Monday, January 28, 2013

Common Core - Instructional Core


Seldom do I give you this much to read on the blog, but I found this article on teaching and learning  very interesting when considering the Common Core, Ipads in the classroom, and smarter balanced assessments.  Please take some time to read...possibly more than once if you are like me.  It has given me much to think about as I continue to read as much as I can about the common core and assessments and instructional practice.  I think that we have to continue to consider how we are keeping students engaged in their learning not just busy.  What is their role? 


First and Second Principle of the Instructional Core:

First Principle:  Increases in student learning occur only as a consequence of improvements in the level of content, teachers' Knowledge and skill, and student engagement.

There are only three ways to improve student learning at scale.  The first is to increase the level of knowledge and skill that the teacher brings to the instructional process.  The second is to increase the level of complexity of the content that students are asked to learn.  And the third is to change the role of the student in the instructional process.  That's it.  If you are not doing one of these three things, you are not improving instruction and learning.  Everything else is instrumental.  That is, everything that's not in the instructional core can only affect student learning and performance by somehow influencing what goes inside the core.

When educators think about "changing" instruction, they typically focus not on the instructional core, but on various structures and processes that surround the core.  They might choose, for example, to group students in a particular way because of a theory about how groupiing will affect the relationship of the student and the teacher in the presence of content.  But it is not the grouping practice that produces students learning.  Rather, it is the change in the knowledge and skill that teachers bring to the practice, the type of content to which students gain access, and the role that students play in their own learning that determine what students will know and be able to do.  If changes in grouping practices don't alter the core, then the likelihood they will affect student learning is remote.

What about content and performance standards?  Standards only operate by influencing the level of the content that's actually being taught.  Their effect in actual classrooms depends on whether there are materials that reflect the standards, whether teachers know how to teach what the materials and standards require, and whether students find the work that they are being asked to do worthwhile and engaging. 

Second Principle:  If you change any single element of the instructional core, you have to change the other two to affect student learning.

A failure to address teachers' knowledge and skill as part of a curriculum-based improvement strategy typpically produces low-level teching on high-level content, a situation we see wih considerable frequency in American classrooms.  We call this "knocking the corners off the grand piano to get it through the door."  Teachers assign high-level text or complex problems and then structure student learning around familiar fill-in-the-blank worksheets.  Or teachers walk students through a straight procedural explanation of how to find the answer, leaving the students int he role of recording what the teacher says, rather than actively thinking through the problems for themselves.

If you raise the level of content and the knowledge and skill of teachers without changing the role of the student in the instructional process, you get another common situation in American classrooms:  Teachers are doing al, or most, of the work, exercising considerable flair and control in the classroom, and sudnets are sitting passively, watching the teacher perform.  A common student question in these classrooms is, "Teacher, should I write this down?"

We frequently hear educators talk about how well the lesson went, without reference to what students were actually doing and the visible evidence of what students actually knew as a consequence of the teaching.  Mostly, the lesson has "gone well" when it has gone according to plan, without any specific reference to what students do or don't know as a consequence of the teaching.

Americans are much more comfortable talking about changing content and teaching than they are about changing the role of the student in instruction.  We focus much more attention on textbook adoptions and curriculum alignment, for example than we do on analyzing students' actual responses to the content, what motivates them to high levels of engagement with the content, and their actual role in the instructional process.

This is one big difference between American schools and schools in other countries.  Here we spend a great deal of time worrying about what we're teaching and how it is being taught.  In other places, people also spend a great deal of time worrying about whether students are actually interested in, actively engaged in, and able to explain how they the students think about what adults are trying to teach them.  We tend to focus more on what the teacher is doing in front of the classroom than we do on the work that is actually on top of the students' desk. 

Next Week at a Glance:

Monday, January 28:  Leader in Me Principal meeting
Wednesday, January 30:  Grades 3-5 PLC assembly
Friday, February 1:  8:00 Staff Meeting
Saturday, February 2:  9:00 - 9:00 (no joke) Scrapbooking in Parma Cafeteria

The following Links offer great resources for Ipad Apps:

6 weeks of Ipad Apps for school  -  Go through the slides on this link.  There are some great apps!
my-35-favorite-free-apps-teaching - Again....some great apps including some for organization
10-ideas-for-creating-literacy-centers-with-technology
apps-we-use-in-kindergarten - I follow this kindergarten teacher on Twitter.  He has some great ideas.
Click here to read how a 2nd grade teacher got started with 1 iPad in the classroom.

Engage Me video:  3 minutes


Video that reminds us that technology is great, but we have to DISCONNECT sometimes to CONNECT!  2 minutes....worth your time!

Check out the falls in January!  Now that is cold.


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