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Large Ships are Hard to Turn

Differentiated Instruction for School Leaders. Large Ships are Hard to Turn. NASSP 2010. For more information and conversation :. Rick Wormeli rwormeli@cox.net 703-620-2447 Herndon, VA USA (Eastern Time Zone).

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Large Ships are Hard to Turn

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  1. Differentiated Instruction for School Leaders Large Ships are Hard to Turn NASSP 2010

  2. For more information and conversation: Rick Wormeli rwormeli@cox.net 703-620-2447 Herndon, VA USA (Eastern Time Zone)

  3. Leadership Strategies for Creating and Maintaining a Culture of Differentiated Instruction

  4. Mindset: What we teach is irrelevant. It’s what students carry forward after their time with us that matters.

  5. What is fair… …isn’t always equal.

  6. Look for evidence of expertise in these areas

  7. Practice with your teachers looking for evidence of DI. Sample scenarios, videos, pictures, and other portrayals from any classroom are a great place to start….

  8. Classroom Samples • Students watch an instructional video. Every 10 to 15 minutes, the teacher stops the video and asks student to summarize what they’ve learned. • The teacher does several math problems on the front board, then assigns students five practice problems to see if they understand the algorithm.

  9. Students are working in small groups on an assigned task. One student isn’t cooperating with the rest of his group, however, and as a result, the group is falling farther behind the other groups. • There are only enough microscopes for every three students. One student uses the microscope to bring items into focus, another draws what the group sees through the eyepiece, then the three students answer questions.

  10. Eleven students do not do the assignment from last night. Consequently, they are not prepared to move on with the class in today’s task. • Four ELL students have been placed in your class, but they are far from comfortable with English, especially with the vocabulary associated with your subject area. • The whole class takes notes during a lecture or presentation for 60 minutes.

  11. Is it, or is it not, DI, and why do you believe as you do? • Some students [get] more work to do, and others less. For example, a teacher might assign two book reports to advanced readers and only one to struggling readers. Or a struggling math student might have to do only the computation problems while advanced math students do the word problems as well.” (Tomlinson, p. 7) • Students have most of the control in the classroom. • Teacher uses many different group structures over time.

  12. Is it, or is it not, DI, and why do you believe as you do? • A science and math teacher, Mr. Blackstone, teaches a large concept (Inertia) to the whole class. Based on “exit cards” in which students summarize what they learned after the whole class instruction, and observation of students over time, he assigns students to one of two labs: one more open-ended and one more structured. Those that demonstrate mastery of content in a post-lab assessment, move to an independent project (rocketry), while those that do not demonstrate mastery, move to an alternative rocketry project, guided by the teacher, that re-visits the important content. (Tomlinson, p. 24)

  13. Is it, or is it not, DI, and why do you believe as you do? • Teacher lectures for 15 minutes, then she conducts a class discussion on the topic for 10 minutes. She calls on a variety of students to answer questions to see if they understand. Some questions are basic recall and some a complex and probing. After the discussion, students are assigned a passage to read out of their textbook and asked to respond to the passage in their journals.

  14. Become well read in differentiation. Seriously. I’m thinking three or more books, plus professional articles, in the first year.

  15. Great book to get started: The Differentiated School: Making Revolutionary Changes in Teaching and Learning Carol Ann Tomlinson, Kay Brimijoin, Lane Narvaez ASCD 2008

  16. Also, to Get Started: Transforming School Culture: How to Overcome Staff Division Anthony Muhammad, Solution Tree Press, 2009 Talk About Teaching! Leading Professional Conversations, NASSP/Corwin/NSDC, 2009 Leading Change in your School: How to Conquer Myths, Build Commitment, and Get Results, ASCD, 2009 Breaking Ranks: A Field Guide to Leading Change, NASSP, 2009 (Don’t forget BRIM – Breaking Ranks in the Middle)

  17. “Opposition to change remains inevitable. In fact, if your proposed change does not engender opposition, then you should question whether or not what you are proposing really represents meaningful change.” - p. 11, Doug Reeves, Leading Change in your School, ASCD, 2009

  18. ‘Another Act of Willful Failure: Changing structures/programs without changing teacher beliefs as well. Accept the fact that there is no one way to get your whole faculty on board. Waiting for 100% buy-in is a willful act of failure.

