Literacy Continuous Improvement Plan: Cartwright School District #83 K-5
Literacy Continuous Improvement Plan: Cartwright School District #83 K-5
Literacy Continuous Improvement Plan: Cartwright School District #83 K-5
IMPROVEMENT PLAN
CARTWRIGHT SCHOOL DISTRICT #83 K-5
Current Reality
CONTINUOUS
IMPROVEMENT Needs Assessment
PLAN:
ENSURING Establish SMART Goals
IMPACT ON
STUDENT Develop plan
ACHEIVMENT
Monitor Progress
CURRENT REALITY:
GUIDED READING LEVEL
(BAS) Guided Reading Level
120%
100%
80% 42%
52% 48% 51%
55% 60%
60%
40%
58%
48% 52% 49%
20% 45% 40%
0%
Kindergarten 1st grade 2nd grade 3rd grade 4th grade 5th grade
100%
40%
0%
Kindergarten 1st grade 2nd grade 3rd grade 4th grade 5th grade
100%
80% 43%
59% 54%
63% 61%
70%
60%
40%
57%
41% 46%
20% 37% 39%
30%
0%
Kindergarten 1st grade 2nd grade 3rd grade 4th grade 5th grade
• District will hire and place a • PLCs will unpack priority • PLCs will use common
literacy coach at each standard to develop assessment data to
elementary school. understanding. intentionally plan content
• District will form committies • PLCs will create common lessons based on student
to identify priority standards assessments on priority need.
for grade K-5 comprised of standards to measure student • Teachers will utilize the 3
teachers, coaches and success. types of lessons to maximize
administration. student understanding of
priority standards.
YEAR 1 AND 2
CURRICULUM
DESIGN
• The tenants of quality PLC work are
grounded in:
CONCEPTS:
clustering into units
– Unpacking of standards to plan for
Tomlinson, C. & McTighe, J. (2006). Integrating differentiated instruction & understanding by design. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.
CURRICULUM DESIGN: IDENTIFICATION OF PRIORITY
STANDARDS AND CLUSTERING INTO UNITS
Pairing with Supporting Standards to create units that flow in a scope and sequence:
This supports developing Essential Questions that guide lessons to specific learning
outcomes for students.
Ainsworth, L. (2013). Prioritizing the Common Core: Identifying the Specific Standards to Emphasize the Most. Englewood, CO: Lead+Learn Press.
CURRICULUM
DESIGN: • PLC teams have learned to calibrate on their understanding of standards:
Tomlinson, C. & McTighe, J. (2006). Integrating differentiated instruction & understanding by design. Alexandria, VA: ASCD
CURRICULUM DESIGN: PLANNING OF INSTRUCTIONAL
STRATEGIES TO ENSURE SUCCESS FOR EACH STUDENT
• After assessments are developed along with descriptive success criteria for visible learning for
students, teachers then can develop their instructional strategies:
– Differentiation
– Scaffolding
– Grouping
– Learning modalities and opportunities
Tomlinson, C. & McTighe, J. (2006). Integrating differentiated instruction & understanding by design. Alexandria, VA: ASCD
YEAR 3
INSTRUCTIONAL
STRATEGIES
THREE CATEGORIES OF TEACHING:
Marzano, R. (2017). The new art and science of teaching (Rev. ed.) Alexandria, VA: ASCD
DESIGN FOCUS AREA:
Content Instruction:
• Direct instruction lessons
• Practicing and deepening lessons
• Knowledge application lessons
Marzano, R. (2017). The new art and science of teaching (Rev. ed.) Alexandria, VA: ASCD
DIRECT INSTRUCTION LESSONS:
Explicit instruction of new content:
• Chunking Content
• Processing Content
• Recording and Representing Content
Marzano, R. (2017). The new art and science of teaching (Rev. ed.) Alexandria, VA: ASCD
PRACTICING AND DEEPENING
INSTRUCTION LESSONS:
Guided practice of new content:
• Using structured practice sessions
• Examining similarities and differences
• Examining errors in reasoning
Marzano, R. (2017). The new art and science of teaching (Rev. ed.) Alexandria, VA: ASCD
KNOWLEDGE APPLICATION LESSONS:
Discovery process of new content:
• Engaging students in cognitively complex tasks
• Providing resources and guidance
• Generating and defending claims
Marzano, R. (2017). The new art and science of teaching (Rev. ed.) Alexandria, VA: ASCD
MONITOR
PR OG RESS
SUPPORT SYSTEMS TO ENSURE THERE IS AN
I M PA C T O N T E A C H E R A C T I O N A N D S T U D E N T
SUCCESS
HOW WILL WE KNOW OUR IMPACT
Admin Literacy Coaches Teachers Students
• Provide opportunities for • Observe, support and provide • Complete surveys measuring PLC • Track personal success on
teacher feedback on feedback on PLC work. team effectiveness and success with mastery of priority
professional development. • Observe and or facilitate peer focused planning and instruction. standards and literacy
• Conduct walk-throughs observations of lessons. • Observe peer lessons and provide benchmark assessments.
utilizing ”look for” • Provide opportunities for teachers feedback and opportunities for
documents created by staff. to reflect on new learning. reflection.
• Monitor student • Monitor student performance on • Monitor student performance on
performance on literacy grade level common asessements common assessments, progress
benchmark assessments. and literacy benchmark monitoring and literacy benchmark
assessments. assessments.
• Increased student performance on
AIMSweb, BAS and MAP.
• Teachers are able to speak to the meaning
of literacy standards and what student
evidence is needed to measure success.
WE WILL ASK
OURSELVES: What leadership
strategies impacted What evidence do
we have?
our success?