Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Monday, December 23, 2013
Top LYS Tweets From the Week of December 15, 2013
A number of you in the LYS Nation are now Twitter
users. 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
December 15, 2013.
1. As an education leader, the work of public
education is ALWAYS bigger than you... Stand for ideals that transcend personal
agendas. (By @tlonganecker)
2. The primary objective of teacher observation
should be to find the most effective way to coach the teacher to improve
instruction. (By @tgrierhisd)
3. Today's Quote: “Almost all unhappiness comes
from comparing ourselves to others.” (By @DrRichAllen)
4. Stop being afraid of what could go wrong. And
start being positive about what could go right. (By @Morrgan_Freeman)
5. Principals, if there's no need to have a
meeting, call it off and encourage teachers to make 5 positive phone calls
instead. (By @billsterrett)
6. Smart people surround themselves with smarter
people. (By @principalspage)
7. Assessments that are not aligned to the
scope and sequence are a waste of instructional time. (By @LYSNation)
8. Students reading below grade level in 3rd grade
are four times as likely as their peers to drop out of school before earning
their diploma. (By @tgrierhisd)
9. The negative unintended results of Texas
school accountability are, at least, equal to the intended positive results. (By
@LYSNation)
10. "Right now school accountability is not
about common sense; it is about politics and agenda." (By @LYSNation)
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
- Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “Look at Me: A Cautionary School Leadership Tale” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/lookatmebook
- Now at the Apple App Store: Fun 5 Plans (Fundamental 5 Lesson Plan Tool); PW Lite (Basic PowerWalks Tool); PW Pro (Mid-level PowerWalks Tool)
- Upcoming Presentations: NASSP National Conference; The 21st Century High
School Conference
- Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation and like Lead Your School on Facebook
Friday, December 20, 2013
A Reader Shares... Measuring "Doing What is Right"
A LYS
Assistant Superintendent shares the following:
LYS
Nation,
I want
to brag on a campus “in need of improvement” in our district. In a true
effort to help save our children we created a dropout prevention academy.
Students who have already left high school (were a couple of years behind; had
to work due to family circumstances; and/or had a child), who are already
considered a dropout, or admitted they were about to dropout of school are the
student body of this campus. We have about 20 students who attend.
We set
the hours for the first part of the day and it is self-paced with close
guidance and tutoring. We have graduated 25 students in the three
semesters since we opened the doors. These students passed all of their state tests (some after multiple attempts) and have a real high school diploma.
We have 18-20 that will graduate this school year. Each one of
these students would not have finished high school.
Now,
Texas, has labeled this campus “in need of improvement.” Our school board
and our administration say that this campus should be emulated and that the
state is in need of improvement. We are extremely proud of the
commitment from everyone involved with this campus. Square pegs do not
necessarily fit into round holes!
SC
Response
First,
congratulations. Your story
reminds me of principal I knew that believed her superintendent when he said,
“Go get your drop-outs and drag them back to school.”
The
other principals in her district did nothing, she on the other hand went and
found her kids and dragged them back to school. Her reward? Her campus rating fell as almost all of those
recovered dropouts failed the TAKS on their first attempt. Her staff was at first crushed, but as
she pointed out, the lost rating was really a badge of honor. It represented the adversity that those
kids had to overcome just to come back to school. It really was a “Finest Hour” moment.
Second,
as is the case with your recovery campus, multiple pathways for both graduation
and accountability make sense. But
right now accountability is not about common sense; it is about politics and
agenda.
The
short-term solution: Serve your students.
The
long-term solution: Serve your students and vote.
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
- Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “Look at Me: A Cautionary School Leadership Tale” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/lookatmebook
- Now at the Apple App Store: Fun 5 Plans (Fundamental 5 Lesson Plan Tool); PW Lite (Basic PowerWalks Tool); PW Pro (Mid-level PowerWalks Tool)
- Upcoming Presentations: NASSP National Conference; The 21st Century High
School Conference
- Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation and like Lead Your School on Facebook
Thursday, December 19, 2013
A Reader Writes... State Testing - Making a Success Out of a Mess - Part 2
In response to the 9/24//2013 post, “State Testing – Making a Success Out of a Mess,” a LYS Assistant Superintendent writes:
SC
I would agree with accountability for all, but I do not and
never will agree with high stakes testing. As you know, I occupy a seat of significant
responsibility/authority in my district, my wife is an educator, and my
daughter consistently has her name among the A - honor roll list. In my family,
we all value education.
When the time for state testing rolls around my daughter becomes
very emotional and starts to cry from the pressure. She always performs
at or near the "commended level" and we, as a family, have never
added any pressure above what is coming from the state through our schools.
When THE TEST affects a student in such a negative way it makes me want
to opt my child out of state testing. Remember that she is one of the
higher scoring students in the school.
I have been reading about other states and the rights of parents
to opt out. It is only a matter of time before the state has a court
ruling that blows the whole system apart. Parents have a right to decide
if their child takes part in such testing. Unfortunately, in my position,
it would probably do my family more harm than good for me to be a test case.
Your thoughts?
SC Response
My thought on the “Parent Opt-out” of high stakes testing...
There’s a minefield to dance through.
