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© Department of Secondary Education, 2007 © Department of Secondary Education, 2007 National Board Candidate Support Session 4 CSU Fullerton College of Education

National Board Candidate Support Session 4

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National Board Candidate Support Session 4. CSU Fullerton College of Education. Agenda. Parking Lot for Questions Analyzing Student Work As Evidence Breakout Sessions Burning Questions and Wrap Up. Parameters for Candidate Support. CSPs will - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

National Board Candidate Support

Session 4

CSU FullertonCollege of Education

Page 2: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Agenda

• Parking Lot for Questions • Analyzing Student Work As

Evidence• Breakout Sessions• Burning Questions and Wrap Up

Page 3: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Parameters for Candidate Support

• CSPs will– be available via e-mail to read

entries and respond to questions– read written work ONLY once– ask questions to focus your entry,

but not serve as editors– act as facilitators, but not as

instructors, mentors or evaluators

Page 4: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Parameters for Candidate Support

• Candidates will– make connections within your

group, and exchange contact information

– collaborate and support one another

– consult the www.nbpts.org or

1-800-22-TEACH

Page 5: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Page 6: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Sources of Evidence of Teacher’s Performance

• Samples of student work• Assessments• Videotapes of classroom

practice• Documentation of

accomplishments outside the classroom

Page 7: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Analyzing Student Work as Evidence

Refer to:• Specific instructions for each entry• “Format Specifications,” provided

for each entry• Scoring guide for each entry• Accomplished Teaching Chapter 11,

and Chapter 12, Part 1

Page 8: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Evidence Student Work Provides:

• What students are asked to do.

• How student responses are interpreted by the teacher.

• What the teacher does with the information provided by the student work.

Page 9: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

What is “quality” evidence?

• Evidence should relate to the stated learning goal/objective

• Evidence should be specific – focus when possible on what students say, do, write, draw, ask

Page 10: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Student Work AnalysisAnalysis of Instruction and Student Work

AYA ELA 

–Danielle’s responses show she is able to analyze, understand, and appreciate texts. She writes in her journal how the book My Darling My Hamburger relates to a moral struggle.

Page 11: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Student Work AnalysisAnalysis of Instruction and Student Work AYA ELA

 Danielle’s responses show an independent reader who is able to analyze, understand and appreciate different texts. For example, Danielle shows understanding an appreciation when she writes that My Darling My Hamburger was “a great book with the emphasis on moral decisions and their effects.” Previously in her journal she stated “I think that Sean made the right decision by not marrying Liz. Not only were they both too young and still in school, but they would have a baby to care for and support also.” Danielle is not only showing her understanding of the text, but also she ties her journal entry to the major emphasis of the unit given that the unit was based on moral struggles.

Page 12: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

MC GEN Entry 2Thematic Exploration: Connection to

Science

-In the first assignment Darryl follows the scientific process. It is apparent that he has a good understanding as he moves through the process and by his strong concluding hypothesis   

Page 13: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

MC GEN Entry 2Thematic Exploration: Connection to Science

In the first assignment (observation of the water cycle) Darryl follows the scientific inquiry process. It is apparent that he has a good understanding as he moves through the process and by his strong concluding hypothesis. He articulates very well both the concept of the water cycle and how it was modeled in the experiment and the big idea of change in the cycle. An example of this is in his concluding hypothesis when he summarizes the process by stating, “the water vapor condenses…cooler air makes a cloud…water vapor accumulates…water droplets grow in size and become too heavy for the cloud…then precipitation is formed.”

Page 14: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

What to Submit

If student work or material is (a):

Submit a:

Piece of writing in any genre or form

Clear copy or original

Three-dimensional Photograph

Song Written copy

Film or Video Transcript and/or storyboard

Oral Discourse Transcript

Software Written description and screen prints

Page 15: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

When Choosing Student Work, Consider the Following

• The purpose of student work is to understand evidence provided in the written commentary.

• Emphasize quality over quantity.• Choice of student work varies from

one entry to another.• What kinds of things about teaching

practice can and can’t be seen in student work.

• Assessors are reading for evidence.

Page 16: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Tips to Remember• Follow requirements in the “Format

Specifications.”• Submit only the number of student

work samples required by the entry.• Show only student’s first name to

ensure anonymity.• Consult each entry for page limits.• Include samples that are most

important in your certificate area!

Page 17: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

The Bottom Line is That:

Student work presented as evidence should reflect

clear connections between stated goals, accomplished teaching and student learning.

Page 18: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Entries Featuring Assessment

Selecting students:You should select at least six students as

potential cases and collect or make copies of the assessments and the students’ responses. Only two or three of these will be chosen to analyze.

Selecting Assessments:The assessments should be appropriate to

the task and learning objectives to which they are matched.

Page 19: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

More about Assessments and Student Responses

• The assessment may be the same for each student.

• It may be formal or informal, but at least one of the assessments should be something produced by the student, although it does not necessarily have to be written.

• The assessments may be given in any mode (unless specified in the format specifications), and the responses may be collected in any mode, drawings, art, projects, models, presentations, essays, cloze exercises, tests, and others.

Page 20: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Student work regarding

assessment should show growth.

Page 21: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Breakout Groups

Page 22: National Board  Candidate Support  Session 4

© Department of Secondary Education, 2007© Department of Secondary Education, 2007

Wrap-up

• Parking Lot Questions• Evaluations• Next Session

February 07, 2009“Reflective Practice and

Understanding Evidence”