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MET and Tripod

MET and Tripod. Slides developed by Dr. Ron Ferguson, Harvard University Presented to Curriculum & Instruction leaders RttT Leadership Committee Invited group of school systems Adapted for you today. Content Knowledge

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MET and Tripod

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  1. MET and Tripod • Slides developed by Dr. Ron Ferguson, Harvard University • Presented to • Curriculum & Instruction leaders • RttT Leadership Committee • Invited group of school systems • Adapted for you today

  2. Content Knowledge Pedagogic Skill Relationship-Building Skills The Tripod

  3. The MET Project • Charlotte-Mecklenburg • Dallas Independent • Denver • Hillsborough County • Memphis • New York City • Pittsburgh

  4. Current Process for Compensation and Advancement • Principal Evaluation • Seniority • Degrees earned

  5. Elements of Potential System • Students’ performance on standardized tests • Four annual video-based classroom observations with reflections from teachers • Teachers’ pedagogical content knowledge – an assessment of a teacher’s ability to recognize and diagnose students’ misunderstandings of the lessons • Student perception data • Teachers’ perceptions of working conditions

  6. The Seven C’s What Teachers Do (What Students Experience) Caring about students (Encouragement and Support) Controlling behavior (Press for Cooperation and Peer Support) Clarifying lessons (Success Seems Feasible) Challenging students (Press for Effort, Perseverance and Rigor) Captivating students (Learning seems Interesting and Relevant) Conferring with students (Students Sense their Ideas are Respected) Consolidating knowledge (Ideas get Connected and Integrated)

  7. STUDENTACHIEVEMENT OUTCOMES The Seven C’s What Teachers Do (What Students Experience) Caring about students (Encouragement and Support) Captivating students (Learning seems Interesting and Relevant Conferring with students (Students Sense their Ideas are Respected) Controlling behavior (Culture of Cooperation and Peer Support) Clarifying lessons (Success Seems Feasible) Challenging students (Press for Effort, Perseverance and Rigor) Consolidating knowledge (Ideas get Connected and Integrated) Student Engagement Targets (Both Individual and Collective) Trust Safety(vs. Mistrust) Cooperation (vs. Resistance) Ambitiousness (vs. Ambivalence) Diligence (vs. Discouragement or Disengagement) Satisfaction and Efficacy (vs. Disappointment and Failure) Teacher Professional Learning (PLCs) Content Knowledge Pedagogic Skill Relationship-Building Skills The Tripod

  8. Learning from Student Surveys

  9. How much do classrooms differ with regard to the Seven C’s?

  10. Do schools in rural districts show similar patterns? Yes. For example:

  11. Average percentage agreement with items in Seven C's indices, for a rural NC district. (Each bar represents one classroom.)

  12. Percent agreement (i.e., Mostly or Totally True), for: "In this class, we learn a lot almost every day." (A rural NC district; each bar is a class.)

  13. Percentages giving each response to:"In this class, we learn a lot almost every day." (NC, rural middle school, two English classes.)

  14. The Point: Teaching in some classrooms is much more effective at fostering Seven C’s conditions than in others.But is it mainly that some schools are just better than others? Is the quality variation mostly between schools?

  15. The Point: There tends to be much more Seven C’s variation within schools—from one classroom to another—than between them, from one school to another.But does such variation correlate with anything that matters?

  16. The Point: Students are happier, more hard working and more satisfied with their achievements in classrooms that rate higher on the Seven C’s. But do they learn more? Do the Seven C’s predict value-added test-score gains?

  17. First, a word on value-added growth measures: A. UNADJUSTED: If we want to track progress toward equalizing learning outcomes … B. ADJUSTED : If our purpose is to estimate the effectiveness of instruction, …

  18. Some findings from the Gates Foundation Measures of Effective Teaching Project

  19. Agreement with selected statements by students in 25th and 75th percentile classrooms from the MET secondary school sample. ( From among 2985 classrooms, each with at least 5 students responding)

  20. Predicted differences in months of learning for classrooms at the 25th versus 75th percentiles of the composite Seven C’s distribution for the MET sample. (Estimated using surveys from one class and gains from another class, taught by the same teacher.) *Based on Table 9, p. 26: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, “Learning about Teaching: Initial findings from the Measures of Effective Teaching Project.” December 2010.

  21. The Point: Student perceptions of classroom practice can help in predicting learning outcomes and should be taken seriously by policy makers and educators.But how can we use them?

  22. Using the Seven C’s to develop profiles and identify priorities at multiple levels of drill down.

  23. There are multiple embedded levels of possible “drill down” on any given issue, e.g., to address questions about: • The district • One or more schools or grade levels within the district • One or more grade levels within a school • One or more classrooms within a grade • One or more students within a classroom • One or more survey items from among an individual student’s responses

  24. We can examine patterns by course title.

  25. Average agreement with Seven C’s statements in one suburban high school, by course title, for selected courses that each have multiple sections.

  26. The Point: There are many ways that student perspectives can be used to provide useful information about patterns of teaching effectiveness.

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