2. Misconceptions…
• The need to “teach to the test” – as if the only
way to raise test scores causes us to “teach
worse”. (p. 306)
• “The bottom line is that we should be
teaching to standards and developing the
kinds of complex assessments reflected in the
language of the standards”. (p.309)
3. Misconceptions…
• There’s too much content to be taught…
• “Content standards were intended to specify
what is most important for students to know
and be able to do, thus providing a muchneeded focus and prioritization for curriculum,
instruction and assessment.” (p.309).
• Remember, the textbook is a resource.
4. TIMSS
• Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study
• provides reliable and timely data on the mathematics
and science achievement of U.S. 4th- and 8th-grade
students compared to that of students in other
countries. TIMSS data have been collected in 1995,
1999, 2003, 2007, and 2011. The next data collection is
in 2015.
• Average Performance of U.S. Students Relative to
International Peers on the Most Recent International
Assessments in Reading, Mathematics, and Science:
Results from PIRLS 2006, TIMSS 2007, and PISA 2009
5.
6. Misconceptions…
• There’s not enough time to do everything
• The authors suggest –
• Each year, interested parties in every school
must ask themselves..
• “What approaches to curriculum design,
teaching and assessing actually yield the
greatest student learning”? (p.317)
• “Let the local research focus on a single unit –
small in scope but deep”. (p.317)
8. Your Role as a technology coach
• When you become a tech coach, ask for
planning periods to be a part of your schedule
• Work with teachers on how technology can be
incorporated into their content area.
• Both “push-in” support and individual support
are needed
9. Be a good listener
• Listen to their needs, and determine what
technology (if any!) can support their goals
10. Learning comes first, not tools
•
•
•
•
•
Ask colleagues for recommendations
Take it for a test drive
Brainstorm potential lessons
Explore available support
Look for teacher reviews online
12. What Are The New Jobs?
• Chief Information Officer
• Career Counselor
• Computerized 3 D Modeling
Machinist
• Senior Technology Security
• Molecular Beam Epitaxy
Technician and/or Engineer
• Epitaxial Engineer
• DNA Lab Technician
• Nano-Technician
• Endoscopy Technician
• Bio-Engineer
• Instrumentation Technician
• Intermediate Biomedical
Engineer Technician
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Medical Ethicist
Sarbanes-Oxley Auditor
GEO Technical Technician
Quality Process Engineer
Fabrication Operator Wafer
Optical Maintenance Technician
Office Space Coordinator
NOC Specialist (Fiber Optics
Technician)
Telecommunications Engineer
Optical Manufacturing Technician
Controls Technician
Administrative Eligibility
Specialist
Computer Forensic Analyst
13. Jobs That Will Boom In 2020
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Data Crunching
Counseling and Therapy
Scientific Research
Computer Engineering
Veterinarians
Environmental and Conservation Science
Healthcare fields
Management
Finance
Entrepreneurship
Source: Newman, R. “10 Businesses that Will Boom in 2020,” U.S. News, September 2012
14. Future
Work
Skills
2020
#1: Sense-Making:
DEFINITION: ability to determine the
deeper meaning or significance of
what is being expressed
#2: Social Intelligence
DEFINITION: ability to connect to
others in a deep and direct way, to
sense and stimulate reactions and
desired interactions
#3: Novel and Adaptive Thinking
DEFINITION: proficiency at
thinking and coming up with
solutions and responses beyond
that which is rote or rule-based
http://cdn.theatlantic.com/static/front/docs/sponsored/phoenix/future_work_skills_2020.pdf
15. Lucrative Careers for 2030
1.
Digital Architect: Designs a selection of virtual buildings for advertisers and
retailer to market their products
2. Home Carer: Helps care for elderly people in their own homes
3. Elderly Well-Being Consultant: Specializes in holistic and personalized care
for the elderly
4. Body Part Maker: Creates living body parts for soldiers and athletes
5. Nano-medic: Creates very small implants for health monitoring and selfmedication
6. Vertical Farmer: Farms crops upwards rather than across flat fields to save
space
7. Waste Data Handler: Disposes of your data waste in a responsible way
8. Climate Controller: Manages and modifies weather patterns
9. Personal Branding Manager: Develops and manages your personal brand
10. Time Broker: Handles time banked by customer in lieu of money for goods or
services
Source: Winch, J.
“!0 Well Paid Jobs of the Future,” The Telegraph, February 2013)
18. The Common Core State Standards:
Reach Higher, Teach Clearly, Learn Deeply
Which word appears in the ELA
standards 122 times?
Evidence
Sources: 61 times
Research: 57 times
19. This isn’t your classroom.
You aren’t this teacher.
These aren’t
your students.
