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School Improvement Facilitators Network

School Improvement Facilitators Network. November 13, 2013. Session Objectives:. Agenda. 8:30-9:30 Introductions and reviewing process 9:30-9:45 Instructional Learning Cycles (ILC’s) 9:45-10:00 Break 10:00-10:45 Progress Monitoring 10:45-11:30 Facilitated Work time

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School Improvement Facilitators Network

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  1. School Improvement Facilitators Network November 13, 2013

  2. Session Objectives:

  3. Agenda 8:30-9:30 Introductions and reviewing process 9:30-9:45 Instructional Learning Cycles (ILC’s) 9:45-10:00 Break 10:00-10:45 Progress Monitoring 10:45-11:30 Facilitated Work time 11:30-12:00 Lunch 12:00-12:30 Updating SIP 12:30-3:00 Facilitated Work Time 3:00-3:30 Evaluation, Feedback and Next Steps

  4. Working Agreements Participate Fully Press for Clarification Collaborate Share your Thinking

  5. Quick Survey on PollEv.com Purpose: Where are we now in Implementation?

  6. How To Vote via PollEv.com EXAMPLE Capitalization doesn’t matter, but spaces and spelling do TIP

  7. Overview of the School Improvement Process

  8. Continuous District Improvement Facilitators Network Meetings Vision/Mission of CSIF/CDIF Network – It is the mission of the Jackson County School Improvement Consortium to support a community of collaboration using a Continuous School Improvement Process in order to increase student achievement. 12

  9. Continuous School Improvement Facilitators Network Meetings School Improvement Support September 25 – Planning for Implementation November 13 – Got SIP now what? January 22 – School Process Rubrics March 26 – School Data Profile / Analysis May 7 – School Improvement Plan 13

  10. The Big Picture

  11. Drivers of Effective Implementation Student Achievement Drivers of Effective Implementation Organization Leadership Competency Mission Vision Beliefs

  12. Leadership Technical Adaptive Leadership • Does the leadership have the knowledge and skills to effectively monitor and evaluate implementation? • Does the leadership have the ability to minimize resistance and to create support for high quality implementation?

  13. Competency Selection Training • Who are the right people to implement the strategy? • What learning opportunities and PD is needed? Competency Coaching Performance Assessment • What ongoing support will be provided? • What will be done to monitor fidelity?

  14. Organization Data-Driven Decision Making Leadership Support How will leadership support successful implementation of the strategy/activity? What type of data systems are in place to collect implementation and impact data? Organization System Support Performance Assessment What internal systems are in place to support the successful implementation of the strategy/ activity? What processes are in place to evaluate if systems are fully functioning to support implementation?

  15. Team self-check: Work Time Competency Organization Leadership How does your Action Plan Template from September 25th include all 3 Drivers?

  16. Instructional Learning Cycle (ILC)

  17. What is an ILC? The Instructional Learning Cycle process is a defined structure that promotes collaboration and collective responsibility within a teacher team by setting up structures for short term cycles of improvement. *This will be a requirement for Focus and Priority schools during the implementation phase.

  18. Instructional Learning Cycle (ILC) Collaborative short term process of instructional improvement Reflect on the quality of classroom instruction Focus teacher teams on implementation of instructional strategies from the School Improvement Plan and linked to a school-wide instructional priority

  19. Instructional Learning Cycle (ILC) Within an ILC, teacher teams focus on a single instructional strategy related to standards Continuous ILCs signals purposeful and focused instructional improvements Provides teachers teams a process to monitor student achievement

  20. Instructional Learning Cycle (ILC) • Short cycles of improvement are meant to last 2-4 weeks • Includes 3 collaborative meetings held by content area or grade level • Each meeting provides an opportunity to • Reflect on the quality of instruction • Analyze implementation and impact data

  21. Instructional Learning Cycles are linkable to… A school improvement plan: An instructional priority; and Content expectations or Common Core Standards

  22. Key features of ILCs Common pre and post assessments (along with data analysis) Purposeful identification and implementation of research-based instructional strategy Collaborative instructional dialogue and reflection

  23. Instructional Learning Cycle

  24. Instructional Learning Cycle is guided by the following questions What do we want students to know and be able to do? How will students demonstrate that they have acquired the essential knowledge and skills? How will we agree on the criteria that we will use in judging the quality of student work, and can we apply the criteria consistently? How will we intervene for students who struggle and enrich the learning for students who are proficient? How will we use the evidence of student learning to improve our individual and collective professional practice?

  25. Theory of Action If teacher teams engage in regular instructional dialogues around a data-informed instructional strategy, then the quality of classroom instruction will improve, and student learning will increase.

  26. Break

  27. Progress Monitoring Strategies and Activities DETERMINE How and What you will MONITOR

  28. What do we monitor? Adults are implementing the strategy with fidelity Impact implementation is having on students

  29. Implementation and Impact Leadership and Learning Center 2010

  30. Adult Activities http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TXMR2THtHcg http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TXMR2THtHcg

  31. Student Impact https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkaUhBj6hOg&list=PLCB718B345BE1E309

  32. Readiness to Implement • Have a shared vision? • Understand the need? • Concerns have been addressed? • Staff and administrators are able to integrate this new work with existing work?

  33. School Improvement Plan

  34. Action Plans

  35. Sample Elementary SchoolWHAT WOULD THIS SCHOOL PROGRESS MONITOR OR MEASURE? Math • Measurable Objectives- • MEAP, NWEA, common unit exams • Strategy • All teachers will teach the 8 math practices using manipulatives. • Activities- • Friday combined math activities • ISD Math Academy Professional Development 

  36. Monitoring Implementation

  37. Progress Monitoring Templates

  38. Lunch Help us tell the story: Tweet one success so far to #JCISDNov13

  39. Welcome Back! Write a two-minute speech about the importance of progress monitoring strategies and activities from your plan Find someone from a different district and share your thinking

  40. Revisions to SIP • Key Questions: • Are there pieces of your plan you are not implementing? • Are there key activities/steps that you forgot to include? • ASSIST is an open tool • Revise as needed • No need to make minor revisions

  41. Additional Online Training is available: • Free MI-CSI on Michigan Virtual University • https://mi.learnport.org/Kview/CustomCodeBehind/Customization/Login/MILPLogin.aspx

  42. Facilitated Work Time

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