62
Student Learning Objectives

Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

Student Learning Objectives

Page 2: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

2

Student Learning Objectives Framing

A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators set for students.

The purpose of an SLO is to measure students’ growth over the course of an academic term.

Student Learning Objectives consist of content standards, evidence, and targets:

The content standards can be CCSS, GSEs/GLEs, or other national

standards

The evidence is the assessment(s) used to measure student progress/mastery

The target is the numerical goal for student progress/mastery, based on available prior data

Page 3: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

3

Student Learning Objective Framing

Curriculum&

Instruction

CommonCore

StudentLearning

Objectives

Data Usage&

Comprehensive

AssessmentSystem

Student Learning Objectives are not a disconnected initiative. Rather, they bring together all the essential aspects of instruction.

Curriculum, standards, data, and the CAS inform high quality SLOs

Instructional Coherence

Page 4: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

4

Alignment of Student Learning Objectives

Student Learning Objectives should be aligned so that district priorities inform administrators’ Student Learning Objectives.

Building administrators’ Student Learning Objectives guide teacher Student Learning Objectives (when applicable).

All educators will have a set of at least two, but no more than 4 Student Learning Objectives.

District Priority

Administrator SLOs

Teacher SLOs

Page 5: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

5

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

Student Learning Objectives include:

• Objective Statement• Rationale• Aligned Standards• Students• Interval of Instruction

• Baseline Data• Target(s)• Rationale for Target(s)

• Evidence Source • Administration• Scoring

5

Priority of Content

Rigor of Target

Quality of Evidence

Page 6: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

6

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

Objective StatementIdentifies the priority content and learning that is expected during the interval of instruction. The objective statement should be broad enough that it captures the major content of an extended instructional period, but focused enough that it can be measured.

All students will improve their reading comprehension of informational text, as measured by their ability to use explicitly stated information to answer questions about the text, identify the general topic of a text, and make inferences and/or draw conclusions about central ideas that are relevant to the text.

6

Priority of Content

Example:

Page 7: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

7

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

RationaleProvides a data-driven and/or curriculum-based explanation for the focus of the Student Learning Objective and indicates if it’s aligned with a building administrator’s Student Learning Objective.

• What learning is necessary?• What is being done to achieve learning?• How will it be determined that learning is being attained

throughout the year?• How will it be determined that learning has been attained by the

end of the year?

7

Priority of Content

Page 8: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

8

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

Aligned StandardsSpecifies the standards (e.g., CCSS, Rhode Island GSEs, GLEs, or other state or national standards) with which this objective is aligned.

8

IT 7.3 Using explicitly stated information to answer questions about the text

IT 8.1 Identifying the general topic of a text.

IT8.2 Making inferences and/or drawing conclusions about central ideas that are relevant to the text.

IT 7.3 Using explicitly stated information to answer questions about the text

IT 8.1 Identifying the general topic of a text.

Priority of Content

Example:

Page 9: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

9

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

StudentsSpecifies the number of and grade/class of students to whom this objective applies.

9

This objective applies to the 25 students in my 5th grade class.

Priority of Content

Example:

Page 10: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

10

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

• Teachers do not need to include ALL of the students for whom their responsible in their set of SLOs

Ex. If a teacher has 2 sections of Algebra I, 1 Geometry class, and 1 AP Calculus class, they can set 1 SLO for her Algebra students and 1 for her Geometry students, and not set one for her AP Calculus students.

• However, if they are writing an SLO for a particular class, the teacher should not exclude any students in that class from the SLO.

Ex. If she has 46 students in her two sections of Algebra I, all 46 students should be accounted for her in Algebra I SLO.

10

Page 11: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

11

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

Interval of InstructionSpecifies whether this objective applies to the entire academic year. For educators who work with students on a shorter cycle, the length of the interval of instruction should be defined.

2012-2013 School Year

Priority of Content

Example:

Page 12: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

12

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

Baseline DataDescribes students’ baseline knowledge, including the source(s) of data and its relation to the overall course objectives. If baseline data are not available for the student population to whom the Student Learning Objective applies, data about a similar student group (such as students taught in a previous year) or national expectations about student achievement in this area may be referenced.

