Friday, November 18, 2016

November 18

November 18



I am thankful for a wonderful school community, a loving family, and that we are all healthy. I look forward to this time of year. It is going to be a crazy week next week BUT our family must LOVE crazy because we have been doing the same thing every year. On Wednesday we have Thanksgiving with my family and we ALL go grocery shopping together and then cook together and always head out to the park to play a game of kickball. On Thursday we head out to Chris's side of the family to enjoy Thanksgiving with them. On Friday we always head out to get our Christmas tree and start decorating the house. Yes, I spend three days decorating the house inside and out! I enjoy every minute of it!!


The following resources are from Kristen Cherry (thank you): 
Please check out some of these resources in regards to testing and practice!

This website
, from Achieve the Core, has resources on (1) aligning assessments with Common Core standards and SBAC expectations and (2) aligning instruction with the rigor required by the Common Core standards. 

This document on examples of formative assessment practices is useful, but long; however, I have read through it and condensed it down to the essential information here: 
These are really great  DOK resources for ALL SUBJECT AREAS for your use!  

Take a look at these for Academic Conversations, including one specifically for math:




A district is prohibited from requiring students to pay a fee, deposit, or other charge in order to participate in an educational activity as defined in Education Code 49010. A district is also required to provide the supplies, materials, and equipment needed by students to participate in educational activities.  A district may charge fees only when specifically authorized by law.

BP/AR 3260 outline what fees are prohibited and what fees are permissible.



Observable Fish Moments at SV:
Be There: Thank you EVERYONE for cheering everyone in as they arrived to school!! Many smiles!!  Thank you Heather H. for helping out with AR celebration!! 
Play: Enjoy your time with family and friends. 

Choose your attitude: Be thankful. 

Make Their Day:  Great job making a student's day this morning. 

Thursday, November 10, 2016

November 10

November 10


We are BELIEVERS here at Suisun Valley
Goal: Success for every student
Accepts that change (the right change) is necessary to improve student performance
Student interest is more important than personal interest. – our concern is “we” not “me”
Focus on overcoming obstacles and problem solving
View colleagues and organization as a resource

We are problem solvers NOT complainers


Refer to the Report Card section of your Important documents folder for GATE plan, EL report card, and retention forms are located in your google drive.




The word "rigor" is hard to avoid today, and it provokes strong reactions from educators. Policymakers tout its importance. Publishers promote it as a feature of their materials. But some teachers share the view of Joanne Yatvin, past president of the National Council for Teachers of English. To them, rigor simply means more work, harder books, and longer school days. "None of these things is what I want for students at any level," Yatvin says. Part of the problem is that we have adopted the jargon without a clear understanding of what we really mean.
Calculating Cognitive Depth
For classroom teachers, the more important question is one of practice: how do we create rich environments where all students learn at a high level? One useful tool, Norman Webb's Depth of Knowledge Levels, can help teachers meet that challenge. Depth of Knowledge (DoK) categorizes tasks according to the complexity of thinking required to successfully complete them.
Level 1: Recall and Reproduction
Tasks at this level require recall of facts or rote application of simple procedures. The task does not require any cognitive effort beyond remembering the right response or formula. Copying, computing, defining, and recognizing are typical Level 1 tasks.
Level 2: Skills and Concepts
At this level, a student must make some decisions about his or her approach. Tasks with more than one mental step such as comparing, organizing, summarizing, predicting, and estimating are usually Level 2.
Level 3: Strategic Thinking
At this level of complexity, students must use planning and evidence, and thinking is more abstract. A task with multiple valid responses where students must justify their choices would be Level 3. Examples include solving non-routine problems, designing an experiment, or analyzing characteristics of a genre.
Level 4: Extended Thinking
Level 4 tasks require the most complex cognitive effort. Students synthesize information from multiple sources, often over an extended period of time, or transfer knowledge from one domain to solve problems in another. Designing a survey and interpreting the results, analyzing multiple texts by to extract themes, or writing an original myth in an ancient style would all be examples of Level 4.
Recently, educators have begun applying Webb’s DoK to help them design better instruction. Try this exercise to better understand the cognitive depth of the tasks you are using in your classroom and improve the rigor of your instruction:
1.      Keep a list or collection of every task you ask students to do in a day (or in one subject for a week), including classwork, homework, and projects.
2.      Sort the tasks into categories according to the four DoK Levels.
3.      Work with a team of colleagues to review the groupings. Many tasks are easily categorized, but some will require deeper discussion to clarify your understanding of the levels. Strive toward consensus. A few pointers:
·        The verb does not define the level. Instead, consider the cognitive effort that a student will use to complete the task. The verb "describe," for example, could be any level, depending on the kind of description.
·        It is common to find tasks that seem to fall in between levels. When in doubt, assign the higher level.
·        "Extended time" alone does not make a task Level 4. Lower-level tasks that are merely repeated over a period of time are still lower level.
4.      Analyze your groupings. What patterns do you see? Is there a reasonable distribution of tasks across the four levels? Do you notice anything unexpected?
5.      Rewrite a Level 1 or Level 2 task to be at least Level 3. These question stems are helpful in creating good tasks (PDF, 28KB).
Apply as Needed
DOK Levels are not sequential. Students need not fully master content with Level 1 tasks before doing Level 2 tasks. In fact, giving students an intriguing Level 3 task can provide context and motivation for engaging in the more routine learning at Levels 1 and 2.
DOK levels are also not developmental. All students, including the youngest preschoolers, are capable of strategic and extended thinking tasks. What they look like will differ, and what is Level 3 to a kindergarten student may be a Level 1 task for a middle schooler. All students, however, should have opportunities to do complex reasoning.
To find the right balance, ask yourself these questions:
·        What kinds of thinking do I want students to do routinely?
·        If my own child were participating, what would I want him or her to be doing?
·        What's the most effective way to spend the limited classroom time I have?
Decide for yourself how often you should focus on tasks at each level so that students gain the most from the learning opportunities you design.
Regardless of how you define "rigor," the important thing is that students are thinking deeply on a daily basis. Webb's Depth of Knowledge gives you a framework and common language to make that happen in your classroom.


