Working Systemically To Increase Student Achievement Responding to Changing Conditions.

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Working Systemically To Increase Student Achievement Responding to Changing Conditions

Transcript of Working Systemically To Increase Student Achievement Responding to Changing Conditions.

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Working Systemically To Increase Student Achievement

Responding to Changing Conditions

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Responding to Changing Conditions

The ability to use research-based options to identify and proactively address the continually emerging issues, factors, and circumstances that impact student achievement.

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Session Outcomes

• Be able to identify changing conditions that impact student achievement

• Be able to identify proactive responses for dealing with changing conditions

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Responding to Changing Conditions

• Leadership

• Resources

• Teaching force

• Demographics

• Politics

• Policy

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• As district-level staff working to ensure academic achievement for each student, you have ideas for many things to put in place to make this happen.

• Work as a table group to create a list of conditions or factors that will ensure success for each student.

Your success on the following activity will depend on

how many factors you can list!

5 Minutes

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• Table groups divide into teams A and B; each team gets their own KerPlunk! game.

• Table facilitators will distribute 2 sticks per team for each idea your group came up with, for both the A and the B team (up to 24 sticks/team).

• Teams work on their own to place the sticks (your great ideas for student success) randomly into the KerPlunk! game (your district).

• Please wait until everyone has their game set up.

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Great! Now your ideas are all in place. Only one thing is missing –

The Students!

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Your students are eager to succeed. Let them in!

• Carefully pour the marbles into the top of the KerPlunk! device.

• If some marbles fall through, please adjust your “factors” and “re-enroll” your students.

Please wait.

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Congratulations!

Your district is up and running!

However, we’re not done yet. Suddenly, “reality” hits.

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Reality Cards• At your table is one envelope labeled “Reality” and two

labeled “Responses.”• Divide the “Responses” cards—A team gets all

Response A cards; B team gets all Response B cards.• Open the Reality envelope and select a person to read

card 1 aloud to the entire table. Teams A and B take turns following the directions on their Response cards, progressing in order, from card 1 to card 6.

• When you have finished all of the cards, please do not disturb your KerPlunk! device. We’ll be making some observations shortly.

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What Happened?

• Take a few minutes to share what happened to your district with the other team at your table.

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Group Discussion

• What caused students to fall (fail)?

• What allowed students to remain (succeed)?

• Do you agree with the penalties assigned to the reality cards?

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Group Discussion

• Are there factors that didn’t appear in the reality cards that you think should have?

• Are there some factors that are more important than others? Why or why not?

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Any additional

thoughts or comments?

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Responding to Changing Conditions

Key LearningsBe proactive instead of reactive in responding

to changing conditions.Failure to respond to changing conditions

makes matters worse.Research-based strategies should be used to

respond to changing conditions.

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Key LearningsBe proactive instead of reactive in responding

to changing conditions.Failure to respond to changing conditions

makes matters worse.Research-based strategies should be used to

respond to changing conditions.

Do these learnings match your experiences?

Can you add any additional learnings?

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Please complete your Working Systemically rubric for Responding to Changing

Conditions.