2019-2020 Visual Arts Departmental Focus

Submitted by: James French

  • Doing a professional development “deep dive” around some aspect of subject related progressive practice. This could draw on within department expertise and/or work with an outside consultant

We are primarily focusing on using arts institutions in and around the city as teaching/learning resources for both our students and ourselves. We are engaging in a series of PD opportunities and workshops at several museums in town.

The plan is to continue using the Tuesday afternoon meeting times to do our work. We plan to be flexible with those times in order to accommodate any opportunities that arise which will support our focus and needs.

2019-2020 Math Departmental Focus

Submitted by: Pat Higgiston

  • Documenting the “story” of the preK-12 curriculum
  • Doing a professional development “deep dive” around some aspect of subject related progressive practice. This could draw on within department expertise and/or work with an outside consultant
  • Some other area of focus to be proposed—School Visit

The department decided that it would be worthwhile to focus on the two aspects of our practice.

1) Data literacy in our curriculum: we would consider the conceptual through-lines in each division for data literacy (probability and statistics), how we align with peer institutions that our students come from (or go to) in the middle years, and ultimately how we align with curricular standards like the Common Core.

We would also explore 2) planning and reflecting around a school visit to a K-12 progressive school. Our intention is to study how they integrate a) data literacy across the curriculum, and b) how they differentiate in classes and address questions of class selection and tracking.

Next steps include documenting how data literacy already appears in our K-12 curriculum, and identifying on schools that are providing models of leadership in that work. We will meet again in January to decide how this will look for the rest of the year.

math department meeting #2, 11/12/19

Submitted by: Pat Higgiston

At this meeting, our newest member Ramsey introduced himself and asked great questions about the program. Welcome to LREI, Ramsey!

Before the meeting, I shared this survey to understand the kinds of questions the members of the math department were considering in the midst of their work this fall, and what work seemed most productive to continue going into next year. Once everyone contributed, I shared the results to form the basis of the conversation.

At the meeting, we split into cross-divisional groups to explore different aspects of our practice: 1) pedagogical practice, 2) the math program, and 3) the paradigm of school mathematics in general, and our relationship to it at LREI. Each group was charged with discussing any themes that came up in the survey results.

Many themes were familiar (in practice, differentiation assessment; in program, the question of tracking and how we align/compete with other schools, especially in the middle school years when transfers and applications are frequent; in paradigm, the versions of progressivism and our broad goals for our students across 14 years and beyond). An urgency emerged in the conversation about finding where data literacy was found in our curriculum.

As for the activity focus of the year, the department was most interested in two approaches: 1) exploring conceptual through lines across the program, and 2) planning and reflecting around a big school visit for the whole department, like the visit to the Park School a few years ago. (There was also moderate interest in reviewing/streamlining/reforming the curriculum).

Taken together, the department decided that it would be worthwhile to focus on the two aspects of our practice. 1) Data literacy in our curriculum: we would consider the conceptual through-lines in each division for data literacy (probability and statistics), how we align with peer institutions that our students come from (or go to) in the middle years, and ultimately how we align with curricular standards like the Common Core. We would also explore 2) planning and reflecting around a school visit to a K-12 progressive school. Our intention is to study how they integrate a) data literacy across the curriculum, and b) how they differentiate in classes and how their structure affects how they think about differentiation (class selection and tracking). It was suggested that a list of past NIPEN schools might provide a good list of possible locations.

I will follow up with the department to plan next steps.

Math Department Meeting #1, 10/1/19

Submitted by: Pat Higgiston

We checked in to start the school year, sharing one math-related thing we did or encountered during the summer. This ranged from professional conferences, to new insights into our school-wide math curriculum, to unique encounters with math in our day-to-day lives — and opened a conversation about a controversy about mathematical notation that took hold of Twitter over the summer, and touched on the way we talk about school math with our students and the ways that context influences our work.

We then briefly reviewed the previous years’ work, led by my predecessor, Michelle Boehm, and discussed what the coming year could look like and how we could best use our time. I committed to sending around a survey to gauge the kinds of questions the members of the department were asking themselves about their math practice now.

We also discussed the possibility of doing a kind of survey of our students’ shared work in classes, based loosely on the NY Times’ photos and essay about blackboards at university campuses.