• Baseline data may include: o prior year assessment scores or grades o beginning-of-year benchmark assessment data o other evidence of students’ learning, such as portfolio work

samples

12

During the first week of school, students completed a mile run. Only 50% of students ran the mile in under 10 minutes. Of those, 25% ran the mile in under 8 minutes. The other 50% ran the mile in over 10 minutes.

Priority of Content

Example:

Page 13: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

13

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

Target(s)Describes where the teacher expects students to be at the end of the interval of instruction. The target should be measureable and rigorous, yet attainable for the interval of instruction. In most cases, the target should be tiered (differentiated) so as to be both rigorous and attainable for all students included in the Student Learning Objective.

13

15 students will demonstrate a 30% increase in accuracy in their demonstration of reading comprehension of information text without prompting.

10 students will demonstrate a 15% increase in accuracy in their demonstration of reading comprehension of informational text.

Rigor of Target

Example:

Page 14: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

14

Progress Target: X% or # of students will improve by Y points/levels on Z assessment*

 World Languages: 100% (26/26) of students will improve by at least

20 points from Q1 to Q4 on the French 2 Quarterly Assessment.   Mastery Target: X % or # of students will achieve level Y on

Z assessment* World Languages: 100% (26/26) of students will attain a passing

score on the French 2 final Quarterly Assessment.   

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

Rigor of Target

Page 15: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

15

Phys Ed: All students (26) will improve upon their Mile Run completion time:

• 16 students will improve their overall completion time by 10%.

• 10 students will improve their overall completion time by 5%.

Targets should be tiered so that all students in a class, prep, or subject are accounted for.

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

Rigor of Target

Page 16: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

16

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

Rationale for Target(s)Explains the way in which the target was determined, including the data source (e.g., benchmark assessment, historical data for the students in the course, historical data from past students) and evidence that the data indicate the target is both rigorous and attainable for all students. Rationale should be provided for each target.

 

16

These targets were informed by my data from last year’s French 2 student data. I created tiers based upon the Q1 assessment, which indicated that 85% of students are on-track. The remaining 15% are entering the course lacking some foundational skills from French 1. Therefore, I have set a slightly lower, though still rigorous, target for these students.

Rigor of Target

Example:

Page 17: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

17

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

Evidence SourceDescribes the evidence that will be used to measure student learning, why the evidence is appropriate for measuring the objective, and its level of standardization.

17

Curriculum-embedded common reading assessments will collected at least twice per month to monitor student progress toward the identified objective. The students will read and respond to informational texts that have been adapted from texts used in the curriculum.

Quality of Evidence

Example:

Page 18: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

18

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

AdministrationDescribes how the measure of student learning will be administered (e.g., once or multiple times during class or during a designated testing window by the classroom teacher or someone else).

18

The common reading assessment will be administered bi-weekly by the classroom teacher. 6 point rubric scoring will be calibrated along with the other 5th grade reading teachers to promote scoring consistency.

Quality of Evidence

Example:

Page 19: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

19

Anatomy of a Student Learning Objective

ScoringDescribes how the evidence will be collected and scored (e.g., scored by the classroom teacher individually or by a team of teachers; scored once or a percentage double-scored).

19

The classroom teacher will score the common reading assessment that is administered bi-weekly using a 6 point rubric that was designed by the grade level team and department chair.

Quality of Evidence

Example:

Page 20: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

20

Timeline of the SLO ProcessM

ID-F

ALL

Submit SLOs for approval and revise as needed

MID

-WIN

TER

Track SLO progress and adjust as needed L

ATE S

PR

ING

Submit student learning data for scoring

Page 21: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

21

Building administrator explains measures of student learning tofaculty and shares administrator SLOs.

Implementation Planning

Building administrator reviews school improvement plan with administrator teams to set administrator SLOs.

21

Step 1: Set Administrator SLOs

Step 2: Train Faculty and Staff

Page 22: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

22

Step 3: Form Teacher Teams

Note: This step is recommended, but not required

• Identify a leader for each team (e.g., teacher, department/grade chair, assistant principal)

• Create the time and space for teams to meet• Share knowledge about the common assessments selected

with each team

Note: In most cases, teachers of the same grade/subject should have the same objectives and evidence. Each teacher will set targets for their specific classroom.

