Learn By Doing

A Lifelong Learner Shares Thoughts About Education

  • From The Oregonian.  It appears that our measurements may be changing and this will affect what we do and how we may do it.

    by BETSY HAMMOND, THE OREGONIAN  •  MARCH 13, 2012

    kitzschool.jpgMichael Lloyd / The OregonianGov. John Kitzhaber, shown walking the halls of Gladstone High School in 2010, wants every Oregon school board to specify the high school graduation rate and other results it aims to deliver in 2013.

    By June, every school board in Oregon must specify how much it aims to improve student performance in 100 areas next year, from the percentage of ninth-graders passing at least six classes to the share of African American, Latino and special education students who earn diplomas.

    After hours of debate, Gov. John Kitzhaber’s overarching education board agreed unanimously Tuesday what the state’s new achievement compacts with local school districts will include — and what they will exclude.

    After critics complained the needs of some students might get ignored, the board agreed to scrap its plan to lump all minority, low-income, disabled and limited English students into one big “disadvantaged students” group.

    Instead, all 197 school boards will have to specify achievement targets for students in 10 groups, most of which have fared poorly in Oregon schools, including minority groups, students with disabilities, talented-and-gifted students and students learning English as a second language, in addition to setting targets for the district’s students as a whole.

    Instituting annual achievement compacts, which ask school boards, community college boards and university presidents to focus on key outcomes at the same time they set their yearly budgets, is the centerpiece of Kitzhaber’s plan for education reform in Oregon this year.  OEIB Adopted Working Compact_K12_3-13-13

    There are no consequences for a school district or college that meets all its performance targets — or fails to meet any of them.

    But Kitzhaber and his team are optimistic that the act of publicly setting goals each spring will spur big gains in the state’s education outcomes, especially the share of students who graduate from high school and who earn college credentials.

    The state aims to have 100 percent of students graduate from high school and 80 percent earn a college or industry credential by 2025. Currently, about 75 percent graduate from high school and fewer than half of Oregon adults have a college credential, such as an associate’s degree.

    “This will put more focus on raising that completion rate, whether it’s high school or college,” said Tim Nesbitt, the governor’s point person on the compacts. “And it’s building a culture of goal-setting and collaboration and bringing it down to the local level.”

    Every Oregon school board will receive a customized compact form by April 2, he said. It will show what percentage of the district’s students have met most of the 100 benchmarks in the past. A few of the benchmarks, such as the share of high school students who graduate with at least nine college credits, are so new that the state doesn’t have statistics and districts will have to calculate those themselves.

    School boards have until July 2 to tell the state how high they’ve set their targets for 2012-13. Nesbitt encouraged parents and community groups, as well as teachers and principals, to weigh in on how lofty their school board’s goals should be.

    If a school board aims too low, it might get a visit from the state’s new chief education officer, who will be hired this spring, Nesbitt said. That person, with broad authority over early childhood, public schools, community colleges and universities, will have the right to try to persuade a school board to raise its goals, but not the authority to order it.

    The governor’s 13-member education oversight board, formally titled the Oregon Education Investment Board, did not settle on the measurements it wants in its achievement compacts with community colleges, public universities, the university system and the Oregon Health Sciences University medical and nursing schools. It plans to decide those on March 27, shortly before the April 2 deadline to distribute them to those higher education institutions.

    Many parents, teachers and advocacy groups urged the board not to overemphasize standardized tests scores in the compacts with school districts. In the end, only 23 of the 100 performance points are primarily about test scores — how many students in 11 categories pass the third-grade reading test and the third-grade math test, along with the number of schools put on a federal needs-improvement list.

    The single largest factor is how many students graduate — whether in four years or five, on a special education diploma or a regular one. That accounts for 33 of the 100 marks.

    The big education board has not decided when or how it will check each district’s results and review how close it came to reaching the targets it set. The board will discuss and decide that this summer, Nesbitt said.

    Betsy Hammond

  • Getting Started with K20alt

    K20alt allows educators from around the country the opportunity to collaborate, dialogue, engage in lesson study and creation, and acquire content-specific PD all at the touch of a button through Virtual Communities of Practice. These groups are meant to engage and empower educators by providing a means by which they can share expertise, create content, and improve pedagogy. The free services that are provided within these Virtual Communities of Practice are outlined below.

