New England Secondary School Consortium

2014 School Redesign in Action Conference

2014_conference_logo

 Complete Program (.PDF)

Pre-Conference Sessions

Response to Instruction + Intervention: What It Is and How We Do It

Engaging Schools

SORRY! THIS SESSION IS NOW CLOSED   

Secondary schools are becoming more intentional about building a culture of instructional supports and academic interventions that serve all students who need them. The aim of this session is to develop some shared understandings about the Response to Instruction and Intervention (RtII) framework as it applies to high schools.  We will explore three tiers of supports and interventions – beginning with the role and tasks of “teacher as first responder”, then examine the key features of effective, equitable, and systemic Tier 2 and Tier 3 school-wide interventions beyond the classroom.

Along the way, participants will have opportunities to:

  1. assess the current status of their RtII initiatives;
  2. consider the connections between quality interventions, the use of data, the establishment of an RtII team, and the development of a coherent case management system
  3. think about intervention practices that they want to stop, start, deepen, or change; and
  4. discuss “how-to’s” for developing, implementing, and sustaining effective intervention practices.
Session
Thursday, March 20 | 8:30 am
Presenters

Carol Miller Lieber (senior consultant, Educators for Social Responsibility)

Contact

Carol Miller Lieber, carolmlieber@esrnational.org

How to Talk About School Improvement: What You Need to Know

Great Schools Partnership, Portland, ME

SORRY! THIS SESSION IS NOW CLOSED   

In this presentation, participants will learn a variety of effective communication strategies that will work in any school or situation, including the construction of a compelling narrative, the power of specific examples, and the use of language that speaks to the core values of parents and community members. Specific examples and case studies will be used to illustrate the power of effective communications, including one Maine high school’s journey from low-performing rural school to a national model of personalized learning. Participants will also receive a brief introduction to the Glossary of Education Reform, a new online resource created by the Great Schools Partnership, and discuss how the glossary can help participants improve understanding of complex school-improvement concepts in their communities.

Session
Thursday, March 20 | 10:00 am
Presenters

Stephen Abbott (director of communications, Great Schools Partnership), Pam Fisher (senior advisor, Great Schools Partnership)

Contact

Proficiency-Based Learning Simplified

Great Schools Partnership, Portland, ME

SORRY! THIS SESSION IS NOW CLOSED   

In this workshop, participants will learn about the fundamental components of an effective proficiency-based teaching and learning system, learn about an array of resources that can support their work, and begin to develop a plan that addresses policies, practices, and community-engagement activities that will lead to the successful implementation of proficiency-based learning.

Session
Thursday, March 20 | 8:30 am
Presenters

Mary Hastings (senior associate, Great Schools Partnership), Ken Templeton (senior associate, Great
Schools Partnership), Angela Hardy (senior associate, Great Schools Partnership), Jean Haeger (senior associate, Great Schools Partnership)

Presentation
Contact

Plenary Sessions

“Does this Assignment Count?” Focus on Formative Instruction and Assessment, A Critical Component in a Proficiency-Based System

Bonny Eagle High School, ME

Learn about Bonny Eagle High School’s transition to a proficiency-based system, which has been ongoing for the past five years. The work began with the identification of standards and development of summative assessments and is currently focused on formative instruction. Using a combination of Assessment For Learning (AFL) strategies, technology, and teacher ingenuity, we are improving instructional practices. As a result, student engagement is increasing and the number of students who need to remediate assessments is dropping.

Participants will see how we are getting a big impact with the use of a 1/2 time instructional coach and a handful of AFL teacher leaders to help change instruction building-wide. Learn how this work is not “one more thing” but can reduce teacher stress. At the same time, our students are beginning to take ownership of their learning.

Participants will leave with an understanding of how one high school is improving student learning by focusing on the identification of clear learning targets and helping students track their own progress as they prepare for summative assessments.

Session
TBD
Presenters

Kate Dumont (instructional coach), Erin Maguire (assistant principal), Lori Napolitano (principal)

“But How Will My Child Get Into College?”: Creating Proficiency-Based Transcripts

Baxter Academy for Technology and Science, Portland, ME

How can schools create a transcript that accurately represents student achievement in a proficiency-based system? At Baxter Academy, students do not receive a single grade at the end of a course, so traditional reports and transcripts are not an option.

After redesigning its grading scale and assessment system, Baxter Academy created an easy-to-read, easy-to-interpret transcript that represents a student’s learning over time.  Baxter’s unique transcript is built around accurate reporting on student achievement of standards using graphs and charts. The school is piloting this transcript with its first graduating class and will have feedback from post-secondary institutions as well as college acceptances to share.

Participants will learn about Baxter’s unique grading and assessment system and transcript and will leave with ideas about how to bring this authentic approach to standards-based reporting back to their schools.

Sessions
Friday, March 18, 10:45am; Friday, March 18, 1:15pm
Presenters

Katherine Driver (director of guidance), Nathaniel Edmunds (design teacher)

Presentation
Contact

“But I Have 120 Students on My Roster!”: Building Partnerships with Families in Secondary Schools

1647 Families, MA

A myth of secondary school family engagement that we hear too often is that families want to drop their kids off in ninth grade and pick them up at graduation. Is this true? (Hint: Nope.) Families want to be engaged! But even if they know that we should build partnerships with families, secondary school teachers and staff can feel overwhelmed by the thought of engaging with every family regularly, especially when they may teach over one hundred different students a year.

In this session, presenters from 1647 Families and the schools they partner with will lead an honest conversation about how the work of strengthening family engagement and partnerships is currently being done in 1647 partner schools. Presenters will explore these questions: How can staff members build equal partnerships with families in the middle- and high-school space? How can we “undo” the power dynamic between school and home that exists? And how do we create welcoming schools for all families—and support staff in doing so?

Participants will receive a brief overview of positive family engagement strategies, including proactive positive communication, re-vamped academic events (e.g., conferences), and home visits. They will also hear about the strategies that have not worked, and the lessons learned from them. Participants will walk away with tactics to try in their classrooms, teams, and/or school.

Session
Student, Family, + Community Engagement
Presenters

Elizabeth Canada (Director of Coaching)

Presentation

Elizabeth Canada, 

elizabeth.canada@1647families.org

“The Future of Learning is Yours”: Personalization through Student-Designed Projects

Westerly High School, RI

In this session, participants will hear about one school’s innovative initiative to provide alternative paths to student success with a student-designed personalized learning opportunity, which allowed students to design their own individualized learning pathways. Presenters will share how they believe this high-quality learning opportunity deepens its commitment to equity for all learners.

Presenters will outline their framework for planning and implementing a dynamic student-centered, student-motivated, student-driven project-based course. They will share their implementation strategies and explain how the course found its rhythm. Students will present their “passion projects” and comment on how their autonomy contributed to rich learning, original craftsmanship, and meaningful assessments. They will explain how their work habits connected to their academic performance.

