Friday, November 22, 2019

11/25-11/29

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Monday November 25th-
No School for Students!
PT Conferences 8A-8P (Dinner will be provided by the CV PTO from 4-5PM)

Out of Building-Kurtzman (Full Day)

Tuesday November 26th-
No School for Students!
PT Conferences 8A-12P

Out of Building- Groff (Full Day), Kurtzman (Full Day)

Wednesday November 27th-
NO SCHOOL!

Thursday November 28th-
NO SCHOOL!
Happy Thanksgiving!

Friday November 29th-
NO SCHOOL!
Happy BLACK FRIDAY!

Bits -n Bytes

 

 What are the 7 Mindsets?

The 7 Mindsets are a set of principles that fit perfectly into work you might currently be a part of (or would like to explore) related to social-emotional learning. If you haven’t heard of them before, you can learn more about all seven on this landing page. Here’s a quick overview:
  • Everything is Possible: Dream big, embrace creativity and expect results
  • Passion First: Pursue your authentic talents and deepest interests
  • We Are Connected: Explore the synergies in all relationships and learn to empower one another
  • 100% Accountable: Choose to be responsible for your own happiness and success
  • Attitude of Gratitude: Seek positives from every experience and be thankful for all you have
  • Live to Give: Inspire and serve others while maximizing your potential
  • The Time is Now:
  • Harness the power of this moment, and take purposeful action today

PLC in PRINT




Friday, November 15, 2019

11/18-11/22

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Monday November 18th-
Day 1-
Gr 4-6 ELA PLC @ 8 AM (LGI)

Out of Building- None

Tuesday November 19th-
Day 2-
Gr K-3 PLC @ 8AM (LGI)

Out of Building-Groff (Half Day AM), Grove (Full Day)

Wednesday November 20th-
Day 3-
PTO Meeting @ 6p

Out of Building- Key (Full Day)

Thursday November 21st-
Day 4-
MTSS @ 1 PM (LGI)
Conferences 5p-8p (Dinner will be provided tonight from Roma's)
School Board Meeting @ 7:30p @ E.C.

Out of Building- Krone (Full Day)

Friday November 22nd-
Day 5-

Out of Building- Krone (Full Day), Roy (Full Day)


PLC in Print 





Education Humor

Three honorable mentions:
1. For Primary...
2.  For Intermediate...

3. The reality of being a secondary teacher but an elementary principal...


For more laughs, click here! Have a great weekend everyone:)



Sunday, November 10, 2019

11/11-11/15

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Monday November 11th-
Day 2-
Veterans Day
CSI Meeting: Students How are OUR Students Doing?
-8am @ LGI (committee rec'd calendar invite)
Gr 2 CoGAT Testing

Out of Building-Godfrey (Half Day PM), White (Half Day PM)

Tuesday November 12th-
Day 3-
CSI Meeting: School Culture
-8am @ LGI (committee rec'd calendar invite)
Gr 2 CoGAT Testing

Out of Building-Godfrey (Full Day), Kurtzman (Half Day PM), Paup (Full Day), Ream (Full Day)

Wednesday November 13th-
Day 4-
CSI Meeting: School Processes
-8am @ LGI (committee rec'd calendar invite)
Gr 2 CoGAT Testing

Out of Building-None

Thursday November 14th-
Day 5-
Gr 2 CoGAT Testing
Gr. 3 STEAM Night 4p-9p RLJHS

Out of Building-Riedel (Full Day)

Friday November 15th-
Day 6-
CSI Meeting: Demographics
-8am @ LGI (committee rec'd calendar invite)
Gr 2 CoGAT Testing

Out of Building- Orwig (Full Day)

Bits & Bytes 

WeVideo Logo

PLC in Print 

Poverty, Not Race, Fuels the Achievement Gap

Analysis shows income drives schools' success

The racial "achievement gap" in standardized-test scores shouldn't be considered a racial gap at all, a new study argues. Instead, it's more accurate to call it a "poverty gap."
Racial segregation tends to concentrate black and Hispanic children in schools where most of the students come from poor families because of the persistent connection between race and income in the United States. And those high-poverty schools provide fewer opportunities than schools that are more affluent.
How stark are the wealth disparities? In 2016, the median wealth of a white family—assets minus debt—was $171,000, based on calculations of federal data conducted by the Urban Institute. For black families, median wealth was a little over $17,000. For Hispanic families, it was just shy of $21,000.
"It's the difference in the poverty composition that is most predictive of the achievement gap," said Sean Reardon, a professor at the Stanford University Graduate School of Education and the study's lead author. "That's the mechanism by which segregation is harmful."
To calculate school effectiveness and achievement gaps, the researchers turned to a data archive they created using federal sources such as state test scores as well as results on the National Assessment of Educational Progress. Segregation data were derived from an annual survey of all schools in the country. Poverty was measured by looking at the percentage of children in a school who are eligible for free- or reduced-price lunches. All those data have been compiled into an interactive online tool that the public can use to rate and rank schools and districts nationwide.
In their analysis, the researchers found that highly segregated districts had sizable achievement gaps, and the rate of the gap grew faster as students progressed from 3rd to 8th grades.

