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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240806T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240806T163000
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UID:248357-1722956400-1722961800@leo.gradelevelreading.net
SUMMARY:REBROADCAST - Not Without Teachers: Intentional Teacher Development for Improved Student Outcomes
DESCRIPTION:“Teachers want to do right by their students\, and they want to teach using the most evidence-based literacy strategies….So what they need are high-quality professional learning opportunities to specifically collaborate with peers as they work to incorporate new techniques into their classrooms.” – Kira Orange Jones\, Teach Plus \n\nTeachers are the front line in turning curricula and instructional material into learning. Their effectiveness is key in learning and addressing the learning recovery need that the pandemic highlighted. During this Learning Tuesdays session\, Cynthia Hadicke\, Ed.D.\, of AIM Institute for Learning and Research acknowledged that we are having a teacher crisis\, with many veteran teachers leaving the field. Meanwhile\, more and more teachers are coming to the field through alternate certification\, and with this\, it is important that these teachers “understand the depth and complexity of teaching reading.” Jill Hoda of the Mississippi Department of Education added\, “We have to have courageous conversations and look at the ways things were done and how things should be done.” In addition\, she said\, “We need to make sure that not only new teachers but also veteran teachers are grounded in the science of reading.” \nKira Orange Jones of Teach Plus shared a preview of data from the organization’s recent survey of over 300 elementary literacy teachers across 24 states who indicated that they “have received more training in\, feel more comfortable with\, and are spending more time on vocabulary and reading comprehension than they do on phonics\, phonemic awareness and fluency….Almost 40% of teachers surveyed report that they do not receive currently any job-embedded coaching that supports their instruction in teaching all five of the pillars of reading.” \nElizabeth “Liz” Woody-Remington of The Learning Alliance in Indian River County\, Florida\, explained that it’s not simply training that teachers need. It’s the support of the translation science\, which is “job-embedded professional development that is collaborative\, intentional and sustained.” In this session\, we also heard success stories of how states\, districts and schools are implementing this in Mississippi\, Louisiana and Florida. \nIn Mississippi\, they have used the AIM pathways as the foundation for their science of reading training\, providing tiered and regional options that are open to teachers\, coaches and administrators. They have implemented a coaching model that includes comprehensive coach training\, which Hadicke describes as “a non-evaluative piece of the puzzle where teachers have the chance to learn\, practice and apply” skills. Mississippi has seen their NAEP 4th Grade Reading National Ranking move from 50th to 21st between 2013 and 2022. \nIn Jefferson Parish\, the largest district in Louisiana\, they are seeing significant progress also using the AIM pathways. Jones says about this work\, “this is actually possible\, because this proves it can happen at scale….The work that districts and states have taken on in partnership with education doesn’t have to remain an outlier example\, but rather could become the norm.” Jones\, continued adding\, “While initially we\, of course\, believe that experts need to be positioned to drive this type of \nprofessional learning\, what we have found is that teachers trust other teachers the most. And they trust them to provide professional learning and to essentially be responsible for leading continuous improvement efforts and professional learning communities to help teachers incorporate new skills into their practice.” \nLeslie Connelly of the School District of Indian River County\, Florida\, and The Learning Alliance described a program at the Moonshot School in Indian River that they launched with a weeklong summer institute on the science of reading for teachers\, which was attended by 85% of the staff. They have also given their staff extended collaborative planning time — two hours every week plus an additional five hours once every six weeks through a creative special schedule. The Moonshot School also opened demonstration classrooms that are always open for lesson studies and for teachers and coaches to collaborate to improve their practice. There is “buy in from the top level down and everybody gets coached. So\, it’s a very systematic coaching model here….We’re that hub of learning\,” said Connelly.