Let me state up front that I do not have children who are
subject to the current accountability testing program, so an emotional
component is not part of my opinion of the matter. I get that it is hard to be rational when it is your own
child.
What I can say is that the testing program we currently have in
Texas has been “Agendaized” and “Politicized” to a point that the unintended
consequences wreck at least as much havoc as the intended consequences produce
the desired result. As such, if I
had a parent who did not want their child to take a test that did not impact
promotion or graduation, I would have a difficult time arguing that their
decision was misguided. And keep in mind, I am a first generation,
pro-accountability guy.
Your problem, as you point out, is that you can’t be
the test case when your child attends school in your district. And enrolling your child in another
district really should not be an option either. As you well know, as a Leader you have to work to make the
system better, even if sometimes that makes it difficult to be a father.
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
- Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “Look at Me: A Cautionary School Leadership Tale” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/lookatmebook
- Now at the Apple App Store: Fun 5 Plans (Fundamental 5 Lesson Plan Tool); PW Lite (Basic PowerWalks Tool); PW Pro (Mid-level PowerWalks Tool)
- Upcoming Presentations: NASSP National Conference; The 21st Century High
School Conference
- Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation and like Lead Your School on Facebook
Labels:
Accountability,
Assistant Superintendent,
Leadership,
STAAR
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
A Reader Writes... Common Assessment Review - Part 1
In response to the 10/23/2013 post, "Common Assessment Review," a teacher
writes:
SC,
We
recently had our 9-week assessment. Up to this point my students have
concentrated on a novel and the elements therein; expository writing based on
the novel; and argumentative writing. The assessment had a poem and an
expository piece about a poem. How does this help me assess what my students
know about what we have learned?
SC Response
Great
question. And the answer is either
“Everything,” or “Nothing.” Let me
explain...
I am
going to assume that your district provides you with a common scope and
sequence. If your district does
not, then honestly, the assessment was a waste of instructional time and the
results really tell you little of value.
So if
the district provides a common scope and sequence and the assessment was
aligned to the scope and sequence, then what you taught was either out of
sequence, off pace or not required.
If this is the case, then the assessment tells you everything you need
to know, “You have to get your instruction aligned and on pace, now.”
Now if
the district provides a common scope and sequence and the assessment was NOT
aligned to the scope and sequence, then the assessment tells you nothing.
Performance data on what you haven’t taught does little to inform our next
instructional decisions. In this
case, what I would suggest is notifying the person who built the assessment and
let them know that there seems to be an alignment issue at play. It happens, especially with campuses
and districts that are early in the common assessment implementation process.
I hope
this gives you some direction. If not send me some details and a new set of
questions.
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
- Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “Look at Me: A Cautionary School Leadership Tale” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/lookatmebook
- Now at the Apple App Store: Fun 5 Plans (Fundamental 5 Lesson Plan Tool); PW Lite (Basic PowerWalks Tool); PW Pro (Mid-level PowerWalks Tool)
- Upcoming Presentations: NASSP National Conference; The 21st Century High
School Conference
- Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation and like Lead Your School on Facebook
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Top LYS Tweets From the Week of December 8, 2103
A number of you in the LYS Nation are now Twitter
users. 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
December 8, 2013.
1. It's not the grade, it's the thinking! McFee
ES recognizes those who think and stick with it! (By @CabidaCain)
2. Congratulations to LYSer, John Schumacher! He
is the new Assistant Superintendent in Johnson City ISD. Who will be next? (By
@LYSNation)
3. A Lesson Frame is a powerful instructional tool
when properly used. They are just words on a board and extra work when not used
in the lesson. (By @blitzkrieg607)
4. Visited 4th Grade math class with 16% jump
on common assessment! Principal,
teacher, and student excitement about data made my day! (By @RandyMBrown)
5. Just passed 1,000 PowerWalks for semester.
Good data collected. Great teacher
conversations follow. On our way
to our goals. (By @blitzkrieg607)
6. It was nice to be at McDonald Middle School
today. Implementing Lesson Framing, Power Zone, and Small Group Purposeful
Talk. Keep up the good work. (By @LindaHenrie1)
7. Outstanding visit at Snyder Intermediate
School. All teachers in the Power Zone and all Lessons Framed. Also saw Critical Writing, Recognition,
and Purposeful Talk! ! (By @RandyMBrown)
8. I love that the kids are learning to form and
justify their own opinions, then use great descriptive language to analyze it!
(By @tjadams105)
9. Disturb the status quo. (By @THS_Mr_Metz)
10. For 2013, The Fundamental 5 (Cain & Laird)
is currently the 4th best selling Education Leadership book on Kindle! Thanks,
LYS Nation! (By @LYSNation)
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
- Call Jo at (832) 477-LEAD to order your campus set of “Look at Me: A Cautionary School Leadership Tale” Individual copies available on Amazon.com! http://tinyurl.com/lookatmebook
- Now at the Apple App Store: Fun 5 Plans (Fundamental 5 Lesson Plan Tool); PW Lite (Basic PowerWalks Tool); PW Pro (Mid-level PowerWalks Tool)
- Upcoming Presentations: NASSP National Conference; The 21st Century High
School Conference
- Follow Sean Cain and LYS on www.Twitter.com/LYSNation and like Lead Your School on Facebook
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