Participants will learn to plan and grow a vibrant and personalized project-based learning course completely driven by student choices.

Session
Teaching + Learning
Presenters

Erica DeVoe (English Teacher), Michelle Doucette (Student), Todd Grimes (Principal), Jazmyne Kinney (Student), Tony Lementowicz (Instructional Coordinator), Thomas Mclaughlin (Student), Denise Oliveira (English Teacher), Hayley Townsend (Student)

Contact

A 21st Century Curriculum: Relevant, Project-based, Student-centered Learning

Milton High School, Milton, Vermont

Two years ago Milton High School undertook a complete revision of its core curriculum in grades 9–12. Using the conceptual framework developed by the Partnership for 21st Century Skills as a starting point, Milton High School set out to design curricula and instructional practices that modeled creativity, innovation, critical thinking, and collaboration using relevant, project-based, student-centered strategies that focused on real-world skills that students could apply outside of high school and in whatever life path they chose. To avoid the trap of incrementalism and stay within tight budgetary limitations, Milton developed a comprehensive, systematic improvement process that fluidly moved from development of new curricula to the implementation of a 1:1 technology initiative starting with this year’s freshman class to the delivery of the professional development needed to make it all successful in the classroom. Join educators from Milton High School as they share the challenges and successes faced on the way to realizing a 21st century learning program for every student.

Session
TBD
Presenters

Kerry Sewell (director of curriculum), Anne Blake (co-principal), Scott Thompson (assistant principal), Katri O’Neill (technology integration specialist), Karen Hammond (teacher), Angela King (teacher) Jason Gorczyk (teacher), Amanda Notman (special educator)

Contact

Scott Thompson, sthompson@mtsd-vt.org

A Call to Leadership: Harnessing the Power of Student Voice in Leading School Improvement

Harwood Union High School, Moretown, VT

At Harwood Union High School, students are not only taking a proactive role in designing their own education and planning for future learning, but in serving as leaders in the school community responsible for creating the systems and structures necessary to ensure a personalized education is possible.

In this interactive session, administrators and teachers from Harwood Union will focus on the benefits of a shared leadership model in which adults and youth lead together. The presentation will provide the rationale for this type of shared leadership model and describe the practical elements as they relate to the implementation of personalized learning.

Participants will have the opportunity to construct a proposal or plan for instituting a distributed and shared leadership model inclusive of teachers and students in their school, and will leave with an understanding of the benefits of a distributed and shared leadership model inclusive of both teachers and students.

Sessions
Thursday, March 17, 2:15pm; Thursday, March 17, 3:45pm
Presenters

Emma Cosgrove (student), Noah Eckstein (student), Jonah Ibson (teacher), Sam Krotinger (teacher), Cole Lavoie (student), Hazel Macmillan (student), Amy Rex (principal)

Contact

Amy Rex, arex@wwsu.org

A Collaborative Approach to Dropout Prevention: It’s All About the KID!

North Country Charter Academy, Littleton, NH

North Country Charter Academy is a mission-driven public charter school collaborating with ten school districts to solve an intractable dropout problem. The school offers a personalized, competency-based curriculum that utilizes a blended, distance-learning model in which students work independently and at their own pace in a brick-and-mortar building with the support of a certified teaching staff. Students are provided multiple pathways and opportunities by which to complete high school, and they earn credit when they demonstrate mastery of subject matter. Over the past ten years, the model has contributed significantly to a 74% reduction in the number of dropouts in Grafton and Coos Counties in Northern New Hampshire and has graduated a total of 362 students – 78 of which had been prior high school dropouts.

Participants will leave this session with a clear understanding of how the North Country model operates and how they can adapt this model for use in any type of educational setting.

Sessions
Thursday, March 26 | 3:45 pm; Friday, March 27 | 9:15 am
Presenters

Scott Kleinschrodt (center director), Lisa Lavoie (principal), Greg Williams (Teacher), Lynne Grigelevich (Registrar)

Presentation
Contact

A Commitment to Change: Informing School Redesign with Student Voices

Come hear three students reflect on equity in education, the meaning of success, and authentic student engagement. Tianna Ridge (Attleboro High School, MA), Jamaal Hankey (Essex High School, VT), and Anna Parker (Yarmouth High School, ME) will discuss the experiences and relationships that have contributed to their success. Tianna, Jamaal, and Anna will share their hopes for all students, and will challenge us to think about how we can each support, inspire, and engage all of the young people with whom we work. At the close of the plenary, participants will be asked to make a personal commitment to learning and leading for equity in their own way, informed by these students’ perspectives.

Session
Tuesday, March 13, 8:00-8:30 AM
Presenters

Jamaal Hankey (Student, Essex High School, VT), Andrea Summers (Senior Associate, Great Schools Partnership), Moises Nuñez (Senior Associate, Great Schools Partnership), Anna Parker (Student, Yarmouth High School, ME), Tianna Ridge (Student, Attleboro High School, MA)

A Critical Conversation about Racial Equity in Northern New England

MaineSpark, ME

How should states in northern New England approach issues of racial and ethnic equity in their education systems? What does it mean to achieve equity and close gaps in a largely homogenous region? This session will draw on Maine’s experience of developing a big-tent alliance of organizations in the education sector and beyond to address these crucial issues. We’ll share key lessons from the efforts of the New England Alliances for College and Career Readiness more broadly, then explore in depth the Maine alliance’s work to balance its focus on racial and economic equity. Session participants will learn about, analyze and discuss the work of MaineSpark’s Future Success track to empower racially diverse student populations to reach college and career readiness. Educate Maine will then lead participants in a critical conversation about approaching equity in their own classrooms, schools and districts.

Session participants will learn about approaches to discussing and working toward racial and ethnic equity in education systems, reflect on lessons learned from Maine in this area, and leverage their own expertise and experiences to generate new ideas for connecting with and engaging diverse communities in authentic ways.

Session
TBD
Presenters

Ed Cervone (executive director, Educate Maine), Kate Leveille (project manager, MaineSpark), Emily Weiss (principal, Education First Consulting)

A Mastery-Based Lesson on Mastery-Based Learning

High School in the Community, New Haven, CT

In this session, presenters will describe how High School in the Community has advanced mastery-based learning to help all students take more responsibility over their own education, while they also address skill deficits, acquire college- and career-ready skills, and excel in their areas of interest. To make the session more resonant and authentic for participants, it will be structured as a mastery-based lesson! So whether you have never heard of mastery-based learning, or whether you already changing practices in your school or classroom, our mastery-based approach will both broaden and deepen your understanding.