URL:https://leo.gradelevelreading.net/event/rebroadcast-not-without-teachers-intentional-teacher-development-for-improved-student-outcomes/
CATEGORIES:Past Event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240813T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240813T163000
DTSTAMP:20260405T005935
CREATED:20240715T025448Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240819T055911Z
UID:248364-1723561200-1723566600@leo.gradelevelreading.net
SUMMARY:REBROADCAST - Education Recovery Scorecard: Results and Implications
DESCRIPTION:During the April 9\, 2024 GLR Learning Tuesdays webinar\, The Education Recovery Scorecard: Results and Implications\, John Gomperts with the Campaign for Grade-Level Reading moderated a conversation exploring the results and implications of the Education Recovery Scorecard. The scorecard captured the academic performance of elementary and middle school students across 30 states in the 2022–2023 school year to understand progress in post-pandemic academic recovery in schools. \nSean Reardon\, Ed.D.\, with Stanford Graduation School of Education and Tom Kane\, Ph.D.\, with Harvard Graduate School of Education were the two lead researchers on the Scorecard and discussed key findings and considerations. Reardon shared the mixed news that students made significant gains in academic progress last school year\, yet inequality of performance widened between students from lower-income and higher-income families. Kane directed attendees to four challenges for post-pandemic academic recovery in U.S. schools: the rise in chronic absenteeism; parents’ underestimation of learning loss; the variation of strategies across districts yielding diverse results; and understanding and meeting the scale and intensity of efforts required to help students catch up academically. Kane then called on states to “step up” with funding and support to districts when the federal funding distributed during the pandemic expires in September. \nThree superintendents who have led strong academic recovery in their districts then shared key strategies and approaches they applied to realize this progress. Adrienne Battle\, Ed.D.\, of Metro Nashville Public Schools described a “doubling down” on what works\, including tier-1 instruction\, high-quality instructional materials\, high-dosage tutoring and wraparound services. She also highlighted the district’s mantra of “every student known” and the corresponding personalized student dashboards to understand where every student is academically at any time. Tony B. Watlington Sr.\, Ed.D.\, of the School District of Philadelphia listed his district’s priorities for academic recovery that included student and teacher attendance\, high-quality curriculum and teacher professional development. Mark A. Sullivan\, Ed.D.\, of Birmingham City Schools shared how he added instructional time to the calendar by creating week-long intersessions and encouraging students who were furthest behind academically to attend. These intersessions included academics and enrichment\, and the district successfully recruited about one-third of its students to attend the last round\, contributing to academic recovery. They also invested in tutoring and staffed classrooms with peer professionals for more individualized instruction\, among other strategies. \nCommissioner Susana Cordova\, Ed.D.\, of the Colorado Department of Education offered a state-level perspective on the ways her office has offered support to districts post-pandemic for continued academic recovery\, including through tackling chronic absenteeism and working to “triangulate with data to make sure the services we’re offering are aligned to the needs that we see in the field.” Finally\, Adam Schott with the U.S. Department of Education Office of Elementary and Secondary Education talked about federal funding that the administration would continue to aim to increase\, including Title I and Full-Service Community Schools\, to support sustained academic recovery once the additional federal funds from the pandemic expire. And he urged states and districts to continue their partnership and collaboration with governors\, mayors and community partners to build the political will and champion the investments necessary to continue recovery. \n  \n 
URL:https://leo.gradelevelreading.net/event/rebroadcast-education-recovery-scorecard-results-and-implications/
CATEGORIES:Past Event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240820T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240820T163000
DTSTAMP:20260405T005935
CREATED:20240718T180208Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240825T223433Z
UID:248410-1724166000-1724171400@leo.gradelevelreading.net
SUMMARY:REBROADCAST - Connecting Communities: National and Local Partners Linking Families to the Internet
DESCRIPTION:This rebroadcast begins with comments from Amina Fazlullah of Common Sense providing updates on the current state of the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP). Since the program lapsed in May 2024\, many Internet Service Providers (ISP) have stepped up to help fill gaps. Additionally\, there is a new bi-partisan effort in the house and senate that would allow the ACP to resume. Fazulallah concludes her updates with a call to action: contact your member of congress today to advocate for the ACP.   \nBefore its lapse\, there were 22.5 million households connected or relying on ACP to be able to afford home connectivity. Andrew Spector of The Patterson Foundation explained that organizations and initiatives like Patterson’s Digital Access for All initiative began training Digital Navigators and partnering with schools\, community centers\, libraries and nonprofits to reach households in their communities.   \nIn many places\, both urban and rural\, it became clear that there was another barrier — a lack of broadband access\, so communities became creative. Michael Calabrese of New America and Adeyinka Ogunlegan\, Esq.\, of EducationSuperHighway shared creative solutions: putting Wi-Fi hotspots on the streetlights\, using schools as towers\, installing Wi-Fi in apartment buildings much like we find in hotels\, adding Wi-Fi to buses that are strategically parked to provide service after school and on weekends\, and connecting households to schools’ Wi-Fi. These examples confirm that universal connectivity is possible. However\, it is a possibility that we have not yet reached.
