Wednesday, July 20, 2016
Tuesday, July 19, 2016
THE CORE 4 OF PERSONALIZED LEARNING
by Scott Johns on January
20, 2016
In some ways, creating a successful personalized learning
classroom is similar to winning a basketball game. To give us direction, my high school basketball coach
consistently focused on three key areas, which he called the Big Three:
(1)
Out-rebound the other team
(2) Limit turnovers to fewer than 12
(3) Make at least 80% of our free throws
He believed that focusing on the Big Three would create the
proper strategy to win basketball games. During halftime and time outs, my
coach would often refocus our team on one or more of these elements by saying
things like, “They are killing us on rebounds. Everyone needs to rebound!” or,
“We have 10 turnovers already. We need to start taking care of the ball!” His
words told us what we needed to know when we got back on the court, as well as
gave us a preview about what we would likely do a lot of in the next day’s
practice.
Not surprisingly, when our team met these three elements, we
won.
At Education Elements, we have established our own set of key
elements, called the Core Four, that lead to a successful personalized learning
classroom. Similar to the basketball court, these core elements can provide
guidance for educators in creating a winning strategy for their district, schools,
and classrooms.
Of course, the Core Four cannot simply be the only items on a
check-off list---my team would have certainly still lost basketball games if we
did not focus on playing defense, perfecting plays, and working together as a
team, just as educators need to develop relationships with students, master
their content, and manage behavior. However, similar to my coach’s Big Three,
the Core Four are designed to provide educators with areas of focus to ensure
success as they make the shift to personalized learning.
- Integrated Digital Content
While personalized learning is never solely about the technology or digital content,
the integration of digital content and technology is essential in creating a
successful personalized learning classroom. By leveraging digital content,
teachers can provide an individualized path and pace for students. Integrated
Digital Content does not mean that students will be isolated on a device for an
entire class period. Rather, teachers should actively find ways to integrate
digital content into their curriculum, thereby providing deeper learning through
reinforcement and practice at the level that each student requires.
Additionally, the use of digital content can provide teachers with
opportunities to better target the needs of their students. For example, while
the majority of students within a class are engaged with digital content, a
teacher can pull a group of students who need additional practice on a
particular topic in order to provide personalized attention.
- Targeted Instruction
Targeted Instruction involves breaking down the monolithic,
whole-group structure found in traditional classrooms in order to better meet
the needs of students. Using data, teachers are able to create and change
student groups frequently and purposefully based on student interest, need, or
skill-level. The small groups themselves can lend to differentiation by using various
strategies, such as grouping students with homogenous skills so teachers can
focus their lessons or heterogeneous skills to encourage collaboration. Many
benefits can stem from the use of Small Group Instruction. For example, Small
Group Instruction provides students with more opportunities to share their
thoughts and questions, and teachers often find that Small Group Instruction
enables them to build more personal relationships with students.
- Data Driven Decisions
In successful personalized learning classrooms, teachers
frequently collect and review data to identify
trends and areas that need improvement. Through such analysis, teachers can modify their instruction to meet the
data-driven needs of students. For example, a teacher may discover that a math
concept needs to be retaught to a small group of students within her class, or
she may find that certain students are able to bypass a specific objective.
Data-Driven Decisions also entail opportunities for teachers to review data
with their students in order to improve learning and help students to set goals
and monitor progress against them.
- Student Reflection and Ownership
Built on metacognition research, we believe students
need ample opportunities to reflect on their own learning. Although far from
simple to accomplish, Student Reflection and Ownership begin with a teacher
helping students to track their own data and set specific learning goals.
Teachers should provide mentorship and support as students
develop the skill of reflecting on their own learning. With practice, Student
Reflection and Ownership lead students to become self-directed learners who
take ownership of their academic futures.
By focusing on these simple elements, teachers,
principals, parents, and students will create an environment in which personalized
learning can succeed. After all, as the legendary basketball player, Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar, once said, “They may just be little things, but usually they make
the difference between winning and losing.”
Quote of the Day
“WE ARE NOT HUMAN BEINGS HAVING A SPIRITUAL EXPERIENCE.
WE ARE SPIRITUAL BEINGS HAVING A HUMAN EXPERIENCE.”
Teihard de Chardin
Monday, July 18, 2016
Something to think about, as we begin a new school year! Avail new mercies for all students.