Session
Friday, March 21 | 9:15 am + 10:45 am
Presenters

Erik Good (building leader), Gail Emilsson (teacher), Adeline Marzialo (teacher), Julie Vargas (student)

Presentation
Contact

A New Way of Building Partnerships with Families

The Right Question Institute, MA

When parents and family members have the opportunity to develop key skills to support their children’s education, monitor progress, and advocate for them when necessary, they can partner more effectively with schools to ensure student success. The Right Question Institute’s evidence-based school-family partnership builds parents’ skills of asking better questions, participating in decisions, and playing three key roles in their child’s education. Using this strategy, parents learn to ask their own questions about their children’s education, and educators learn how to build parents’ skills for more effective participation by using a set of simple methods.

Session participants will experience the school-family partnership strategy, will explore the art and science behind the methods, and will practice integrating them into their work. This session will prepare participants to use this strategy, which has been applied to a variety of setting producing consistent results, at their schools and share it with colleagues.

In this session, participants will: 1) experience the Right Question Institute’s school-family partnership strategy 2) explore examples of implementation of the strategy; 3) acquire resources and materials.

Session
Monday, March 12, 8:30 -11:00 AM
Presenters

Luz Santana (co-director) 

Contact

Luz Santana, luz@rightquestion.org

A Sample System for Proficiency-Based Learning in the Classroom

Burlington High School, Burlington, VT

This session will introduce participants to the key elements of proficiency-based learning through an in-depth investigation of the instructional process in a high school chemistry course. The presenters will describe a flexible instructional cycle that includes frequent formative assessment and a balance of whole-class instruction and personalized time for practice, re-teaching, tutoring, and extension work. They will also share systems and strategies that teachers can use to manage highly differentiated classrooms, empower students to monitor their own learning, and create a growth-mindset culture. Additional examples from the humanities, mathematics, world languages, ELL classes, and other scientific disciplines will also be discussed to illustrate how Burlington High School teachers are applying proficiency-based structures across the curriculum.

Participants will leave with concrete strategies and an array of materials they can adapt in their own classrooms, and ample time will be provided for participants to ask questions and participate in discussion.

Session
Friday, March 27 | 10:45 am + 1:15 pm
Presenters

Amy Dickson (teacher learning coordinator), Molly Heath (science teacher)

Presentation
Contact

Amy Dickson, amy@partnershipvt.org

A Three-Step Process for Successful Learning Using Self-Assessment, Peer-Assessment, and Reassessment Effectively

Poland Regional High School, ME

At Poland Regional High School, a flagship public high school for proficiency-based education in Maine, an emphasis on self- and peer-assessment and a school-wide process for reassessment has supported students towards successfully reaching their learning goals. Teachers have implemented classroom tasks specifically designed from the current leading guidelines for self- and peer-assessment in hopes of making each student’s learning process transparent. Furthermore, a school-wide process for reassessment has been adopted to ensure each student has the opportunity to demonstrate their best learning on summative assessments. In this session we will walk you through the process that our science, math, and humanities classes have developed for self- and peer-assessment as well as outline the process we took to develop our school-wide reassessment protocol.

Participants will leave this session with practical approaches to teaching self- and peer-assessment; an understanding of how reassessment opportunities can reinforce learning and how assessment strategies are managed in a proficiency based/ standards-based system.

Session
TBD
Presenters

Jessica Elias Castillo (science teacher), Patrick Martin (biology and anatomy/physiology teacher), Laurie Sevigny (social studies teacher)

A Vision for Learning: Using Self-Reflection and Peer Review to Align Your School Improvement Efforts

New England Association of Schools and Colleges, MA

In this session participants will learn how to use research-based NEASC CPS Standards which define best practices as a tool for self-reflection and peer review. Through a process of self-reflection based on evidence and in collaboration with stakeholders, schools can develop a vision for learning with specific and measurable goals for success. Participants will use collaborative practices to explore the NEASC CPS Standards for Accreditation, focusing on student learning. We will do a crosswalk with the Global Best Practices to see how to align school improvement efforts. Participants will experience elements of the self-reflection process including the review of student work, classroom observations, document review, survey data, stakeholder interviews, and peer review. With the Standards in mind and the understanding of the essential components of self-reflection, participants will develop an outline for a process to improve learning, achievement, and well-being for students.

Session
TBD
Presenters

Alyson Geary (deputy director), Bill Wehrli (associate director)

Agents of Their Own Learning: A District’s Proficiency-Based System Enters Maturity

Regional School Unit 2, Hallowell, ME

Regional School Unit 2 has been implementing K–12 proficiency-based learning for several years now. Join the presenters as they describe how their model has given students significant amounts of voice and choice in their learning. In the district’s three high schools, students have authentic opportunities to design their own learning pathways, learn at their own pace, and engage in learning experiences that not only match their interests, but that build upon the resources and opportunities that exist in the wider community. In this session, participants will learn about the structure, schedule, and other design elements that have empowered the district to dramatically increase personalization for students without watering down standards.

Session
Thursday, March 20 | 2:15 pm + 3:45 pm
Presenters

Rick Amero (principal, Monmouth Academy), John Armentrout (director, information technology), Christine Arsenault (teacher, Monmouth Academy), Brenda Dalbeck (teacher, Hall-Dale High School), Virgel Hammonds (superintendent), Libby Ladner (teacher, Hall-Dale Middle School), Steve Lavoie (principal, Richmond High School), Eric Palleschi (teacher, Monmouth Middle School), Megan Rounds (teacher, Richmond High School), Matt Shea (coordinator of student achievement), Mark Tinkham (principal, Hall-Dale High/Middle School), Charlie Urquhart (teacher, Richmond High School)

Presentation
Contact

Virgel Hammonds, vhammonds@kidsrsu.org

NESSC States

Connecticut Sessions

A Mastery-Based Lesson on Mastery-Based Learning

High School in the Community, New Haven, CT

In this session, presenters will describe how High School in the Community has advanced mastery-based learning to help all students take more responsibility over their own education, while they also address skill deficits, acquire college- and career-ready skills, and excel in their areas of interest. To make the session more resonant and authentic for participants, it will be structured as a mastery-based lesson! So whether you have never heard of mastery-based learning, or whether you already changing practices in your school or classroom, our mastery-based approach will both broaden and deepen your understanding.

Session
Friday, March 21 | 9:15 am + 10:45 am
Presenters

Erik Good (building leader), Gail Emilsson (teacher), Adeline Marzialo (teacher), Julie Vargas (student)

Presentation
Contact

How Personalized Learning Changed Our Practice and Our Students

Naugatuck High School, Naugatuck, CT

What does personalized learning look like? At the start of Naugatuck High School’s journey, personalization meant meeting everyone’s needs. It meant shifting our instructional philosophy to embrace learning as the constant and time as the variable. It also challenged what we knew about instruction, causing us to reexamine our practices. Our faculty sought out more creative ways to manage our classrooms to support students whose educational journeys might take more time—or less time—than others. Personalization not only transformed learning for our students, it also transformed us as teachers, mentors, and leaders. In this session, participants will learn about our new instructional practices, how we have evolved as educators, and what the implications are for student learning. The presenters will share their vision for a personalized classroom and how they were able to achieve it. They will also share curriculum and assessment tools that helped shape instructional practice, as well as student video interviews, written survey data, and student work that reveals how students have responded to the changes. 