URL:https://leo.gradelevelreading.net/event/connecting-communities-rebroadcast/
CATEGORIES:Past Event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240827T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240827T163000
DTSTAMP:20260405T005935
CREATED:20240718T182625Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240829T180909Z
UID:248414-1724770800-1724776200@leo.gradelevelreading.net
SUMMARY:REBROADCAST - Emergent Bilinguals and English Language Learners: The Sturdy Bridge
DESCRIPTION:https://leo.gradelevelreading.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/1.30.24-Bilingual-K-Slides-1.pdf\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				\n			\n				\n				\n				\n				\n				“We do this work because we believe in the cultural\, linguistic\, intellectual brilliance of our country’s diverse children\, and we deeply understand that our schools were not adequately designed to serve these children. Yet\, we know that when schooling builds upon the assets\, the lived experiences and the funds of knowledge\, honoring family and community cultures and developing home languages\, children thrive.” \nIn the first of GLR Learning Tuesdays new Kindergarten Matters webinar series\, CGLR partnered with Sobrato Philanthropies. In the above quote\, Anya Hurwitz of Sobrato Early Academic Learning (SEAL) emphasized the inherent potential of our country’s diverse children and underscored a need for the evolution of our schools to better serve emergent bilinguals. \nKarla Ruiz with Sobrato Philanthropies moderated the conversation and set the scene for the importance of utilizing kindergarten as a foundational stage for ensuring that essential elements seamlessly integrate into the broader educational journey of each child. \n“It’s become really clear how important it is in this moment\, where so much is happening in education\, to leverage kindergarten as that sturdy bridge between early learning — where developmental\, culturally responsible practices and family engagement are really core — and the later grades\,” Ruiz reflected. \nRuiz first engaged Melissa Castillo\, Ed.D.\, of the Office of the Secretary within the U.S. Department of Education in a discussion about Secretary Miguel Cardona’s Raise the Bar Initiative\, launched with the intention of lifting up three goals to achieve academic excellence\, boldly improve learning conditions and create pathways for global engagement. Castillo then discussed the “three key levers” aimed at providing every student with a pathway to multilingual wisdom: equitable access for English learners\, a diversified bilingual/multilingual educator workforce and quality bilingual education for all. Before closing\, Castillo directed attendees to visit NCELA.ED.GOV to access over 57\,000 resources\, including the English Learner Family Toolkit\, designed to help families and educators stay connected with tips\, tools and resources to help navigate the education system. \n“At the Department\, we want to model and exemplify what it means to ensure that families and students have access [to resources] in a language that they understand\,” Castillo closed. \nRuiz then engaged Anya Hurwitz in a discussion about SEAL’s P–3 Framework\, which “aims to help the field more fully center multilingual learner/English learner students.” Hurwitz spoke to the development of the P–3 Framework\, referring to the significant and growing population of English learners in California and across the nation. The P–3 Framework\, Hurwitz explained\, was developed to provide “research-based\, joyful\, culturally and linguistically responsive instruction pathways across the P–3 continuum.” Hurwitz explained that the Framework includes Eight Key Understandings and Eleven Overarching Principles\, which help guide readers in addressing and dismantling the long history of exclusion and inequity regarding language status. She said\, “We are still operating within systems that were built in deeply inequitable ways.” \nHurwitz closed with a powerful reminder about the importance of kindergarten as an entry point to this work: “Our English learners experience tremendous language loss when a kindergartner walks into school for the first time\, and they are told to leave their language and culture at the door. Implicitly or explicitly\, language loss begins immediately….It is our hope that leaders will use the framework to reflect on their systems and practices and that it can be a tool for learning\, planning and implementing.” \nRuiz then engaged with Shantel Meek\, Ph.D.\, of The Children’s Equity Project at Arizona State University\, who provided a reminder to attendees that “dual language education is an issue of equity and civil rights” because “if we don’t provide dual language education\, we’re initiating a disadvantage for a large population of children from the start.” Meek went on to share data that reflected that English learners who have access to dual language education become more proficient in English more quickly\, they outperform their peers in other subject areas\, they reach academic norms\, they exit English learner designation faster\, and they\, of course\, become biliterate. To expand on this importance\, Meek referred to multiple economic studies that point to the success of biliterate individuals in our global economy. \n“We have lots of data on the benefits of bilingualism. We know that ELs and DLs are bringing this gift from home. Instead of aligning with that research and that science\, we’re doing the opposite\, where in this nation\, about 92% of ELs are not in dual language programs….This is one of the most profound misalignments that we see\,” concluded Meek. \nLastly\, attendees heard from Lydia Acosta Stephens with the Multilingual and Multicultural Education Department in the Los Angeles Unified School District. As a renowned former principal in LAUSD\, Stephens spoke to the importance of witnessing the Framework and approaches in practice. She stated\, “My dream would be that in our country\, from that moment of first enrollment\, [the family] is congratulated for having another language at home.” Expanding off that vision\, Stephens spoke to the work she does in the Multilingual and Multicultural Education Department\, in which LAUSD delivers Biliteracy Pathway Awards to families starting in their learner’s kindergarten year\, all the way through 12th grade. Stephens shared that the implementation of the SEAL P–3 Framework has furthered their success in this program\, leading to over 20\,000 awards being issued. \n“What is your role in everything that we do from the moment a child comes into our public education system? Because when that child walks onto campus…all of those spaces should be validated from their Indigenous language. Tell me more. I want to hear you speak in your home language\, teach me a few phrases….We’ve been missing the human piece of it\,” stressed Stephens.
URL:https://leo.gradelevelreading.net/event/emergent-bilinguals-rebroadcast/
CATEGORIES:Past Event
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