Friday, July 29, 2011

Readers' Reviews - The Fundamental 5

Two LYSers submitted to following comments:

1. SC, Just wanted to let you know that I read the book from cover to cover. Then I read it again. Of all of the "How to Teach Better" books, yours is the most accessible. In the on-going debate of are great teachers born or made - you and Laird make a great case for building great teachers. I have already recommended the book to three other principals.

2. We have all heard the old cliché that the issue isn't discipline, it's instruction. And I always roll my eyes because the person saying that inevitably taught in an easier setting than the one I'm in. But now I can see it. I see what I have always done in my class versus the Fundamental Five practices and why my practice has caused some of the discipline issues. Time to try something new this year. Thank you.

SC Response

Thanks for the great comments. The response to the book has been beyond what either of us ever imagined. It seems to have struck a cord with cord with teachers and administrators. We are just happy people believe that reading it was worth the time investment. And again, thanks you to everyone who has bought a copy and an extra big thank you to the over 60 campuses who have selected our little book for their fall book study.

Think. Work. Achieve.

Your turn...

Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/4ydqd4t

Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation

Thursday, July 28, 2011

The Big Easy Writes... (TASSP / TASB Wrap Up)

In response to the 6/22/2011 post, “TASSP / TASB Wrap Up," the Big Easy writes:

As I reflected on this blog something just came to me that seems a bit of a paradox, and yet, is interesting enough. I have read, "It is not about what you learn. It is about how you learn it."

So does this mean that learning is not like scoring in an athletic contest, but is in fact as much about style points?

Not so fast. Is it about how you score - touchdown vs. field goal, homerun vs. squeeze play, three point shot vs. layup? How you score (learn) assumes that scoring (learning the right "stuff") took place. So the question becomes “How do you hit a homerun in classroom?” LYSers know the answer.

SC Response

After reading your comment, up is down... right is left... Make it stop.

I think I know where you are going with this. It is one thing to just know the fact (scoring). It is another thing all together to connect facts, create meaning, and communicate revealing questions and understanding. Which is why the LYS Nation continues to separate itself from the masses. Others are operating on varying degrees of autopilot and panic (more of the same and “fix the broke kids” programs). The LYSer is engaged in purposeful application, driven by analysis and synthesis. Evaluated though the lens of student performance (style point capacity building).

Think. Work. Achieve.

Your turn...

Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/4ydqd4t

Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

A Report From the Field - Blame Game

A new LYS Principal submits the following:

The blame game is operating at full speed in my district. The Superintendent and the Assistant Superintendents are trying to distance themselves from our results and all decisions leading to those results. They are blaming campuses for not having better common assessments. They are blaming campuses for not having a vibrant PLC model. Even though last summer it was agreed that full implementation would take two years, and that this year we had more than enough new practices and programs on our plate.

At my “I Suck Data Autopsy,” I went through everything we implemented on my campus and the growth that we experienced because of it (admittedly, not enough growth). The feedback I received was driven by what I didn’t do and what they would have done differently. Interestingly, this feedback was not provided during the year when they were happy that teachers were happy and parents weren’t complaining.

So yes, I will endure their jabs and continue to implement the plan that we agreed to. A plan that is working (but didn’t work fast enough to cover for the lack of TPM). Next year our common assessments will be better. Our Fundamental 5 execution will be better. My one lagging sub-pop that TPM was covering for will be successful, without a crutch.

My campus learned (which my central office has not) that pull outs and support do little if Tier 1 instruction is poor or non-existent on a daily basis. We are working to teach better, not “Program Your Way to Success.”

SC Response

As regular readers know, I was never a fan of TPM. I advocated for its removal. Though I would not have removed it in the middle of the year. But politics required this to happen. As AYP standards increased and state standards decreased (the effect of TPM), the state was going to have to explain why Exemplary schools couldn’t meet AYP requirements. Take away TPM and the problem goes away. But enough with political maneuvering talk.