Session
Thursday, March 20 | 2:15 pm + 3:45 pm
Presenters

Caroline Messenger (teacher), Marc Pardee (teacher),

Contact

Jan Saam, saamj@naugy.net

Foundational Transformation: A Springboard to Competency-Based Learning

Windsor Locks High School, Windsor Locks, CT

Beginning in 2011, Windsor Locks High School, along with other schools in its underperforming Connecticut school district, began a journey of transformation driven by the characteristics of high-performing schools identified by research. The presenters will share their past, present, and future plans, which will help other school districts rethink their culture, belief systems, and approaches to teaching and learning. The presenters will also discuss how, in just three years, the district’s systemic, strategic changes have resulted in a new and rigorous curriculum, a shared educational vision, improved student achievement, and greater faculty satisfaction. Most importantly, participants will learn how these three foundational years are serving as a springboard for the process currently underway to both design and implement a competency-based educational system.

Session
Friday, March 21 | 9:15 am + 1:15 pm
Presenters

Susan A. Bell (assistant superintendent), Sharon M. Cournoyer (principal), Wayne C. Sweeney (superintendent of schools),

Presentation
Contact

Susan Bell, sbell@wlps.org

Maine Sessions

Focused Learning: Ellsworth High School’s Response to Intervention

Ellsworth High School, Ellsworth, Maine

In this interactive presentation, faculty from Ellsworth High School will describe the development, design, and implementation of its teacher-developed Response to Intervention program called Focused Learning—an integrated, dynamic, technology-assisted program that addresses the learning needs of every student through a combination of intervention, extension, and enrichment opportunities. Each day during second period, 500 students move to their interventions, extensions, enrichments, or study halls based on their distinct learning needs. The school’s flexible scheduling model is managed through a teacher-designed app that lets the staff “tag” students in a targeted and timely manner, using a prioritized content-area schedule that allows for an even distribution of students across each content area throughout the week. While this initiative is still in its early stages, the Ellsworth High School teaching faculty are excited to share the development process, management of the program, qualitative and quantitative data, and the personal experiences of teachers and students. A Q&A will follow.

Session
Friday, March 21 | 10:45 am + 1:15 pm
Presenters

Jonathan Bender (teacher), Jessie Falabella (teacher), Tracey Hollingsworth (teacher), Lydia Kinney (teacher)

Presentation
Contact

Focused Learning Team, ehsfocusedlearning@rsu24.org

Agents of Their Own Learning: A District’s Proficiency-Based System Enters Maturity

Regional School Unit 2, Hallowell, ME

Regional School Unit 2 has been implementing K–12 proficiency-based learning for several years now. Join the presenters as they describe how their model has given students significant amounts of voice and choice in their learning. In the district’s three high schools, students have authentic opportunities to design their own learning pathways, learn at their own pace, and engage in learning experiences that not only match their interests, but that build upon the resources and opportunities that exist in the wider community. In this session, participants will learn about the structure, schedule, and other design elements that have empowered the district to dramatically increase personalization for students without watering down standards.

Session
Thursday, March 20 | 2:15 pm + 3:45 pm
Presenters

Rick Amero (principal, Monmouth Academy), John Armentrout (director, information technology), Christine Arsenault (teacher, Monmouth Academy), Brenda Dalbeck (teacher, Hall-Dale High School), Virgel Hammonds (superintendent), Libby Ladner (teacher, Hall-Dale Middle School), Steve Lavoie (principal, Richmond High School), Eric Palleschi (teacher, Monmouth Middle School), Megan Rounds (teacher, Richmond High School), Matt Shea (coordinator of student achievement), Mark Tinkham (principal, Hall-Dale High/Middle School), Charlie Urquhart (teacher, Richmond High School)

Presentation
Contact

Virgel Hammonds, vhammonds@kidsrsu.org

Easy Come, Easy Go: Maintaining and Sustaining Standards-Based Practices

Troy Howard Middle School, Belfast, ME

Each year, the Troy Howard Middle School staff holds a four-day workshop series called “Standards-Based Education in Action” as a way to ensure the continuation of practices that have improved student achievement in our school. Teachers new to Troy Howard join visiting teachers from other schools to learn about “how we do business” from veteran faculty and students. Each session involves direct instruction from multiple teachers and students, as well as classroom observations and demonstrations of teaching principles in action. Participants will learn about this unique professional-development program and walk away with a breakdown of the learning targets for each of the four days.

Sessions
Thursday, March 20 | 3:45 pm; Friday, March 21 | 10:45 am
Presenters

Bruce Bailey (assistant principal), Kim Buckheit (principal), Sandy Flacke (special education coordinator), Chris LaValle (social-studies teacher)

Presentation
Contact

Kim Buckheit, kbuckheit@rsu20.org

Making Learning Constant: An Integrated Approach to CCSS-Driven Mathematics

Westbrook High School, Westbrook, ME

Westbrook High school began its journey to become a proficiency-based high school starting in the math department, and department chair Jeff Guerette and sophomore math-team teacher Will Leque are working at the forefront of proficiency-based math instruction. In this workshop, participants will learn how Westbrook High School developed an integrated, proficiency-based math program in which learning is constant and time is the variable. Classroom procedures and systems will be discussed along with the opportunities and challenges inherent in putting students at the center of learning.

Sessions
Thursday, March 20 | 2:15 pm; Friday, March 21 | 9:15 am
Presenters

Rhonda Fortin (mathematics instructional coach, grades 5–12), Jeff Guerrette (mathematics department chair), Will Leque (mathematics teacher)

Contact

New Hampshire Sessions

Student Leadership in Creating a Dynamic High School

Hillsboro-Deering High School, Hillsboro, NH

During the transitional years of high school, every student must learn to become a productive member of our diverse and magnificent society. For this reason, student leadership and voice are critical, and character needs to be developed alongside academic abilities. At Hillsboro-Deering High School, the faculty believes all students must understand how to act on behalf of their peers while accomplishing superordinate objectives. And the school’s student-leadership strategies can already claim significant progress and successes, including the student-led development of school policies, events, and goals. The ongoing goal of the school’s student-leadership program is to promote the acquisition of new liberties for students while continually fostering a positive relationship between out senior and junior administration.

