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Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

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Page 1: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

Student Learning Objectives -SLOsStudent Growth Measures and OTES

Gail Martino

ConsultantStark County Educational Service Center

Page 2: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

The time to do this is NOW!(Implementation Year will be here before

we know it!)

Page 3: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

Stark County Educational Service Center

• Serves 21 local, city, and exempted village districts in northeastern Ohio

• Pilot included 52 Art and 51 Music teachers• Art Advisory Committee and Music Advisory

Committee – met before and after summer SLO writing sessions

• Submitted more than 50 Art SLOs and 50 Music SLOs

Page 4: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

OUR PROCESS

• Six full days for Art Teachers; six full days for Music Teachers (July and August)

• One hour PPT introduction; an in-depth look at Student Growth Models and Student Learning Objective (SLO) for anyone who had not been in a session yet

• Used online template and checklist• Sent completed work in for feedback for first

few days

Page 5: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

Our Process (continued)

• Teachers ALWAYS worked in teams – three of more when possible

• “Finished” SLOs were reviewed a FINAL time using the checklist

• Advisory Committees reviewed all SLOs one final time before they were submitted

Page 6: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

What is our task?

To develop Student Learning Objectives (SLOs) for each grade and course that do NOT have Value Added data or data from an assessment on the ODE Approved Vendor List – and for some of those, too!!

Page 7: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

What is an “SLO”?

A measurable, long-term academic goal informed by available data that a teacher or teacher team sets at the beginning of the year for all students or subgroups of students.An SLO is one of 3 types of STUDENT GROWTH MEASURES. (handout)

Page 8: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

Why are we doing this?

• ODE requirements related to new teacher evaluation - OTES

• To improve and track student achievement• To be a part of the process – to have input into

what we teach and how we know what students have learned

“SLOs are our FRIENDS!” R.R.

Page 9: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

How are we doing this?

• Working together in teams using the ODE’s template and tools

• Following the ODE’s directives; using the checklist

• Piloting; discussing; revising

Page 10: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

What else do we know about SLOs?

• Must reflect BIG ideas; most important grade level or course learning (Power Standards?)

• Must reflect 21st century learning• Must be standards-based• Must use ODE’s template and checklist• SLOs will be different for most teachers – will be tailored to fit the students and the situation

Page 11: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

What are the specifics about the assessments?

• May include multiple measuresWritten, performance, portfolio

• Authentic assessment – objective attainment of learning included in the SLO

• Pre/post (Growth model)

Page 12: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

What is included in an SLO?

The template is found on the ODE website:http://www.ode.state.oh.us

Click on “Educator Evaluation”And then “Student Growth Measures”

The TEMPLATE and the SLO Checklist MUST BE USED TOGETHER

Page 13: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

SLO COMPONENTS

• Baseline and Trend Data• Student Population• Interval of Instruction• Standards and Content• Assessment(s)• Growth Target(s)• Rationale for Growth Targets

Page 14: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

ASSESSMENTS

• Best if teachers do not create their own assessment, but this might have to occur in some cases.

• Assessments can be state tests that do NOT have Value Added data.

• Assessments should measure higher level thinking skills.

• Assessments should be representative of total content.

• ODE has a NEW checklist for selecting assessments.

Page 15: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

Are there rules or non-negotiables?

• The Ohio Department of Education suggests 2 to 4 SLOs per teacher. SLOs must be representative of teacher’s overall teaching assignment.

• SLOs must be based on ODE’s Student Growth Model – demonstrating objective measurement of student achievement of the SLO.

• SLOs must be broad enough to encompass the most essential learning for each grade and course, including the content standards related to that learning.

• SLOs must also be specific enough to measure student growth and provide data to demonstrate that growth.

Page 16: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

• Districts may study the SLOs recommended by the SCESC pilot and other pilots and then make adjustments as needed to meet district’s needs.

• Each district must approve SLOs for each grade or course not covered completely by Value-Added measures or the ODE Approved Vendor List. SLOs must be finalized by November, 2013.

Page 17: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

Timeline

2012-2013 Writing Year and PILOT YEAR (Implementation Year for RttT Districts that fully implement OTES!)

2013-2014 Implementation Year for ALL OTHER DISTRICTS (as part of the OTES) –unless contract dates overlap.

Page 18: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

What’s NEW?

• Teachers will use a “Scoring Calculator” to report data from SLOs.

• Teachers enter SLO data into a spreadsheet.• This Scoring Calculator is found in Appendix A

of the SLO Guidance Document on the ODE SLO site.

• SLO data must be reported by mid-April of reporting years for eTPES reporting by May 1.

Page 19: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

IMPORTANT TOOLS on ODE Site

• Steps for Designing a Local Student Growth Plan

• SLO Template• SLO Checklist• (MUST READ and RE-READ) Guide to Using

Student Learning Objectives• Educator Evaluator Updates on ODE website (Check regularly!)

Page 20: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

Additional Resources

• Sample SLOs for MUSIC and ART in SCESC website

• Sample SLOs from other pilot districts

• SLO shared by districts in the Stark County region (may be posted on the SCESC website)

Page 21: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

Teachers Need…….

• Time to develop SLOs. Every teacher should create at least one.

• Time to work together across the district to create and/or edit sample SLOs

• Time to pilot the SLOs – particularly if new assessments have been created or obtained.

• Regularly scheduled time to discuss the SLOs and the students’ progress throughout the year.

Page 22: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

FIRST STEPS for District Administrators

• Read/study the documents on the ODE web site.

• Formulate a district plan – for each teacher – which SGMs and how many.

• Create a system for building/district approval of SLOs.

• Refer to ODE’s Educator Evaluation website regularly for updates and Teacher Tools.

Page 23: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

First Steps (continued)

• Strive to enable every teacher to have someone in their area with whom to collaborate to develop/finalize SLOs.

• Strive for consistency across the district whenever possible.

• Remind teachers that SLOs are NOT TESTS for which students cram or study. Pre-assessments should not be GRADED.

• Remind teachers that we have SLOs so that teachers will use the best possible instruction and so that students will all learn and demonstrate growth.

Page 24: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

eTPES – Ohio Teacher and Principal Evaluation System

• Electronic reporting system• Value Added data will be populated

by ODE.• All other SGM data will be entered

by LEA.

Page 25: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE PILOT

• Many teachers do not have baseline data or trend data.

• Creating assessments is challenging; ODE support in SLO Guide is helpful!

• Teachers really NEED to work together to create SLOs.

• Teachers MUST use the SLO checklist.

Page 26: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

More lessons learned….

• Setting targets is a different concept for most teachers. Difficult to do when you have not given the assessment yet.

• Some teachers have hundreds of students and need to consider how to assess and document that assessment.

Page 27: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

More lessons learned…

• Teachers need to think about creating or implementing assessments that do NOT take up a great deal of instructional time – especially those who only see students once each week.

• Districts need to address how to handle students who come in after school starts – or mid-year

Page 28: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

Final Words of Advice1. Stay calm.2. Educate EVERYONE. Involve EVERYONE. Encourage

EVERYONE. Support EVERYONE.3. Say the word “Rigor” as often as possible.4. Be flexible. Be patient.5. Check the ODE website regularly for updates6. PRAY HARD.7. Lead with courage and be positive.8. Smile and laugh as often as possible.9. Don’t be afraid to ask for help. No one can do all of

this alone.

Page 29: Student Learning Objectives -SLOs Student Growth Measures and OTES Gail Martino Consultant Stark County Educational Service Center

Thanks for your kind attention!