Showing posts with label Rigor Relevance Relationships. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rigor Relevance Relationships. Show all posts

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Rigor, Relevance and Relationships


I recently attended the 2012 Wisconsin School Leadership Academy and was fortunate to hear some great speakers that I will try to blog about in my next few posts (especially since I've been challenged to blog twice a week this summer --if you're counting this is blog post #2 in the challenge).  If you'd like to check out the tweets from this Academy, you can check #2012WSLA on twitter. I tweeted from the @AWSALeaders1 account, so you won't find too many tweets from me.

The first speaker we heard was Willard Daggett, known by many for speaking/writing about Rigor, Relevance and Relationships in education.  Here are some of my bullet point notes from his session:
  • Schools are improving, but we still have a gap of where students need to be in our changing world.
  • Teachers are on treadmills just trying to keep up and cover everything that might be on the test.
  • The 3 central challenges in education right now: Common Core State Standards, Next Generation Assessments, and Teacher Evaluations.
  • Rapidly improving schools have proactive leadership, and focused/sustained professional development. 
  • Our state tests focus on lower level applications, but our students NEED higher level/real world applications (Rigor/Relevance).
  • Research on the most improving schools have found that many have eliminated department chair heads and have instead moved to interdisciplinary teams. You cannot get to higher level/real world applications one discipline at a time!
  • Building character/guiding principles (respect, responsibility, compassion, initiative, adaptability, perseverance, etc.) are still essential for our students.  Do you know anyone that truly lost a job due to a lack of academic skills? It was likely a lack of one of those character traits.
  • There is NO research that supports eliminating the arts (especially if it means more test prep).
I realize that these are not the best notes from his session (like I said, I was also busy tweeting!)  I must confess that I have heard Daggett's name mentioned numerous times before, but didn't hop on the bandwagon to read up on the new "Rigor/Relevance" buzz words, but now I'm racking up another amazon order for his books.  Daggett doesn't speak to any sort of magic "be all/end all," but rather speaks about common sense practices and the importance of making your curriculum rigorous (higher level thinking/applications) and relevant (real-life situations that make the learning important and applicable for students).