mi/mis pdu april 2013

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MI/MIS PDU April 2013 Agenda: 7:00 – 7:10 Deep Dive in LEAP Indicator I.8 7:10-7:15 Center Institute 7:15-7:45 Stage 2 and 3 of UbD

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MI/MIS PDU April 2013 . Agenda: 7:00 – 7:10 Deep Dive in LEAP Indicator I.8 7:10-7:15 Center Institute 7:15-7:45 Stage 2 and 3 of UbD. LEAP Indicator I.8 deep dive. Rethink Autism . Elementary MI and MIS should all have access to Rethink Autism - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

MI/MIS PDU April 2013

Agenda: 7:00 – 7:10 Deep Dive in LEAP Indicator I.8

7:10-7:15 Center Institute7:15-7:45 Stage 2 and 3 of UbD

Page 2: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

LEAP Indicator I.8 deep dive

Page 3: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Rethink Autism

• Elementary MI and MIS should all have access to Rethink Autism

• If you would like to add students, pleaser email Rob with the list of kiddos

• Set up a site visit with a person from Rethink to work with you side by side around April 24

• They will attend the April 24 MI and MIS meeting at Asbury

Page 4: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Boardmaker Studio

• Digital download • Right now one per school • Choose a stationary computer in your building

that is accessible by your special education team and connected to a computer

• Add the pink sticker we will give you so folks know this computer has the software download

• Training during the Summer Institute

Page 5: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Summer InstituteInclusion and Collaboration: Inclusion and Co Teaching; collaboration; using your paraprofessional; collaboration with school administration

10

Social intelligence; behavior for severe cog students; discipline structures in center classrooms; student who sexually act out; explosive kids; Peace4Kids; Behavior and Low Cognition

8

Technology: Assistive Technology and Applications (boardmaker); how to get new hardware (fundraising options), Educational Technology

7

Multiple types of disabilities in one classroom; multiple modes of communication 6

Transition issues; older students; coming from jail; out of district; planning and IEP Integration; articulation from various grade levels.

6

Rigorous but Realistic Expectations; Meeting grade level demands for kids 2-3 years behind; Common Core and Special Education

5

Scope and Sequence for Sig Needs and how to tie the curriculum together; reading programs, writing programs; Intervention for Severe disabilities; differentiation

5

Autism and sig cog disability; Autism workboxes; high functioning autism 5

Logistics of Teaching: Creating a schedule so breaks and planning occur; Organization skills; DPS policy and procedure; DPS continuum of Services; Criteria for a center program

5

Executive Functioning Disorders: Specific training on Executive Functioning, TBI, ADHD, Dessemia, non-verbal LD

5

Page 6: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Understanding By Design AKA Backwards Design

1. What is your goal?2. How are you going to assess?

3. What are yourinstructional tasks?

Page 7: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

UBD Template

1. What i s your goal?

2. How are you going to assess?

3. What are yourinstructional tasks?

Page 8: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Stage 2 of the UBD Process What evidence can show that

students have achieved the desired results?

What assessment tasks and other evidence will anchor

our curricular units and thus guide our instruction?

What should we look for, to determine the extend of student understanding?

Page 9: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Think like an Assessor

Not a teacher

Understandings Essential Questions

Goals

What performance evidence signifies they have been met?

What evidence would show the learner has deeply

considered them?

What would show the learner “got it”

Page 10: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Examples

Teacher has the students bring from home a poster that indicated they have counted 100 objects as a way of demonstrating their understanding of 100. Teacher refers to the state standards that references the “idea” of number and place value.

Is this evidence that they can count to 100?

Is this evidence that they have

developed “one hundredness”?

Do we even know if the

student did this?

Did the student have to explain rows, columns or patterns?

Page 11: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Rigor high but realistic expectations

depth over breadth

cross-curricular integration

stated outcomes

curriculum mapping

Does the 100 day activity meet the criteria of

rigor?

Page 12: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Assessor vs Activity Designer Assessor Activity Designer

What would be sufficient and revealing evidence of understanding?

What would be fun and interesting activities on this topic?

Given the goals, what performance tasks must anchor the unit and focus on instructional work?

What projects might students wish to do on this topic.

Page 13: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Continuum of Assessments inf

ormal

chec

ks fo

r

unde

rstan

ding

obse

rvation

s and

dialog

ues

tests

and q

uizze

s ac

adem

ic pr

ompt

spe

rform

ance

task

s

Page 14: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Authentic Assessment is realistically

contextualized

requires judgment and

innovation asks the students to

“do” the subject

replicates “adult”

challenges challenges

students to use a repertoire of knowledge and

skill

allows for rehearse,

practice, consul and feedback

to refine

Page 15: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Authentic Assessment

based upon these criteria which assessments from the brainstorm list would meet the criteria of authentic?

How could they be changed to be an authentic assessment?

Page 16: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Small Group Discussion

• Discuss as a group the types of assessment tasks you are thinking about doing for your unit.

• Provide feedback to your fellow teachers

Page 17: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

UBD Stage Three Instructional Tasks

And the learning activities need to…

Then you need evidence of the student’s ability to…

That suggests the need for specific tasks or test like…

If the desired result is for learners to …

Meet the standard Understand that Consider the questions

Page 18: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

The learning activities need to…

Group A

When are students most fully engaged?

Group B

When is student

learning most effective?

Page 19: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

The learning activities need to…Group A

When are students most fully engaged?

-hands-on-involves mystery or

problems -provides variety-personalize the

challenge-cooperation and

competition-real-world

-provocative interaction (case study, mock trial)

-authentic learning

Group BWhen is student learning most effective

-focused work ;clear goals -understanding of the

purpose/rational-models and exemplars are

provided -clear criteria that allows for

monitoring progress-limited fear and maximal

incentive to try harder, take risks and learn from mistakes-Ideas are concrete and real-students self assess reflect

and adjust

Page 20: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

WHERETO

W- Where the unit is headed and whyH- Hook and Hold attentionE- Equip with necessary tools and experience R- numerous opportunities to Rethink, Reflect

and Revise their workE- Evaluate progress and self accessT- Tailored to reflect individual needs O- Organized

Page 21: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Before and After

• read textbook section life on the prairie

• Read Sara Plain and Tall• Pioneer- life truck

artifact • Prairie Day Activities –

churn butter, 19th century game, seal letter with wax, etc

• KWL• Sub Oregon Trail 2 with

Journal entry for Prairie Day Activities

• Other Fiction and non-fiction text

• time line maps of a journey west

• Scoring rubric for memory box task

Page 22: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

Transfer of Knowledge

Page 23: MI/MIS PDU April  2013

PDU Review May 7

• Bring your two page UBD design of a unit of study to share with a triad of peers

• 2 page reflection essay to turn into the PDU office.