Building North Carolina’s Globally Competitive Workforce TEACHING; LEARNING; DOING.

Post on 14-Jan-2016

213 views 0 download

Tags:

Transcript of Building North Carolina’s Globally Competitive Workforce TEACHING; LEARNING; DOING.

Building North Carolina’sGlobally Competitive Workforce

TEACHING; LEARNING; DOING

North Carolina Global Education Strategic Plan

Session 121 on Tuesday, March 31, 2015

at 8:00 – 9:30 a.m.

in Imperial D

NC State Board of Education Strategic Plan for Global Education

Collaborative Conference on Student Achievement

AgendaOverview of SBE Global Ed Strategic Plan

GEDB for Teachers Policy

Global-Ready Schools Designation

Global Languages Endorsement

Resources

Questions

SBE Task Force on Global Education

In 2011, North Carolina State Board of Education Chairman appointed 5 SBE members to the Task Force on Global Education.

The Task Force was charged to bring, to the full Board, recommendations that would enable a better understanding and appreciation of other countries, languages and cultures by our students.

6 Major Task Force Findings

1. We aren’t preparing students for a global tomorrow; North Carolina is global today.

2. Pilot programs won’t cut it. Preparing globally competent graduates requires a comprehensive approach.

3. To prepare our students for the world, we need to prepare their teachers.

6 Major Task Force Findings

4. North Carolina was once a leader in language learning. It’s time to return to the pole.

5. Schools need peers and partners to move this agenda.

6. If it’s not sustainable, it’s not a strategy.

5 Commitments

1. Robust teacher support and tools; Action Item 1.2

2. Leading-edge language instruction;

3. New school models;

4. District networking and recognition; and

5. Strategic international relationships.

Connection to State Plan

Every public school student will graduate ready for post secondary education and work, prepared to be a globally engaged and productive citizen.

-April, 2014

SBE Vision Statement:

Commitment 1: Robust Teacher Support and Tools

1.2 Implement an SBE-recognized badging process for teachers and administrators to support a professional development system for global content that leads to an endorsement, certificate, or other recognition with market value.

What is a digital badge?

How do we recognize and value the way we learn today? Badges are a new idea to recognize the learning that happens anywhere and share it in the places that matter.

NCEES Rubric

Take a few moments and highlight or underline the global references in each of the following elements on your rubric copy:

–Element Ia–Element IIb–Element IIIc–Element IIId–Element Vb

Think, Pair, ShareWith a partner consider the following questions around each element?

– Element Ia: What is global competitiveness?– Element IIb: What materials or lessons have you observed where teachers counteract stereotypes and acknowledge the contributions of all cultures?

– Element IIIc: How do teachers promote global awareness and the relevance in your schools?

– Element IIId: How can we ensure that teachers are aware of these 21st century skills?

– Element Vb : Other than today, what PD have you attended?

Global Educator Digital Badge Criteria for Teachers

SBE Policy TCP - H- 001: Candidate must● Document goals to address global awareness

elements within the NC Professional Teaching Standards

● Complete 100 hours of global education professional development aligned to documented goals

● Complete a Capstone Project that demonstrates educator ability to increase student global awareness while teaching their content standards

● Complete process within 2 years of documented plan

Documenting the Plan• Adhere to the NCEES process for

completing Professional Development Plan

• Document Professional Development Plan within Home Base in online evaluation tool

• Develop Professional Development Plan goals based on self-evaluation in alignment with global awareness elements adopted into SBE policy

Home Base GEDB Online Management System

Step 1: Memorandum of Agreement signed by:● GEDB Teacher Candidate● Principal or Supervising Administrator● District Liaison(TNL credit transfer manager for district)

The District Liaison sends the signed agreement to the NCDPI GEDB Coordinator who will enroll the teacher candidate in the online management system.

