Are We Confusing Standards with Standardization?

Standards, not standardization

My soap box. Here I go again…

As I write this, I’m ducking behind my screen, ready to dodge virtual tomatoes. Please bear with me as I question some assumptions we are making with regards to standards and standardization.

We educators use terms and acronyms, assuming that all people have the same understanding. First, I will clarify terms. Then I will ask questions.

Clarification 1: Textbooks are not curriculum.

Most simply put, curriculum is a list of things students should know and be able to do. We call the list a list of standards because we hope that all students will be able to know and do these things when they leave school. Then we create benchmarks, clarifying what those standards “look like” at various grade levels.

I often hear teachers and other school leaders saying that they want to find a curriculum that teaches to the standards. What they’re really saying is this: They are looking for the “magic bullet” educational materials that will help student test scores improve.

I haven’t used textbooks in over ten years. What I learned from my Australian colleagues is this: Teachers can look at a list of standards and figure out the best way to teach to those standards.

So here are some questions: Are schools underestimating teachers? Are schools assuming that teachers cannot teach to standards unless they have the “right” materials?

Clarification 2: Standards are different than Standardization

If we understand curriculum as a list of standards describing what students should know and be able to do, we can differentiate between curriculum and instruction.

Curriculum is built on standards. Instruction may or may not be standardized.

The progression of assumptions goes something like this (my reaction in italics):

  1. We need to teach to the common core (standards). True.
  2. The district has purchased materials that align with the standards. Okay.
  3. If we all teach this curriculum (a misuse of the term), then [the company's] research suggests that students will test better. Here is training on how you should all use these materials… Hold the phone!!!!!

We have crossed a line at #3. We assume that, to hit standards, instruction must be standardized according to commercially-created materials.

My next question: Once companies have convinced us that they have the “right” materials, are we requiring all teachers to use those materials in the same way?

Clarification 3: If we agree that instructional standardization is unnecessary, we can maintain creativity and passion in a standards-based classroom.

But we need to make a few paradigm shifts.

Specifically,

  1. Look at the standards before we look textbooks or think of “thematic” activities. The unit on Spiders is no longer a list of activities. It is a list of standards first (classification, expository writing, research, health and safety), then activities.
  2. Use team meeting time to plan. Work together to compile activities and resources that will teach to the standards. Use textbooks and other materials as resources. Trust yourself to create new activities that teach to standards more authentically than pre-packaged materials.
  3. Maintain checklists of standards and keep track of students that have and have not met specific standards. Project-based learning is then tweaked to include the following instructions: Somewhere in your project, you need to show me that you understand the difference between insects and spiders. You need to tell me whether or not your spider is dangerous and how you can tell. When I come and talk to you, I will ask which books and websites you have been reading and how they helped you.

Clarification 4: There are some things that are just wrong.

Wrong: Awards and sanctions for schools, teachers, and students based on test scores. Household rewards and sanctions do not get kids to bed on time, nor is bedtime a single standard by which we judge parenting (thank heavens!). Let’s pay attention to the scores, but realize that tests will never tell us the full extent of student knowledge.

Wrong: Hours and hours of standardized testing. I’ve created assessments where students learn through the process of demonstrating, synthesizing, and evaluating their knowledge and skills. Students learn nothing when they fill in bubbles. A few hours per year is okay. Weeks? Wrong.

Wrong: Teaching all students the same way. The little Steve Jobses and Mark Zuckerbergs in your classroom (who probably test well), will withdraw or start programming social media when they should be underlining the topic sentence.

There are more wrong things, but those are the biggies.

Conclusion: Education is not doomed, unless we confuse standards with standardization.

As Yong Zhao Trim said, American education was “doomed” in the 1960s when the Russians beat us to space. American education was “doomed” according to the 1980s publication “A Nation At Risk.” NCLB was created because schools were failing.

Yes, we have work to do in education. But, we have innovative teachers who care about student passions and are capable of creating lessons that teach to standards. Accomplished teachers know their students and how they learn.

Let’s teach to the standards, but teach them in ways that are individualized, differentiated, and personalized.

My last question: What if we change the assumptions?

If the new assumptions are as follows…

  • Teachers can teach to standards with or without specific, commercial materials.
  • No one set of materials (commercially-created or otherwise) will help teachers teach all standards to all students.
  • Standards can be taught and tracked in the midst of innovative, project-based classrooms.
  • We fight government initiatives that are truly wrong while resolving to show the world that students learn through individualized, differentiated, and personalized instruction.

…how would schools look different?