Implementation Planning

Page 23: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

23

Approving SLOs

When approving SLOs, you are primarily looking at:

Priority of Content• Is this objective aligned to school and/or district level priorities?• Is the objective aligned to state and/or national standards?

Quality of Evidence• Is the assessment completely aligned to measure the identified content/skills of

the objective?• Does the assessment provide the specific data needed to determine if the

objective was met?• Can the assessment be compared across classrooms and schools?

Rigor of Target• Is the target(s) aligned with annual expectations for academic growth or

mastery?• What data source(s) informed the target that was set?• Is the target(s) rigorous, yet attainable for all students?• Will students be “on track” and/or reduce gaps in achievement if they reach the

target(s)?

Page 24: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

24

Approving SLOs

24

The SLO must be revised if it does not identify the:Priority of Content

Rigor of TargetQuality of Evidence

Page 25: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

25

Mid Year Review

25

Teachers should carefully review

The student data at mid year and

if necessary consider revising their targets!

Page 26: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

26

Mid-Year

SLOs can/should be revised IF…

• Based on new information, it is clear the objectives fail to address the most important learning in the classroom/course

• New, more reliable sources of evidence become available

• Class compositions have changed significantly

• Teaching schedule or assignment has changed significantly

26

Page 27: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

27

If the SLO is in need of revision…

1. The teacher should provide an explanation of why revisions are needed and suggestions for how to revise.

2. Teacher should revise and resubmit to evaluator as soon as possible.

3. Evaluator should review revised SLO and either approve or send back to teacher with guidance on how to submit a final revision.

Page 28: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

28

Scoring SLOs

28

Page 29: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

29

Scoring SLOs

• PRIOR to the End-of-Year Conference, teachers should:

• Gather and analyze student learning data relevant to their SLOs (e.g., assessment results)

• Complete the end of year section of each SLO Form

• Submit data and completed SLO Form to evaluators in advance of conference

Page 30: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

30

Scoring

Step 2

The rating is calculated within EPSS based upon individual scores

Step 1

The evaluator should rate each individual Student Learning Objective

Page 31: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

31

Step 1: Rating individual SLOs

Participants should review Sample SLO

Objective: Students will improve their expository writing in response to informational text, including a clear thesis statement and the inclusion of appropriate textual evidence.

Assessment: District writing prompt assessment (administered quarterly)

Targets:

1. The 26 students who scored a 3 or 4 on Q1 assessment will improve by at least 1 level by Q4.

2. The 34 students who scored a 1 or 2 on Q1 assessment will improve by at least 2 levels by Q4.

Page 32: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

32

Step 1: Rating individual SLOs

Met-This category applies when all or almost all students met the target(s). Results

within a few points, a few percentage points, or a few students on either side of the

target(s) should be considered “Met”. The bar for this category should be high and it

should only be selected when it is clear that the students met the overall level ofattainment established by the target(s).

SAMPLE DATA

Most students met their targets. 8/60 students exceeded their targets. Only 3/60 students did not meet their targets.

Targets Results

The 26 students who scored a 3 or 4 on Q1 assessment will improve by at least 1 level by Q4.

25/26 students who scored a 3 or 4 on Q1 assessment improved by at least 1 level by Q4. 5 of the 26 students improved by 2 levels.

The 34 students who scored a 1 or 2 on Q1 assessment will improve by at least 2 levels by Q4.

32/34 students who scored a 1 or 2 on Q1 assessment improved by at least 2 levels by Q4. 3 of the 34 students improved by 3 levels.

Page 33: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

33

Step 1: Rating individual SLOs

What’s “a few”?

Each district must decide whatconstitutes “a few”.

33

Page 34: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

34

Step 1: Rating individual SLOs

Nearly Met- This category applies when many students met the target(s), but the

target(s) was missed by more than a few points, a few percentage points, or a few

students. This category should be selected when it is clear that students fell just short

of the level of attainment established by the target(s).

SAMPLE DATA

Both targets were missed by more than a few students (6/26 and 8/34). However, over 75% of students in both tiers met their targets and 2 students exceeded their targets.

This category was added based on feedback from gradual implementation

Targets Results

The 26 students who scored a 3 or 4 on Q1 assessment will improve by at least 1 level by Q4.

20/26 students who scored a 3 or 4 on Q1 assessment improved by at least 1 level by Q4.

