
Coaches' Corner
Working together for student success!
Director's November Notes
Consider which of these are your strengths: how can you model for colleagues? Which elements offer opportunities for you to grow? Seek out support from our coaches and colleagues to learn how to increase student engagement and achievement. Remember, we are working together for student success!
Cheri Leffler's 4th Grade Math Stations
This month has been a busy, yet exciting month for me as the elementary’s instructional coach. I have been inundated with requests from teachers who are ready to try new things or who are really interested in collaborating. I have been modeling, co-teaching, co-planning, and brainstorming with so many of you. These are truly the highlights of my days!!
One of the many successful collaborations I have had this month was with Cheri Leffler. Cheri wanted to try math stations with her students. She and I looked at the standards she was planning to cover on the day of my visit, and we also looked at some previously covered high-priority standards. Keeping the clear learning outcomes in mind, we developed four standards-based stations. Cheri worked with students addressing questions from the lesson at one station while the rest of the students worked independently at three other stations. The students remained engaged and enthusiastic throughout the entire hour. The kids enjoyed their time, had an opportunity to work in a small group with their teacher and receive immediate feedback, and they also had the opportunity to practice and review previously taught skills.
6th Grade PLC with a smooth transition
TMS teachers have been working hard in their Professional Learning Communities. In these times together once a week, teachers examine data, identify barriers to student learning, discuss possible solutions, and select a strategy to apply to this problem. As teachers apply that strategy in their classroom, the PLC monitors progress.
The sixth grade PLC focused on improving the transition time between passing periods and the beginning of class. Teachers established a baseline by recording how many students were off task or disruptive during that transition period. Next, they discussed strategies. Several teachers had used Bell Work in their classrooms but had discontinued that strategy for various reasons. So the team discussed ways to improve upon Bell Work and use it as a strategy for smoother start-of-class transitions.
It was noted that Bell Work needed to meet these requirements: no device needed, no grade required, and no new instructions from day to day.
The team decided to give students a planning sheet at the beginning of each school day. In each of their core classes, students begin the class period by taking out their planning sheet and writing down the “Learning Goal” and “Homework” posted at the front of the room. Students keep planning sheets in their folders until the end of the week when their Success Lab teacher checks them. Teachers continued using this strategy and revisited their baseline data, noting that there was a marked decrease in the number of students disrupting the start of class with off task behavior.
PLC leader and 6th grade English teacher Abby Speck reflected on her team’s work on this goal.
"As a team we are seeing improvement in the transition from hallway to class. We have seen fluctuation in the completion of the bellwork from week to week; however, overall, it has still significantly improved this transition that used to be such a struggle for our kiddos. The majority of kids have a better idea of what to expect in class, and the students who are not doing the bellwork are also not being disruptive because most of the students around them are too busy completing the bellwork to pay attention to their antics. The questions of 'Are we doing anything in class today?' and 'Do we have homework?' are old news with this new procedure!"Ethan Worthington putting theory into practice at THS
The High School November shout out goes to Ethan Worthington. I've had the opportunity to watch the students in US History and in the AP Microeconomics class and was very impressed with what they are doing. As I stood in the classroom before the bell, I heard him in the hallway asking students individually about assignments, about upcoming deadlines, encouraging them to talk to other teachers and giving advice on how to approach that task. The students walked in and started working; they knew how to read the board, gather materials and get started on their bell work.
Mr. Worthington had the students use whiteboards to respond to open-ended questions and to show their understanding through the lessons. During checks for understanding, he would ask the students to reflect on and share what they found difficult. He was using real-world connections and situations to keep the students engaged and help activate background knowledge. Ethan has been implementing some elements of the effective lesson plan template to maximize student learning. Wow, Ethan! Way to knock it out of the park!