Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools [email protected]

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Mathematics Standards of Learning Instruction and Assessment Update TCTM – General Session Princess Anne High School, Virginia Beach October 1, 2013 Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools [email protected]

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Mathematics Standards of Learning Instruction and Assessment Update TCTM – General Session Princess Anne High School, Virginia Beach October 1, 2013. Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools [email protected]. Instruction and Assessment. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools [email protected]

Page 1: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Mathematics Standards of Learning Instruction and Assessment Update

TCTM – General SessionPrincess Anne High School, Virginia BeachOctober 1, 2013

Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s [email protected]

Page 2: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Instruction and Assessment

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Page 3: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

“The content of the mathematics standards is intended to support the five

goals for students”

- 2009 Mathematics Standards of Learning

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Page 4: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Five goals…for students to

• become mathematical problem solvers that• communicate mathematically; • reason mathematically;• make mathematical connections; and• use mathematical representations to model

and interpret practical situations

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Process Goals

Page 5: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Increased Rigor…

Seriously, what does that mean?

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Page 6: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Level of Cognitive Demand in Activities

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Page 7: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Level of Cognitive Demand in Activities

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Leve

l of C

ogni

tive

Dem

and

Low

Med

Med

High

Page 8: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Level of Cognitive Demand in Activities

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Leve

l of C

ogni

tive

Dem

and

Simplify.

Is the value of this expression more or less than 1? How do you know?

Write a real-world problem using this expression.

Page 9: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

So how could we increase cognitive demand ?• Mark has ¾ cup of water and Mary has ½ cup

of water. How much do they have all together?

• Write the equation of the line that passes through the points (2,3) and (4, 8).

Page 10: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Collaboration is Key

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Page 11: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Learning Community

Planning/Pacinglong/short term

Instruction what/how

Common Assessments

development/ modification

Analyze Data and Student

Work

Page 12: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Increased Rigor in Daily Instruction and Assessment• Consider the level of cognitive demand that

instructional activities and assessments require

• Consider the engagement level of the activity• Reflect on the kinds of questions that you are

asking students• Let students struggle with the mathematics

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Page 13: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Effective Questioning When Kids Struggle• Ask students what they know• Ask about their approach to solve• Ask them where they ran into trouble• Ask them why• Restate what they’ve said• Ask them to reflect on possible other routes

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Page 14: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Effective Questioning and Discourse • Ask students to justify and explain their thinking• Have students share their problem solving

approaches with others• Ask them to explain others’ approaches in their

own words• Ask them to evaluate others’ approaches (error

analysis)• Ask them “what if” questions

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Page 15: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Virginia Department of Education• Standards of Learning• Curriculum Framework• Testing blueprints• SOL Institutes (2009, 2010, 2011, 2012)• Instructional Videos• ESS Sample Lesson Plans• Technical assistance documents• SOL Practice Items and Tools Practice• Vocabulary resources 15

Page 16: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

SOL Institutes – FOCUS

2009 •SOL changes (content)

2010 •Vertical articulation of the SOL and areas of greatest challenge (content and pedagogy)

2011 •Process goals (standards) and cognitively rich tasks

2012 •Formative assessments (performance tasks) to inform instruction

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Page 17: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

2013 Mathematics SOL InstitutesParticipants will• Analyze and modify an assessment – compare

expectations of SOL and Curriculum Framework to an assessment and modify it to meet intended expectations; and

• modify an existing instructional task to emphasize process goals and problem solving.

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Page 19: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

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Page 20: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

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Mathematics Instructional Resources

Page 21: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

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Mathematics Instructional Resources

Page 22: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

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Mathematics Instructional Resources

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Mathematics Vocabulary Word Wall Cards

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Page 29: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Practice SOL Items• Practice SOL Items: Available for grades 3-8,

Algebra I, Geometry, and Algebra II• Grades 3-8 Practice Tool: Practice measuring with

the ruler, measuring angles with the protractor, using the four function calculator, and provides a grid for open practice with tools

• EOC Practice Tool: Practice with geometric constructions and provides a grid for open practice with tools

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Page 30: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Current Projects (some of them)

• Mathematics Vocabulary Word Wall Cards– Algebra (includes Algebra I and II)

• SOL to CCSS lookup tables• Technical assistance – box-and-whisker plots• Models for algebraic properties• Division through OSI• Algebra Readiness Diagnostic Test (ARDT)

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Page 31: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Test Development• TEI: Fill-in-the-Blank Items

Frequently asked question: Will a student be marked wrong for not spelling a word correctly in fill-in-the-blank items?

Currently, there are no items that require students

to spell a word to correctly answer a question. Students do not need to enter words. May require letters, numbers, and/or characters.

ABC x<3 1/2 3R431

Page 32: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Test Development

• TEI: Fill-in-the-Blank ItemsFrequently asked question: Can students enter a

decimal equivalent when asked specifically for a fraction?

Acceptable character keys are controlled for student responses. In this case, the decimal would not be an allowable character.

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Page 33: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

Test Development

• TEI: Fill-in-the-Blank ItemsFrequently asked question: Do students have to give an exact answer for FIB items that require them to use a ruler or protractor?

There is a range of acceptable answers for certain items, depending on the type of measure required.

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Page 34: Michael Bolling, Director of Mathematics and Governor’s Schools michael.bolling@doe.virginia.gov

[email protected]

Questions? / Thoughts?

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