22. Create - requiring deep
consideration of audience,
purpose, structure, text features,
and format.
Collaborate - forcing students to
plan, adopt, adapt, rethink, and
revise, all higher-level practices.
Evaluate - necessitating that
students make critical judgment
calls about how information is
presented and shared.
Integrate - emphasizing design,
and producing considerable
cognitive load on a learner.
25. “Digital literacy is imperative for America’s economic future
and possessing these skills is absolutely essential for
accessing the jobs and education opportunities that will enable
current and future generations to compete in the 21st century
workforce.”
…”in the U.S. today, more than 80 percent of Fortune 500
companies post their job openings online only and require
online applications.”
…”Fifty percent of today’s jobs require technology skills, and
this percentage is expected to grow to 77 percent in the next
decade.”
Source: Mike Bolognini, July 1, 2013: Digital Literacy is Imperative for America’s Economic Future
26. What’s the Connection Between CCSS and Digital Literacy?
Students who are digitally literate:
…_______________ digital information in a variety of
formats.
…use relevant ___________ to judge the quality of the
information.
…use these skills and the appropriate technologies to
_______ and collaborate with others.
…use diverse technologies appropriately, effectively
and ________ to search for information..
ALA Definition of Digital Literacy
27. What’s the Connection Between CCSS and Digital Literacy?
Students who are digitally literate:
…evaluate digital information in a variety of formats.
…use relevant evidence to judge the quality of the
information.
…use these skills and the appropriate technologies to
communicate and collaborate with others.
…use diverse technologies appropriately, effectively
and strategically to search for information.
ALA Definition of Digital Literacy
28. A digitally literate person:
possesses the variety of skills—cognitive
and technical—required to find,
understand, evaluate, create, and
communicate digital information in a wide
variety of formats;
is able to use diverse technologies
appropriately, effectively and strategically
to search for and retrieve information,
interpret search results, and uses relevant
evidence to judge the quality of the
information retrieved;
uses these skills and the appropriate
technologies to communicate and
collaborate with peers, colleagues, family,
and on occasion the general public;
uses these skills to participate actively in
civic society and contribute to a vibrant,
informed, and engaged community.
29.
30. Who does the public trust most when it comes to
information about education? Rate 1-8.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Local newspaper
The principal/admin at local school
Local TV/radio news
Teachers at your local school
The teachers’ union
Friends and family members
School district admin/superintendent
Local school board/elected officials
Source: The Winston Group
30
31. Who does the public trust most when it comes to
information about education?
Results:
1. Teachers at their local school
2. Friends and family members
3. The principal/admin at their local school
4. School district admin/superintendent
5. Local newspaper
6. Local school board/elected officials
7. Local TV/radio news
8. Teachers’ unions
Source: The Winston Group
31
36. “Argument” and “Persuasion”
When writing to persuade, writers employ a variety of
persuasive strategies. One common strategy is an appeal to
the credibility, character, or authority of the writer (or speaker).
When writers establish that they are knowledgeable and
trustworthy, audiences are more likely to believe what they
say. Another is an appeal to the audience’s self-interest,
sense of identity, or emotions, any of which can sway an
audience.
A logical argument, on the other hand, convinces the
audience because of the perceived merit and reasonableness
of the claims and proofs offered rather than either the
emotions the writing evokes in the audience or the character
or credentials of the writer. The Standards place special
emphasis on writing logical arguments as a particularly
important form of college- and career-ready writing.
What resonated with you? For me, there are two things.
Here are some of the things that resonate with me: changing landscape of jobs.
Let’s look at some Common Core trivia.
Here’s the second thing that resonated with me. Read slide. The unpredictability of the job markets parallels with the unpredictability and changing profile of our students. Here are some things we know.
We have data that shows how students spend their time…A recent profile of today’s students showed.
We also know that our educational targets are requiring that all students are college and career ready. The Common Core State Standards are about preparing all students to be college and career ready.
The 4 big ideas of the Common Core…
Work in pairs to research a definition of digital literacy… paste definition in padlet.Discuss commonalities of posted definitions
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X5ySocUyI7IDoes this sound familiar?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X5ySocUyI7IDoes this sound familiar?
Definition from ALA
Discuss these questions among your table and write down your answers.
Note that teachers report that they trust principals the most. The public also reports that they’d like more coverage of education issues. What do they get now? Sports, crime, events. Very little about academics.
Myths:
The standards are for ALL students. The standards address students with special needs in several ways.
The standards are for ALL students. The standards address students with special needs in several ways.
Technology can quickly become yesterday’s diorama if the learning targets aren’t clear.
Ask for justification.Discuss examples of something that is difficult, but not complex (i.e., a math problem)