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•
SLO’s and HPDP’s
Best Practices in Education
Setting rigorous and ambitious goals for student growth, combined with the purposeful use of data, leads to…
Greater academic growth and performance by students
Teachers being systematic and strategic in their instruction, which leads to increased teacher performance as well
Teachers reflecting and examining their instructional strategies, techniques and methods to reach each student
Learning Targets
I can explain the purpose of SLO’s and HPDP’s.
I understand the similarities and differences between HPDP’s and SLO’s.
I can recognize high quality SLOs and learn how to develop, review, monitor,
approve, and assess them.
What is an EFFECTIVE EDUCATOR?
An effective teacher consistently uses educational practices that foster the
intellectual, social and emotional growth of children, resulting in measurable growth that can be
documented in meaningful ways.
Effectiveness is the goal.Evaluation is the merely the means.
Guiding Principles of the System
An educator evaluation system must deliver information that:– Guides effective educational practice that is
aligned with student learning and development– Documents evidence of effective educator
practice– Documents evidence of student learning– Informs appropriate professional development– Informs educator preparation programs– Supports a full range of human resource decisions– Is credible, valid, reliable, comparable, and
uniform across districts
Educator Effectiveness Measures
Practice measures
District Choice
State Assessment (value-added model)
District Assessment
Student Learning Objectives
School-wide Reading (Elementary-Middle)Graduation (High School)
Educator Practice Student Growth
HPDP Student Learning Objective
What do we know? HPDP & Grade Level SMART Goals
What is a SLO?
What are SLOs?
SLOs are collaboratively established goals for growth in student achievement at the classroom level that are:– Specific and measurable– Aligned to standards and to school improvement
plans/district strategic plans (if applicable)– Based on learning needs as determined by data– Established for individual teachers, teams, or schools,
and for all students or selected subgroups– Developed collaboratively by educators and their
supervisors– Based on rigorous, yet attainable growth goals– Goals can be GROWTH or ATTAINMENT– Behaviorial goals allowable only if they directly
support an academic goal
Student Learning Objectives
Baseline data
Goal approval meeting with
Principal
Mid year review meeting with Principal
Scoring meeting with Principal
HPDP/ SMART Goal Template
By June 2013, _____% of ___________ will score_______ on ___________assessment.
Possible Evidence Sources• Many potential sources of SLO evidence:
– End of course exams (with appropriate pre-test/baseline measure of student knowledge)
– High-quality classroom assessments– Performances/Portfolios of student work (when
scored with a rigorous rubric)
• SLO evidence should generally be kept separate from data used to determine areas of student need, in order to avoid “double-counting” of student outcomes– WKCE is not an appropriate SLO evidence source
(measures November-November growth)– Use of benchmark data (MAP, etc.) discouraged, but
could be appropriate in limited circumstances
SLO Evidence
October/ NovemberBaselineToday’s Staff MeetingNov. 12 Day 6
November 20 Roll Through
What stays the same?
What changes?
We write a student learning goal each year similar to HPDP & Grade Level SMART Goals.
We used data to create a goal based on a specific need.
We could look at a smaller subset of students.
We can write it collaboratively. Stronger data measurements.
Similar process of using data, approval, and end of the year conference.
Rubrics are used to approve the goal and evaluate it at the end of the process.
A mid year conference will be held to look at data and refine goal and plan as needed.
We need to use a different data source than WKCE or MAPS.
Teachers who are not directly tied to the WKCE or district assessment may need to write 2-3 SLO’s.
How is Hudson Preparing for Educator Effectiveness?
Pilot of CESA 6 Practice Tool High School- Kevin Moore
Middle School- Jim DalluhnEP Rock- Amy HambourgNorth Hudson- Dolf Schmidt
WI DPI Pilot of SLO (Student Learning Objectives) Hudson Prairie
Educator Effectiveness Timeline
Work Time