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Video Education Program talk:University of Wisconsin - Madison/ELPA 845 (Spring 2015)



Adding new messages

Please enter all new messages at the bottom of this page. That is standard Wikipedia policy, as I just found out. Sorry for the confusion. Trawat (talk) 09:35, 22 February 2015 (UTC)


I'm here-Mejacs (talk) 01:05, 20 February 2015 (UTC)

Hi! This is Kathleen. I am nervous but excited for this project!Kfranzen (talk) 01:03, 20 February 2015 (UTC)

Hi - this is Sarah Hackett. My username is shackett2. I'm planning to create an article on Teacher Led Schools: schools that are led by a democracy or committees of teachers rather than by one or a a team of administrators. My experiences have led me to a number of examples, research, and resources on the topic, and it's something I feel people should know about. I look forward to seeing what everyone else will do!

Hi-- this is Anne Marie Werley-Gonzalez. I thought I wanted to create a wikipedia entry on loose coupling but after this week's readings, I'm more interested in Networked Improvement Communities. Are we each supposed to have our own talk pages, or will we when we start writing? Anne Marie W-G (talk) 03:07, 12 February 2015 (UTC)Anne Marie W-G

Hello dear classmates. This is Bauyrzhan! My username is Bauyrzhanabuov. I am excited about our Wiki project. Hope to be able to publish something)))

Hello this is Katie Schmitt. My user name is schmittkr17. I'm planning on making a page on Educator Effectiveness. Schmittkr17 (talk) 01:05, 20 February 2015 (UTC)

Hi my name is Heather and my username is hmilo0321. I am enrolled in this class to better understand the nature of the work and language of leadership. I might one day be able publish in wikipedia.

Hi. This is Kelsey Schmit. I am excited but struggling to pick a topic. Looking forward to seeing everyone else's so I can make a final decision. Thanks! KSchmit (talk) 01:07, 20 February 2015 (UTC)


Hello, Kathleen here! I am planning to edit the page for Flipped Classrooms. At this time I am working alone, but if you are passionate about the topic, feel free to let me know. This is a new area of research for me, so I'd be happy to chat if you have found compelling research / study in the area.Kfranzen (talk) 13:34, 21 February 2015 (UTC)


Hello, everyone! Thank you all who have posted here about their topics. Its nice to see activity happening here. I look forward to seeing all of you guys post something here. Trawat (talk) 06:37, 22 February 2015 (UTC)

Hey---This is Katie Miller. Sorry for the delay! I am going to be working with Carrie to produce a page on PBIS: Positive Behavior Inventions and Supports. I am hoping you will be able to show use some examples of what each step looks like because I am such a visual learner. It seems daunting right now but I am way more excited to do this than a lit review! KMiller23 (talk) 14:02, 22 February 2015 (UTC)

Hello hello - I'm planning to create a page for Distributed Leadership -Kalipdx (talk) 00:24, 27 February 2015 (UTC)

This is Ellen, and I am trying to decide between writing about professional community and social justice leadership. I look forward to talking with Rich today to help me decide between topics. Embins (talk) 00:28, 27 February 2015 (UTC)

This is steffenie! I am planning on writing a page on Games in Learning. After talking with Rich, I think that this really fits what I am learning and teaching in my classroom. Very excited to start!Shwilliams1 (talk) 04:36, 1 March 2015 (UTC)



Maps Education Program talk:University of Wisconsin - Madison/ELPA 845 (Spring 2015)



Welcome

Post two sentences about your topic here, with newest message at last, and sign your posts using Trawat (talk) 09:35, 22 February 2015 (UTC). Thanks! Trawat (talk) 09:35, 22 February 2015 (UTC)

Hello class! This is Heidi. What an interesting project to be working on! I'll be researching Charlotte Danielson and her framework. Good luck everyone!Heidibiancat (talk) 23:16, 22 February 2015 (UTC)

Hello Everyone, As Katie said above, we will be working together to create a page on PBIS and maybe a little CRPBIS thrown in. I am scared about this project, and I am glad I now have Katie to work with me! :)Hirsca (talk) 01:39, 23 February 2015 (UTC)

Hi there- This is Kelsey. I am excited to be working on a peer coaching page. I am interested in linking this page with instructional coaching and any other pages that it may relate to. KSchmit (talk) 00:27, 27 February 2015 (UTC)

Hi! This is Anne Marie. I just learned how to talk.