Session
Friday, March 21 | 9:15 am + 10:45 am
Presenters

Clarice Clark (faculty advisor), Jennifer Crawford (associate principal), Paul Mooney (student leader), Tristan Brooks (student leader), Joshua Gould (student leader), Jim O’Rourke (principal), Katie Ort (student leader), Shannon Thomas (student leader), Jeramy Thompson (faculty advisor), Brianna Welch (student leader)

Presentation
Contact

Jim O’Rourke, jorourke@hdsd.k12.nh.us

Uncovering, Discovering, and Recovering the Gifts and Talents of Every Learner

MC2 Charter School, Manchester, NH

Effective student-centered learning taps into students’ strengths, challenges, interests, and abilities as a way to engage their intellectual curiosity and promote greater ownership over the learning process. The Making Community Connections (MC2) Charter School uses learning profiles to uncover, discover, and recover all the gifts and talents each learner possesses. MC2 is a middle/high school with a unique competency-based instructional model that integrates cognitive science and educational research, while also giving learners multiple, self-paced pathways to mastery. Join MC2 staff and students for an interactive exploration of the school’s structures, tools, and stories.

Session
Friday, March 21 | 10:45 am + 1:15 pm
Presenters

Rowan Brantley (student), Elizabeth Cardine (school coach), Kim Carter (executive director), Shaun Davis
(student), Angela Hinkle (teacher), Brendan Hinkle (student), Indira Palmer (student)

Presentation
Contact

Supporting a School-Wide Competency-Based Grading and Reporting System

Sanborn Regional High School, Kingston, NH

Over the past three years, Sanborn Regional High School has developed a school-wide competency-based grading and reporting model that has received local, state, and national attention. Based on some of the latest assessment research by Ken O’Connor, Rick Wormeli, Robert Marzano, Rick Stiggins, and Rose Colby, the model is aligned with the Common Core State Standards and the competency-based model promoted by the New England Secondary School Consortium. Participants in this multimedia session will learn about how we structured our system, how we implemented it in a school of 750 students, and how it reinforces our school’s vision of learning for all. Participants will also have an opportunity to question the educators who designed and implemented the model.

Sessions
Thursday, March 20 | 2:15 pm; Friday, March 21 | 9:15 am
Presenters

Mark Giuliucci (Freshman Learning Community PLC team leader), Brian M. Stack (principal), Andrew Wood (Career & Technical Education PLC team leader)

Presentation
Contact

Brian M. Stack, bstack@sau17.org

Introducing Aspire: Competency-Based Learning Unbound

Virtual Learning Academy Charter School, Exeter, NH

In July, the Virtual Learning Academy Charter School was awarded a Next Generation Learning Challenge grant to implement a breakthrough college-readiness model. Called VLACS Aspire, the model provides students and families with the opportunity to radically personalize learning by creating individualized “learning playlists” that reflect their particular interests and goals. Students earn competencies through a variety of learning pathways, including independent studies, projects, internships, work experiences, online courses, face-to-face courses, hobbies, service learning, or a combination of activities. Students who participate in a VLACS Aspire learning experience will find that there is no prescribed way or timeline for earning a competency; there is just the way that works best for the student. Participants in this session will leave with a better understanding of competency-based education and the VLACS Aspire program.

Session
Thursday, March 20 | 2:15 pm + 3:45 pm
Presenters

Anthony Baldasaro (chief human resource officer), Steve Kossakoski (chief executive officer), Gary Tirone (special projects coordinator)

Presentation
Contact

Steve Kossakoski, skossakoski@vlacs.org

Rhode Island Sessions

Turning a School Around: Lessons Learned in a Large Urban School

Central Falls High School, Central Falls, RI

In 2010, Central Falls High School experienced a very challenging year. After being deemed “persistently low achieving” and in need of intervention by the Rhode Island Department of Education, the school created a bold plan to improve graduation rates, the school culture, and student math proficiency. While the past three years have not always been easy, the entire school community—teachers, students, parents, and community partners—have come together to make the school truly great place to learn. And progress is happening: the four-year graduation rate improved from 48% in 2009 to 70% in 2012, while student proficiency in mathematics has nearly doubled. In addition, community members all report an improved school culture and learning environment. In this session, the presenters will tell the Central Falls story from multiple perspectives, giving participants an insider’s view of the struggles and successes of large urban school in the process of improving. In addition, the presenters will share findings from The Central Falls High School Third Year Transformation Report, an independent study conducted by the Education Alliance and the Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University.

Sessions
Thursday, March 20 | 2:15 pm; Friday, March 21 | 9:15 am
Presenters

Evelyn Cante (student), Victor Capellan (deputy superintendent for transformation), Kim Cataldo
(teacher), Joshua Laplante (principal), Therese McMaugh (parent), Susan Volluci (teacher)

Contact

Victor F. Capellan, capellanv@cfschools.net

Teacher Leading Professional Development

Coventry High School and Alan Shawn Feinstein Middle School, Coventry, RI

Over the past two years, Coventry High School and Alan Shawn Feinstein Middle School have been working together to increase professional-development opportunities for all faculty members. By utilizing “resident experts” to deliver professional development in technology, the Common Core State Standards, formative assessment, and questioning skills, teachers have increased their professional knowledge and skills in these critical instructional areas. Participants will leave the session with a clear framework for building capacity in their schools through teacher-led professional development.

Sessions
Thursday, March 20 | 3:45 pm; Friday, March 21 | 1:15 pm
Presenters

Maria Boulmetis (teacher, Alan Shawn Feinstein Middle School), Lynne Burke (assistant principal, Coventry High School), Jennifer Graham (teacher, Alan Shawn Feinstein Middle School), Michael Hobin (principal, Coventry High School), Arthur Lisi (principal, Alan Shawn Feinstein Middle School), Michael Rockwell (teacher, Coventry High School), Cynthia Teixeira (teacher, Coventry High School), Joyce Windrow (teacher, Coventry High School)

Presentation

The Power of Collective Practice

Cumberland High School, Cumberland, RI

When teachers collaborate and learn from one another, both classroom practice and student performance improves. A highly qualified but professionally isolated teacher is no longer enough—to overcome today’s educational challenges, teachers need to work together. While new evaluation systems may help to improve teaching, they still do not harness the power of collective practice. Cumberland High School’s emerging plan focuses on the school as an instructional organization, while using collective practice to enhance instructional quality and effectiveness. In this session, participants will learn how to use technology, social media, professional learning groups, micro-teaching, “Smarter Cookie,” an “open door” initiative, new leadership approaches, and RTI data systems to increase the professional capacity of their school.

Sessions
Thursday, March 20 | 3:45 pm; Friday, March 21 | 9:15 am
Presenters

Jessie Butash (assistant principal), Adolfo Costa (assistant principal), Malinda DeWaele (STEM Interdisciplinary Coordinator), Amanda Letoile (humanities interdisciplinary coordinator), Alan Tenreiro (principal)

Contact

Making the Shift from Student to Learner and Teacher to Educator

Westerly High School, Westerly, RI

How can we turn our students into learners and our teachers into educators? Westerly High School—a suburban, comprehensive school of just under a thousand students in southern Rhode Island—is on a mission to answer this fundamental question. In this interactive session, presenters will highlight four school-wide strategies that are advancing the shift: project-based learning (the presenters will showcase the design of a new graduation pathway solely dedicated to project-based learning in an off-campus setting); a school-wide writing initiative (our writing lab bolsters interdisciplinary writing and encourages collaboration with colleagues and students to instill writing confidence and competence); an innovative approach to professional development (the presenters will share their “un-conferencing” strategy that is both meaningful and relevant to the educators and student needs), and a new reporting system (our work reconciles traditional and proficiency-based grading and reporting, which has resulted in higher-quality feedback to students and greater consistency in reporting progress and achievement). Participants will rotate through four sessions and return to a topic of choice to deepen their understanding.

