an uncommon approach to common core

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Lesson Study: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core Jah-Yee Woo and Nicole Knight Oakland Unified School District [email protected] and [email protected]

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Teachers become researchers and experts when preparing for the changes with common core standards.

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Page 1: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Lesson Study:An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Jah-Yee Woo and Nicole Knight Oakland Unified School District

[email protected] and [email protected]

Page 2: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Understanding Goals

Teachers will...

• understand the lesson study cycle and explore ways in which it will support their own inquiry into teaching and learning in their classroom/site

• understand an interdisciplinary approach to incorporating the Common Core standards into their instruction

• understand ways in which teaching argument were illuminated by the lesson study cycle.

Page 3: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

KWL

• What experience or knowledge do you already have about lesson study?

• What are you hoping to learn today?

Page 4: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Why an Uncommon Approach?

Expertise comes from Academia

Teachers are the experts

Page 5: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Lesson Study Cycle

1. STUDYConsider long term goals for

student learning and development

Study curriculum and standards

2. PLANSelect or revise research lesson

Do task

Anticipate student responses

Plan data collection and lesson

3. DO RESEARCH LESSONConduct research lesson

Collect data

4. REFLECTShare data

What was learned about student learning, lesson design, this

content?

What are implications for future teaching, for the field?

Page 6: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Professional Development

Traditional

Begins with an answer

Driven by Expert

Communication: Trainer to Teacher

Relationships hierarchical

Research informs practice

Research

Begins with a question

Driven by Participant

Communication among Teachers

Relationships reciprocal

Practice is Research

By Lynn Liptak, Paterson School #2, New Jersey.

Page 7: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Teachers’ Activities to Improve Instruction

copyright Catherine C. Lewis 20057

Choose curriculum,write curriculum, align curriculum,

write local standards

U.S. JAPAN

Plan lessons individually

Plan lessons collaboratively

Watch and discuss each other’s classroom lessons

Page 8: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Lesson Study in Practice: Video Analysis

• What is the student question in each class? What are students trying to understand?

• What is the teacher research question in each class? What is the teacher trying to understand about teaching and learning?

Page 9: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Lesson Study in Practice:Connecting to your work

What in this video did you see that supports inquiry into teaching and learning? What are

teachers learning about their practice?

What questions emerge?

How is this experience similar or different than your own professional development

experiences?

Page 10: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Using Lesson Study to Understand the CCSS

Page 11: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

National set of expectations for student knowledge and skills that students need to master to succeed in college and career.

Designed by Council of Chief State School Officers and the National Governors Association for Best Practices, in collaboration with educational leaders and university partners.

Adopted by CA SBE August 2, 2010

Will officially replace the ELA and Math California State Standards in 2014-2015, not the History or Science content standards.

What are the Common Core State Standards?

Page 12: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

The Common Core State Standards lay out a vision of what it means to be a literate person

in the 21st century.

1) They demonstrate independence.

2) They build strong content knowledge.

3) They respond to the varying demands of audience, task, purpose and discipline

4) They comprehend as well as critique.

5) They value evidence. 6) They use technology and digital media strategically and capably.

7) They come to understand other perspectives and cultures.

Page 13: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Gerald Graff, professor of English and education, writes that “argument literacy” is fundamental to being educated. The university is largely an “argument culture,”

Graff contends; therefore, K–12 schools should “teach the conflicts” so that students are adept at understanding and engaging in argument (both oral and written) when they enter college.

The Special Place of Argument in the New Common Core State Standards

Page 14: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

The Goals of the ELA-History Collaborative

Teacher Learning

1. Increase secondary HSS and ELA teachers’ knowledge of the Common Core standards and understanding of the shared literacy goals of secondary HSS and ELA teachers

2. Increased knowledge of strategies to help students develop the reading and writing skills necessary to construct an argument.

Student Learning

Increase student ability to construct a strong written argument.

Lesson Study - Linking PD and

Classroom Practice

Page 15: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Lesson Study Project Timeline

Collaborativ

e Formed

Research Lesson on Occupy Oakland

Analysis and Reflection

Summer Institute

Public lessons

Page 16: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Student Question: Is Occupy Movement Good for the 99% of

Oakland?

Page 17: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

A Case Study

• Context – Students read 5 documents and write an argument-based response in multi-grade secondary classrooms

• Teacher Question - To what extent and depth can students contrast a range of possibly conflicting documents in order to form and support a claim?

• Student Question - What are the main ideas and most important points raised by each document? What is the bias or point of view of the author/s? Is the Occupy Movement good for Oakland?

Page 18: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Occupy Oakland Lesson Study Questions

How can we create a sequence of activities in order to write a paragraph using an evidence sandwich?

When students are provided with sufficient background knowledge, how can we get them to critically analyze the media?

How can students learn to analyze conflicting points of view?

How can guiding questions lead students to deeper source analysis(as evidenced by written work, student discussion, etc.)?

How can we help students identify and address conflicting evidence?

How can use use rhetorical appeals as a gauge by which students evaluate the validity of an argument?

Can instruction of annotating text lead students to writing strong summaries?

Page 19: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

New Questions that Emerged after Occupy Oakland

• How does a focus on “frontloading” context, vocabulary and conceptual frameworks support student understanding of texts and the focus of writing tasks?

• What classroom structures enhance the role of discussion as a key support in helping students move from a close reading of texts to comprehension and understanding? How do we both structure and encourage the “messiness” of discussion?

• What graphic organizers can support the development of student understanding and analysis, helping to bridge the gap between the reading of texts and the development of an argument?

• How does helping students define and understand the relation between claim/evidence/argument support their ability to develop a thoughtful and coherent argumentative essay?

Page 20: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Lesson Study – Opportunities and Challenges

Page 21: An Uncommon Approach to Common Core

Contacts and Resources to Help Get Started

OUSD Teaching American History Grant Website http://www.teachingamericanhistory.us/index.htm, Stan Pesick, Project Director, 510 879-8497; [email protected]

Lesson Study Group at Mills Collegehttp://lessonresearch.net/

Lesson Study Research Group, Teachers College/ Columbia Universityhttp://www.tc.edu/lessonstudy/

Lessons Studied: Lessons Learned - MacComb Intermediate School Districthttp://www.misd.net/lessonstudy/process.htm#Introduction

The Lesson Study Project at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse as part of the Center for Advancing Teaching & Learning.http://www.uwlax.edu/sotl/lsp/