Home Base GEDB Online Management System

Step 2: Teacher completes PD log

Step 3: Teacher uploads Attestation (link) form completed by Principal

Step 4: Teacher enters Capstone Project information when district submits for state level review

NC Educator Evaluation System (NCEES) Wiki

http://ncees.ncdpi.wikispaces.nethttp://ncees.ncdpi.wikispaces.net/Webinar+Archive

For more information about the Global Educator Digital Badge for teachers, please visit the following website which is updated regularly.

http://www.ncpublicschools.org/globaled/actions/item1-2

Global-Ready Schools Designation Rubric

Connection to State Plan

SBE Strategic Plan:

Partners in Development :

State Board of Education

Department of Public Instruction

Friday Institute at NC State

Global Education Partners

Center for International Understanding

VIF International Education

World View

LEAs

Universities

GRS Rubric - Background

Application completed

and schools

submit for recognition

as Global Ready School

Spring 2015

Present to SBE

Dec 2014

FI Eval Team

conducts formal

subject matter expert validity

test; revisions

Sep 2014

LEA representa

-tive design

team develops first draft

June-Aug 2014

Global Ed

Partners define over-

arching principles

and attributes

Feb-May 2014

KEY ELEMENT

Levels of Achievement

QUALITYINDICATOR

ATTRIBUTE

Rubric Structure

The Global-Ready School rubric is comprised of the following elements:

•Overarching Principle

•Attribute (grouped under an Overarching Principle)

•Levels of Achievement (“Prepared” or “Model” required for designation)

•Key Elements (for each Attribute)

•Quality Indicators (for each Level of Achievement per Key Element)

GRS Structure Elements

• Early: There is awareness for  school-wide for global education.  The school has a few systems and structures in place to support global education and  needs to identify and integrate systematic support for these efforts. Limited practices showing little impact on students.

• Developing: The school occasionally implements systems and structures to support global readiness.  The school recognizes the need for global connectivity and has some components of global connections.  An opportunity exists for refining systems and structures. Inconsistent practices showing some positive impact on students.

• Prepared: The school effectively implements systems and structures (processes) to support global readiness. Many components of global education are embedded school-wide.  Sound, well-embedded practices showing positive impact on students.

• Model: The school consistently implements systems and processes to support global readiness.  The school is a leader for other schools to replicate or model.  Global readiness is embedded in the school’s culture. Well-developed, cutting edge practice showing consistent, high-level student impact.

Levels of Achievement

1. Schools can earn the Global-Ready School (GRS) Designation at either the “Prepared” or “Model” Level of Achievement.

2. To receive GRS designation, schools must also meet the following student achievement requirements in addition to "Prepared" or "Model" on the Global-Ready School rubric:

–Schools must be at or above the state average performance composite for Level 3. Schools will use the state average for their school grade configuration:

•through grade 5

•through grade 8

•through grade 12

–In addition, schools must meet or exceed their expected yearly growth. 

These measurements are based on the data from the school year preceding the application year.

Requirements for State Designation

• Review one of the designation rubric Attributes and a Key Element with Quality Indicators on the next slide.

• What evidences would you look want to see if a school indicates that they are at the “Prepared” or “Model” designation?

Take a Closer Look

GRS Rubric

• Adopted at SBE January 2015 meeting

• Similar to the STEM school designation

• Applications available March 2015

http://www.ncpublicschools.org/globaled/actions/item4-2

Global Languages Endorsement

SBE Policy GCS-L-007

• Adopted at SBE January 2015 meeting

• Proficiency in English and at least one other language

• College and Career Ready in an interconnected world

https://eboard.eboardsolutions.com/Meetings/ViewMeetingOrder.aspx?S=10399&MID=1643

Questions?

Contact

Helga FascianoSpecial Assistant for Global Educationhelga.fasciano@dpi.nc.gov

http://www.ncpublicschools.org/globaled/

http://www.cvent.com/d/hrq907/3B

Please take a few

moments to evaluate

this session!

Your feedback is important.