Board Policy of the Week:


The Governing Board recognizes that volunteer assistance in schools can enrich the educational program, increase supervision of students, and contribute to school safety while strengthening the schools' relationships with the community. The Board encourages parents/guardians and other members of the community to share their time, knowledge, and abilities with students. BP/AR 1240 - Volunteer Assistance outlines the process for having volunteers on campus.


Observable Fish Moments at SV:
Be There: Thank you Janice, Kristin, and Katie for doing an AMAZING job for our AR party. Brandon thank you for having student council collect candy for our troops.

Play: LOVE YOUR JOB!! 

Choose your attitude: Be positive during conferences. Parents LOVE to hear what their child shines in.

Make Their Day:  Make Their Day:  THANK YOU: I
would like to take this time to let you know how thankful I am to work with a warm, hard working and dedicated staff that puts students needs first. I am thankful for every day that I come to work and smile at how much we have already accomplished in just a few short months (new staff, academic conferences, setting RIT goals, new math curriculum). I love working here with you, the students and parents!

Friday, November 4, 2016

November 4

November 4



As an educator and a parent myself, conferences can lead to a perspective where I can understand both positions. Parents want their children to feel safe, be happy and learn at school. I know EVERY parent wants this. That is why it is SO important that we make them feel welcome and part of the team when making decisions. Parent/teacher/student conferences is a great time to build relationships with parents. A great question to ask yourself is what do I want from my child's teacher? How would I want to be included? If my child was being disruptive or struggling in class how would I like to be approached?


Have you planned to have your students lead part of the parent/teacher conference? This can easily be done by using the RIT goals students have set for themselves.




This week's board policies
  
The Governing Board recognizes the value of technology such as social media platforms in promoting community involvement and collaboration. The purpose of any official district social media platform shall be to further the district's vision and mission, support student learning and staff professional development, and enhance communication with students, parents/guardians, staff, and community members.

If you operate a district-sponsored social media account, review BP/AR 1114 District-Sponsored Social Media to learn more about the guidelines for content.


Observable Fish Moments at SV:
Be There: Thank you for making it to our harvest festival on Friday. Students LOVED seeing you.

Play: I hope the ENTIRE staff enjoys having lunch today together.

Choose your attitude: Be positive, SMILE

Make Their Day:   Have lunch with a student!