The 34 students who scored a 1 or 2 on Q1 assessment will improve by at least 2 levels by Q4.

26/34 students who scored a 1 or 2 on Q1 assessment improved by at least 2 levels by Q4. 2 of the 34 students improved by 3 levels.

Page 35: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

35

Step 1: Rating individual SLOs

Exceeded –This category applies when all or almost all students met the target(s)

and many students exceeded the target(s). For example, exceeding the target(s) by

a few points, a few percentage points, or a few students would not qualify an SLOfor this category. This category should only be selected when a substantial

numberof students surpassed the overall level of attainment established by the target(s).

SAMPLE DATA

All but one student students met their target. In addition, 23 out of 60 students exceeded their targets. This can be considered a “substantial number” for a group of this size.

Targets Results

The 26 students who scored a 3 or 4 on Q1 assessment will improve by at least 1 level by Q4.

25/26 students who scored a 3 or 4 on Q1 assessment improved by at least 1 level by Q4. 16 of the 26 students improved by at least 2 levels.

The 34 students who scored a 1 or 2 on Q1 assessment will improve by at least 2 levels by Q4.

34/34 students who scored a 1 or 2 on Q1 assessment improved by at least 2 levels by Q4. 7 of the 34 students improved by at least 3 levels.

Page 36: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

36

Step 1: Rating individual SLOs

Not Met- This category applies when the results do not fit the description of what it

means to have “Nearly Met”. If a substantial proportion of students did not meet the

target(s)the SLO was not met. This category also applies when results are missing,

incomplete, or unreliable.

SAMPLE DATA

The targets were not met in either tier. 10 students missed the target in the first tier and 13 students missed the target in the second tier. This can be considered a substantial proportion for a group of this size (23/60).

Targets Results

The 26 students who scored a 3 or 4 on Q1 assessment will improve by at least 1 level by Q4.

16/26 students who scored a 3 or 4 on Q1 assessment improved by at least 1 level by Q4.

The 34 students who scored a 1 or 2 on Q1 assessment will improve by at least 2 levels by Q4.

21/34 students who scored a 1 or 2 on Q1 assessment improved by at least 2 levels by Q4.

Page 37: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

37

Scoring

Step 2

The rating is calculated within EPSS based upon individual scores

Step 1

The evaluator should rate each individual Student Learning Objective

Page 38: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

38

Step 2: Scoring a Set of SLOs

Page 39: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

39

Step 2: Scoring a Set of SLOs

Scoring Tables

SLO 1 SLO 2 Final

Exceeded Exceeded Exceptional

Exceeded Met Full

Exceeded Nearly Met Partial

Exceeded Not Met Partial

Met Met Full

Met Nearly Met Partial

Met Not Met Partial

Nearly Met Nearly Met Partial

Nearly Met Not Met Minimal

Not Met Not Met Minimal

Page 40: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

40

Putting it All Together

40

Page 41: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

41

Final Effectiveness Rating MatrixP

P x

PG

R

Page 42: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

Professional Academy for Cranston Educators P A C E

“PACE Yourself - One Step at a Time”

Cranston Public SchoolsSLO’sDesign &Guidance2012- 2013

Page 43: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs! What is the time table for SLO

Approval?

SLO’s must be designed and approved by last school day in November.

Page 44: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs! What form is Cranston Public

Schools using for the design, approval, and individual rating of SLO’s?The current form is aligned to RIDE standards.

Page 45: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs! What is the time table should a teacher request

an SLO revision?Revision should only be made in the case of a significant change in the student population or a change of class assignment. Teacher must communicate a request to revise an SLO to their evaluator by the last day of the second quarter. The revision process must be completed – in collaboration between the teacher and the evaluator - by the Friday before February Break.

Page 46: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs! What is the deadline for the final

collection of student data?

All student data on the assessments selected must be completed by the end of the first week of May.

Page 47: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs! How many days must a student be in

school in order to included when collecting data for an SLO? Students must attend class a minimum of 80% in order to be included in a teachers collection of data for an SLO.

Page 48: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs! What is the last day a baseline assessment

can be given to a student in order to include them in a teacher’s collection of data for an SLO?

The last day a baseline assessment can be given to a student in order to include them in a teacher’s collection of data for an SLO is the first day of the second quarter

Page 49: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs!How many times should data be collected as evidence of attainment of an SLO?Teacher should collect and record data on student learning a minimum of 3 times over the course of a school year.