Hey guys! Keep calm and work on your projects))))Bauyrzhanabuov (talk) 00:46, 27 February 2015 (UTC)

Hi - this is Sarah Hackett. I'm planning to create an article on Teacher Leadership. This will include a number of sections including: Teacher Led Schools / Teacher Cooperatives / link to Julie's distributed leadership / link to Kelsey's peer coaching. Shackett2 (talk) 01:07, 27 February 2015 (UTC)


This is Katie Schmitt. I will be working on Educator Effectiveness. I hope to focus more on how this is done in general. Schmittkr17 (talk) 23:08, 11 March 2015 (UTC)




Ellen - Social Justice Leadership

Sources

Capper, C. A., & Frattura, E. (2008). Meeting the needs of students of all abilities: How leaders go beyond inclusion. Newbury Park, CA: Corwin Press.

Frattura, E., & Capper, C. A. (2007). Leadership for social justice: Transforming schools for all learners. Newbury Park, CA: Corwin Press.

Johnson, R. S., & Avelar La Salle, R. L. (2012). Data Strategies to uncover and eliminate hidden inequities: The wallpaper effect. Newbury Park, CA: Corwin Press.

McKenzie, K. B., & Scheurich, J. J. (2004). Equity traps: A useful construct for preparing principals to lead schools that are successful with racially diverse students. Educational Administration Quarterly, 601-632.

McKinney, S. & Lowenhaupt, R. (2013). New Directions for Socially Just Educational Leadership: Lessons from Disability Studies. In L. Tillman & J. Scheurich (Eds.), Handbook of Research on Educational Leadership for Diversity and Equity. Washington DC: American Educational Research Association.

Scanlon, M. & Lopez, F. (2012). ¡Vamos! How school leaders promote equity and excellence for bilingual students. Educational Administration Quarterly XX(X), 1-43.

Scheurich, J. J., & Skrla, L. (2003). Leadership for equity and excellence: Creating high-achievement classrooms, schools and districts. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.

Theoharis, G. (2009). The school leaders our children deserve: Seven keys to equity, social justice, and school reform. New York, NY: Teachers College Press.

Outline

Hi Ellen - can you take a shot at this first paragraph? I think that the intro paragraph will help set up the rest of the article... Rich

Please let me know if you would like a more extensive outline.

  • Intro paragraph
  • Goals of social justice leadership
    • All students must reach proficiency, no exceptions
    • Proportional representation
    • Equity audits - data
  • Bringing services to students
    • Location of services
    • Compare to RTI
    • Responsibility lies with classroom teacher
  • Staff allocation
    • Reduce class size
    • Reallocate student services staff to classrooms
    • All staff responsible for supporting academic growth
  • Students with disabilities
    • Dual certification in special education & general education
    • Support students with significant needs in flexible inclusive environments
  • English Language Learners
    • DLI vs. bilingual vs. ESL
    • DLI allows quality language instruction and proportional representation

Embins (talk) 21:28, 7 March 2015 (UTC)




Katie Miller and Carrie-PBIS

Outline

Can you give a shot at the first paragraph? This will be the most difficult part, I think, to draw the central ideas together... Rich

Positive Behavior Intervention and Supports (article topic)

I. Definition/History (Lead section/introduction)

II.Core Components

    • Systems
    • Data
    • Practices
    • Outcomes

III. Continuum of Support (RtI)

    • Tier 1: Primary Level
    • Tier 2: Secondary Level
    • Tier 3: Tertiary Level

