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Bradford Saron

Value-added teacher evaluation goes on trial - literally - The Answer Sheet - The Washi... - 0 views

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    Via @mcleod, this gives you a very good understanding of the weaknesses of the forthcoming teacher evaluation tools and principal evaluation tools. 
anonymous

Evaluation - 1 views

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    Evaluation PBIS Assessment provides Surveys and Checklists to assist schools, districts and states in assessing the fidelity of PBIS implementation. Information about Evaluation and the various surveys and checklists available on PBIS Assessment are included in this section. Evaluation is the process of collecting and using information for decision-making.
Vince Breunig

Leadership and the PLC | AllThingsPLC - 2 views

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    Listen: When teachers say they are overwhelmed with district and school mandates, take the time to evaluate these concerns. Teaching under the very best of conditions is complicated. It requires time for planning, professional development, and collaboration. The emotional wear and tear of the job can be exhausting
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    This is so true-especially with so many new initiatives changing at lightning speed.
Bradford Saron

Gates vs. Weingarten « Matt Bowman - 1 views

  • “tenure is a proxy for fairness”
  • Weingarten deflects the accusation and suggests the real problem is a lack of “support” for teachers, aka funding:
  • Then Gates nails it: No, we spend more on professional development than they do. We spend more on salaries than they do. We spend more on pensions than they do. We spend more on retirement health benefits than they do. But we have less evaluation than they do. In many districts you have to give advance notice before anybody can come into your classroom. That’s part of the contract. So there are some real differences in terms of the personnel system in these other countries.
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    This is the exchange between AFT national president and Bill Gates as they debate tenure for teachers. 
Bradford Saron

Tech Transformation: Information Literacy, Digital Literacy and Digital Citizenship - 1 views

  • To be information literate, a person must be able to recognize when information is needed and has the ability to locate, evaluate, and use effectively the needed information.
  • igital literacy is the ability to locate, organize, understand, evaluate and analyze information using digital technology.
  • Digital citizenship refers to the use of these skills to interact with society.
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  • Digital Literacy seems to be very similar: In Wikipedia it starts with a definition that is almost word for word identical to ALA definition of information literacy but adds on three new words:
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    Thoughtful article about how 21st Century literacies interface with 21st citizenship.  
Bradford Saron

A trip to the Reformy Education Research Association? « School Finance 101 - 0 views

  • Policy recommendation: Immediately implement a new teacher evaluation system based 50% on student assessment data. Prohibit the use of experience or degree level as a basis for compensation.
  • Policy recommendation:  Set in place a strategy to turn over all host district schools, across all grade levels to the charter operator.
  • Conclusions & Implications: The strongest correlate of true teaching effectiveness was the estimate of teacher contribution to student achievement on the same test a year later. However, this correlation was only modest (.30). All other measures including effectiveness measures based on alternative tests and student, parent and administrator perceptions of teacher effectiveness were less correlated with the original value-added estimate, thus raising questions about the usefulness of any of these other measures. Because the value-added measure turns out to be the best predictor of itself in a subsequent year, this estimate alone trumps all others in terms of usefulness for making decisions regarding teacher retention (especially in times of staffing reduction) and should also be considered a primary factor in compensation decisions. Note that while it may appear that school administrators, students and their parents have highly consistent views regarding which teachers are more and less effective (note the higher correlations across administrator ratings of teachers, and student and parent ratings), we consider these findings unimportant because none of these perception-based ratings were as correlated with the original value-added estimate as the value-added estimate was with itself (which of course, is the TRUE measure of effectiveness).
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    Wow. A thoughtful article with good content and reform recommendations to think about. What do you think? 
Bradford Saron

Implications Comprehensive School Leadership Development 04/20 by UCEA | Blog Talk Radio - 1 views

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    Great discussion on principal development and evaluation. Skip to 10:30 for the good stuff!
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    Good stuff Brad-Good luck with Lacrosse-they would be lucky to get you. Louie
Bradford Saron

Ravitch: The toll of school reform on public education - The Answer Sheet - The Washing... - 1 views

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    Via @mcleod, this is a must-read for school administrators and educators alike. 
Bradford Saron