Learning Support Department meeting notes

Submitted by: Susannah Flicker

We met on 10/1 and planned for our focus for the upcoming year. We decided that we want to schedule a professional development as a department with an evaluator to help us develop our ability to read and interpret evaluation reports and test results, and work with classroom teachers and parents to more effectively understand student learning profiles and accommodations. We have since scheduled this with Dr. Anya Barak for 2/25/20 and will meet in January to plan for that session, as well as for the work we hope to do with our divisional faculty members afterwards.

 

The Continuum of Literacy Learning

Submitted by: Faith Hunter

Tomorrow’s faculty meeting is a Department Meeting that will include our learning specialists. We will meet in Elizabeth and Maria’s room promptly at 3:30.
If you are up for a little bit of foundational reading we have attached an article. It would be helpful if you can read even just the first and last two pages prior to the meeting. We will have copies at our meetings and can spend the first 10 minutes debriefing.
Topic:
This meeting is the first in a series of meetings on the topic of Coherence that the curriculum coordinators and I have planned together.
  • We will begin with a focus on literacy.
  • We will examine a description of competencies of effective readers and writers from four year olds to fourth graders.
  • We will introduce a particular tool, The Continuum of Literacy Learning, to ensure consistency and coherence in our approach.
  • We will consider how this tool can help us meet the differentiated needs of our students while ensuring a consistent experience.

We look forward to a productive meeting.

Warm regards,

Beth, Sarah, Charissa, and Faith

 

Lower School SeeSaw Pilot

Submitted by: Faith Hunter

Seesaw Study Group

Here is the email Celeste sent:

We are looking for a few volunteers to form as a “study group” and to “re-pilot” this online resource called Seesaw with your students. Seesaw is an application that documents students’ learning and understanding and we think that it could be a useful tool for documenting students’ work. In short, it’s like a portfolio, but a digital version.
We would work closely together to learn and explore the various ways it could be used (including the option to a visit to a neighboring school that is using Seesaw) and then after a trial period, come together to see if this is something we could use with our students as they move through Lower School and into Middle School.
Here are two videos (one from Seesaw, the other from a teacher who uses Seesaw) describing it more.
Please reply directly to me here if you would like to learn more and thank YOU for considering!

Library Department Meeting Notes, 10/1

Submitted by: Jennifer Hubert Swan

The LS librarian shared an LREI archives update, the MS librarian checked in about the execution of the digital literacy thread and shared what she and and the MS tech integrator have taught in 5-8 so far, and the HS librarian provided a HS library renovation update, and proposed a potential  e and audio book rollout to Lower/ Middle school.

World Language Departmental Focus 2019-2020

Submitted by: Adele deBiasiPelz

  • Documenting the “story” of the preK-12 curriculum
  • Doing a professional development “deep dive” around some aspect of subject related progressive practice. This could draw on within department expertise and/or work with an outside consultant
  • Continuing to document the skills we teach and how we teach them throughout the three divisions and across languages

Continuing to look at how reading informs the other major skills  : speaking, writing, and listening comprehension which relate to each of us in every language. For this we may choose another  skill as our focus and explore how we teach it and its relationship to reading.

*Building a library in each of our classes complete with different levels and topics that interest a range of student passion and interest to motivate and move forward our “reading” projects. 

We plan on using the Tuesday meetings with perhaps one full or two half PD days because that was very productive for us.

Performing Arts Departmental Focus 2019-2020

Submitted by: Joanne Magee

Continuing to documenting/examining our preK-12 curriculum and exploring the mission of our department in relation to the changing world we live in.

  • Documenting the “story” of the preK-12 curriculum
  • Deep dive into repertoire and how we need to reflect and support the students in the world they live in.
  • Using the 1619 NYT materials to examine our approach to our teaching. 
  • Working in subdivisions to support program development

Description of Work focus: Looking at the overarching connections in our subjects and forming a cohesive understanding of what the arts content provides for the student in the world they live in. Examining how we continue to support equity and diversity within our work.

Meetings will happen in sub groups within subjects, within divisions and across divisions. We will meet at times that work for the many PT faculty and will document our progress.