Teaching Learning

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The Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat

The Capacity Building Series is


produced by The Literacy and
Numeracy Secretariat to support
leadership and instructional
effectiveness in Ontario schools.
The series is posted at:
www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/
literacynumeracy/inspire/
For information: lns@ontario.ca

Why Teaching-Learning Critical


Pathways?
The Teaching-Learning Critical Pathway makes
use of the following high-yield strategies for
improving student achievement:
setting high expectations for students
(Brophy & Good, 1974)
using assessment for learning to guide
instruction (Chappuis et al., 2005)
providing frequent, useful and useable
feedback for students (Black & Wiliam,
1998)
understanding the meaning and scope of
curriculum expectations (Reeves, 2002)
engineering effective classroom discussion,
questions and learning tasks that elicit
evidence of learning (Marzano, Pickering,
& Pollock, 2001)

June 2008
ISSN: 1913 8482 (Print)
ISSN: 1913 8490 (Online)

CAPACITY BUILDING SERIES

SECRETARIAT
SPECIAL EDITION # 6

Teaching-Learning Critical Pathways


One Model for Ontario Professional Learning Communities
We can predict with some certainty that our students will be graduating into a world that is
based on a new knowledge economy. They will require facility with a complex set of skills
to deconstruct, construct, co-construct and reconstruct meaning efficiently and effectively.
This high level of literacy is the new criterion for success. Students will require an education
that has a solid foundation on basic literacy and numeracy skills but also supports deep thinking
and action an education that values and understands the human condition. This is about a
type of education that prepares students to survive and thrive in the 21st century and to make
positive and lasting contributions to their world.
How can we as 21st century educators provide our students with the education they need?

Practical, Precise and Personalized


The Teaching-Learning Critical Pathway (TLCP) is a promising model used to organize actions
for teaching and student learning. The TLCP, inspired by a strategy presented by Michael Fullan,
Peter Hill and Carmel Crvola in their book Breakthrough, is designed as the work of the
professional learning community (PLC). (For an overview of the structure and benefits of PLCs,
go to http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/literacynumeracy/inspire/research/PLC.pdf.)
The basic idea of the pathway is that classroom practice can be organized in a practical, precise
and highly personalized manner for each student, with the intended outcome being increased
achievement for all students. The model which sequences the work of each PLC is an
organizer for deep learning and inquiry. However, it should be noted that a teaching-learning
pathway is not simply a technical exercise. It also involves new ways of working together.
As Little states, improved student learning and teaching result when teachers collaboratively
focus on achievement and assessment, questioning practice, and supporting professional
growth (cited in Schmoker, 2006, p. 109). This type of work engages teachers in relationships

TLCP tips ...


Identification and ownership of issues is
necessary to promote open-ended dialgoue
and professional risk-taking.
Systematic evaluation of the consequences
of actions is necessary if TLCPs are to
refine and further develop interpretations
and solutions.
Ownership by the school staff makes
it more likely that TLCPs will be able
to compete for priority.
Road blocks, misunderstandings, and
disappointments need to be recognized
as important moments of learning
for both individuals and teams.
Common understanding of assessment,
rubric criteria, curricular expectations
and big ideas takes time; all present
potential moments of uncertainty and
learning.
Refining, adjusting and modifying occur
in all stages and should be embraced
as teachers co-construct their collective
understanding through the experience.

of trust. Trust propels momentum towards collaboration and creates contexts in which
people feel able to take risks to develop innovative practice. This work values teacher
expertise, creative thinking and new knowledge.

Embedded Professional Learning


Embedded professional learning changes the school culture by holding everyone accountable
for continuous improvement. Discussion and action are centred on the interdependence of
curriculum expectations, assessment of and for learning, higher-order and critical thinking
strategies and reflection.
Embedded professional learning provides teachers with opportunities to imagine ways
and means to improve student learning by doing. It is about small, focused and precise
steps that result in improving life chances for all students. The TLCP embraces the belief
and understanding that all students can learn and all teachers can teach to high standards
and articulate their practice.

Benefits
A decade of experience, Crvola, Hill and Fullan write, has led us to propose what we
see as the breakthrough that will transform classroom instruction and lead to quantum
improvements in literacy outcomes (2006, p. 10). The critical learning instructional path
is one key because it provides teachers with a model or process to manage instruction
in the most expert way possible (p. 14).
In Ontario, the critical learning instructional path has been adapted and piloted with a
number of Ontario Focused Intervention Partnership (OFIP) schools. Many superintendents,
principals and teachers credit improvements in achievement to the use of the
Teaching-Learning Critical Pathway.