Comparing Districts

To see this in action, consider the school districts in Atlanta and Baltimore. Both are highly segregated by race and both have large test-score gaps between black and white students. Atlanta is about 75 percent black and 15 percent white; Baltimore's student population is about 82 percent black and 8 percent white.
But in Atlanta, the test-score gap between white and black children is nearly five grade levels, and in Baltimore, the test-score gap is two grade levels, according to the tool developed by Stanford.
Measuring 'Educational Opportunity'
Sean Reardon, a professor at the Stanford University Graduate School of Education, developed a data archive that allows analysis of racial test-score gaps and comparisons among school districts across states. A public version of the data tool, the Educational Opportunity Project at Stanford University, can be found online at edopportunity.org.
The interactive tool allows users to examine three important measures by school, district, or state.
Average Test Scores
These scores capture a student’s learning opportunities both inside and outside the school environment. Children who have rich learning opportunities outside of school can score higher on tests compared to students who don’t have access to the same resources, Reardon says.
Learning Rates
This measure evaluates how effectively a school, district, or state does its job at moving students ahead academically.
Trends in Test Scores
This measure captures both changes in the community and the change in the performance of the school, district, or state over time.
The data tool allows schools and districts to be compared to others in the country, even though they don’t use the same standardized tests.
The interactive tool shows that black students in Baltimore attend schools that are relatively more affluent than black students in Atlanta. In Baltimore, black schools are 15 percent poorer than the schools attended by white students. In Atlanta, those schools are 56 percent poorer than those attended by white students.
In contrast, Detroit, which is 83 percent black and about 2 percent white, has an achievement gap of less than a grade level between black and white students. But both groups are scoring more than two grade levels below national averages, and both groups are attending schools classified as high poverty.
"Whether your child is white or black, that [high-poverty] school is likely to be much less effective," Reardon said.
The study adds to a growing body of research about the effects of segregation on academic achievement.
A 2017 study by David Leibowitz, an analyst for the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, found that residential segregation increased in districts after desegregation orders were lifted.
When districts were no longer required to integrate their schools, dropout rates rose by 1 percentage point for black students and by 3 percentage points for Hispanic students.
And, in a 2017 study of New York schools, researchers found that gaps between white students and black and Latino students in math- and reading-test scores, as well as gaps in graduation rates, were all smaller in the city's most integrated schools, compared with the city's most racially segregated schools.
In the city's most segregated schools, white students were 23 percentage points more likely to graduate from high school than black students and 29.4 percentage points more likely to graduate than Latino students. By contrast, in New York's most racially and ethnically mixed schools, the Latino-white graduation gap was only 4 percentage points, and black students graduated statistically on par or even slightly more often than white students.

Understanding Why

So what is it about high-poverty schools that stifles students' academic growth?
That's a harder question to answer, the researchers concluded, possibly because the proxies for school quality that can be quantified—things like the existence of gifted programs, the number of skilled and experienced teachers, or the use of more challenging curricula—are poor gauges for evaluating a school's quality. High-poverty schools have fewer of those resources, but that does not seem to be associated with achievement gaps.
The researchers also examined whether poor schools have large groups of students with lower test scores compared with schools with more white students. That clustering could mean that teachers can't concentrate on rigor, or that there are differences in norms around achievement, the researchers hypothesized. But those elements also didn't explain the gaps, the papers found.
Even though the analysis did not pin down the mechanisms that lead to achievement gaps, it does show poverty is the cause, rather than a school's racial makeup. If it were possible to address academic-achievement gaps while leaving racial and economic segregation intact, Reardon said, some school district or community would have figured it out by now.
"It may not be possible," he said. "It certainly isn't easy."
Vol. 39, Issue 07, Page 5
Published in Print: October 2, 2019, as Poverty, Not Race, Fuels the Achievement Gap

Friday, November 1, 2019

11/4-11/8

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Daylight Savings Time comes to an end...
Sunday November 3rd-
Adjust your clocks back one hour @ 2 a.m. 


Monday November 4th-
Day 3-
Data Meeting - Gr 3/4 @ 8AM (LGI)
PTO Texas Roadhouse Fundraiser 3p-10p

Out of Building- Capik (Full Day), Frey (Full Day), Kurtzman (Half Day PM)

Tuesday November 5th-
Day 4-
Data Meeting - Gr 5/6 @ 8AM (LGI)

Out of Building-Capik (Full Day)

Wednesday November 6th-
Day 5-

Out of Building- Capik (Full Day), Key (Full Day Training)

Thursday November 7th-
Day 6-
Camo/Flannel Day (You may wear jeans)
Gr. 5 Byrnes Lesson
School Board Meeting @ 7P @ E.C.

Out of Building-Capik (Full Day), Godfrey (Half Day AM), Key (Full Day Training)

Friday November 8th-
Day 1-

Out of Building- Capik (Full Day), Key (Full Day Training)

Bits & Bytes 
Still working on hours for Dec 23, click on these webinars to check them out...



and/or

Screen Shot 2015-07-14 at 12.00.10 PM
Anxiety and depression are affecting students at staggering levels. Join SEL leaders from Los Angeles Unified School District and Sacramento County Office of Education to learn simple strategies districts, schools and classroom educators can implement to promote students’ social, emotional and mental wellness.
DATE: Wednesday, November 13th
TIME: 12:30pm PT/3:30pm ET
SPEAKERS: Los Angeles Unified School District’s SEL Advisor Susan Ward Roncalli and Sacramento County Office of Education's Director of Student and Educational Services, Brent Malicote



PLC in Print  
ELIMINATE PING-PONG BEHAVIOR
"To address classroom management, I frequently provide trainings from the Time to Teach discipline curriculum (published by the Center for Teacher Effectiveness). Administrators, teachers, and staff, alike, have told me that these strategies have tremendously transformed classroom environments by increasing instructional time and teachers’ confidence, as well as decreasing off-task behavior. Here are three of the most effective self-control strategies."
1. Exercise the Power of Silence
2. Keep Responses Clear and Concise
3. Diffuse the Challenge and Move On
**FULL Article Linke in Title**