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Latest Updates: improvement RSS

  • avatar

    Russell Middle School's Tier 1 Attitude-Effort-Improvement Intervention

    posted in Character Blog at 8:38 pm on January 10, 2012 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , improvement, PBIS, RTI,

    Post by Kyle Baker, Program Coordinator for the Institute for Excellence & Ethics.

    Last week, I facilitated an Excellence & Ethics Toolkit Workshop on “Utilizing Effective Goal Achievement Strategies” for the faculty, staff, and administration at Russell Middle School in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

    Russell Middle School has a passionate faculty & staff committed to giving their students the best educational experience possible (this is reflected in Russell’s distinction as a Colorado Trailblazer School to Watch and a Colorado State School of Character).  Given this fact, the school leadership team had little doubt that the faculty and staff would quickly and powerfully integrate tools such as the Goal Achievement Process, the Goal Map, and the Attitude-Effort-Improvement Rubric (AEI Rubric) following Wednesday’s Toolkit professional development workshop, however they decided that they wanted to implement a school-wide, Tier-1 intervention as well.

    The school leadership team identified the objectives of the intervention they wanted to plan by choosing to adopt the Excellence & Ethics competencies addressed in the Toolkit as the stated goals for their students:

    • Benchmark current state (baseline starting point) and establish desired state (end goal).
    • Balance tactical (short-term) and strategic (long-term) goals.
    • Apply strategies to overcome obstacles to goals achievement.
    • Develop the attitude and effort needed to revise and continuously improve.

    The leadership team then decided to incorporate another goal as well: To increase the frequency and quality of planner use by students.  This objective strengthened the intervention strategy by authentically aligning it with the school’s ongoing PBIS initiative while also encouraging students to make better use of a powerful tool that they already had access to.

    Prior to this intervention, planner use was encouraged and reinforced by many teachers, but the only coordinated school-wide use of the planner was as a hall pass, and as one teacher told us, “ Those planners are an awfully expensive bathroom pass.”

    After identifying the goals for the intervention, the school leadership team and I worked to envision what steps the students would need to take in order to achieve them.

    The leadership team determined that they would work to achieve the goals they identified by having the students:

    1.  Set 1 academic and 1 citizenship (using the Russell ROCKS citizenship rubric as the guide) every month.

    2.  Record their goals on the month overview page in their student planners.

    3.  Chart their current Attitude and Effort in relation to the academic and citizenship goal they identified using the Attitude-Effort-Improvement Rubric (better known as the AEI Rubric).

    4.  Revisit their goals and AEI chart at least once during the month in order to have a MMR (Measure, Monitor, Revise if necessary) point.

    Of course, identifying the things we want students to do doesn’t solve the seemingly endless logistical challenges that curb well-intentioned initiatives and interventions every day in schools across the country.

    What’s the #1 way to stop such a derailment from occurring?  By practicing the same long lost art we encourage our students to:  Thinking before acting.

    And so we set out to think about the systematic process that would be required to have 700 students set goals, monitor progress, and evaluate their attitude and effort over time.

    The leadership team made several decisions (that students would use the form pictured below and that those forms would go in each student’s portfolio, etc.), but they also decided to leave several decisions up the 6 PLCs that the faculty & staff are grouped together in.

    This move empowered the individual teams to take ownership of the intervention by making their own decisions about who would get the forms into the portfolios, when (and by whom) mid-month check-ins would take place, what dates at the beginning of each month students would set new goals, how the need for Tier 2 and Tier 3 interventions would be identified, and what other kinds of intervention reinforcement would occur.

    Something important to note here:  The initial decisions made by the school leadership team happened BEFORE the Toolkit workshop ever began.  That’s right, before the teachers ever poured their first cup of coffee or checked their email on the morning of their second semester professional development day, the school leadership team had already put in work to identify goals, set up the intervention framework, and define the decisions that each PLC would need to make.

    During the afternoon of the Toolkit workshop, each PLC met for 45 minutes to make their own plan for implementing the intervention.  At the conclusion of these PLC meetings, the entire faculty and staff came together to share their ideas, ask their peers questions that came up in their discussions, and use their collective expertise to solve problems that may have otherwise prevented the intervention from being successful.

    So what was the result?  On Friday, January 6th, I watched as 700 students–every single student in the building–learned about effective goal setting and the importance of attitude and effort in relation to improvement toward their desired goal (a process that will be conducted during the first week of every month for the rest of the school year).