Page 50: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs!What if a student achieves their goal before the end of the school year?

If a student achieves their targeted objective before the end of the school year, a teacher still continues to collect data on that student but they are automatically counted as having met the goal.

Page 51: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs!What if a student is proficient at the start of the school year, based on the baseline assessment?

If a student achieves their targeted objective during the baseline assessment they must maintain that level for the school year.

Page 52: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs! What is “a few” – as defined by the CPS District Evaluation

Committee?

85% or more of the students met the targetAND35% of the students exceeded the target = Exceeded

75% - 84% or more of the students met the target = Met

65%-74% of students met the target = Nearly Met

<65% of students met the target = DidNot MeetPlease refer to the SLO Rating Guidance document provided.

Page 53: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs! How should teachers design their SLO targets?

Teachers should tier their targets based on the baseline data collected for each group of students and include both #s and %s in the target - for example:

• *The 15/60% students who scored a 3 or 4 on Q1 assessment will improve by at least 1 level by Q4.

• *The 10/40% students who scored a 1 or 2 on Q1 assessment will improve by at least 2 levels by Q4

Page 54: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs! How should Special Education design

their SLO targets?Teachers should still tier their targets based on the baseline data collected for each group of students and include both #s and %s in the target -but may choose to have each tier targeting one or a very small group of children.

Page 55: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs! How should Reading Teachers/Math

Coaches design their SLO targets?These teachers will write their 2 SLO’s by grade level (1 SLO for the 3rd grade and one for the 5th grade). One SLO will be content based and one will be a district designed writing SLO, a short constructed response to a question on a content

related piece of text.

Page 56: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s Elementary Classroom teachers will

write their 2 SLO’s on their entire classroom, choosing, in collaboration with their evaluator, either a Reading (PALS/STAR) or Writing SLO

AND a Math SLO using a district assessment (K,1,2) and PTS3 (3,4,5,6)

Page 57: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s Elementary Unified Arts teachers will write

their 2 SLO’s by grade level (1 SLO for the 3rd grade and one for the 5th grade). One SLO will be content based and one will be a district designed writing SLO, a short constructed response to a question on a content related piece of text.

Page 58: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s Middle Level teachers will write their 2 SLO’s by team

or by caseload – UAs two sections per grade / per semester.One SLO will be content based and one will be a district designed writing SLO, a short constructed response or essay to a question on a content related piece of text.PTS3 and Problem Solving Prompts for Math teachers STAR and Writing for ELA teachersUse Scaled Scores.

Page 59: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s High School teachers will write their 2 SLO’s by their preps –

one SLO per Prep, not to exceed 2 sectionsFor Content teacher, one SLO will be content based and one will be a district designed writing SLO, a short constructed response or essay to a question on a content related piece of text.For ELA teachers, one SLO will be on expository essay. The second will be released in the near future. For Math teachers, one SLO will be based on the district skills assessment based on CCSS. The other SLO will be based on problem solving prompts and district problem solving rubric.

Page 60: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s Secondary Unified Artsl teachers will

write their 2 SLO’s by their preps – one prep, not to exceed 2 sections - per SLOOne SLO will be content based and one will be a district designed writing SLO, a short constructed response to a question on a content related piece of text.

Page 61: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs! Elementary / Middle When using a standardized

assessment – it is advisable to use the scaled score to chart a student’s progress.

Page 62: Student Learning Objectives. 2 Student Learning Objectives Framing A Student Learning Objective is a long term, measureable, academic goal that educators

SLO’s FAQs!What do I do now to get started writing my SLO’s?

1. In collaboration with your Evaluator and your Program Supervisor and Department Chair - select two areas, one each for your two SLO’s

2. Save to your desktop the corresponding SLO Template from the PACE website.

3. Describe your class and assess your students to establish a baseline.4. Analyze the baseline data and put that data into the template.5. Tier the targets for your students based on the baseline data. 6. Provide the rational for the targets set.7. Complete the Action Plan for your students to successfully achieve the

target set.8. “Save as”-1st initial, last name, SLO area on your desktop.9. Send your two SLO’s to your evaluator10. Revise, if required, by your evaluator and resend.