So Here's What I'd Do : 2¢ Worth - 0 views

  • But here are the solutions that this challenge brings to mind. Eliminate paper from the budget and remove all copiers and computer printers from schools and the central office (with exceptions of essential need). “On this date, everything goes digital.” Create a professional development plan where all faculty and staff learn to teach themselves within a networked, digital, and info-abundant environment — it’s about Learning-Literacy. Although workshops would not completely disappear, the goal would be a culture where casual, daily, and self-directed professional development is engaged, shared, and celebrated — everyday! Then extend the learning-literacy workshops to the greater adult community. Establish a group, representing teachers, staff, administration, students, and community. Invite a “guru” or two to speak to the group about the “Why” of transforming education.  Video or broadcast the speeches to the larger community via local access, etc. The group will then write a document that describes the skills, knowledge, appreciations and attitudes of the person who graduates from their schools — a description of their goal graduate. The ongoing work of writing this document will be available to the larger community for comment and suggestion. The resulting piece will remain fluidly adaptable. Teachers, school administrators, and support staff will work in appropriately assembled into overlapping teams to retool their curricula toward assuring the skills, knowledge, appreciations and attitudes of the district’s goal graduate. Classroom curricula will evolve based on changing conditions and resources. To help keep abreast of conditions, teachers and support staff will shadow someone in the community for one day at least once a year and debrief with their teams identifying the skills and knowledge they saw contributing to success, and adapt their curricula appropriately.
  • The district budget will be re-written to exclude all items that do not directly contribute to the goal graduate or to supporting the institution(s) that contribute to the goal graduate. Part of that budget will be the assurance that all faculty, staff, and students have convenient access to networked, digital, and abundant information and that access will be at least 1 to 1. A learning environment or platform will be selected such as Moodle, though I use that example only as a means of description. The platform will have elements of course management system, social network and distributive portfolio. The goal of the platform will be to empower learning, facilitate assessment, and exhibit earned knowledge and skills to the community via student (and teacher) published information products that are imaginative, participatory and reflect today’s prevailing information landscape. Expand the district’s and the community’s notions of assessment to include data mining, but also formal and informal teacher, peer, and community evaluation of student produced digital products. Encourage (or require) teachers to produce imaginative information products that share their learning either related or unrelated to what they teach.  Also establish learning events where teachers and staff perform TED, or TELL (Teachers Expressing Leadership in Learning) presentations about their passions in learning to community audiences. Recognize that change doesn’t end and facilitate continued adapting of all plans and documents. No more five-year plans. Everything is timelined to the goal graduate.
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    In response to the "bad" trend of tech gurus not offering any solutions. 
Guy Leavitt

Sustainability| The Committed Sardine - 1 views

  • Here is what we are doing, when we are doing it, where we are doing it, and who is doing it (describing the situation) Here is why and how we are doing it (analyzing), and here is why it's important, the outcomes, relationships and impacts (evaluation
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    Ian Jukes
Bradford Saron

How to Overhaul the U.S. Education System - WSJ.com - 0 views

  • to make all of the politically unpopular choices that had been put off for decades
  • year after year, our schools have been run for the benefit of the adults in the system, not for the benefit of the kids.
  • first time someone dared to question an entrenched practice that had only served the interests of adults.
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  • based on quality and performance instead of seniority.
  • Ineffective teachers are immediately dismissed from the system
  • higher level of accountability with some of the highest teacher pay
  • comprehensive system for evaluating teachers, including growth in student achievement as measured by standardized tests (so that teachers who take on the toughest students aren't unfairly penalized), observation of their classroom practices and assessment of their contributions to the school community.
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    Rhee's parting comments as she leaves the office of DC district administrator. 
Bradford Saron

Teaching for America - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Incremental change isn’t going to get us where we need to go. We’ve got to be much more ambitious. We’ve got to be disruptive. You can’t keep doing the same stuff and expect different results.
  • There are three basic skills that students need if they want to thrive in a knowledge economy: the ability to do critical thinking and problem-solving; the ability to communicate effectively; and the ability to collaborate.
  • they insist that their teachers come from the top one-third of their college graduating classes.
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  • They have invested massively in how they recruit, train and support teachers, to attract and retain the best.
  • Duncan’s view is that challenging teachers to rise to new levels — by using student achievement data in calculating salaries, by increasing competition through innovation and charters — is not anti-teacher.
  • How we recruit, train, support, evaluate and compensate their successors “is going to shape public education for the next 30 years,” said Duncan. We have to get this right.
  • All good ideas, but if we want better teachers we also need better parents — parents who turn off the TV and video games, make sure homework is completed, encourage reading and elevate learning as the most important life skill. The more we demand from teachers the more we have to demand from students and parents. That’s the Contract for America that will truly ensure our national security.
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    Here, Friedman analyzes Duncan's new approaches to federally initiated school reform. His last point, however, is very thought provoking. 
Bradford Saron

What is the State of your school? | Connected Principals - 1 views

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    Must read on the state of our schools, with some reflective questions. 
Bradford Saron

Collaboration Is Difficult… | Principal Thoughts - 0 views

  • Organize Staff Into Meaningful Teams Provide Teams With Time to Collaborate Provide Supportive Structures That Help Groups Become Teams Clarify the Work Teams Must Accomplish Monitor the Work of Teams and Provide Direction and Support as Needed Avoid Shortcuts in the Collaborative Team Process Celebrate Short-Term Wins, and Confront Those Who Do Not Contribute to Their Teams
  • The same can be said of the PLC process with its emphasis on a collaborative culture.  There is growing recognition that the process represents a powerful strategy for improving student achievement, but bringing it to life in the real world of schools remains difficult.  Educators are asked to change long-standing assumptions, expectations, and habits regarding schooling.  They are asked to relate to colleagues and students in new ways.  They are called upon to abandon the tradition of pursuing the latest educational fad and instead are asked to sustain a commitment to a very different way of operating schools – forever.
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    Great post. 
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