  19. How do education leaders maintain any new building or district initiative? Remember: When asking how to maintain differentiated practices, we’re really asking how to maintain effective teaching.

  20. Important Administrative Questions • What are our own interpretations and preferences when it comes to assessment, grading, and differentiation: Are they accurate? What are we doing to keep informed? • To what degree will we accept philosophies in our teachers that are different from our own? • How can we tell if a teacher is assessing, grading, and differentiating instruction successfully? How do we know if a teacher’s approach is developmentally appropriate for students?

  21. Important Administrative Questions • What does, “Fair isn’t always equal” look like in a classroom? • Does assessment inform the teacher’s practice? • How can we facilitate struggling teachers’ growth in assessment, grading, and differentiation?

  22. Be careful what you wish for -- If a teacher differentiates instruction, some conventional practices become suspect. Are you ready for the conversations to be had? • How to interpret and use of standardized testing data... • When a student fails to learn, teachers question their instructional approach rather than automatically blaming the student. • Teachers can change their lesson plans daily, depending on the needs of students, regardless of what’s been submitted for approval earlier. • Teachers need more opportunities to increase their instructional flexibility, i.e. they need to build their repertoire of responses. • Teachers are asked to make decisions based on assessment data, and they are asked to explain those decisions publicly.

  23. Teachers will work more collaboratively with those in and out of the building. • Teachers emphasize formative over summative assessment. • Homework assignments will be different for some students, and it will not count heavily in the final grade, if at all. • Final exams will not carry as much weight. • Grading will be criterion-referenced (standards-based). This is the beginning of intense conversations on what teachers will accept as evidence of mastery, and the end of averaging, using zeroes on the 100-point scale, tabulating points, using percentages, and setting up gradebooks according to formats (Teachers will use individual standards instead). • Teachers will claim that this isn’t done in upper grade levels so isn’t differentiating instruction/assessment/grading a disservice to students? • Parents will need to be trained – every year.

  24. Carol Dweck (2007) distinguishes between students with a fixed intelligence mindset who believe that intelligence is innate and unchangeable and those with a growth mindset who believe that their achievement can improve through effort and learning…Teaching students a growth mindset results in increased motivation, better grades, and higher achievement test results.” (p.6, Principal’s Research Review, January 2009, NASSP)

  25. Skill Sets Teachers Need in Order to Improve their Differentiated Practices • How to write and talk about teaching; how to make the implicit explicit • Formative versus Summative Assessments • Cognitive Science applied in the classroom • How to critique each other constructively • How to work with mentors/coaches • How to get to know students’ well: learning styles, challenges, strengths, interests, intelligences, background, etc.

  26. .” Practice Critiques Where do we begin when critiquing? How should we phrase our feedback and observations? On what should we comment? How do we know if a lesson is differentiated well? What do we do if the lesson isn’t working?

  27. [Artist Unknown]

  28. Why do we differentiate instruction in our schools?

  29. Clearly Define Differentiated Instruction • Create a working definition • Provide/Generate examples of what it is and is not • Bust myths • Practice identifying it in classrooms: videos, peer observation, written descriptions • Work with a lot of hypotheticals: Teachers feel comfortable talking in the abstract, and they’ll consider their own actions as they comment

  30. Definition Differentiating instruction is doing what’s fair for students. It’s a collection of best practices strategically employed to maximize students’ learning at every turn, including giving them the tools to handle anything that is undifferentiated. It requires us to do different things for different students some, or a lot, of the time. It’s whatever works to advance the student if the regular classroom approach doesn’t meet students’ needs. It’s highly effective teaching.

  31. Start with a Few… • Identify 3 or 4 staff already differentiating or willing to give it a shot…and support their journey with everything you’ve got. • Ask them to present their journey to the faculty -- ‘mistakes, successes, ‘everything. • Invite a parent or three to be a part of the conversations.

