Transcript Slide 1

Increased Rigor in the Standards of
Learning: Setting a New Trendline
for Virginia Schools
Dr. Linda Wallinger
Assistant Superintendent for Instruction
Virginia Department of Education
July 1, 2012
Standards of Learning Revision and
Assessment Dates
Subject Area
Standards of Learning &
Curriculum Framework
Approved
Year of Full
Implementation Assessments Based
Entirely on New
Standards
History and Social
Science
2008
2010-2011
Mathematics
2009
2011-2012
English
2010
2012-2013
Science
2010
2012-2013
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New Standards of Learning
Assessments
More information on Virginia’s Standards of Learning and assessments is
available at www.doe.virginia.gov.
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What is “Rigor”?
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What Rigor Is Not
• Endless repetition and long hours of
completing worksheets
• The quantity of material covered or the
number of times it’s covered
• More worksheets for students who finished
the assignment early
• Covering more material in a shorter amount of
time
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Descriptions of Rigor
• The quality of thinking
• High expectations
• Deep immersion in a subject, which also includes real-world
applications
• The depth and attention devoted to an assignment, for
example a scientific experiment or literary analysis done
thoughtfully, with sufficient depth and attention to accuracy
and detail
• The capacity to understand content that is complex,
ambiguous, provocative, and personally or emotionally
challenging
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Importance of the Teaching
Environment
• Creating an environment in which each
student:
• Is expected to learn at high levels
• Is supported so he or she can learn at high levels
• Demonstrates learning at high levels
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What Does Rigor Look Like?
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Critical thinking and problem solving
Collaboration and leadership
Adaptability
Motivation and initiative
Effective oral and written communication
Accessing and analyzing information
Curiosity and imagination
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What Does Rigor Mean to You?
Think of a personal learning experience that you
felt was rigorous
• What did it look, feel, sound like?
• What were you doing?
• What were others doing to create that
experience for you?
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What Does Rigor Mean To Others?
 “Rigor is an experience. It stretches your mind, engages
your body and soul.”
 “Rigor involves both challenge and frustration. It’s
important to manage the frustration so it doesn’t
overwhelm you. But in most cases, the more challenging
the learning, the more satisfying it is when you succeed.”
 “I did a lot of reading and independent research and
worked on asking well thought-out questions. This was
self-motivated, self-directed learning that came from my
personal commitment to do the very best I could.”
 “I had to go through the stages of inquiry, discovery, and
self-questioning that are all part of rigorous learning.”
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Rigor in the Classroom
 Active, either through conversation or hands-on
or minds-on activity. There’s questioning and
discovery going on.
 Deep rather than broad; project-based. The
learners are digging into a topic or project.
 Engaging. The learner has made a real
connection with the material to be learned,
either on his or her own or with the help of the
teacher. There’s a sense that the learning was
“hard but satisfying.”
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Teaching Methods to Support Rigor
 Using inquiry methods to help students seek
their own answers
 Finding ways to make learning relevant to the
real world
 Helping students learn strategies they need to
attack challenging text, detect bias, gather
relevant information, and decide how to put
what they’ve learned to work in a useful way
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Rigor in Education
• Rigor means providing challenging content through effective
instructional approaches that lead to the development of cognitive
strategies that help students know what to do when they don’t
know what to do next.
• It requires active participation from both teachers and students. It
involves high-level content and instruction that may ask teachers to
think about teaching and assessment in a different way.
• It asks students to use content and skills to:
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Solve complex problems
Develop strategies that can be applied to other situations
Make connections across content areas, and
Draw conclusions and create solutions on their own.
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For More Information
Information about Virginia’s Standards of
Learning is available at:
• http://www.doe.virginia.gov/testing/index.shtml
and
• http://www.doe.virginia.gov/instruction/index.shtml.
You may also call the Department of Education
at 804-225-2880.
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Resources Used In This Presentation
include the following:
•
Blackburn, B.R. & Williamson, R. (November 2009). “The Characteristics of a Rigorous Classroom” in
Instructional Leader. Austin: Texas Elementary Principals and Supervisors Association.
http://www.ronwilliamson.com/RW_Web/Inst_Leadership_files/RigorNov09.pdf. (Retrieved April
30, 2012.)
•
Is it Rigor? Or is it Something Else? (September 4, 2007). An American Teacher.
http://debbieshultsblog.blogspot.com/2007/09/is-it-rigor-or-is-it-something-else.html. (Retrieved
April 30, 2012.)
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Small Schools Project. (April 2004: Volume 3, Number 9) Focus: A Newsletter for Selected School
Board Members in Washington State. Seattle: Abeo School Change.
http://www.smallschoolsproject.org. (Retrieved April 30, 2012.)
•
Virginia Department of Education. (February 22, 2012). 2011-2012 Mathematics Standards of
Learning Testing: Start of a New Trend Line in Student Achievement.
http://www.doe.virginia.gov/news/news_releases/2012/feb22.shtml. (Retrieved April 30, 2012.)
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