What I been counseling school districts to do is ignore the state rating (this year). Just compare the 2010 raw score against the 2011 raw score. If you improved (as did your campus), don’t panic. If you regressed, you have cause for concern. Some districts are listening. Others are not. But if you were congratulating yourself on your rating last year and you are punishing someone for your rating this year, AND YOUR SCORES ARE THE SAME OR BETTER, at the very least your credibility is suspect.

Think. Work. Achieve.

Your turn...

Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/4ydqd4t

Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Readers Write... (The Legacy of a Great Coach)

In response to the 7/20/2011 post, “The Legacy of a Great Coach,” readers write:

1. Thanks for sharing. I am at T-CASE, today. He will be missed, but what a legacy of influence.

2. That is awesome! Made me cry.

SC Response

I agree and me too.

Harlan understood principal coaching. He had a rule for our relationship. At least twice a week he would remind me, “Son, this is your school, not mine. I’m going to give you my best advice for a given situation. Use it to inform your decision. I’ll adapt my advice based on what you decide.”

That is the same mindset I now use when I’m working with school leaders.

Think. Work. Achieve.

Your turn...

Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/4ydqd4t

Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation

Monday, July 25, 2011

Top LYS Tweets from the Week of July 17, 2011

So you have been thinking, “This Bootleg Technology idea sounds intriguing, but why should I go through all the hassle when I have so many other things on my plate this year, such as accountability, budget, and staff reductions?”

Why? Because bootleg technology addresses all three of those issues and more. As it relates to accountability, bootleg technology puts a powerful and accessible instructional resource into the hands of almost every student. Raising the rigor of instruction to the levels of analysis, synthesis and evaluation is all about student product. The product is better when the quality of the raw materials is better.

In regards to budget, what’s cheaper? Buying another cart full of laptops or letting your students reach into their backpacks and pull out their phones, I-pods and I-pads (which are already there)? And if you had to hazard a guess, which technology device do you think the students will take better care of, yours or theirs?

In regards to staff reductions, consider this. When you had a computer lab teacher, every student didn’t use the lab, every period. Now that you don’t, how often do you think the lab will be used? But with bootleg technology, every student, in every class has the opportunity to embed technology use in the assigned instructional activity. My question is in today’s educational environment, how are you not already all over this?

A number of you in the LYS Nation are now using bootleg technology devices to follow Twitter. If you haven’t done so yet, we want you to join us. To let you see what you are missing, here are the Top 10 LYS Tweets from the week of July 17, 2011, as tabulated by the accountants at Price Waterhouse.

1. Congratulations to LYS Principal, Dr. Michael Seabolt. He will be the new Superintendent for Louise ISD! Who will be next?

2. Let's quit calling the anti-public school faction, "Reformers." Let's call them, "Dismantlers." It is more honest and better frames the debate.

3. Joe Strauss, Texas Speaker of the House, represents property rich Alamo Heights ISD. They don’t have to make cuts... that explains a lot. (By Cheadhorn)

4. Second day of Manor ISD elementary teachers (60+ volunteers) outlining curriculum scope and creating assessment items! What are you doing to prepare?

5. Tonight’s Run Thought: Change is an exponential function of getting X number of personal agendas moving in the same purposeful direction.

6. When it comes to Principals selecting staff, I follow the Bill Parcels’ rule: If you are accountable for the cooking, you get to buy the groceries.

7. How can a teacher performance bonus plan not impact student scores? What were they paying the bonuses for? Political posturing?

8. Just received notice that LYS will present at the Texas School Improvement Conference on Oct 26 & 27. Topic: The Foundation for Improvement

9. Just received notice of a second LYS Presentation at the Texas School Improvement Conference on Oct 26 & 27. Topic: PowerWalks

10. Just received notice that LYS will do a third presentation at the Texas School Improvement Conference on Oct. 26 & 27. Topic: The Fundamental 5

Think. Work. Achieve.

Your turn...

Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “The Fundamental 5: The Formula for Quality Instruction.” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/4ydqd4t

Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation