A LYS Assistant Superintendent
asks the following:
SC,
The training that you provided this past summer was great and our
staff has worked this semester implementing the Fundamental 5. With that implementation, we some have
questions.
What is the best way to manage “We will” and “I will” statements for
grade levels that are self-contained and have several content objectives?
I appreciate any guidance that you may be able to give us.
SC Response
Great question. I would
start with the reminder that the self-contained classroom is inherently unfair
for both the teacher and the student.
The teacher is expected to be an expert in all four content areas, plan
for all four content areas, and deliver daily rigorous and engaging
instruction in all four content areas.
Yet Framing the Lesson is where the breakdown occurs? The better solution is partner pairing,
but we can save that concept/practice for a later discussion.
Start with the understanding that a Lesson Frame frames the big idea
or the critical understanding of the lesson. Which means, especially in elementary classrooms, you don’t
frame everything taught during the content time, you frame the most important
thing. So lets say during my
Reading/ELA block that my direct teach addresses reading comprehension, but I
will also have a grammar review, centers, individual practice and some pullout
groups. Most likely, I will Frame the direct teach concept. From a practical
and observation standpoint, this means that there will be less Frame / Student Activity alignment in an elementary classroom than in a secondary
classroom.
Now, the question becomes, which content areas should be Framed. The answer is (in the self-contained
classroom) the critical content areas.
Depending on the class and the grade that may be just reading and math,
or could expand to include reading, writing, math, science and social
studies. But to not Frame the
critical content is not an option.
On this I cannot be more direct. To not Frame is to not prime the brain
to be receptive to the learning and to not set up the brain to retain the
content. Which means to
purposefully teach poorly.
Now, if I have assigned my teachers the nearly impossible task of
being self-contained, there are three things that I must do to help my
teachers.
1. I must provide them with a common scope and sequence. I must give them the “What and the When”
of instruction if they are to plan for quality delivery in four different
content areas.
2. I must carve out time for my teachers to plan and collaborate
together. And I must make sure
that they use the time appropriately and effectively.
3. I must visit classrooms to observe instruction and check the Lesson
Frames. If the Frames are not
posted, cue the teacher to get them up.
If the Frames are of poor quality, help the teacher revise them. If the
Frames are up and of good quality, give the teacher a “Thumbs up.”
I hope this gets you and your team past this little hiccup. Let me know if you need any more
assistance.
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/Fundamental5
- Now at the Apple App Store: Fun 5 Timer (Fundamental 5 Delivery Tool); Fun 5 Plans (Fundamental 5 Lesson Plan Tool)
- Upcoming Presentations: TESPA Fall Conference; The Fundamental 5 National Summit (Keynote Presentation); ASCD Annual Conference
- Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation and like Lead Your School on Facebook
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