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www.cue.org Blended Learning and Leadership: What are the best ways to support blended learning teachers? October 20, 2014

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www.cue.org

Blended Learning and Leadership:

What are the best ways to support

blended learning teachers?

October 20, 2014

www.cue.org

Housekeeping

• This session is being recorded and will be emailed out

and posted on CEM and http://cue.org/blended-learning-

theme_2014

• Archives here:

http://blendedlearning.pbworks.com/w/page/86632270/C

EMBlendedLearning2014

• Hashtags: #ce14 #blendedlearning

• Future BL webinars sign up via CUE website:

http://cue.org/blended-learning-theme_2014

• Feel free to share with others (see handout).

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CEM Blended Learning Strand

• Monday webinars for 4 weeks – 7:00 EST

• Tuesday Tweet Ups – 8:00 EST (#ce14 #blendedlearning)

• Ongoing discussions via Linked In “Blended Teacher Network” Discussion group. Free to join.

• Blogposts via

– CEM blog (connectededucators.org) ,

– CUE (blog.cue.org),

– Rob’s Blog (robdarrow.wordpress.com)

Link your blogs with #ce14 #blendedlearning

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Where do you live?

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Panel Members

• Anna Gu, Research Assistant, Christensen Institute,

California

• Anne Pasco, Blended Learning Coordinator, Huntley

High School, Huntley, Illinois

• Brian Bridges, Director, eLearning Strategies

Symposium; CLRN (emeritus director)

• Travis Phelps, Vice Principal / Teacher, St. Justin School,

San Jose, Ca

• Rob Darrow, CUE / Blended Teacher Network, California

www.cue.org

Quick Poll

• What is Blended Learning ?

– A. Students control their own learning

– B. Teachers guide student learning through a

prescribed curriculum

– C. A change in teaching pedagogy that better

personalizes learning for students.

– D. Putting lesson plans and videos on the

web

– E. All of the above

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Blended Learning Definition

• Important for research

• How to teach others (professional

development)

• Implementation

• Let’s start what it is not…

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Tech-rich = blended

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Teaching and Learning

• What the student is

doing and where the

student is.

What the teacher is

doing and where the

teacher is.

What and where the

content is.

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Generally Defining Terms:

“Teaching and Learning”

• Traditional = the way it has always been

done

– (e.g. teacher lecture, quarterly benchmark

testing, if students don’t get it, the teacher

moves on, limited use of technology)

• Blended = use of technology, course

management system, flexibility of time,

student centered learning and data to

personalize learning for students

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Blended Learning Definition –

Christensen Institute

A formal education program in which a student learns at least in part through online learning, with some element of student control over time, place, path and/or pace

and

at least in part in a supervised brick-and-mortar location away from home, and , and the modalities along each student’s learning path within a course or subject are connected to provide an integrated learning experience.

(Horn & Staker, 2013)

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Ideal blended learning includes:

• Use of digital resources and tools are integral to content,

curriculum and instruction and utilized on a daily basis

• Students engage with digital content on a daily basis (e.g.

through a course management system or related tools)

• Students have some control and choice regarding content and

pace

• Communication between teacher and students occurs both

synchronously and asynchronously; in person and online in a

variety of formats

• Teacher utilizes real-time formative assessment data on a

daily basis that allows for ongoing feedback and better

individualized instruction for students

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Blended Learning:Is a journey,

not a destination.It takes time to transform

thinking and teaching.

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iNACOL’s Blended Learning Roadmap:

The Six Elements

• Leadership• Professional Development

• Teaching/Instructional Practice

• Operations/Admin Systems/Policy

• Content

• Technology

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Blended Learning: Why is this

important?

• Brian

• Anne

• Travis

• Anna

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Anna Gu, Research Assistant,

Christensen Institute

• Superintendents, barriers and challenges

– what was learned?

• http://www.christenseninstitute.org/publicat

ions/barriers/

Knocking Down Barriers: California Superintendents & Blended Learning

Anna Gu

@christenseninst

Convened superintendents in Fall 2013

Major themes:

-redesigning teacher roles

-managing new technology & infrastructure

Finding barriers, finding solutions

@christenseninst

Teacher credentialing

Immediate supervision

Class-size limits

Union contracts

Redesigning Teacher Roles

@christenseninst

Public contract code

Adopting digital instructional materials

BYOD

Providing sufficient access

Managing new technology infrastructure

@christenseninst

Schools restricted to state-adopted instructional materials?

California A.B. 1246 frees districts from list

Perception of barrier

Digital instructional materials

@christenseninst

Postsecondary approval

Carving time, space, & funds for blended learning

Building coalition of support & trust

Other tricks & tips

@christenseninst

From real solutions to

cage-busting leadership

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Brian Bridges, Former Director,

CLRN in California

• Why the blended learning survey in

California?

• Lessons Learned?

• Recommendations to other states, districts

and school leaders?

California eLearning Census

Gaining Depth and Breadth

http://clrn.org/census/

2014 Responses

Question Set:

http://bbridges51.edublogs.org

February 1 – April1

569 Responses 31% of 1810

40%/60% Charters vs. Districts

50%/50% Elementary vs. Unified & High School Districts

Who is eLearning?

Yes

No

53%

302 districts &

charters

Who wants to eLearn?