IV: Criticism of PBIS

    • Culturally Responsive PBIS
    • Responsive Classroom

V. Bibliography (References/Footnotes)

References

  • Bal, A., Thorius, K.K., & Kozleski, E. (2012). Culturally responsive positive behavioral support matters. Equity Alliance. Retrieved March 9, 2015, from: http://www.equityallianceatasu.org/sites/default/files/CRPBIS_Matters.pdf.
  • Center for Responsive Classroom (n.d.). Responsive classroom and PBIS: Can schools use them together? Retrieved March 9, 2015, from: http://www.responsiveclassroom.org/sites/default/files/pdf_files/RC_PBIS_white_paper.pdf.
  • Cregor, M. (2008). The building blocks of positive behavior.Teaching Tolerance, 18-21.
  • Student Services (2015). Positive behavior interventions & supports (PBIS): What is PBIS? Retrieved March 9, 2015, from: http://www.sjusd.org/student-services/pbis/what-is-pbis/.
  • Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction (DPI) (n.d.). Positive behavioral intervention and supports (PBIS). Retrieved March 9, 2015, from: http://rti.dpi.wi.gov/rti_pbis.

KMiller23 (talk) 16:24, 11 March 2015 (UTC)

Hi team - here are a couple more cites/resources...take a look at some of these articles to see whether they help round out your study: http://www.pbis.org/research/primary/evaluation-studies http://www.pbis.org/research/secondary/referred-journal-articles

If you can't find some of the articles...take a look at some of the researchers mentioned as authors...




Julie Robison, Distributed Leadership

Hi Julie - take a shot at what the first paragraph might be...I think that you are ready to move ahead with this.

I. Lead section: Clear definition - what it is and what it isn't

II. Main section

1. brief history on research on leadership that brought about a different understanding of leadership

2. other key concepts that inform distributed leadership:

  • distributed cognition

- social distribution of leadership (leaders, followers) - situational distribution of leadership (artifacts, routines)

  (you can probably take these out...)  

communities of practice

  • basic vocabulary
  • tasks, social, situational
  • leaders, followers, situation, tasks, routines, artifacts

(I don't think you'll need section 3) 3. Use of DL framework as an analytic tool

  • DL Leadership Study
  • professional community
  • CALL
  • distributed leadership & social network analysis
  • link with design


4. Different versions distributed leadership

  • Spillane,

Harris Peter Gronn, Ken Leithwood, Mark Smiley (UChicago)

5. Important links

Resources

  • Daly, A. J. (Ed.). (2010). Social Network Theory and Educational Change (pp. 1-300). San Diego, CA: Harvard Education Press.
  • Harris, A. (2009) Distributed Leadership: Different Perspectives
  • Harris, A. (2010) Interview on Distributed Leadership
  • Halverson, R. R. (2003). Systems of practice: How leaders use artifacts to create professional community in schools. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 11, 1-34.
  • Leithwood, Kenneth; Harris, Alma; Hopkins, David. (2008) Seven strong claims about successful school leadership. 28(1): 27-42.
  • Peter Gronn, (2008) "The future of distributed leadership", Journal of Educational Administration, 46(2):141 - 158
  • Spillane, J. (2006) Distributed Leadership
  • Spillane, J. & Diamond, J. (2007) Distributed Leadership in Practice
  • Spillane, J. P., Halverson, R., & Diamond, J. B. (2001). Investigating School Leadership Practice: A Distributed Perspective. Educational Researcher, (April), 23-28.
  • Spillane, J. P., Halverson, R., & Diamond, J. B. (2004). Towards a theory of leadership practice: a distributed perspective. Journal of Curriculum Studies, 36(1), 3-34.



Heidi Biancat Charlotte Danielson

Heidi Biancat146.151.105.55 (talk) 19:09, 10 March 2015 (UTC)


Bibliography: Charlotte Danielson

Danielson, Charlotte. The Framework for Teaching Evaluation Instrument. , 2011.

Danielson, Charlotte. The Framework for Teaching: Evaluation Instrument. , 2014.

Danielson, Charlotte. Enhancing Professional Practice: A Framework for Teaching. Alexandria, Va: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 2007.

Danielson, Charlotte. Enhancing Student Achievement: A Framework for School Improvement. Alexandria, Va: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 2002.

Danielson, Charlotte. The Handbook for Enhancing Professional Practice: Using the Framework for Teaching in Your School. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 2008.

Danielson, Charlotte. Teacher Leadership That Strengthens Professional Practice. Alexandria, Va: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 2006.

Danielson, Charlotte. A Collection of Performance Tasks & Rubrics. Hoboken: Taylor and Francis, 2013.

