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Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D.

Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

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Page 1: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Effective Professional Development Using the

SIOP® Model

Jana Echevarria, Ph.D.

Page 2: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Content Objectives: Participants will become familiar with the

SIOP® Model. Participants will examine a process for

professional development.

Language Objectives: Participants will begin to develop a SIOP®

-related lexicon. Participants will discuss how the SIOP®

Model serves as an instructional framework for enhancing literacy.

Page 3: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Students Identified as Culturally Diverse

From 1991-92 to 2001-02, the number of LEP students grew 95% while the total enrollment increased only 12% (National Clearinghouse for English Language Acquisition, 2002).

Culturally diverse students have consistently lagged behind their English speaking peers academically.

Overall, English learners are not getting the support they need to develop academic literacy skills.

Page 4: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Students Identified as Culturally Diverse

The educational reform movement and the No Child Left Behind Act clearly offer opportunities and challenges for students learning English.

Increasing academic rigor and delivering standards-based instruction appropriately for ELLs relies on the qualifications and experience of the teachers and the availability of appropriate curricula and instructional materials.

Page 5: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Closing the Achievement Gap(Sleeter, 2001)

1. Recruit prospective teachers of diverse backgrounds.(Au & Blake, 2003)

2. Provide all teachers with stronger preparation for teaching students from diverse backgrounds.

Page 6: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

The SIOP Model(Echevarria, Vogt, & Short, 2000)

Preparation

Building Background

Comprehensible Input

Strategies

Interaction

Practice & Application

Lesson Delivery

Review & Assessment

Page 7: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Research Definition of SDAIE/Sheltered Instruction

A means for making grade-level academic content (e.g., science, social studies, math) more accessible for English language learners while at the same time promoting their English language development.

The practice of highlighting key language features and incorporating strategies that make the content comprehensible to students.

Page 8: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

SIOP® Model of Sheltered Instruction

Cooperative learning

Learning Strategies

Multiple Intelligences

Standards

Writers Workshop

Flexible Grouping

Reading First

DifferentiatedInstruction

Page 9: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Development of the SIOP Model (CREDE Research Project)

After 4 years of teacher-researcher collaborative research, the SI project developed a model of effective sheltered instruction, operationalized in the Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol (SIOP) (Echevarria, Vogt & Short, 2000).

After several years of field-testing the SIOP, a study was conducted to establish the validity and reliability of the instrument (Garino, Echevarria, Short, Schick, Forbes & Rueda, 2001). Findings indicated that the SIOP is a highly reliable and valid measure of sheltered instruction.

Page 10: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Applications of the SIOP®

Teacher lesson plan checklist Teacher self-reflection tool Classroom observation tool by

administrators Supervision and observation tool of

student teachers Program of professional development

Page 11: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

SIOP® Professional Development Program Book 2 Videos (3 additional summer 2005) Professional development manual SIOP® Digest Series SIOP® Institutes

SIOP® I & SIOP® II SIOP® for Administrators

Page 12: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Current Implementation and Emerging Findings

Lela Alston Elementary School Phoenix, AZ

Page 13: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

One School’s StoryLela Alston Elementary School The nine elementary schools in the district are

similar in demographics: High LEP population High poverty Mostly Latino

Lela Alston School demographics: 97% free/reduced lunch 57% mobility 74% LEP 10% identified as special education

Page 14: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

One School’s Story

In 2002, the principal, teacher/coach and coach attended a SIOP Institute.

Training began 1 component at a time throughout a two-year period.

Teachers were observed and coached to ensure fidelity to the SIOP Model.

Current school year, the SIOP Model continues to be the only professional development program at Alston School.

Page 15: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Professional Development: In her own words….

Page 16: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

400

450

500

550

600

Arizona’s Instrument to Measure Standards (AIMS)

Spring 2004 Grade 3

Esp

eran

za

Als

ton

Mit

chel

l

P T

Co

e

Math Reading Writing

Mean Standard Score – Arizona Department of Education

Page 17: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Off To A Good Start

36% Above Grade Level

14% Below Grade Level

50% At Grade Level

This graph represents the third grade students who began kindergarten at Alston Elementary in the fall of 2001.

86% of third grade students who began in Alston’s full-day kindergarten program, are currently performing at or above grade level.

Page 18: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Alston School 2002-04Stanford 9 Scores

Page 19: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Teachers’ Perspectives:

Impact of the SIOP® Model on Students

Page 20: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Conclusion

Although professional development is a complex and multifaceted endeavor, the SIOP

is an effective tool for improving teachers’ instructional practice

Page 21: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Goals of SIOP Model ImplementationELLs who are

- additive bilinguals - proficient readers- successful students

Teachers who are- effective educators- reflective professionals

Schools that are- productive - embracing of diversity

Page 22: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

For More Information:www.siopinstitute.net

SIOP Institute

August 1-3, 2005 Honolulu

SIOP for Administrators

May 19-20, 2005 Scottsdale

SIOP II

August 4-5, 2005 Honolulu

Become a Certified SIOP Model Trainer

Attend a SIOP Institute and SIOP II

Page 23: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Questions?

Page 24: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

SIOP Teacher Feedback Teachers who took our SIOP-based course last year

commented most on the benefits of writing and stating the content and language objectives before a lesson.  It helps the teacher stay focused and at the end of the lesson gives the teacher and students a sense of accomplishment when they go back and check off what they learned. (Alaska)

I saw one teacher get a lesson back on track by pointing to the objectives and stating that they had a lot to cover so they needed to stay focused.

(Arizona)

Page 25: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

SIOP Teacher Feedback I am a classroom teacher. My students appreciate

having the objectives up and often times they add to the objectives after class. They also write the objectives in their agendas at the beginning of each class. (Texas)

Not only does it help the students but when the teacher has to write out the objectives, s/he can be sure that lesson activities do in fact lead towards meeting them. (Arkansas)

Page 26: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

SIOP Teacher Feedback This does not really take that much time

once put into practice. It's like writing the date on the board. Plus, look at the advantage of writing complete sentences on the board, students get a spelling lesson, a sentence lesson, and a strategy to help them as adults: that is to write things down.

(Nevada)

Page 27: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

SIOP Teacher Feedback

For ELLs, objectives provide the much needed context that helps them put the individual lessons into their "what is this for, what does this mean to me?“ schema. 

(California)

Page 28: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

National Reading Panel

For teacher education to be effective, it must change both teacher and student behavior.

Page 29: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Professional Development Research The Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol: A Tool

for Teacher-Researcher Collaboration and Professional Development (Short & Echevarria, 1999)

www.siopinstitute.net

The Effect of Sheltered Instruction Staff Development for Middle and High School Teachers. (Hulquist, 2002)

* Preparation, Instruction, Review/Assessment

Page 30: Effective Professional Development Using the SIOP ® Model Jana Echevarria, Ph.D

Professional Development Research After teaching and mentoring 8 teachers to

implement the SIOP to a high degree, Wlazlinski (2003) measured the achievement of 203 students grades K-8. Based on state-mandated tests, students reading scores improved significantly.

Mentoring resulted in teachers’ SIOP ratings improving significantly over 3 time periods.

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