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JJB电竞赛事开盘官方

Written by
August 15th, 2018

Presented by Mark Adato – Transcription Below

 

Introduction

Welcome to the “JJB电竞(兰州)联赛下载v8.3版 Whiteboard Series.” My name is Mark Adato. I am an Implementation Manager on the D and A Team, and today, we’re talking about data driven instruction. So let’s talk about the components that go into the data driven instruction cycle, there are three main pieces. You have assessment, you have analysis, and you have action. And so this is a cycle that you see happening in the classroom and at the school level all the time. So as a teacher, I might give some sort of a baseline, maybe some sort of a diagnostic quiz, something to find out, “Where are my students at and what do they understand right now?” Based on that, I’m gonna do some analysis. I’m going to try to figure out, “What is it that they don’t understand? Where are the gaps in their understanding?” And lastly, what am I gonna do about it? Now that I know what they don’t understand, what they’re having challenges with, what reteaching action steps am I gonna take in order to help them overcome those gaps?

Cycle in the Classroom

And so this is all part of a cycle that we see happening all the time in the classrooms. Now, encompassing this entire framework is the culture, so it’s not just the culture of the classroom, like, “How do students and teachers talk about data?” but it’s a culture of the school itself. How do teachers talk about data with each other as well? For example, a classroom with a healthy culture around data would have students asking questions like, “How did I do on this assessment?” They would be able to analyze their own data, looking at their own graphs and their own reports, and they’d say, “Hey, this is what I think I need to do about it,” mister or missus teacher, “Can you help me out and give me some resources?”

Healthy School Culture

A school with a healthy culture around the DDI cycle would have teachers in a PLC, or in a data team, or whatever you might call it, getting together and saying, “Hey, based on this assessment that we all gave our kids, this common assessment, here’s what my kids had trouble with. I see that your kids did really well. What is it that you did that I can now do? What materials did you use? What strategies did you use that I can now borrow for my classroom?” And so that culture really encompasses the entire framework, and really puts it together. Now, a lot of people think the data driven instruction process only happens with big scary benchmarks, or tests that happen, like, once every one or two months. In reality, this is a process that happens with both formal and informal data.

What if They Don’t Get It?

For example, if I’m a teacher and I just gave a homework assignment to my kids last night, and I’m walking around and I’m hearing some confusion, I’m noticing that they didn’t quite get one of the concepts, that’s my analysis piece of that informal data. And I realize, you know, I need to do something about it, so maybe I’m going to have a quick reteaching session. Maybe I’ll give an anecdote, or an example, or have my kids try the problem in a different way. And now, what I’m gonna do is I’m gonna call on my students one more time at random and say, “Can you please explain to me again what you didn’t understand beforehand?” That would be an example of using the entire data driven instruction cycle in maybe 15 minutes based on some homework that I gave the night before. It doesn’t need to be a big scary process. In fact, it’s just me, as a teacher, paying attention to what my kids are doing and then doing something about it.

Make Sure You Use Data Driven Instruction

If I’m a school or a district leader and I want to make sure that all of my teachers and school leaders are using data driven instruction within the classroom or within the school, I need to know that leaders at all levels are gonna have to be involved. This is not a process that I can hand off to someone and say, “Here, go ahead and use this. I heard this works in classrooms.” This is something that I need to be bought into, and I need to make sure my teachers are bought into, and I can do that best by modeling for them how the data driven instruction cycle looks in a classroom and at a school and district level.

Conclusion

So please join us again for another “JJB电竞(兰州)联赛下载v8.3版 Whiteboard Series.” Again, my name is Mark Adato, and we have been talking about data driven instruction with JJB电竞(兰州)联赛下载v8.3版 Education.

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JJB电竞(兰州)联赛下载v8.3版 Education is a provider of educational technology and services offering innovative data, assessment and student information solutions. Serving K-12 schools, our cloud-based software and services currently assist more than 1,600 school districts in promoting student achievement and success.

Ready to discover your one-stop shop for your district’s educational needs? Let’s talk .

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1 Comment

  1. Natalie Keenen on July 17, 2020 at 12:34 pm

    Yes! It has to be a school wide push and I love showing our students their data and charts so they can see themselves grow.

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