"When a low-performing student is being described, their racial profile will probably provide the least useful data. It will not point to different teaching interventions or course offerings. Leading with race can distort the appropriate process in identifying this student's needs." @terrenceruth https://t.co/DVuvTqVRqY
http://www.christiancentury.org/blogs/archive/2016-07/fog-race-american-discourse#.V36eottj5Fs.linkedin
"When a low-performing student is being described, their racial profile will probably provide the least useful data. It will not point to different teaching interventions or course offerings. Leading with race can distort the appropriate process in identifying this student's needs." @terrenceruth https://t.co/DVuvTqVRqY
http://www.christiancentury.org/blogs/archive/2016-07/fog-race-american-discourse#.V36eottj5Fs.linkedin
The Tug of War between Change and Resistance Michael Murphy*
Resistance to change efforts in schools is natural, predictable,
and possible to get beyond.
Resistance: Perfectly Predictable
Human attitudes and behavior toward any proposed change develop
over the course of that change (Hall & Hord, 2001). Change often happens in
three phases: initiation, implementation, and institutionalization (Michael
Fullan, 2007). Initiation is the "process that leads up to and includes a
decision to adopt or proceed with a change" (Fullan, 2007, p. 69), and
this is typically where resistance initially appears. People confront the technical aspects of the change—what they perceive
it will require them to do differently, and if the demands of the change will
be overwhelming (Lawrence, 1969). This
"can I do it?" mentality grows as they are pushed to implement the
new practices. During implementation, change can also shift the way people in
the organization relate to one another (Lawrence, 1969). The social aspects of change can be dangerous and more
confounding than the technical aspects, because many people have deep, personal
reactions to changing "the way we've always functioned." Technical
and social aspects often feed each other to fuel overt resistance.
Observe Others, but Alter Your Behavior
Thinking about the three phases of change and how they relate to
human behavior enables leaders to anticipate resistance before it happens. Knowing
that the technical and social aspects of change often compound resistance also
helps predict the way practitioners may respond to what appears to be a logical,
much needed change. Three strategies help leaders see how to adjust their
behaviors to meet resistance head on.
Strategy
1: Give People What They Need
Closely observe the behavior of those affected by the change and
then provide whatever that behavior signals these colleagues need—before the
behavior turns negative. During the initiation phase, focus on the purpose of
the change and be clear about the urgent reasons that a shift in knowledge or
practice must happen. People are motivated by a sense of purpose_ by an
understanding of the overarching rationale. They will seek connections between
the work you're championing and the other work they're obligated to do. During
implementation, leaders must notice what teachers need and have a thorough plan
ready to support teachers as their understanding of new practices evolves. It's
important that people experience short-term wins during this phase, so they'll
be motivated to continue the work.
Strategy
2: Ask How It's Going
Practitioners will generally be eager to talk about the change and
any concerns they have—if you ask them and truly listen. Then you’ll know how
to address the biggest concerns. When concerns are met, people tend to
cooperate with change and are motivated to work for full implementation (Hall
& Hord, 2001). The most effective way to find out how the change is going: have
a quick, casual conversation with each individual teacher.
Strategy 3: Keep the Change Formula in Mind
A simple formula to keep resistance to a nontoxic level (Beckhard
& Harris, 1987): D x V x F > R (Dissatisfaction workers feel about the
status quo, Vision for the change and
how it will positively affect teachers and students, and First steps a worker must take
to work toward the change, must be greater than the amount of Resistance put forth.) Leaders
should consider how their actions and conversations strengthen teachers'
awareness that the status quo isn't working (D), their vision for positive changes
(V), and their level of comfort with their own first steps (F)—so these
elements will outweigh resistance.
Beyond Tug of War
Leaders must become skilled in observing and responding to the
first signs that unrest is brewing. In many cases, a leader's failure to
strategize how to respond to pushback may actually nurture or accelerate
resistance. Better planning for the pull toward change and better noticing of
the opposing pull of resistance is the leader's job. When we change our own
thinking and behaviors so we create an "us" that accelerates change
together, we can end the tug of war.
References
Beckhard, R., & Harris, R. (1987). Organizational transitions: Managing complex change (2nd
ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson.
Fullan, M. (2007). The new meaning of educational change (4th
ed.). New York: Teachers College Press.
Hall, G., & Hord, S. (2001). Implementing change: Patterns,
principles, and potholes. Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
Huberman, A., & Miles, M. (1984). Innovation up close: How school improvement works. New
York: Plenum Press.
Powell, W., & Kusuma-Powell, O. (2015, May). Overcoming
resistance to new ideas. Phi Delta Kappan, 96 (8), 66–69.
*(For full article, go to Educational Leadership Online June 2016 | Volume 73 How to Be a Change Agent Pages 66-70)
Begin with the End in Mind: if we all begin the school year...with "being..." (you feel in the blank) as our goal for the end, what a year for our students... |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)