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1
LeaPSLearning in Physical
ScienceADMINISTRATOR’S
MEETINGFebruary 24, 2011
Funding Provided by KDE through a Math and Science Partnership Grant from USDOE
Facilitated by the P-12 Math and Science Outreach Unit of PIMSER
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• “I often wonder if many of our students feel like they are time traveling as they walk through the school door each morning. As they cross the threshold, do they feel as if they are entering a simulation of life in the 1980’s? Then, at the end of the day, do they feel that they have returned to the 21st century?
• As educators, our challenge is to match the needs of our learners to a world that is changing with great rapidity. To meet this challenge, we need to become strategic learners ourselves by deliberately expanding our perspectives and updating our approaches.”
• Heidi Hayes Jacobs, Curriculum 21
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Facilitator
• Kim Zeidler-Watters, Director P-12 Math & Science Outreach Unit of University of Kentucky PIMSER
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Group NormsRESPECT
• Rejoin whole group when signaled• Everyone participates• Side conversations to a minimum • Prepared for meeting• Expect to be here and present in the work• Cell phone and other electronics etiquette• Two feet rule
Project Goals for LeaPS
• Overall goal: Students will learn targeted physical science concepts (structure and transformation of matter, force & motion)
• Goal 1: Enhance teacher content and pedagogical knowledge of targeted physical science concepts
• Goal 2: Improve Teacher Instructional Practices • Goal 3: Enhance Administrator Support
Why this design?Requirements for PD that Impacts
Practice:• Content Focus• Time- 30-120 hours to change practice• Pedagogy• Participation• Sources of information, expertise for
new learning• Sources of support for implementation
and reflection (e.g., administration)• Evaluation
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Roadmap for Today
Literacy Standards for Science
Conceptual Framework for New Science Education
Standards and Accountability Update,
KDE
Connections To SB 1
Wrap-up
Literacy Standards and EXPLORE
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• “Change is a person by person process. But the system has to respond to the needs of each person.”– Carol Commodore
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Ball Drop
• Learning Targets– I can use data to
make inferences and draw conclusions.
– I can support a claim with evidence.
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Is energy conserved when a ball is dropped? How do you know?
• Work as district or table group. Please work in groups of 3.
• Complete the “Ball Drop” probe on your own. Be sure to write your explanation.
• Discuss your probe thoughts with your group.
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Let’s Find Out!
• Obtain a ball from a facilitator.• Using the probe as your guide, explore the
question concerning the ball.• Develop a plan to test your hypothesis.• Be sure to record your observations and any
data collected.• Materials available:
– Ball, meter stick
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Let’s Do a Little Research
• To help you gather more information to answer your question, use the organizer as you read the excerpt from Newton at The Center by Joy Hakim.
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What about the probe?• Discuss your findings
with your group.• Re-visit the probe used
at the beginning.• Are you satisfied with
your choice & explanation?
• Modify if needed.
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What’s Your Claim?
• Use the frame to guide your writing
When a ball is dropped, ___________________. The data provide evidence that _____________________ . Therefore, I think ____________________________.
Your claim
Include qualitative & quantitative data
Reasoning for claim
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Ball Drop
• Learning Targets– I can use data to
make inferences and draw conclusions.
– I can support a claim with evidence.
• “Language capacity is the root of all student performance.”
• Heidi Hayes Jacobs, Active Literacy Across the Curriculum
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Literacy Standards for Science
• Learning Targets– I can describe the
reading and writing standards for science and understand the connect to CCR.
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What matters most?
• What does our investment in teaching students mean?
• What do we want students to walk away with from our schools and classrooms?
• What should we teach?
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BP Oil Spill: A Teachable Moment
What can we learn about the nature of the challenges our students will face in the 21st century from this ecological disaster?
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The challenges and problems our students will face in the 21st Century are:
• unpredictable. As in the case of the BP oil spill, we can wake up facing new and significant challenges we didn’t know we had yesterday.
• ambiguous. We may not have the knowledge we need to solve the problems when they occur and will have to acquire new knowledge as a result.
• interdependent. No single person or entity can solve the problem of the BP oil spill. 21st century problems are situated in a global economy in which individuals, organizations, corporations, and governments often have to work together to solve large-scale problems.
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What is the Common Core State Standard (CCSS) Initiative?
• Draws upon the best practices of existing curricular models in the United States, as well as internationally—cognizant of the fact that we are preparing our students to be active participants in a global society and economy.
• Designed with a focus on coherence and consistency, rigorous content and its application through higher order thinking skills—to best prepare students for college and careers.
• Emphasis on literacy across the content areas.
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How are the Common Core State Standards designed?
ELA & Literacy in Science, Social Studies/History, & Technical Subjects
Mathematics
The CCSS are divided up into 2 categories:
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ELA Standards—An Overview• K-12 Standards for
– Reading – Writing– Speaking and Listening– Language
• Reading and Writing Standards for History/Social Studies (explicit for 6 – 12)
• Reading and Writing Standards for Science and Technical Subjects (explicit for 6 – 12)
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College and Career Readiness Anchor StandardsELA
– 4 sets: Reading, Writing, Language, and Speaking and Listening– Social Studies/History, Science, and Technical Subjects—2 sets: Reading and Writing– All of the standards within the grade bands are linked to these anchors with building complexity as
the grades increase
StrandsWithin each set, the anchors are divided into strands
Grade BandsThe ELA anchors are grouped K-5 and 6-12 (6-12 only for Social Studies, History/Science, and Technical Subjects)
StandardsThe standards within grades and grade bands provide further specificity in a developmentally
appropriate progression toward meeting the expectation of the anchor
AppendicesExemplar texts, performance tasks, student work
ELA Standards—StructureThis hierarchy describes how to read the CCSS documents for ELA & Literacy in Science, Social Studies/History, Science & Technical Subjects
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Literacy Standards for Science: Writing
• Examine the College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards for Writing (pg. 63) and the Writing Standards for Literacy in Science (pgs. 64-66).
• What are the 3 types of writing specified in the CAS for science?
• What are some curricular and instructional implications based on the “Research to Build and Present Knowledge” strand and the “Range of Writing” strand? How is this similar and different from current practices in your schools?
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Literacy Standards for Science: Writing
• Would the notebooking frame we used today help address these writing standards? What evidence can you cite to support your thinking?
• Why would it be important to help students develop this type of thinking and writing?
• Are frames only useful in science?
Resource
• Provide to your teachers and embedded in the Force and Motion unit.
• What is your expectation for teachers?
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Literacy Standards for Science
• Learning Targets– I can describe the
reading and writing standards for science.
• Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius —and a lot of courage —to move in the opposite direction.– E. F. Schumacke
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Connections to SB 1
• SB 1 calls for professional development in:– Highly effective teaching and
learning– Assessment literacy– Kentucky’s Core Academic
Standards– Leadership to implement
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Take Aways from Today’s Meeting
• Implications for CIA from the literacy standards in science.
• Vision of high quality instruction in science that effectively integrates the reading and writing as a way to learn content.
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Wrap-up and Feedback• Answer the following on an
index card:• 3 – ideas gained from today• 2 – actions will take as a
result of meeting• 1 – question or topic to
address in upcoming meetings
• Leave the index card on your table.