Tuesday, April 10, 2012

A Reader Writes... If We Could Just Keep Our 'Friends' From Helping - Part 1

In response to the 3/14/2012 post, “If We Could Just Keep Our ‘Friends’ From Helping,” a reader writes:

SC,

In response to "...running out of things to do" when teachers are using a ‘flipped’ environment.

Teachers and students would actually have time to have a conversation about the subject matter and possibly veer off into related areas of interest. After many years in education I am convinced that the most effective way to develop higher order thinking and problem solving skills is to have teacher-student conversations. From conversations, teachers can figure out what students are actually thinking and understanding and from there can lead them to higher plateaus of understanding/learning.

It's so basic and one of the very valuable things that the over-emphasis on standardized testing has stolen from the teaching and learning in our educational environment today.

SC Response

You are absolutely correct in your belief that conversation is a critical element in increasing instructional rigor. This is one of many reasons why the Fundamental 5 is able to dramatically change student performance. It is through academic conservation that students create meaning, make connections and expand on ideas. When teachers monitor or participate in these conversations they are able to formatively assess student understanding, guide learning in the appropriate direction, and have a window into the student’s brain to more accurately determine levels of cognition (rigor).

However, I disagree with your blanket assessment that accountability has stripped this practice from today’s classrooms. The sad truth is that this practice was rarely occurring prior to the current accountability era. Instruction, to this point, has been primarily at the knowledge and comprehension level, rooted in the specific content area. In other words, chronically low rigor, chronically low relevance. This isn’t to say that educators don’t work hard, with the best of intentions. It is to say that we are notoriously poor at objectively self-assessing our practice (and who isn’t, at both a professional and personal level) and accountability is forcing us to address weaknesses in our collective craft.

In fact, every day I see where the realities of increased accountability have improved the lot of our students. Because for our most fragile student populations the key to performance is not drill and kill, it is high rigor / high relevance (more build, more talk, more write). It just so happens that what is good for our weakest students is also what is best for our strongest students. Accountability just provides the incentive for us to do this everyday, instead of when it is convenient.

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
  • 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)
  • Confirmed 2012 Presentations: NASB Conference; TASSP Conference (multiple sessions); Region 10 ESC Fall Leadership Conference (Keynote)

Monday, April 9, 2012

Top LYS Tweets from the Week of April 1, 2012

According to a recent PEW report more than 75% of all teenagers have a cell phone. Visit any mall on the weekend and you will swear that 75% is a conservative estimate. Add to this fact that each day the number of smart phones over the number of regular cell phones increases. As you are looking at your tech budget for the upcoming year, ease up on the typical computer-buying spree. Instead beef up your Wi-Fi and carve out some time and money to help teachers figure out how to embed the use of bootleg technology in daily instruction. At least 75% of your student body is already in possession hardware that is faster and more relevant than the desktops in your computer labs and the laptops in your charging carts. As it now relates to technology, our job is to catch up with our students and figure out how to let them use their hardware.

A number of you in the LYS Nation are now using your own 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 April 1, 2012.

1. If you spend the first 5 minutes collecting papers & taking attendance why would any kid care if they were on time to your class? (By @justintarte)

2. Bad practice + a good excuse = bad practice.

3. When your school/district improvement plan primarily focuses on skimming the cream from the top, what exactly is being improved?

4. Here's an idea. Why not send progress reports and report cards to parents via text and/or e-mail?

5. If people take refuge at an elementary school, is that a government handout? (By DrJerryRBurkett)

6. Most DAEP's do a decent job of playing the hand they are dealt. The problem is that the most districts deal them a losing hand.

7. Leadership Malpractice: Moving teachers to less desirable classes, grades or settings with the hope that they will leave.

8. Proactive Leadership: Putting your best people in your toughest settings. Great for kids, great for the organization!

9. A teacher said yesterday when we were discussing The Fundamental 5, “Isn't this what we are supposed to do for PDAS!” :-) (By @fosterbkay)

10. A second grader is showing me tricks on my I-Phone. Every day you keep bootleg technology out of your school you are falling behind.

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
  • 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)
  • Confirmed 2012 Presentations: NASB Conference; TASSP Conference (multiple sessions); Region 10 ESC Fall Leadership Conference (Keynote)

Thursday, April 5, 2012

NASSP Conference Ratings - The Fundamental 5

Last week, NASSP sent me the audience feedback from our standing room only presentation of “The Fundamental 5”. This was unexpected since most conferences don’t do this. After our presentations, the participants always warmly receive us, but we are educators presenting to educators, which means that the audience would be polite even if we didn’t deserver it. So getting to see what the audience really thought is a rare and valuable report card. Here is what an audience of over 140 principals and assistant principals reported:

Overall

  • 96% of the audience ratings of the components of the presentation and the quality of the presenters were “Excellent”
  • 4% of the audience ratings of the components of the presentation and the quality of the presenters were “Good”

There were no negative ratings or negative comments.

Positive comments included:

  • I plan to use and share this information.
  • I wasn’t sure that I would get much from this session. I was wrong! The presenters were phenomenal and the information was very useful!
  • Very energetic and positive!
  • Excellent!
  • Will take this back to my district.
  • Very good info.
  • Awesome!!! Thanks!!!
  • Excellent presentation. Great content and modeled it in the lesson. So inspired. Loved it!
  • Excellent!
  • I’m going to begin training my staff on using the Fundamental 5.
  • Great... The LYS Blog is very interesting and useful
  • Excellent topic, this session should be conducted again next year.

For all of you who attended our presentation at NASSP, thank you for your time and enthusiasm. And if you missed us, our next big conference presentations are at the National Association of School Boards Conference (later this month) and the Texas Association of Secondary School Principals Summer Conference. Come see us!

