Sunday, March 5, 2023

This is how we do it.

 This is how we do it, all hands are in the air. And wave them from here to there 
I'm kinda buzzed, it's all because
(This is how we do it)
BLOOMER does it like nobody does
(This is how we do it)

Wave your Hands in the air
Teacher Clarity

The formula to 'do it' and make an impact includes having clarity with your learning intentions and success criteria.  Finding a solution to this issue is based on starting with the standard; collaborating with your teammates and using your materials to understand.  Last week in third and fourth grade Bri facilitated a discussion using the introduction of a bridges unit.  I noticed that the descriptions included the developmental arc as well as models that explained how the standards can be taught throughout the unit.  In the second grade PLC  Julie and I had a discussion with Sam and Katie about breaking down the success criteria into manageable chunks that included potential misconceptions.  They choose to put those in the notes of their slide.  They were prepared to confer with kids who needed a prompt, cue or direct instruction based on their questions to check understanding.  

Teacher clarity is both a method and a mindset, and it has an effect size of 0.84 (Hattie, 2022). It's teaching that is organized and intentional. It brings a forthrightness and fairness to the classroom because student learning is based on transparent expectations. 

I'm Kind of buzzed and it's all because...
Guided Instruction

Jones Math
Bigley Reading
Scherb Reading
This is how we do it.   Guided Instruction at it's finest.  Carol Bigley had assessed her students in reading comprehension.  During the assessment she reviewed as kids worked and noticed that the five students shown had a serious misconception.  They are capable readers but were using their own background rather than the author's words to back their inference.  She prompted and cued. I noticed very quickly that the students took on the concept independently.  Amy Scherb was also monitoring as kids did the comprehension assignment.  She did more cuing with a few kids as they were not able to hit the learning target without a heavier scaffold.  It wasn't one size fits all it was: you get what you need.  Finally, in the third photo Felicia Jones was working with two students who were unable to grasp the standard algorithm.  She walked them through the problems and gave them manipulatives to manage the place value of fair trade.  When they had finished the problem she had them compare this work to their previous assignment where the same problem was.  Like Carol she led a discussion helping the students realize their error and them gave them an opportunity to learn from their mistakes.

Two primary benefits of effective guided practices are 1) the lesson is focused and 2) the teacher gives clear instructions to students defining “when” and “how” to use a particular strategy. The teacher gives the students guided practice using the strategy and provides feedback on their use of the strategy.


Scaffolding for learning is the key to guided instruction.  You are working toward reaching Vygotsky's "zone of proximal development."  This is the sweet spot in learning; it's the distance between what a learner can do independently and what can be accomplished with the help of a "knowledgeable other." This is a critical concept to understand so you can scaffold learning.  You must have clarity, know when and how to scaffold and then use formative assessment to determine when kids have learned.  
You need clarity.  
You need questions, prompts and cues.  
                                                                                This is how we do it.


Consider what your plan will be.  How will you know that you have made the difference and prepared kids to be independent in their learning.  What will you do?  What will your PLC do?  How will you use student work to guide your actions? 

You know that this is how we do itThis is how we do it 
You gon' make it,Keep on doing what you doing, man 

4 comments:

  1. 1st Grade: Our plan is to continue to use guided instruction in all areas of our day. We really value small group instruction tailored to exactly what kids needed determined by assessment - DFA/CFA. We will continue to discuss like children and maybe even find ways to share students who are in common situations or understandings. We continue to monitor progress and fluidly move students within groupings based on how they are performing.

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  2. As we are conferring and observing students with DFAś and student work, we will make sure to guide them with the amount of guidance each needs. We will make sure we are clear when teaching and explaining.

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  3. As a team we discussed that students will be able to accurately self assess their work. As a team we will use our PLC time to look at ways to encourage students to use the LI/SC to when assessing their work.

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  4. 2nd Grade: As a team we will continue to use DFA and CFA data to drive instruction and lean into what our students need each day. We will use the learning intentions and success criteria to prompt and cue students in their thinking.

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