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Monday Mentions

Over the past couple of weeks, the posts below have given me reason to pause and ponder – savored with some combination of coffee, wine, and chocolate…

Are We Wringing the Creativity Out of Our Kids?

Teaching is a balancing act. On the one hand, we want students to be creative. Ideally, students independently explore topics of interest and demonstrate learning in a format of their choice.

On the other hand, we must measure and report learning as it relates to educational standards.

To what extent can the two expectations coexist?

Just Trying to be Better Than Yesterday

I love it when a fellow writer is able to articulate the seemingly indescribable. Author Kenny Pieper reminds us that we all experience foibles – lessons we plan perfectly that don’t run as expected. His article conjured up memories of my mother’s tongue-in-cheek comment: My lessons would run perfectly were it not for the students.

Kenny’s smooth writing style makes me want to open a bottle of wine and be swallowed up by a recliner. A good read. Really.

Don’t Underestimate the Quiet Ones

As a self-proclaimed social media introvert, I appreciate it when authors speak for folks like me who choose their words carefully. These are a few things about me that are often misunderstood:

  • I’m not arguing with you…but that doesn’t mean I agree with you.
  • I’d rather ask questions than give my opinion – especially at first. After hearing everyone’s point of view and digging through the research, I’ll come back with a few suggestions on how to move forward.
  • I prefer to say difficult things directly to people – in a quiet place where no one loses face. I’ve probably said tough things to plenty of colleagues – you just haven’t been around to hear them.

Grade the Work, Not the Behavior

Ah, one of my soap box topics. When I coach teachers, I often ask teachers to do the following:

  1. Articulate what you are seeing.
  2. Decide if what you see is an academic issue or a behavioral issue (sometimes it is a technical issue).
  3. Address the correct problem. Grades should reflect what student know and are able to do. Behavioral issues require a one-on-one conversation with the student. Try to “get into their heads” to identify the obstacles to being on time, submitting work, etc.
  4. If unsure, address the academic issue first. Many students hide academic challenges with behaviors that help them save face in front of peers. When the student feels successful, discuss ways you can help the student in the future – so that the disruption need not precede the academic assistance.
  5. If the issue is behavioral and a one-on-one conversation ineffective, round up a team of parents, counselors, and principals for intervention and support.

7 More Ways to Go from On-Task to Engaged

Bryan Harris has some great quotes:

Increasing time on task is pointless if the tasks themselves are not productive (quoting John Hattie).

While praise may encourage effort, specific feedback is necessary in order to truly learn and grow.

Some of the most valuable and long-lasting learning comes from the personal insights and “ah-hahs” we discover when learning about ourselves.

What have you read lately?

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Classroom and Student Blogs: Advice from the Masters

I’m a big fan of learning from the masters. We look to the masters when learning art, music, literature, sports – even prayer and meditation.

This post is dedicated to the blog masters – those who post advice for teachers with classroom and student blogs. Wisdom of the masters + personal experience has led me to embrace the following pieces of wisdom:

Bookmark Great Examples of Kid Blogs

Before diving into blogging, you should check out some examples of classroom blogs and kid blogs. Bookmark your favorites – you can use the great ones as examples for your students.

Many know Adora Svitak from TED talks. She keeps a blog.
A Second Grader’s blog: Nick’s Picks
A Third Grader’s blog: Jarrod’s Awesome Blog
My Fifth Graders: 5a3dragonslair.edublogs.org
Blogs by High School students in Norway are linked to Ann S. Michaelson’s site

Need more? Check out the Edublog Award Winners.

Start with a Classroom Blog

By “classroom blog”, I mean the one that you control.

No need to fear first steps. Online real estate is free. If you want to start slowly and deliberately, consider signing up for the Edublog Teacher Challenge. The challenge takes you through blog setup in a step-by-step fashion.

You can play around with a couple different formats. I’ve tried Blogger. Blogger is easy because it links to your Gmail account. The cautions with Blogger are twofold: Google may “suggest” to students that they check out blogs that are inappropriate. Google, by nature, will also have advertising.

Consider going through Edublogs. When students write on Edublogs, they are only exposed to other education blogs – blogs with safe content. My only complaint with Edublogger is that you cannot keep track of the users who sign up for your blog. I hope they will add that feature – I want to know the email addresses that receive direct email feeds.

Other teachers have successfully used Kidblog.

Generally, professional bloggers use WordPress. You can start with a WordPress.com site. Like blogspot, WordPress is open to everyone in the world (not just kids). But, my experience is that wordpress.com users are more committed to good content.