Danielson, Charlotte. Teaching Methods. Upper Saddle River, N.J: Pearson, 2010.

Danielson, Charlotte. The Four Domains of Teaching Responsibility. , 2010.



Outline:

Charlotte Danielson-Introduction - give a shot at this first paragraph, Heidi - I think it will focus the rest of the article...

1. Biography (birth, education, work, professional experiences, books, contributions to education)


2. Synopsis of Framework for Teaching 2011/2014 (4 domains: planning and preparation ; classroom environment ; instruction ; professional responsibilities)

3. Research within the framework (Measures of effective teaching project (MET) ; Excellence in teaching project, Rethinking teacher evaluation in Chicago)

4. Implications for Education (correlation of framework to standards ; evaluations that help teachers learn ; observing classroom practice ; teaching smartcard)

5. Influence on National Policies

    - educator effectiveness    - race to the top  


-Kalipdx (talk) 21:01, 9 March 2015 (UTC)




Steffenie Williams, Games and Learning

I. Definition - What is it?
- take a shot at this...what would the first paragraph look like?

what are the areas in games for learning? - science -math -literacy -health - environment - pop culture

II. Research Behind Games and Learning

III. Design

IV. Controversy

V. List of Games

VI. Important links

Resources

- Cambridge Games Learning and Society book - National Academy report on games and learning


  • Cazden, C., Cope, B., Fairclough, N., & Gee, J,;et al. (1996). A pedogogy of multiliteracies; Designing social futures. Harvard Educational Review, 66(1), 1-14.
  • Gee, J. P. (2010). Video Games: What They Can Teach Us About Audience Engagement. Nieman Reports, 52-54.
  • Gee, J. P. (2012). Digital Games and Libraries. Knowledge Quest-Participatory Culture and Learning, 41(1), 61-64.
  • Shaffer, D., Squire, K., Halverson, R., & Gee, J. P. (2005). Video Games and the Future of Learning. The Phi Delta Kappan, 87(2), 104-111.
  • Squire, K., Shree, D., & DeVane, B. (2008). Designing Centers of Expertise for Academic Learning Through Video Games. Theory Into Practice, 47, 240-251.
  • Squire, K., & Gaydos, M. (2012). Role playing games for scientific citizenship. Cultural Study of Science Education, 7, 821-844.
  • Squire, K. (2006). From Content to Context: Videogames as Designed Experience. Educational Researcher, 35(8), 19-29.
  • Squire, K. (2013). Video Game-Based Learning: An Emerging Paradigm for Instruction. Performance Improvement Quarterly, 26(1), 101-130.

Shwilliams1 (talk) 15:21, 11 March 2015 (UTC)




Sarah Hackett: Teacher Leadership

Outline

I. Definition and Context within the School Structure/System

II. Research Supporting the Concept

III. Examples and Types of Teacher Leadership (think: spectrum of "no teacher involvement" to "purely teacher-led")

IV. Inhibiting Factors of Implementation

V. Links (to schools, organizations, resources, and other wikipedia links)

Sources

Hi Sarah -these are great! I found a set of standards for teacher leadership published by the NEA, these might help frame the work: http://www.nea.org/assets/docs/TeacherLeaderModelStandards2011.pdf

Chris Argyris. 1991. "Teaching Smart People How to Learn." Harvard Business Review.

Elizabeth A. City, Richard F. Elmore, Sarah E. Fiarman, Lee Teitel. Instructional Rounds in Education: A Network Approach To Improving Teaching And Learning.

Kim Farris-Berg, Edward J. Dirkswager. 2012. Trusting Teachers with School Success: What Happens When Teachers Call the Shots. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.

David Frost & Judy Durrant. 2002. "Teachers as Leaders: Exploring the impact of teacher-led development work". Pages 143-161. School Leadership & Management: Formerly School Organisation. Volume 22, Issue 2. <<http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/1363243022000007728#.VO-kN1PF_FI>>

Beth Hawkins. "Teacher Cooperative: What Happens When Teachers Run the School?"<< http://educationnext.org/teacher-cooperatives/>>

Charles Taylor Kerchner, Laura Steen Mulfinger. 2010. "Can Teachers Run Their Own Schools? Tales from the Islands of Teacher Cooperatives." Claremont Graduate University. 2010. <<http://www.educationevolving.org/pdf/Can-Teachers-Run-Their-Own-Schools.pdf>>

Ann Lieberman. Networks As Learning Communities Shaping The Future Of Teacher Development. Stanford University.