    Authentic Lessons and Lesson Groups

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  • It isn’t just lifting the lowest 30 state standards to real college and career readiness levels, but the tie with OER, that will be the legacy of the Common Core State Standards Initiative.

    Tom Vander Ark on GettingSmart.com says that the new standards unleashed a timely wave of investment in digital content.

    He goes on to list a small group of updating going on and although he mushes the updates driven by Technology in and doesn’t include current leaders in OER, it is a fun list to at least ponder along with each of our own content providers and tools.

    EdWeeks’s Catherine Gewetrz wrote a good summary of the wave of new Core-aligned content.  She mentioned McGraw-Hill but left out Pearson’s substantial across the board investment in Common Core resources.

    The Core has provided the impetus for providers like Apex Learning, American Virtual Academy, and Compass Learning to update their curriculum.  Compass is shifting from courses to objects and Flash to HTML5 to enable anywhere & any device learning.

    MIND Research Institute just launched a touch version of its visual ST Math.  The program has posted great results with twice weekly lab use.  Now that it is available on tablets it opens up a world of possibilities for expanded use—and impact.

    Learn Capital portfolio companies leading the shift to the Common Core include:

    • Mastery Connect provides a platform to connect Common Core goals with classroom practice through the innovative use of on-­‐demand micro-­assessments sourced from a nationwide network of educators.
    • Mangahigh makes compelling middle grade math games with embedded Core-aligned assessment and achievement analytics.
    • Bloomboard (formerly Formative Learning) provides online professional development.
    • LearnZillion launched a highly flexible, ultra low cost production model for generating Common Core digital curricula that rapidly iterates and improves through use.
    • StudySync models the deeper learning and rich discourse incorporated in Core standards.

    Core standards are also the basis for next generation assessments in development by the Race to the Top funded testing consortia—PARCC and SBAC.  These online assessments provide a useful timeline for the shift from print to digital instructional materials.

    Common Core State Standards provide a national platform for innovation.  For the first time, content developers can invest for a national market.  As illustrated above, the Core has triggered a wave of investment in engaging, personalized learning content and tools.

  • OER K-12 Bill Passes in U.S. Washington State

    From the Creative Commons Blog and I think it is about time someone actually addressed key issues in Education and this is indeed one of them.

    There was exciting open policy news from U.S. Washington State (WA) last evening.

    HB 2337 “Regarding open educational resources in K-12 education” passed the Senate (47 to 1) and is on its way back to the House for final concurrence. It already passed the House 88 to 7 before moving to the Senate.

    The bill directs the Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) to support the 295 WA K-12 school districts in learning about and adopting existing open educational resources (OER) aligned with WA and common core curricular standards (e.g., CK-12 textbooks & Curriki). The bill also directs OSPI to “provide professional development programs that offer support, guidance, and instruction regarding the creation, use, and continuous improvement of open courseware.”

    The opening section of the bill reads:

    • “The legislature finds the state’s recent adoption of common core K-12 standards provides an opportunity to develop high-quality, openly licensed K-12 courseware that is aligned with these standards. By developing this library of openly licensed courseware and making it available to school districts free of charge, the state and school districts will be able to provide students with curricula and texts while substantially reducing the expenses that districts would otherwise incur in purchasing these materials. In addition, this library of openly licensed courseware will provide districts and students with a broader selection of materials, and materials that are more up-to-date.”

    While focus of this bill is to help school districts identify existing high-quality, free, openly licensed, common core state standards aligned resources available for local adoption; any content built with public funds, must be licensed under “an attribution license.”

    This legislature has declared that the status quo — $130M / year for expensive, paper-only textbooks that are, on average, 7-11 years out of date — is unacceptable. WA policy makers instead decided their 1 million+ elementary students deserve better and they have acted.

  •  

    appinventor-doc-diagram

    The first beta version of MIT’s App Inventor for Android popped up on the web today at appinventor.mit.edu.

    The App Inventor, first launched by Google in mid-2010 before being discontinued and open-sourced last year, allows just about anyone to dive directly into Android app development with a simple web-based interface. To get started with the public beta, all you need is a Google Account and a little creativity.

    However the launch seems to have stressed the MIT servers, there are reports of responsiveness being up and down.