Assessing Program and Session Effectiveness 3-25-12
Assessing Program and Session Effectiveness 3-25-12
How do we know that the Focusing Students on Achievement, Managing Classroom Behavior, and Creating a Healthy School Climate programs achieve what they set out to accomplish? That is, how do we know that these Culture of Achievement system programs work?
For each Program there is a Sessions & Instructional Units document that details the instructional and guided practice content as well as the Products of Work for each of a programs Sessions. Further, there is a program document, Program-level Outcomes, that details program level Expected Outcomes for Teachers and principals and school leaders. Each participant must demonstrate minimal level performance at each session level and, ultimately, at the program level. Formative measures of performance are building-block elements of the summative outcomes and authentic assessments. Each Culture of Achievement program is criterion-referenced. That which is required is defined by Performance Objectives that describe required outcomes. Individual success is measured by the demonstration of the behaviors defined by the program-level outcomes. Adequate program performance is reached when each designated principal, school leader and teacher demonstrates the program-level outcomes to the criteria contained in the appropriate rubric.
Performance responsibilities
It
is
the
responsibility
of
Metis
Leadership
Group
to
prepare
principals,
school
leaders,
and
teachers
to
demonstrate
the
program
level
outcomes
per
the
appropriate
rubrics.
Such
outcomes
include
teacher
performance
and
principal
and
school-leader
mentoring.
It
is
the
responsibility
of
the
district,
the
principal,
and
school
leaders
to
assure
that
the
programs
practices
are
sustained.
Comprehensive form
Given two formal classroom learning sessions that cover: The teaching relationship Engaging communication Three questions
Characteristics of a Goal-Focused Conversation Structure of a Goal-Focused Communication and guided practice in conducting basic and intermediate Goal-Focused Conversations, each teacher will conduct a Goal-Focused Conversation that causes a student to clarify his or her career, school, or classroom goals and causes that student to elicit a plan for reaching those goals. Elements of the teachers communication are compared to a rubrics criteria understood in advance by the teacher and the principal, school leader or Metis fellow reviewing the teachers work
_________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________
WHERE are you now?
- Verbal, non-verbal - Authentic, flows naturally Accepting - Non-critical - Listens without judgment Respectful Demonstrated b elief in:
1 10
___________________________________________________________
HOW
will
you
do
that?
___________________________________________________________
WHERE
will
you
be
(on
the
scale)
when
we
meet
next?
1
Appointment
10
When will our next conversation be? Metis Leadership Group 2011 Mon Tues Wed Thu Fri _____/_____; _____:_____ am pm
Rubric
This
rubric
serves
as
the
final
skill
assessment
for
the
FOCUSING
STUDENTS
ON
ACHIEVEMENT
program
and
is
completed
by
a
School
Leader
or
MLG
Teaching
Fellow
following
the
third
session.
A
completed
skill
sheet
indicates
that
the
teacher
conducted
a
GOAL-FOCSED
conversation
with
a
student
and
the
degree
to
which
the
conversation
adhered
to
the
questions,
structure,
and
characterisitcs
of
a
complete
GOAL-FOCSED
COMMUNICATION.
THREE QUESTIONS WHAT is your goal? WHERE are you now? (in relation to that goal)? HOW will you get there? (What are your next steps)? Completion
of
the
first
segment
of
the
Skill
Sheet
will
indicate
that
all
three
questions
were
asked
and
answered.
STRUCTURE Affirmation Did
the
teacher
affirm
the
student
(state
something
positive,
hopeful)?
Yes
No
Reason Did
the
teacher
state
a
reason
for
the
conversation
(e.g.
regularly
scheduled,
special
concern,
requested
by
parent,
etc.)?
Yes
No
Plan A
plan
will
be
documented
by
completion
of
the
second
segment
of
the
Skill
Sheet.
Appointment The
follow-up
appointment
will
be
documented
by
completion
of
the
third
segment
of
the
Skill
Sheet.
CHARACTERISTICS Congruent Did
the
teacher
seem
natural?
Did
the
conversation
flow
naturally?
Did
verbal
and
non-verbal
messages
agree?
Yes
No
Accepting Was
the
teacher
non-critical?
Did
the
teacher
listen
without
judgment
(and
not
try
to
sell
a
point
of
view)?
Yes
No
Respectful Did
the
teacher
demonstrate
belief
in
the
students
goals,
the
students
strengths,
and
the
students
competence?
Yes
No
Encouraging Did
the
teacher
express
confidence
in
the
students
ability
to:
clarify
goals,
identify
resources,
and
accurately
gauge
progress?
Was
the
student
encouraged
to
carry
out
the
action
plan?
Yes
No Teachers Signature ______________________________________ School Leader or Metis Fellow ______________________________