Barry McGhan. 2002. "A Fundamental Education Reform: Teacher-Led Schools". The Phi Delta Kappan. Vol. 83, No. 7 (Mar., 2002), pp. 538-540. <<http://www.jstor.org/stable/20440190?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents>>

Daniel Muijs, Alma Harris. 2006. Teaching and Teacher Education. Volume 22, Issue 8, November 2006, Pages 961-972. "Teacher led school improvement: Teacher leadership in the UK". <<http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0742051X06000515>>

Shackett2 (talk) 21:35, 11 March 2015 (UTC)

(*NOTE* I'm in the process of sifting through these and adding more of the texts from class like Gomez, Bryk, Reznick, Halverson, etc.)




Katie Schmitt, Educator Effectiveness

Outline

I. Definition - What is it? (Can you take a shot at this?)

II. Purpose (Historically - you can talk a little about how teachers were evaluated, and how the ways in which Educator Effectiveness has turned attention to understanding and evaluating teacher practices)

III. How it is being used (in different states? Countries?)

IV. Criticisms

Sources

Hi Katie - too much Gates here...build in some of the resources that Sheila will talk about today...Rich

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (2013). Ensuring Fair and Reliable Measures of Effective Teaching: Culminating Finding from the MET Project's Three-Year Study. http://metproject.org/downloads/MET_Ensuring_Fair_and_Reliable_Measures_Practitioner_Brief.pdf


Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (2013). Feedback for Better Teaching: Nine Principles for Using Measures of Effective Teaching. http://metproject.org/downloads/MET_Feedback%20for%20Better%20Teaching_Principles%20Paper.pdf

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (2013). Have We Identified Effective Teachers?: Validating Measures of Effective Teaching Using Random Assignment. http://metproject.org/downloads/MET_Validating_Using_Random_Assignment_Research_Paper.pdf

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (2012). Gathering Feedback for Teaching: Combining High-Quality Observations with Student Surveys and Achievement Gains. http://metproject.org/downloads/MET_Gathering_Feedback_Research_Paper.pdf

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (2013). Learning About Teaching: Initial Finding from the Measures of Effective Teaching Project. http://metproject.org/downloads/Preliminary_Findings-Research_Paper.pdf

Gordon, R, Kane, T.J., & Staiger, D.O. (2006). Identifying Effective Teachers Using Performance on the Job. The Brookings Institution. http://www.brookings.edu/views/papers/200604hamilton_1.pdf

Hinchey, P.H., (2010). Getting Teacher Assessment Right: What Policymakers Can Learn From Research. National Education Policy Center

Mihaly, K., McCaffrey, D., Staiger, D., & Lockwood, J. (2013). A Composite Estimator of Effective Teaching. Rand Corporation. http://metproject.org/downloads/MET_Composite_Estimator_of_Effective_Teaching_Research_Paper.pdf

Steinberg, M.P. & Sartain, L. (2015). Does Better Observation Make Better Teachers? Education Next. 16. http://educationnext.org/better-observation-make-better-teachers/

The New Teacher Project (2013). Issue Analysis Report. http://tntp.org/assets/documents/TNTP_FixingClassroomObservations_2013.pdf

Toch, T. & Rothman, R. (2008). Rush to Judgment: Teacher Evaluation in Public Education. Education Sector. http://www.educationsector.org/usr_doc/RushToJudgment_ES_Jan08.pdf

Weisberg, D., Sexton, S., Mulhern, J., & Keeling, D. (2009). The Widget Effect: Our National Failure to Acknowledge and Act on Differences in Teacher Effectiveness. http://tntp.org/assets/documents/TheWidgetEffect_2nd_ed.pdf

Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction (DPI) (n.d.). Educator Effectiveness. Retrieved March 11, 2015, from: http://ee.dpi.wi.gov/

Wisconsin Education Association Council, What is Educator Effectiveness? Retrieved March 11, 2015, from: http://weac.org/professional-resources/educator-effectiveness/


Schmittkr17 (talk) 02:05, 12 March 2015 (UTC)




Yeseul Choi, Instructional Leadership

Outline

Brief definition /history

Nice outline! Can you take a shot at a definition of instructional leadership?