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
  • 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)
  • Confirmed 2012 Presentations: NASB Conference; TASSP Conference (multiple sessions); Region 10 ESC Fall Leadership Conference (Keynote)

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

My Property Tax Appraisal - Revisited

A number of readers have noticed over the past eighteen months the blog has addressed political topics more frequently than was the previous norm. I was raised with the understanding that it is bad form to discuss politics or religion in polite company. Sadly, with the attack on public education by the far right and the apathy towards public education by everyone else, I have felt compelled to ignore the lessons of my childhood more often than I like.

As I have mentioned before, I have adopted the willingness to invest in public education as my candidate litmus test. If we agree on that, I am willing to overlook a lot of other views held by the candidate. We disagree on that and the rest of the candidate views no longer matter (in terms of getting my vote).

But my stance is more than just posturing and empty words. I have figured out a small but critical way to financially support my position (with is appropriate considering that my position is financial).

Previously, I would protest my property taxes appraisal as a matter of course. It is a prudent practice from an individual financial standpoint. By reducing the valuation of my house, I reduce my tax burden and put more dollars in my pocket. However, from a supporting public education standpoint, reducing my tax burden reduces revenue for my neighborhood schools. So for now the second year, my wife and I will not protest the appraised value of our house. We will continue to pay taxes on a slightly inflated value because our community and our state are suffering from a structural tax deficit orchestrated by our governor and the republican legislature. As school people it is the right thing to do. And if things don’t improve with the upcoming election, I might give up my homestead exemption (against the continued advice of my CPA).

Serious times require purposeful action by serious people. Once again I ask, “What are you doing?”

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
  • 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)
  • Confirmed 2012 Presentations: NASB Conference; TASSP Conference

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

PowerWalks Hero Schools (March 2012)

As is now a LYS Nation tradition, we will take time to tip our caps to the campuses that are taking the most important step in creating and maintaining an action oriented professional learning community. These are the campuses that have conducted an extraordinary number of formative classroom observations in a given month. Due to Spring Break and statewide testing, for the month of March the cutoff numbers were as follows:

  • Big Schools – 300 PowerWalks Observations
  • Medium Sized Schools – 200 PowerWalks Observations
  • Small Schools – 125 PowerWalks Observations
  • Very Small Schools – 60 PowerWalks Observations

So without further adieu, here are your thirty PowerWalks Hero Schools for the Month of March. Congratulations!!!

(#) = Number of Months in a Row

Elementary Schools

Junior High and Middle Schools

Alternative Schools

Combined Campuses

High Schools

McFee ES (CFISD) (5)


Rockdale (JWJPCS)

Louise Schools (LISD) (6)

Hutto HS (HISD)

Cottonwood Creek ES (HISD) (6)




Waco HS (WISD) (2)

Ray ES (HISD) (3)





Stanfield ES (SISD) (2)





Alta Vista ES (WISD) (2)





Bell’s Hill ES (WISD) (6)





Brooke Ave ES (WISD) (2)





Cedar Ridge ES (WISD) (4)





Crestview ES (WISD) (2)





Dean-Highland ES (WISD) (2)





JH Hines ES (WISD) (6)





Kendrick ES (WISD) (6)





North Waco ES (WISD) (6)





South Waco ES (WISD) (2)






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
  • 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)
  • Confirmed 2012 Presentations: NASB Conference; TASSP Conference (multiple sessions); Region 10 ESC Fall Leadership Conference (Keynote)

Monday, April 2, 2012

Top LYS Tweets from the Week of March 25, 2012

More schools are considering the move to e-readers over textbooks. The benefits are many. Less weight, less cost, convenience, just to name a few. But I have been trying to come up with a reason why this shift would not be a good idea. And then it hit me. With an e-book you can’t highlight passages or write notes in the book. But then I realized this is wrong on two fronts. First, you can write notes and highlight passages with many e-readers. Second, we fine and punish students for damaging school property if they mark a single page in a traditional textbook. Oops.

So e-readers are cheaper, lighter and offer a more interactive reading experience (without fear of punishment). And to top it off, due to e-reader apps most of your students have one in their pocket, purse, backpack or locker right now. It’s just that most schools make their students hide them during the day.

A number of you in the LYS Nation are now using your own 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 March 25, 2012.

1. The "genius" of the Texas Legislature: Make students take a high stakes “End of Course” exam with two months left in the course.

2. The RTI success formula: 1. Teach the right thing (Foundation Trinity) 2. Teach it better (Fundamental 5) 3. Teach it longer (Tri-mester)

3. The GT success formula: 1. Teach the right thing (Foundation Trinity) 2. Teach it better (Fundamental 5) 3. Teach it at depth (Tri-mester)

4. North Forest ISD will not have to close and merge with Houston ISD. Education commissioner changes mind and grants reprieve. (By @e_mellon)

5. NFISD remaining open is bad news for kids but great news for incompetent education leaders across the state.

6. If North Forest ISD gets to survive there is no meaningful consequences in Chapter 39 of the Texas Education Code. It’s over. (By @txschoolsupe)

7. We all agree that the quality of educators varies. So why do we fight to maintain a system that allows a poor teacher to decide what is taught?

8. A college student costs the state $8,667 per year; a prisoner costs it $45,006 a year. (By @FareedZakaria)

9. Our choice in the voting booth is pro-public education or anti-public education. The choice is that clear.

10. I am a public school guy.


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
  • 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)
  • Confirmed 2012 Presentations: NASB Conference; TASSP Conference (multiple sessions); Region 10 ESC Fall Leadership Conference (Keynote)