Sessions
Friday, March 21 | 10:45 am; Friday, March 21 | 1:15 pm
Presenters

Anne Barnhart (NBCT English teacher), Lorri Dean (coordinator of PBL academy), Tony Lementowicz (instructional coordinator), Brendan Murphy (special education department chair), Steven Ruscito (principal), Carmela Sammataro (former English department chair), Sarah Steverman (world language department chair), Shelby Worsham (cosmetology teacher)

Contact

Steven Ruscito, sruscito@westerly.k12.ri.us

Vermont Sessions

Can You Show What You Know? One School’s Approach to Proficiency-Based Learning

Big Picture South Burlington High School, South Burlington, VT

Many schools are replacing the Carnegie unit and high-stakes assessments with proficiency-based approaches that provide opportunities for students to demonstrate their learning in more authentic and personally meaningful ways. Yet proficiency-based learning brings its own set of challenges for schools. In this workshop, participants will learn how proficiency-based learning is practiced in a personalized, experiential-learning school-within-a-school. Presenters will share their process for transitioning to proficiency-based learning and show how they document and communicate student achievement on reports and transcripts. Students will share their experiences, including examples of projects they have undertaken to meet expected proficiencies. Participants will also leave with concrete action steps they can take to explore or implement proficiency-based learning in their own schools.

Sessions
Thursday, March 20 | 3:45 pm; Friday, March 21 | 1:15 pm
Presenters

Ella Downey (student), Anna Finklestein (advisor), Amelia Payne (student), Shelby Resposa (student), Jim
Shields (advisor)

Presentation
Contact

Seamless Coexistence: Integrating Coursework and Personalized Learning

Mount Abraham Union Middle/High School, Bristol, VT

Mount Abraham has spent the last five years developing a personalized-pathways program that is based on the Big Picture model—but with one significant difference: the great majority of the students who take part in the pathways program also take other courses at the school. While our hybrid model has allowed many more students to take advantage of personalized learning at Mount Abraham, it also created a variety of dilemmas that school leaders have had to address. In this workshop, the presenters will describe the continuum of personalized-learning opportunities offered by the school, and engage participants in a frank and honest discussion of the school’s struggles with a blended model of student learning. Participants will have a chance to hear from and ask questions to staff and students, and they will leave the workshop with a stronger understanding of personalized learning, as well as the challenges and conflicts that may arise and will need to be overcome.

Session
Friday, March 21 | 10:45 am + 1:15 pm
Presenters

Russell Comstock (personalized learning advisor), Gerrie Heuts (personalized learning advisor), Josie
Jordan (personalized learning advisor), Andy Kepes (principal), Robin Kuhns (student), Brian Wendel (student)

Contact

Andy Kepes, akepes@anesu.org

From Hypothesis to Practice: The Messiness of School-Wide Transformation

Vergennes Union High School, Vergennes, VT

As the classes of 2016 and 2017 begin their high school careers at Vergennes Union, the school’s transition to personalized, performance-based learning continues. Balancing the hopes and dreams of students and staff, the school has embraced rigor, relevance, and relationships, while also offering students voice and choice as they work to acquire vital 21st-century skills. In this presentation, students and teachers will share their recent adventures on their journey toward Performance-Based Graduation Requirements (PBGRs), including, from both the students’ and the teachers’ points of view, topics such as e-portfolio-based evaluation, yearlong projects, and integrated systems of support. In addition to hearing from all learners involved (teachers and students), participants can come away with tools and templates for enhancing the three “Rs” in their school.

Session
Thursday, March 20 | 2:15 pm + 3:45 pm
Presenters

Matthew DeBlois (teacher), Brianna Gebo (student), Kristine Kirkaldy (teacher), Natalie Salley (student)

Contact

Matthew DeBlois, mdeblois@anwsu.org

NESSC

“Does this Assignment Count?” Focus on Formative Instruction and Assessment, A Critical Component in a Proficiency-Based System

Bonny Eagle High School, ME

Learn about Bonny Eagle High School’s transition to a proficiency-based system, which has been ongoing for the past five years. The work began with the identification of standards and development of summative assessments and is currently focused on formative instruction. Using a combination of Assessment For Learning (AFL) strategies, technology, and teacher ingenuity, we are improving instructional practices. As a result, student engagement is increasing and the number of students who need to remediate assessments is dropping.

Participants will see how we are getting a big impact with the use of a 1/2 time instructional coach and a handful of AFL teacher leaders to help change instruction building-wide. Learn how this work is not “one more thing” but can reduce teacher stress. At the same time, our students are beginning to take ownership of their learning.

Participants will leave with an understanding of how one high school is improving student learning by focusing on the identification of clear learning targets and helping students track their own progress as they prepare for summative assessments.

Session
TBD
Presenters

Kate Dumont (instructional coach), Erin Maguire (assistant principal), Lori Napolitano (principal)

“But How Will My Child Get Into College?”: Creating Proficiency-Based Transcripts

Baxter Academy for Technology and Science, Portland, ME

How can schools create a transcript that accurately represents student achievement in a proficiency-based system? At Baxter Academy, students do not receive a single grade at the end of a course, so traditional reports and transcripts are not an option.

After redesigning its grading scale and assessment system, Baxter Academy created an easy-to-read, easy-to-interpret transcript that represents a student’s learning over time.  Baxter’s unique transcript is built around accurate reporting on student achievement of standards using graphs and charts. The school is piloting this transcript with its first graduating class and will have feedback from post-secondary institutions as well as college acceptances to share.

Participants will learn about Baxter’s unique grading and assessment system and transcript and will leave with ideas about how to bring this authentic approach to standards-based reporting back to their schools.

Sessions
Friday, March 18, 10:45am; Friday, March 18, 1:15pm
Presenters

Katherine Driver (director of guidance), Nathaniel Edmunds (design teacher)

Presentation
Contact

“But I Have 120 Students on My Roster!”: Building Partnerships with Families in Secondary Schools

1647 Families, MA

A myth of secondary school family engagement that we hear too often is that families want to drop their kids off in ninth grade and pick them up at graduation. Is this true? (Hint: Nope.) Families want to be engaged! But even if they know that we should build partnerships with families, secondary school teachers and staff can feel overwhelmed by the thought of engaging with every family regularly, especially when they may teach over one hundred different students a year.