1. Perspectives (Approach)

2. Characteristics (or Roles or Components? activities that an effective instructional leader should do?)


3. Empirical study (effect on school performance, teacher, students' outcome)


4. Stages in developing instructional leaders (3 stages from Marsh)


5. Limitations (conceptual and measurement problems from Murphy, limitation from Hallinger)


6. References

Sources

Hi Yeseul - I'm putting an x in front of the articles that might be less useful...

Did you find the Leithwood and Louis article?

x Bays, D. A., & Crockett, J. B. (2007). Investigating instructional leadership for special education. Exceptionality, 15(3), 143-161.
x Blase, J., & Blase, J. (1999). Principals' instructional leadership and teacher development: Teachers' perspectives. Educational Administration Quarterly, 35(3), 349-378.
Blase, J., & Blase, J. (2000). Effective instructional leadership: Teachers' perspectives on how principals promote teaching and learning in schools. Journal of Educational Administration, 38(2), 130-141.
Hallinger, P. (2003). Leading educational change: Reflections on the practice of instructional and transformational leadership. Cambridge Journal of Education, 33(3), 329-352.
Halverson, R., Grigg, J., Prichett, R., & Thomas, C. (2007). The new instructional leadership: Creating data-driven instructional systems in school. Journal of School Leadership, 17(2), 159.
Heck, R. H. (1992). Principals' instructional leadership and school performance: Implications for policy development. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 14(1), 21-34.
Marks, H. M., & Printy, S. M. (2003). Principal leadership and school performance: An integration of transformational and instructional leadership. Educational Administration Quarterly, 39(3), 370-397.
Marsh, D. D. (1992). Enhancing Instructional Leadership: Lessons from the California School Leadership Academy. Education and Urban Society, 24(3), 386-409.
Murphy, J. (1988). Methodological, measurement, and conceptual problems in the study of instructional leadership. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 10(2), 117-139.
O'Donnell, R. J., & White, G. P. (2005). Within the accountability era: Principals' instructional leadership behaviors and student achievement. NASSP Bulletin, 89(645), 56-71.
Robinson, V. M., Lloyd, C. A., & Rowe, K. J. (2008). The impact of leadership on student outcomes: An analysis of the differential effects of leadership types. Educational Administration Quarterly. Retrieved from http://eaq.sagepub.com/content/early/2008/09/23/0013161X08321509.short
Southworth, G. (2002). Instructional leadership in schools: Reflections and empirical evidence. School Leadership & Management, 22(1), 73-91.
x Terry, P. M. (1996). The Principal and Instructional Leadership. Retrieved from http://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED400613

Ychoi93 (talk) 02:43, 12 March 2015 (UTC)




Kathleen, Flipped Classroom

Outline

Hi Kathleen - one of the issues here is that flipped classrooms are known by different names...try blended learning as well

1.) Lead Section: Definition of Flipped Classroom

2.) History of the Flipped Classroom

3.) Traditional versus Flipped Teaching

4.) Examples of Flipped Teaching / Case Studies of the Flipped Classroom

5.) Resources for Flipped Teaching

Sources

Herreid, Clyde Freeman, and Nancy A. Schiller. "Case studies and the flipped classroom." Journal of College Science Teaching 42.5 (2013): 62-66.

Khan, Salman. The one world schoolhouse: Education reimagined. Twelve, 2012.

Sams, A. "The Flipped Class: Shedding light on the confusion, critique, and hype." The Daily Riff, Nov 11 (2011): 2011.

Toppo, Greg. "Flipped classrooms take advantage of technology." USA Today 6 (2011).