    The intervention the Russell faculty, staff, and administration has put into action is a powerful example of how different initiatives and frameworks within a school (PLCs, RTI, PBIS, Character Education, 21st Century Skills, etc.) can come together to empower students to not only set their own goals, but to achieve them.

    Watching the students identify their goals and think about their attitude and effort was exciting for me as one of the designers of the Tools they are using and as a person who believes that it’s possible to unleash nearly limitless potential in every individual student, but my guess is that my initial excitement will pale in comparison to the excitement we will all share when we begin to see the progress students make and the goals they are able to achieve in the course of the coming months.

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  • avatar

    Attitude+Effort=Improvement (and honest reflection)

    posted in Character Blog, Power2Achieve Community at 9:53 am on February 10, 2011 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , improvement

    Yesterday Rich Parisi and I spent some time at LaFayette Jr. High here in Central New York talking Power2Achieve.

    Before I tell you what happened, here’s a bit of the backstory…

    LaFayette is a relatively small Jr/Sr. high school just outside of Syracuse.  They have a diverse student population and face many of the resource and funding challenges that are (all too) typical of many rural schools across the US.  We’re able to work with LaFayette Jr. High thanks to a generous grant from the Community Foundation of Central New York.  The grant also includes Cathedral Academy at Pompei, an inner-city K-8 Catholic school in Syracuse and Bishop Grimes High School, a suburban Catholic high school that includes many working class families.  Pretty cool mix for one project, right?

    The project entails initial professional development training on a batch of Power2Achieve Tools along with other work depending on the schools needs.  For example, in November I spoke to the faculty at Bishop Grimes about how to use the Power2Achieve Integrity-in-Action Checklist to discuss the issues of cyberbullying & sexting with their students.  (you can read more about that here).  Today Rich Parisi will be at a Cathedral faculty meeting to work more with the teachers, counselors, and aides on using Power2Achieve Tools with students.  Again, pretty cool mix of work within one project.

    So what’s happening at LaFayette?

    In January, the entire Jr. high faculty came to IEE for an afternoon session to learn more about the  P2A Compact-4-Excellence, the P2A Portable Compact-4-Excellence and the P2A Attitude-Effort-Improvement Rubric.

    One of the plans hatched during that session was to have the entire 7th and 8th grade, 94 students total, get together and develop a Jr. High Compact-4-Excellence.  Great idea!  The challenge was who would facilitate it…and that’s when all eyes turned to me.

    So two weeks ago I found myself at LaFayette Jr. High in front of a room full of Jr. high students. (Just before starting, one of the teachers came up to me and said, “I’ll pray for you.” While being in front of 94 middle school students for 3 hours is a somewhat intimidating thought, the students were awesome and we had a great session).

    The students started off by answering a question on index cards:  What do you want out of this (your experience at this school)?  I had volunteers share a few of their answers, then collected the cards.  Later in the day someone at the school typed them up into a list.

    We talked about everything from Google to the Superbowl, but mostly we talked about what kind of school they wanted to have.  The students worked in small groups of 5, in teams of 20, and as an entire group to come up with a Compact-4-Excellence, which the students then signed in Declaration of Independence style.

    Want to see what they wrote?  Here’s a doc that shows how they answered the question that started off the day (it needs a bit more editing, but you’ll get the idea) and then shows the Compact they came up with.  Check it out by clicking here!

    That’s not all though…

    Yesterday we found out that the Jr. high teachers have come up with a system to have students self-evaluate for every subject area using the P2A Attitude-Effort-Improvement (AEI) Rubric!  The students sit down with at least one, usually multiple teachers, talk through a self-evaluation as they plot their current state of performance on the AEI Rubric, then flip their sheet over to identify goals for the semester and steps they need to take to achieve those goals. Another really cool tidbit—the teachers are reporting that the the students are exceptionally open and honest in sharing their reflections on attitude and effort. In other words, teachers are hearing things from Jr. high students like “I know I’m not trying that hard, and I know I can get better.” Turns out that when given the opportunity and a guided way to reflect, students can often point directly to the root cause of their academic challenges, and will follow that up by setting up steps to improve!

    Incredible work by the teachers coming up with this, and such an awesome impact their work is having on entire school community!

    Stay tuned for a blog post coming soon from a LaFayette teacher describing exactly what they’re doing, and the “how” and “why” behind it!

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