Reading Expectations
1.5 Making Inferences/Interpreting Texts
1.6 Extending Understanding
Name
#1
#2
#3
#4
#5
#6
#7
#8
#9
# 10
# 11
# 12
# 13
# 14
# 15
# 16
# 17
# 18
# 19
# 20
# 21
= actual
= 38%
= prediction
= 67%
= results
= 81%

Level 1

Level 2

Level 3

Level 4

holidays

3
2
1

Figure 1 Class Data Wall

10
5
2

6
9
8

2
5
9

This sample Class Data Wall


displays the achievement of
students in a Grade 3 class
in relation to two curriculum
expectations from 1.0 Reading
for Meaning The Ontario
Curriculum: Language,
Grades 18. The dot is
used to represent student
achievement at the beginning of the TLCP. In this case
38 per cent of the students
were at Levels 3 and 4.
The rectangle indicates the
teachers prediction or target.
The teacher is predicting that
67 per cent of the students
will achieve Levels 3 and 4
by the end of the TLCP. The
triangle shows where each
student scored at the end of
the TLCP. Eighty one per cent
of the students achieved
Levels 3 and 4.

Getting Started: A Sample Process


The process described below has been used effectively in professional learning communities
in Ontario schools. The number of PLC meetings and the order and number of steps may vary.

First Stage Setting Up the TLCP


Number of PLC meetings will vary depending on the past work of the school.
1. Gather evidence.
What evidence of student achievement do we currently have?
2. Determine area of greatest need.
What does our evidence of student achievement tell us?
3. Build clusters of expectations related to the area of greatest need.
Which expectations from curriculum documents can be clustered to address student learning?
What is our individual understanding of these expectations?
4. Review current practice.
What is our current practice in relation to our students area of greatest need? What does
the research literature tell us in relation to the area of greatest need?
5. Design classroom assessments.
What should students know, do and understand at the end of the pathway?
Develop criteria that reflect what successful student work would look like in relation
to the cluster of expectations selected.
Develop a rubric.
Develop a culminating post-assessment task.
Build a class data wall (See Figure 1 on page 2).

Evidence of student achievement


may come from ...
Common grade-level assessments
Common board-level assessments
(e.g., CASI, DRA, PM Benchmarks)
Report card data
EQAO

Specific examples of areas of


greatest need include students
being able to ...
Make connections
Make inferences
Express personal opinions
Identify points of view
Understand how text features and stylistic
elements relate to the meaning of texts

Examples of big ideas ...


Overcoming prejudice
Being an agent of change

Second Stage TLCP Actions


Two or more PLC meetings are recommended.
1. Plan a six-week learning block and build collective understanding about how you
are going to teach it.
How and what will we teach? What did we notice about our students pre-assessment results?
What is the Big Idea students are learning about? What thinking and metacognitive
strategies will be used to support student learning? What will classroom assessment
look like?
Select a variety of rich texts (literary, informational, graphic) for the instructional approaches.
Select high-yield teaching strategies that will promote the greatest student growth and
align best with the identified area of need. (For video and print resources on high-yield
teaching strategies go to http://www.curriculum.org/secretariat/may2.shtml.)
2. Share evidence of student learning (PLC check-ins)
Identify one student as a marker student whose progress will be shared at each PLC
(refer to the class data wall).
Identify a number of students as students to watch. These students may need more
precise scaffolding of their learning
Bring in student work both a strong piece and a piece of work that the teacher considers
puzzling.
Deconstruct student work using the criteria/rubric and suggest next steps in the improvement process.
Share teacher practice. Discuss presenting issues that arise out of the teacher conversations. Hold just in time embedded conversations to find solutions for challenges.
Reflect on the TLCP actions and next steps.

Poverty
Empathy

Rich culminating tasks ...


connect to the world beyond the classroom
lead to outcomes of substantial intellectual
substance and educational value
reinforce reading and writing expectations
engage students
frequently include the arts (represented
in print, movement, rhyme and rhythm)
involve more than one curricular area
require higher-order and critical thinking
skills

3. Have students complete the agreed-upon culminating task.

TLCPs in brief ...