Kfranzen (talk) 02:58, 12 March 2015 (UTC)

Sources up until now, although Julie has a book for me to use. YAY. Bryk A. S., Gomez L. M., Grunow A. (2010), Getting Ideas Into Action: Building Networked Improvement Communities in Education, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, Stanford, CA, essay, retrieved from http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/spotlight/webinar-bryk-gomez-building-networked- improvement-communities-in-education. Anne Marie W-G (talk) 00:04, 13 March 2015 (UTC)Anne Marie W-G




Dauren, Instructional rounds

Outline

I. Definition - What is it?

II. Purpose of Instructional Rounds?

III. Procedure - How Do You Do Instructional Rounds?

IV. Alternatives

V. Examples

Sources

City, Elizabeth A., Elmore, Richard F., Fiarman, Sarah E., Teitel, Lee. ?Instructional Rounds in Education: A Network Approach to Improving Teaching and Learning.? Harvard Education Press, 2009

City, Elizabeth A. ?Learning from Instructional Rounds? Coaching: The New Leadership Skill,Educational leadership: October 2011 | Volume 69 | Number 2





Bauyrzhan Abuov

Data Driven Decision Making

Outline

1. Definition

2. Purposes of using DDM

3. What counts as Data?

4. Using data in educational organizations

5. Examples of DDDM

6. Resources of DDDM

7. Using assessment results to improve teaching and learning

Sources

1. School Planning and Management, M. Flickes. 1998

2. Data-Driven Decision Making, JA. Marsh, JF. Pane, LS. Hamilton. 2006

3. Data-Driven Decision Making, M. Ediger. 2003

4. Data Analysis for Continuous School Improvement, V.L. Bernhardt. 2013

5. Data Wise: a step-by-step guide to using assessment results to improve teaching and learning, P. Boudett, K. City. 2009

6. A Perfect time for Data use, Mandinach. 2012 Bauyrzhanabuov (talk) 21:02, 19 March 2015 (UTC)




Stacey Mejac AIW Outline

The Framework Summary of research Scoring and Rubrics Implementation of AIW in Schools Schools using AIW

AIW References

I chose references used in the Newman, King, Carmichael piece as additional resources.

Newman, F, King, M. B., Carmichael, D. L. (2007). Authentic instruction and assessment: Common standards for rigor and relevance in teaching academic subjects. Des Moines, IA: Iowa Department of Education.

Avery, P.G. (1999). Authentic instruction and assessment. Social Education, 65(6), 368-373.

Ladwig, J., Smith, M., Gore, J., Amosa, W., & Griffiths, T. (2007, April). An examination of the relationship between the quality of pedagogy and student achievement. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association, Chicago.

Louis, K.S., Kruse, S.D., & Marks, H.M. (1996). School-wide professional community (Chap. 10). In F.M. Newmann & Associates, Authentic achievement: Restructuring schools for intellectual quality. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Newmann, F.M. & Associates (1996). Authentic achievement: Restructuring schools for intellectual quality. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Newmann, F.M., Bryk, A.S., & Nagaoka, J. (2001). Authentic intellectual work and standardized tests: Conflict or coexistence. Chicago: Consortium on Chicago School Research. Available at www.consortium-chicago.org

Newmann, F.M., Marks, H.M., & Gamoran, A. (1996). Authentic pedagogy and student performance. American Journal of Education, 104(4), 280-312.

Newmann, F.M., Secada, W.G., & Wehlage, G.G. (1995). A guide to authentic instruction and assessment: Vision, standards, and scoring. Madison, WI: Wisconsin Center for Education Research, University of Wisconsin.




Anne Marie, Networked Learning Communities

This is Anne Marie W-G. I am going to write about networked learning communities. Here are my sources and a loose outline: Bryk A. S., Gomez L. M., Grunow A. (2010), Getting Ideas Into Action: Building Networked Improvement Communities in Education, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, Stanford, CA, essay, retrieved from http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/spotlight/webinar-bryk-gomez-building-networked- improvement-communities-in-education.


Organization of Research and design-- past and present-- need for purposeful collective action toward common solution NICs-- design communities, learning communities Common Measurable Targets and Goals-- variability in (and publicity of) results + joint accountability are both drivers toward continuous improvement Problem-Solution Space-- leads to common language, tool 1: program improvement maps, tool 2: driver diagrams Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) Cycle Anne Marie W-G (talk) 23:19, 19 March 2015 (UTC)Anne Marie W-G

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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