instruction. • The teacher designs instruction for specific learning goals and objectives, student characteristics and needs, and learning contexts. • The teacher uses on-going analysis of student learning to make instructional decisions. • The teacher uses assessment data to profile...
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...Hernandez, Grimes, &ump; Warschauer, 2010), using data driven tasks, administering cross curriculum running records, promoting explorations, and facilitating assessments. Teachers can use wireless laptops to teach students to generate and analyze their own data during inquiry learning (Kervin &ump; Mantei, 2010; Skevakis, 2010). Students with access to wireless laptops also have added aids at hand for creating products that illustrate mastery of introduced concepts (Zucker &ump; King 2009). To determine teachers’ need for ongoing training to incorporate wireless computing, I will use the teachers’ responses from the TAS. Nature of the Study Teachers' overall attitude toward adapting a set method with applying wireless laptops in the instructional practices will hypothesize a key determinant of the nature of this quantitative, pre-experimental study. In this study, the reason why teachers do not widely and effectively use available technology such as wireless laptops in K–12 classrooms will be examined. I will investigate whether the selected rural K–12 school...
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