Yes

NoN=267

21%

Who wants, by grade span

K-5/K-8

Yes

No13%

K-12/9-12

44%

eLearning by District Type

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

K-5/K-8 K-12/9-12

2012

2013

2014

19%

73%

28%

78%

16%

68%

Virtual & Blended Populations

0

20000

40000

60000

80000

100000

120000

140000

160000

Virtual Blended

2012

2013

2014

100.9

150.5

86.6

49%

24K

74%

70

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

Blended Median Virtual Median

2012

2013

2014

180

80% Increase

14% Decrease

60

100

Blended and Virtual Medians

56

80

Longitudinal Data

131 Districts/Charters; 3-yr data

K12/9-12 64 districts/charters

2012: 78%

2014: 82% eLearning

K-8 67 districts/charters

2012: 9% eLearning

2014: 20% eLearning

Longitudinal: K12/9-12

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000

35000

40000

45000

50000

Blended Virtual

2012

2013

2014

734%

Blended Model Breakdown:

2014

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50%

Flex

Rotation

Enriched-Virtual

A La Carte

2014: K-5/K-8 Blended Model

Breakdown

0 10 20 30 40 50 60

A La Carte

Enriched-Virtual

Rotation

Flex

N=71

76%

K-12/9-12 Blended Breakdown

2014

0 50 100 150

A La Carte

Enriched Virtual

Rotation

Flex

N=198

59%

29%

53%

32%

Do Online Instructors Receive

OL/BL Professional Development?

No

Yes

79%

PD Content and Duration

0 50 100 150 200

Other

In the behavioral, social, and

emotiona, aspects of the learning

environment

Support and use of a variety of

communication modes

Online course delivery system (LMS)

Technical Skills Curricular Support

85%

46%

71%

Nothing

Build Own Courses

Train Staff Better

More Carefully Select

CoursesPlan Differently

If You Could Start Over,

33%

33%

17%

11%

If You Could Start Over,

District Comments: Pg 20

Planning Process

Build Own Courses

Professional Development

Be Better with Course Selection

Nothing

Starting Over: Planning

Start earlier. Have greater input from stakeholders.

I would rigorously protect the process of using Evergreen Education Group's Quality Planning Tool:

Choose teachers who are more willing to adapt

Spend more time reviewing the different options

Starting Over: Course Selection

Would have had more of an emphasis on the ability to modify content

I would have engaged with my provider and demanded certain instructional and curricular expectations sooner

We would examine more programs and have the students use them first to determine ease of use and suitability.

I would help everyone understand that no one platform will meet all of our needs

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Come to the eLearning

Strategies Symposium –

Dec. 12 and 13, San Mateo, Ca

• www.elearns.org

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Anne Pasco,

Huntley High School, Huntley, Illinois

• Blended learning implementation –

how did it start?

What grades, subject?

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Huntley High School

• How and why did the blended learning

program begin?

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Huntley High School. Huntley, Illinois

• 4th year of implementation

• 23 classes offer blended options

• 932 students occupy 1441 seats in those classes (roughly 1/3 of our school)– Students are NOT required to be in attendance during

their blended (ie online) days

– Students may leave the building

– Students may stay in commons areas within the building

– Students may be in the Learning Resource Center

• Accountability: Common Assessments given across Traditional/Blended sections

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Huntley High School

• Where are things at with blended

learning now?

• Leadership and support systems?

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Travis Phelps,

St. Justin Catholic School, San Jose, Ca

• Blended learning implementation – how

did it start? What grades / subjects?

• Leadership – what exists?

• Where are things at now?

• What did you do first, second, third for

implementation?

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Implementation: St. Justin Catholic

School, San Jose, Ca

-- Within 8th grade classroom

-- Not a schoolwide implementation

-- Policy challenges

-- Technology Policy: flexibility is

key

-- Resistance exists from many

parties

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Implementation: St. Justin Catholic

School, San Jose, Ca

-- Early training is key

-- Connected Education

-- Constant parental communication

-- Patience with the process

-- Expect mistakes

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Ideal leadership / support

• Travis

• Brian

• Anne

• Anna

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Blended learning success factors:

What are the right metrics to use?

• Travis

• Brian

• Anne

• Anna

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Other Questions?

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Quick Poll

• What is Blended Learning ?

– A. Students control their own learning

– B. Teachers guide student learning through a

prescribed curriculum

– C. A change in teaching pedagogy that better

personalizes learning for students.

– D. Putting lesson plans and videos on the

web

– E. All of the above

www.cue.org

Final Comments from Panelists

• Brian

• Anna

• Travis

• Anne

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Thank you panelists!

• Link will be emailed out to you.

• Check the handout for specific links.

• Thanks for being part of Connected

Educator Month and the blended learning

strand.

www.blendedteachernetwork.org

Join Today – It’s Free!

www.cue.org

Contact Information

• Anna Gu, Research Assistant, Christensen Institute,

California, [email protected]

• Anne Pasco, Blended Learning Coordinator, Huntley

High School, Huntley, Illinois, [email protected]

• Brian Bridges, Director, eLearning Strategies

Symposium; CLRN (emeritus director),

[email protected]

• Travis Phelps, Vice Principal / Teacher, St. Justin School,

San Jose, Ca, [email protected]

• Rob Darrow, CUE / Blended Teacher Network,

California, [email protected]

www.cue.org

Contact / Resources

• Meghan Jacquot, English teacher, Fusion Academy, California - [email protected].

• Haley Hart, Science teacher, EAA, Detroit, Michigan. [email protected]

• Jeff Gerlach, 7th Grade Social Studies / Instructional Designer, Michigan Virtual University, Detroit, Michigan. [email protected].

• Brian Thornley, Algebra II Honors teacher, Huntley, Illinois. [email protected].

• Lesley Farmer, Professor, Librarianship, California State University, Long Beach, California. [email protected]

• Rob Darrow, CUE / Blended Teacher Network, California. [email protected]