Video tutorials are available to help you get started on Blogger and WordPress.

Unsure about what to put on your class blog? Here are 65 ideas.

The two most Twitter-mentioned classroom blogs are Mrs. Yollis’ Classroom and Leopold Primary School (Australia). Use their posts as examples.

Begin the year by teaching Good Commenting

I don’t recommend giving students personal blogs too early in the year. Students should demonstrate responsibility first. I like the steps that teacher Kathleen Morris takes with her students.

Prior to writing full blog posts, students need to learn how to write quality comments.

Video tutorials exist to help students make comments on WordPress and Edublog sites.

Video tutorials also exist to help students make comments on Blogger sites.

A colleague of mine started student comments with a discussion about responsible use.

One of the biggest reasons to have a classroom blog is for students to practice commenting in a controlled environment. I don’t find that students post inappropriate things, but I DO find they type their last names. I both delete the last names and conference with children who sign with full names.

Helping Student Get Started

One of the easiest ways to help students get started is to have them sign up for the Edublogs Student Blog Challenge. Students receive emails with links to instructions on how to make their blog look great. And, students link up with other student bloggers.

Getting Parents Involved

Next year, I want to make a more concerted effort to get parents involved. A few of my students’ parents have made nice comments on student posts. Kathleen Morris has been far more intentional and has experienced the subsequent success.

Let parents know that students LOVE to receive comments. Comments are one of the biggest motivators for students to continue writing.

If you Want to Assess

I don’t formally assess student blogging. I want blogging to become something students want to do. Instead of formally assessing students, I point out to them ways in which I see their writing improve.

That said, sample rubrics are available.

Safety Stuff

The biggest lesson is to keep identities anonymous. When commenting, students should not use full names. When students create blogs of their own, they should be careful with the “About Me” page. I encourage students to put a Wordle on their “About” page – using words they would use to describe themselves.

I highly discourage names attached to pictures.

I don’t tend to advertise the location of my school. Viewers could deduce the location from the school uniforms, but the name of the school shouldn’t show up in Google searches.

Mrs. Ripp has a great post guiding students to think about how the Internet is like the mall. She also includes a letter to parents regarding safety.

Who do you believe are the master blog teachers? What have you learned from them? What links would you recommend?

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From Pre-Assessments to Differentiated Instruction

Once you have enough information to clearly determine the knowledge and skills students already possess, you quickly realize that you can’t teach exactly the same lesson to all students.

  • Some students need a full lesson and repeated practice to master the objectives.
  • Some students can learn the objective in half the class time.
  • Some students have fully mastered the objective and need something more complex to further their learning.

Early in my teaching career, the two latter groups of students really got the shaft. I made them sit through a lesson and demonstrate learning they had already mastered. Then, to keep them busy, I’d assign them more of the same.

What Differentiation is Not
Differentiation does not mean permanent groupings. When you have a permanent “high” group, those students may miss important objectives they have not yet mastered. Students in a permanent “low” group may have areas of strength that need to be challenged.

Differentiation is not an excuse to have students work in complete independence. When I was in school, my teachers had me “work ahead”, submitting assignments at my own pace and rarely interacting with me. Teachers have a responsibility to help students who have already mastered grade-level objectives reach their learning potential. Students who have mastered grade level content deserve teacher interaction and facilitation. For more information on teaching gifted students, click here.

Differentiation is not the sole responsibility of learning specialists. Learning specialists tend to serve large numbers of students in multiple classrooms – each with a different schedule. Students deserve much more frequent differentiation.

Differentiation is not a complete second or third set of lesson plans. Students who have demonstrated knowledge/skills on a pretest do not necessarily skip an entire lesson. Rather, they receive the lesson at a different level of sophistication.

Examples of Differentiation in Math
In math, we are working on graphing ordered pairs. Many students have experience graphing coordinates where letters are placed on the x-axis and numbers on the y-axis, as they are in the game of Battleship. Students are introduced to the (x,y) ordered pair and they demonstrate the ability to graph such coordinates.

Other students have graphed coordinates but have difficulty remembering to first move along the x-axis. Those students quickly master (re-master?) the concept. As an extension, I ask these students predict what would happen if the x-coordinate was doubled. What if the x-coordinate was negated? What happens if we do the same to y-coordinates? Can they use math vocabulary to explain their reasoning?

Another student was able to easily explain effects of changing x- and y-coordinates. I pulled him aside, helping him connect equations such as y = 3x + 2 to ordered pairs and the graphing of lines. I then asked him to play around with different multiplies until he could explain what happens to a line when the multiple changed.