  32. Create a Culture of Differentiated Instruction • “This is our way of doing things around here.” • Letter to potential new faculty • Immersion -- If it’s in sight, it’s in mind, so put it in sight. • Publicize at faculty meetings, newsletters, letter to parents, news organizations, Website • Promote in public spaces used by teachers • Attach differentiated instruction practices to professional goals and annual evaluation

  33. The Professional Substrate in which we Swim 1. DI is non-negotiable. 2. We reflect on the larger questions of what we do. • 3. We take risks daily: • Teaching analysis, and change as a result, is expected. • It’s easy to ask and receive help.

  34. Changing a Building/District’s Culture Great publications for culture change can be found at: Corwin Press ASCD NASSP/NAESP NSDC Jossey-Bass

  35. With colleagues, reflect on the bigger questions: Why do we grade students? What does a grade mean? Does our current approaches best serve students? How do we communicate with parents? How does assessment inform our practice? Is what we’re doing fair and developmentally appropriate? How can we counter the negative impact of poverty on our students’ learning? What role does practice play in mastery? What is mastery for each curriculum we teach? What is homework, and how much should it count in the overall grade? How are our current structures limiting us?

  36. With colleagues, reflect on the bigger questions: Whose voice is not heard in our deliberations? What evidence of mastery will we accept? What do we know about differentiated practices and the latest in cognitive theory and how are those aspects manifest in our classrooms? If not, why not? Are we mired in complacency? Are we doing things just to perpetuate what has always been done? Are we open to others’ points of view – why or why not? Does our report card express what we’re doing in the classroom? How are modern classrooms different from classrooms thirty years ago? Where will our practices look like 15 years from now? To what extent do we allow state, provincial, country, or international exams to influence our classroom practices?

  37. Differentiate staff development. End hypocrisy…

  38. Teachers Lead • Identify two or more teachers to coordinate the DI journey for the building. Empower them to make decisions on behalf of the faculty. • Maintain a place on the school’s Intranet to post questions and have them answered by teachers or guest experts (local and national trainers and authors on differentiation). • Ask these teachers to train you and the rest of the administration as well – ‘creates credence, empathy, and knowledge

  39. Put time, energy, people, and money into coaching/mentoring teachers. Consider: -- PLC’s -- Critical Friends Network -- Teacher Action Research Teams -- Becoming a Lab School for a local University -- Beginning Teacher Induction programs

  40. “Dipstick” frequently.(a John Saphier term)This includes a checklist for evidence of DI in your Walk-through observations. Ask teachers to present evidence in planning and practice. Consider both quantitative and qualitative measures. What would this look like?

  41. Bring at least one parent to every conference or in-service training on differentiated instruction.

  42. Open each Faculty Meeting with the Idea A different group shares their interactions with the topic for five to ten minutes each meeting. Rotate different departments and grade levels through the presentation duty.

  43. Use Department Meetings At every department meeting: Discuss an aspect of the idea and prepare a report for the administration Ask: What does this look like in our discipline?

  44. Conduct Instructional Roundtables • One-hour or less • Someone (not limited to leaders) posts a topic for discussion and a location for the meeting two weeks in advance • All are invited, but ‘must have one idea to share (photocopied) as ticket to the roundtable

  45. Teacher Inservice Training • Alberta Assessment Consortium • www.nmsa.org • www.ascd.org • www.sde.com • www.nsdc.org • www.nassp.org • Specific subject professional organizations • Authors and presenters • www.aeispeakers.com • Speaker’s bureaus • “Wisdom Within” – experts in the building already • Consider Webcasts, E-Seminars, or Videocasts

  46. Conduct Monthly orQuarterly meetings Gather together to debrief in small groups about how things are going with the new initiative.

  47. Conduct Book Study Groups • Teachers and administrators • Request study guides from publisher, if available • One month in duration, if possible

  48. Disseminate articles/ideas in teacher boxes Keep the idea(s) in front of teachers so it doesn’t get moved to the back burner. Make sure to follow up with a structured interactions.

  49. Inform Parents Educate parents of the school’s new emphasis and invite them to look for evidence of it in action. Invite parents to help critique the impact of the new emphasis.

  50. Publicize! Add the new program or emphasis to the school’s publications such as newsletters, Website, Work Plan, accreditation materials, and promotional school materials.

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