In this session, presenters from 1647 Families and the schools they partner with will lead an honest conversation about how the work of strengthening family engagement and partnerships is currently being done in 1647 partner schools. Presenters will explore these questions: How can staff members build equal partnerships with families in the middle- and high-school space? How can we “undo” the power dynamic between school and home that exists? And how do we create welcoming schools for all families—and support staff in doing so?

Participants will receive a brief overview of positive family engagement strategies, including proactive positive communication, re-vamped academic events (e.g., conferences), and home visits. They will also hear about the strategies that have not worked, and the lessons learned from them. Participants will walk away with tactics to try in their classrooms, teams, and/or school.

Session
Student, Family, + Community Engagement
Presenters

Elizabeth Canada (Director of Coaching)

Presentation

Elizabeth Canada, 

elizabeth.canada@1647families.org

“The Future of Learning is Yours”: Personalization through Student-Designed Projects

Westerly High School, RI

In this session, participants will hear about one school’s innovative initiative to provide alternative paths to student success with a student-designed personalized learning opportunity, which allowed students to design their own individualized learning pathways. Presenters will share how they believe this high-quality learning opportunity deepens its commitment to equity for all learners.

Presenters will outline their framework for planning and implementing a dynamic student-centered, student-motivated, student-driven project-based course. They will share their implementation strategies and explain how the course found its rhythm. Students will present their “passion projects” and comment on how their autonomy contributed to rich learning, original craftsmanship, and meaningful assessments. They will explain how their work habits connected to their academic performance.

Participants will learn to plan and grow a vibrant and personalized project-based learning course completely driven by student choices.

Session
Teaching + Learning
Presenters

Erica DeVoe (English Teacher), Michelle Doucette (Student), Todd Grimes (Principal), Jazmyne Kinney (Student), Tony Lementowicz (Instructional Coordinator), Thomas Mclaughlin (Student), Denise Oliveira (English Teacher), Hayley Townsend (Student)

Contact

A 21st Century Curriculum: Relevant, Project-based, Student-centered Learning

Milton High School, Milton, Vermont

Two years ago Milton High School undertook a complete revision of its core curriculum in grades 9–12. Using the conceptual framework developed by the Partnership for 21st Century Skills as a starting point, Milton High School set out to design curricula and instructional practices that modeled creativity, innovation, critical thinking, and collaboration using relevant, project-based, student-centered strategies that focused on real-world skills that students could apply outside of high school and in whatever life path they chose. To avoid the trap of incrementalism and stay within tight budgetary limitations, Milton developed a comprehensive, systematic improvement process that fluidly moved from development of new curricula to the implementation of a 1:1 technology initiative starting with this year’s freshman class to the delivery of the professional development needed to make it all successful in the classroom. Join educators from Milton High School as they share the challenges and successes faced on the way to realizing a 21st century learning program for every student.

Session
TBD
Presenters

Kerry Sewell (director of curriculum), Anne Blake (co-principal), Scott Thompson (assistant principal), Katri O’Neill (technology integration specialist), Karen Hammond (teacher), Angela King (teacher) Jason Gorczyk (teacher), Amanda Notman (special educator)

Contact

Scott Thompson, sthompson@mtsd-vt.org

A Call to Leadership: Harnessing the Power of Student Voice in Leading School Improvement

Harwood Union High School, Moretown, VT

At Harwood Union High School, students are not only taking a proactive role in designing their own education and planning for future learning, but in serving as leaders in the school community responsible for creating the systems and structures necessary to ensure a personalized education is possible.

In this interactive session, administrators and teachers from Harwood Union will focus on the benefits of a shared leadership model in which adults and youth lead together. The presentation will provide the rationale for this type of shared leadership model and describe the practical elements as they relate to the implementation of personalized learning.

Participants will have the opportunity to construct a proposal or plan for instituting a distributed and shared leadership model inclusive of teachers and students in their school, and will leave with an understanding of the benefits of a distributed and shared leadership model inclusive of both teachers and students.

Sessions
Thursday, March 17, 2:15pm; Thursday, March 17, 3:45pm
Presenters

Emma Cosgrove (student), Noah Eckstein (student), Jonah Ibson (teacher), Sam Krotinger (teacher), Cole Lavoie (student), Hazel Macmillan (student), Amy Rex (principal)

Contact

Amy Rex, arex@wwsu.org

A Collaborative Approach to Dropout Prevention: It’s All About the KID!

North Country Charter Academy, Littleton, NH

North Country Charter Academy is a mission-driven public charter school collaborating with ten school districts to solve an intractable dropout problem. The school offers a personalized, competency-based curriculum that utilizes a blended, distance-learning model in which students work independently and at their own pace in a brick-and-mortar building with the support of a certified teaching staff. Students are provided multiple pathways and opportunities by which to complete high school, and they earn credit when they demonstrate mastery of subject matter. Over the past ten years, the model has contributed significantly to a 74% reduction in the number of dropouts in Grafton and Coos Counties in Northern New Hampshire and has graduated a total of 362 students – 78 of which had been prior high school dropouts.

Participants will leave this session with a clear understanding of how the North Country model operates and how they can adapt this model for use in any type of educational setting.

Sessions
Thursday, March 26 | 3:45 pm; Friday, March 27 | 9:15 am
Presenters

Scott Kleinschrodt (center director), Lisa Lavoie (principal), Greg Williams (Teacher), Lynne Grigelevich (Registrar)

Presentation
Contact

A Commitment to Change: Informing School Redesign with Student Voices

Come hear three students reflect on equity in education, the meaning of success, and authentic student engagement. Tianna Ridge (Attleboro High School, MA), Jamaal Hankey (Essex High School, VT), and Anna Parker (Yarmouth High School, ME) will discuss the experiences and relationships that have contributed to their success. Tianna, Jamaal, and Anna will share their hopes for all students, and will challenge us to think about how we can each support, inspire, and engage all of the young people with whom we work. At the close of the plenary, participants will be asked to make a personal commitment to learning and leading for equity in their own way, informed by these students’ perspectives.

Session
Tuesday, March 13, 8:00-8:30 AM
Presenters

Jamaal Hankey (Student, Essex High School, VT), Andrea Summers (Senior Associate, Great Schools Partnership), Moises Nuñez (Senior Associate, Great Schools Partnership), Anna Parker (Student, Yarmouth High School, ME), Tianna Ridge (Student, Attleboro High School, MA)

A Critical Conversation about Racial Equity in Northern New England

MaineSpark, ME

How should states in northern New England approach issues of racial and ethnic equity in their education systems? What does it mean to achieve equity and close gaps in a largely homogenous region? This session will draw on Maine’s experience of developing a big-tent alliance of organizations in the education sector and beyond to address these crucial issues. We’ll share key lessons from the efforts of the New England Alliances for College and Career Readiness more broadly, then explore in depth the Maine alliance’s work to balance its focus on racial and economic equity. Session participants will learn about, analyze and discuss the work of MaineSpark’s Future Success track to empower racially diverse student populations to reach college and career readiness. Educate Maine will then lead participants in a critical conversation about approaching equity in their own classrooms, schools and districts.