Third Stage Outcomes of the TLCP

require a full-school effort

One PLC meeting is recommended for teacher moderation.

are facilitated by a school administrator


develop distributed leadership
take about six weeks (time varies)
identify curriculum expectations that will
be used as a focus during the TLCP
identify students area of greatest need
identify a big idea that engages students
provide students with many opportunities
to develop and demonstrate deep thinking
provide opportunity for both staff and
students to reflect on learning and teaching
conclude with next steps that contribute
to the next TLCP and school-wide changes

One PLC meeting is recommended to review findings and determine next steps.
1. Conduct teacher moderation.
(For print and video resources on the teacher moderation process, go to
http://www.curriculum.org/secretariat/september10.shtml.)
Is there a difference in student achievement?
Each teacher brings student work to share and one piece is moderated by the group.
The group then forms teams and moderates three or four more pieces of student work
(make sure to include the puzzling ones).
Data for individual students are collected and placed on the classroom data wall
Next steps are generated for the students.
2. Engage in reflection.
What did we learn? Based on our inquiry, what do we want to do next? Were the most
effective high-yield strategies chosen? What does or doesnt our student evidence tell
us about student learning? How do we know that a high level of learning was achieved?
What do we do for our students who are not meeting with success?

More Information about Networking for Learning


Networked learning communities have grown in popularity since they appear to address
many of the key findings that present-day organizational/education reformers say
are needed to produce change and improvement in schools, teaching and learning
(Darling Hammond & McLaughlin, 1995; Cochran-Smith & Lytle, 1993). Readers are
referred to Building Networks for Learning for additional resources and strategies
(http://www.curriculum.org/buildingnetworks.html).

REFERENCES AND RELATED READING

Black, P., & Wiliam, D. (1998). Inside the black box: Raising standards through classroom assessment.
Phi Delta Kappan, 80(2), 139148.
Brophy I. E., & Good T. L. (1974). Teacher-student relationships: causes and consequences. New York:
Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1974.
Chappuis, S., Stiggins, R.J., Arter, J., & Chappuis, J. (2005). Assessment FOR Learning. Portland,
OR: Assessment Training Institute.
Church, M. et al. (2002). Participation, relationships and dynamic change: New thinking on evaluating the
work of international networks. Retrieved June 27, 2008 http://networkedlearning.ncsl.org.uk/
knowledge-base/research-papers/participation-relationships-and-dynamic-change-madelinechurch-2002.pdf.
Cochran-Smith, M., & Lytle, S. L. (1993). Inside/outside: Teacher research and knowledge. New York:
Teachers College Press.
Crvola, C. Hill, P., & Fullan, M. (2006). Critical learning instructional path: Assessment for learning
in action. Orbit, 36(2), 1014.
Darling-Hammond, L., & McLaughlin, M. (1995) Policies that support professional development in
an era of reform. Phi Delta Kappan, 76, 597604.
Earl, L., Katz, S., Elgie, S., Ben Jaafar, S., & Foster, L. (2006). How networked learning communities
work. Toronto: ON: Aporia Consulting Limited.
Elmore, R. (2003). Knowing the right thing to do: School improvement and performance-based
accountability. Washington, DC: NGA Center for Best Practices.
Fullan, M., Hill, P., & Crvola, C. (2006 ). Breakthrough. Thousand Oaks, CA Corwin Press
Marzano, R., Pickering, D., & Pollock, J. (2001). Classroom instruction that works: Research-based
strategies for increasing student achievement. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and
Curriculum Development.
Little, J. W. (2005) Nodes and nets: Investigating resources for professional learning in schools and
networks. Working paper prepared for the National College for School Leadership, Nottingham,
England Accessed June 27, 2008. http://www.curriculum.org/secretariat/files/Jan30NodesNets.pdf.
Reeves, D. (2007). Ahead of the curve: The power of assessment to transform teaching and learning.
Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree.
Reeves, D. (2002). Making standards work (3rd ed.). Denver: CO: Advanced Learning Press.
Schmoker, M. J. (2006). Results now. How can we achieve unprecedented improvements in teaching
and learning. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
Stoll, L., & Seashore Louis, K. (Eds.). (2007). Professional learning communities: Divergence, depth
and dilemmas. Berkshire, U.K.: Open University Press.

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