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Differentiated Technical Assistance Team (DTAT) Video Series Instructional Preparation,

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Differentiated Technical Assistance Team (DTAT) Video Series Instructional Preparation, Part I of IV: Effective Teaming Dr. Jane J. Baskerville & Steve DeGaetani. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Differentiated Technical Assistance Team (DTAT)  Video Series Instructional Preparation,
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Differentiated Technical Assistance Team (DTAT) Video Series

Instructional Preparation, Part I of IV: Effective TeamingDr. Jane J. Baskerville & Steve DeGaetani

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The ultimate goal in school improvement is for the people attached to the school to drive its continuous improvement for the sake of their own children and students.

- Dr. Sam Redding

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Instructional Preparation

Session 1 – Effective Teaming

Session 2 – Unit PlanningSession 3 – Effective Differentiation

Session 4 – Collegial Coaching

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Instructional Preparation Series The sessions are designed to be used

by individuals or in a group setting. The sessions are sequential.

The PowerPoints and all related materials may be downloaded from the VDOE Website.

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Purpose

Series:•To identify requisite components of instructional preparation including effective teaming with common planning time, unit planning and differentiation of instruction driven by student performance data, and collegial coaching

Today’s Video Presentation:•To examine the critical importance of “building” effective instructional teams through common planning time--of which the work product will be unit planning to address individual student learning needs

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Today’s Agenda

1) What does research say about effective teaming as it relates to instructional preparation?

2) What should the “work” of instructional teams look like during common planning time?

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What Does the Research Say?

The right kind of continuous, structured teacher

collaboration improves the quality of teaching and pays

big, often immediate, dividends in student learning…in

any setting (Schmoker, 2005). And the “work” of

teachers during common planning times must be

efficient, effective, and always driven by students’ needs

(Schmoker, 2006).

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What the Research Says

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For Instructional Teams (Redding, 2006):

Instructional Teams (grade level or content area) of teachers operate most effectively when they meet for two purposes: 1) to conduct business, review student progress, and coordinate their efforts, 2) to co-develop aligned units of instruction

A block of 4 to 6 hours of time once a month is necessary for curricular and instructional planning, and additional whole days before and after the school year are a great advantage

A 45-minute meeting twice a month is ideal for maintaining communication and organizing the work at hand (i.e., student performance data as they pertain to individual learning tasks/differentiation, etc.). Source: Redding, S. (2006). The mega system. Deciding. Learning. Connecting. A handbook for continuous

improvement within a community of the school. Lincoln, IL: Academic Development Institute.

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10Source: Snow-Renner, R. & Lauer, P.A. (2005). Professional Development Analysis. McREL Insights, 1-24.

Per Redding (2006), the team--that should be composed of the principal (or designee), grade level team members/content team members, representatives from special education, resource staff, Title I and/or reading or mathematics specialists, and other staff as appropriate—has

• A high level of interdependence.• Members who are willing to contribute.• A relaxed climate for communication.• Members who have developed mutual trust.*• Individuals who are willing to take risks.• Members who are clear about goals and who establish targets and dates.• Members whose roles are defined .• Members who know how to examine team & individual error without personal

attacks.• The capacity to generate new ideas.• Individual members who know that they can influence the team.

What are the characteristics of Schmoker’s continuous, structured collaboration (instructional team) that is driven by student need and pays big dividends?

What the Research Says

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Reflection Questions 1) How much common planning time do your teacher

teams currently maintain weekly or monthly?

2) If your school already matches the research standard for amount of common planning time, what obstacles did you have to overcome to achieve this? What are some observable results of protecting this quantity of time?

3) If your school does not currently match the research standard, what next step(s) could you realistically take to move toward the research standard? (See Decision Making Pyramid in Resources.)

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Best Practices – A Formative Assessment Activity in PDFFor each statement, indicate Agree or Disagree.

During common planning time, the teachers should be…

Using student learning data to assess strengths and weaknesses of the curriculum and instructional strategies.

Reviewing student assessment results to help plan instruction for individual students.

Deciding on dates for field trips and other special activities.

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Review this activity individually or as a team for the best practices in unit planning. – PDF

The keys to improved academic achievement are the professional practices of teachers and leaders and not the economic, ethnic, or linguistic characteristics of the students (Reeves, 2005).

Of the 11 terms listed below, think about a minimum of five that play a role in unit planning in your building:

Is there a document (i.e., instructional planning template) that you useto help institutionalize the practices associated with the terms?

Note: A unit of instruction, developed by an instructional team, usually represents three to six weeks of work within a content area(Redding, 2006).

Blueprints Bloom’s taxonomySMART objectives Pre-assessmentFormative assessment Post-assessmentsPrior knowledge Tiered/personalized instruction

(differentiation)Self-assessment Metacognitive processingReflections

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What was one idea I learned during today’s

webinar that I will use or plan to

share with teachers at my

school?

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Questions?

If you come up with a question today, or even later when you share content from this video in your school, please contact…

The OSI staff at [email protected]

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Are You A Goose Or Buffalo?

http://animoto.com/play/pp0Imqm0wl4SXBFBAZ964g?utm_content=escape_link

Reflect on or discuss with your instructional team the message of the video and how that message is relevant to the research.

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Additional Resources Redding, S. (2006). The mega system. Deciding. Learning. Connecting. A handbook for continuous improvement within a

community of the school. Lincoln, IL: Academic Development Institute.

Virginia Support for School Improvement: Effective Teaming & Instructional Planning (2008)

Wise Ways: Center on Innovation & Improvement; available at Indistar Web site

Addison Action Agenda (adapted) for team meetings Decision-Making Pyramid Sample: Instructional Team Planning Document Sample: Procedures: Developing Unit Plan & Learning Plan Grid Sample: Unit Plan

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Instructional Preparation Next Session

Session 1 – Effective Teaming

Session 2 – Unit PlanningSession 3 – Effective Differentiation

Session 4 – Collegial Coaching