Same basic lesson – but at varying levels of sophistication.

Examples of Differentiation in Literacy
Students recently wrote Realistic Fiction stories. A couple students were able to, in a short amount of time, create a story that met all unit objectives. As most students continued their rough drafts, I asked those two students to conference together, discussing how their stories might incorporate symbolism. To what extent does each story have a message? A dynamic character? How would the story change if the character was given one magical power?

In reading, similar skills can be taught with varying levels of text sophistication. While some students are learning to use headings and paragraphs to understand nonfiction texts, others can study essays of Nobel Prize winners or famous speeches. How did those authors organize their work without clear headings?

How to Differentiate
1. Start slowly. You’ll quickly burn out if you try to differentiate every lesson all by yourself. Aim for one or two lessons each unit and add a few each year.

2. Work with colleagues. Working together, groups of teachers can add to the files of differentiated resources. If you have a teaching partner or colleague who teaches the same units at the same time, have one teacher take students who need the regular lesson and the other teacher can take those who need extensions. The next day, one teacher takes those who need re-teaching or pre-teaching while the other teacher follows up with the regular and/or extension group. If learning specialists are involved, the differentiation is even more powerful.

3. Flip lessons. Videos take time to make, but they can be used over and over again. Video lessons do not replace the teacher – but they can get groups of students started while the teacher is working with another group.

When videos are used in the classroom, groups of students can watch them together, pause, reflect, and synthesize ideas. Students are then given a project, a mini-project, or a task to complete. Be clear what students need to accomplish and show the teacher when he/she arrives.

Differentiated instruction takes practice. It requires new structures of classroom management. How do you manage differentiated instruction?

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Differentiation: Using Pretests

We’ve all been told that students learn at different rates and enter class with diverse levels of knowledge. Rebecca Alber wrote an article saying that, when she coaches teachers, many ask What does differentiation look like?

Differentiation begins with the analysis of student work.

Math
Differentiation begins with a pre-test. It doesn’t have to be long. Put together two questions from each lesson in a unit.

Here is a partial example of a unit pretest:

Created by colleague Mary Ellen Ryan

After the pre-test, tick off the objectives each student has already mastered. Notice that no child has a full grasp of all objectives. Hence, the “extension” group must be flexible by lesson. (Note: Student names are fabricated).

Reading and Writing
The first piece you need is paper that looks something like this:

When you notice patterns in student work, write down topics for mini-lessons. List names of students who need the mini-lesson. Pull the students for a small group session during workshop time. You can create the same “boxes” with on-screen Stickies.

Each year I get a file of student work from the previous teacher. I wish I had time to read carefully through each piece. I choose to spend the most time looking at the Diagnostic Reading Inventory (DRA 2) sheets.

The bad news about DRA 2 sheets is that the assessment may be an indication of writing skills as much as (if not more than) reading skills. The good news about DRA 2 sheets is that the assessment may be assessing writing skills. So I use it for both. Here is an example of the summary page:

What can I learn about this student as a reader?

  • The child sees the beginning, middle, and end of the story.
  • He/she can concisely list the main details of a story.
  • He/she identifies character feelings and actions.
  • He/she includes more details from the beginning of the story than the end.
  • More or less, the writing suggests literal comprehension is at grade level.

I would use other pages to check the student’s reading habits and his/her ability to use specific reading skills. The first couple weeks of school, I would need to have an individual conference with the reader to confirm my DRA-based impressions.

What can I learn about this student as a writer?

  • He/she organizes writing in a sequential fashion.
  • He/she is able to communicate ideas.
  • He/she uses vocabulary acceptable for a fifth grader.
  • He/she uses a consistent tense.
  • Paragraphing is present, but not indented.
  • The student needs lessons on plurals and possessives
  • Spelling patterns deserve further investigation.

The folder also has a narrative writing sample. A quick glance confirms or refutes my initial impressions.

Poetry begins this week. We assessed students’ poetry writing by simply saying “Write a poem.” My teaching partner and I will review those to see which students use imagery, which students take the poem through the entire writing process, and more. To assess students’ poetry reading, we had them analyze an Emily Dickenson poem. Again, we will compare to see which students discussed important lines or words, which students examined meanings beyond the literal…

How does pre-assessment lead to differentiated instruction?
Great question – to be answered in a future post.

I wish I could tell you a super-quick way of pre-assessing students. The analysis time is worth it, though. If we want to differentiate instruction, we first need to know which students need which lesson(s).

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