Session participants will learn about approaches to discussing and working toward racial and ethnic equity in education systems, reflect on lessons learned from Maine in this area, and leverage their own expertise and experiences to generate new ideas for connecting with and engaging diverse communities in authentic ways.

Session
TBD
Presenters

Ed Cervone (executive director, Educate Maine), Kate Leveille (project manager, MaineSpark), Emily Weiss (principal, Education First Consulting)

A Mastery-Based Lesson on Mastery-Based Learning

High School in the Community, New Haven, CT

In this session, presenters will describe how High School in the Community has advanced mastery-based learning to help all students take more responsibility over their own education, while they also address skill deficits, acquire college- and career-ready skills, and excel in their areas of interest. To make the session more resonant and authentic for participants, it will be structured as a mastery-based lesson! So whether you have never heard of mastery-based learning, or whether you already changing practices in your school or classroom, our mastery-based approach will both broaden and deepen your understanding.

Session
Friday, March 21 | 9:15 am + 10:45 am
Presenters

Erik Good (building leader), Gail Emilsson (teacher), Adeline Marzialo (teacher), Julie Vargas (student)

Presentation
Contact

A New Way of Building Partnerships with Families

The Right Question Institute, MA

When parents and family members have the opportunity to develop key skills to support their children’s education, monitor progress, and advocate for them when necessary, they can partner more effectively with schools to ensure student success. The Right Question Institute’s evidence-based school-family partnership builds parents’ skills of asking better questions, participating in decisions, and playing three key roles in their child’s education. Using this strategy, parents learn to ask their own questions about their children’s education, and educators learn how to build parents’ skills for more effective participation by using a set of simple methods.

Session participants will experience the school-family partnership strategy, will explore the art and science behind the methods, and will practice integrating them into their work. This session will prepare participants to use this strategy, which has been applied to a variety of setting producing consistent results, at their schools and share it with colleagues.

In this session, participants will: 1) experience the Right Question Institute’s school-family partnership strategy 2) explore examples of implementation of the strategy; 3) acquire resources and materials.

Session
Monday, March 12, 8:30 -11:00 AM
Presenters

Luz Santana (co-director) 

Contact

Luz Santana, luz@rightquestion.org

A Sample System for Proficiency-Based Learning in the Classroom

Burlington High School, Burlington, VT

This session will introduce participants to the key elements of proficiency-based learning through an in-depth investigation of the instructional process in a high school chemistry course. The presenters will describe a flexible instructional cycle that includes frequent formative assessment and a balance of whole-class instruction and personalized time for practice, re-teaching, tutoring, and extension work. They will also share systems and strategies that teachers can use to manage highly differentiated classrooms, empower students to monitor their own learning, and create a growth-mindset culture. Additional examples from the humanities, mathematics, world languages, ELL classes, and other scientific disciplines will also be discussed to illustrate how Burlington High School teachers are applying proficiency-based structures across the curriculum.

Participants will leave with concrete strategies and an array of materials they can adapt in their own classrooms, and ample time will be provided for participants to ask questions and participate in discussion.

Session
Friday, March 27 | 10:45 am + 1:15 pm
Presenters

Amy Dickson (teacher learning coordinator), Molly Heath (science teacher)

Presentation
Contact

Amy Dickson, amy@partnershipvt.org

A Three-Step Process for Successful Learning Using Self-Assessment, Peer-Assessment, and Reassessment Effectively

Poland Regional High School, ME

At Poland Regional High School, a flagship public high school for proficiency-based education in Maine, an emphasis on self- and peer-assessment and a school-wide process for reassessment has supported students towards successfully reaching their learning goals. Teachers have implemented classroom tasks specifically designed from the current leading guidelines for self- and peer-assessment in hopes of making each student’s learning process transparent. Furthermore, a school-wide process for reassessment has been adopted to ensure each student has the opportunity to demonstrate their best learning on summative assessments. In this session we will walk you through the process that our science, math, and humanities classes have developed for self- and peer-assessment as well as outline the process we took to develop our school-wide reassessment protocol.

Participants will leave this session with practical approaches to teaching self- and peer-assessment; an understanding of how reassessment opportunities can reinforce learning and how assessment strategies are managed in a proficiency based/ standards-based system.

Session
TBD
Presenters

Jessica Elias Castillo (science teacher), Patrick Martin (biology and anatomy/physiology teacher), Laurie Sevigny (social studies teacher)

A Vision for Learning: Using Self-Reflection and Peer Review to Align Your School Improvement Efforts

New England Association of Schools and Colleges, MA

In this session participants will learn how to use research-based NEASC CPS Standards which define best practices as a tool for self-reflection and peer review. Through a process of self-reflection based on evidence and in collaboration with stakeholders, schools can develop a vision for learning with specific and measurable goals for success. Participants will use collaborative practices to explore the NEASC CPS Standards for Accreditation, focusing on student learning. We will do a crosswalk with the Global Best Practices to see how to align school improvement efforts. Participants will experience elements of the self-reflection process including the review of student work, classroom observations, document review, survey data, stakeholder interviews, and peer review. With the Standards in mind and the understanding of the essential components of self-reflection, participants will develop an outline for a process to improve learning, achievement, and well-being for students.

Session
TBD
Presenters

Alyson Geary (deputy director), Bill Wehrli (associate director)

Agents of Their Own Learning: A District’s Proficiency-Based System Enters Maturity

Regional School Unit 2, Hallowell, ME

Regional School Unit 2 has been implementing K–12 proficiency-based learning for several years now. Join the presenters as they describe how their model has given students significant amounts of voice and choice in their learning. In the district’s three high schools, students have authentic opportunities to design their own learning pathways, learn at their own pace, and engage in learning experiences that not only match their interests, but that build upon the resources and opportunities that exist in the wider community. In this session, participants will learn about the structure, schedule, and other design elements that have empowered the district to dramatically increase personalization for students without watering down standards.

Session
Thursday, March 20 | 2:15 pm + 3:45 pm
Presenters

Rick Amero (principal, Monmouth Academy), John Armentrout (director, information technology), Christine Arsenault (teacher, Monmouth Academy), Brenda Dalbeck (teacher, Hall-Dale High School), Virgel Hammonds (superintendent), Libby Ladner (teacher, Hall-Dale Middle School), Steve Lavoie (principal, Richmond High School), Eric Palleschi (teacher, Monmouth Middle School), Megan Rounds (teacher, Richmond High School), Matt Shea (coordinator of student achievement), Mark Tinkham (principal, Hall-Dale High/Middle School), Charlie Urquhart (teacher, Richmond High School)

Presentation
Contact

Virgel Hammonds, vhammonds@kidsrsu.org

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