It was an electric atmosphere last night at the Rex Center Gallery as the Grade 10 Visual Arts Class premiered their feature length digital film, “Troya.” There was over 100 people in attendance to view the project put together by co-directors, Grade 10 student Lucia and Visual Arts Teacher Ms. Natasa Skoric.
The students learned much about the tremendous amount of work and time that goes into making a movie. The class did the entire process, from writing the screen play, casting, costumes and sets, film editing, etc. It was special to see them very excited at their appearances in the film. The movie is a comedy based on the Trojan War. The ancient Greek history is put into a more modern teenage context.
This is the kind of project that sets apart the teaching and learning at the International School of Belgrade from other schools. We strive to take all of the students’ interests and activities to their highest level. The art and film students had the opportunity to work with professionals, using their latest technology, and then displaying their project in one of the premier galleries in the city. It was also great to see so many teachers, parents, students, and Belgraders together sharing in the success of the students. I would like to thank Natasa for her monumental effort and dedication towards the students of ISB.
After the film, lead actor Monty thanks cast and crew
This weekend we are hosting the American International School of Zagreb, Croatia for a couple of friendly basketball matches. We are both preparing for the CEESA Tourney in Helsinki is two weeks.
Tonight’s game was a close knit affair throughout. In the end, the difference was AISZ star Bret Atkins, who scored 22 of the Huskies’ 30 points. The final score was 28-30. For ISB, Pan and Lajos combined for 17 points and six different players scored points. The second game in the series begins tomorrow morning at 9:00 AM.
Shown above is Misa shooting some free throws in the final minutes. Below is a photo for my Dad. He is a long-time public address announcer for West Iron County High School sports. I had the duties this evening to do the starting line ups for the game.
Last weekend the ISB Middle School Boys’ Basketball Team travelled to Kiev, Ukraine to participate in the “Blue Division” championship of the Central and Eastern European Athletic Association. The Dragons won 5 games and lost 2 and finished in second place. They defeated teams from Hungary, Ukraine, Latvia, and Slovakia on their way to the finals.
In the final, a few controversial referee decisions in favor of the hosts, gave the win to the Kiev International School. The boys were gracious in defeat and won the Sportsmanship Award as well as earning a standing ovation from the crowd. Basketball is one of the strengths of our school and it reflects the history of the sport in Serbia and the USA. I would like to thank Coach Ethan Van Drunen and the boys for their efforts in dedication in bringing honor to our school.
Seeing the Sights
The final results are posted below.
Win – American International School of Budapest40-15
Yesterday the boys’ high school basketball team traveled to the outer suburbs of Belgrade to play The First Basketball School of Belgrade. The game was played in the beautiful arena used by the FMP – Belgrade professional basketball club. We specialize in producing global citizens, they specialize in producing basketball players, so you can probably tell how the game turned out. Our student athletes played well and improved quite a bit as the game went on. We even had the support of the cheerleading squad and mascot and both teams appreciated their enthusiasm.
The Principal of the school gave Dr. Sands and I a tour of the facilities after the game. The First Basketball School is for boys ages 14 – 18. The students mostly come from Serbia but they also have international students. The boys want to focus on basketball and two practices per day are an integral part of the curriculum. They have several levels of teams and they play an NBA – type schedule of games. The school is affiliated with the FMP – Belgrade professional team. FMP plays in the NBL Adriatic Basketball Leage. FMP is a steel product factory that sponsors the team. Many of the students are boarding residents and the Principal showed us their rooms. Students from the school after graduation in 11th grade, often complete the final year of their high school in the USA or home countries. Several earned USA university scholarships and some go on to play professionally. Many with the FMP club or other Serbian professional club.
Lajos looks inside.
The Serbs know how to do sports and this is an example of it. They take sports to the highest level. Most Serbian youngsters specialize in a sport and they are provided with the best in coaching and time. It is the reason why such a small country has so many successes in sports. They have three players ranked in the top 10 tennis players in the world, the Partizan team is one of the best in Europe, and the national soccer team is leading their group in World Cup qualifying.
Their team was spectacular with height, speed, fundamentals, etc. Our team improved in the second half and raised their game. The team scored 1o more points in the second half than the first and reduced the number of turnovers by 6. It was a good lesson for them. The ISB cheerleaders also performed several dance routines during time outs and cheered on the team during the game.
School A: There is a single storage database with all of the student’s assessment results. The table has the criteria and whole mark. We need to make sure we are recording the data as the IB asks for. For example, you do not put an % point. Also one needs to put the clear evidence.
A)Teachers are telling the students the criteria against which they are being assessed.
B)Teacher need to give some understanding to students on how to get to the highest level. It can be verbal or it can be a detailed rubric.
C)When the work is assessed, the students are to be shown what the criteria is.
D)Teachers are supposed write the points scored in each criteria. They can add them up and convert to number 1-7
A school gradebook will look like this…
Task1Task 2
Cr A
Cr C
Cr. B
Cr. C
Student Name
·Not all tasks or assessments need to be graded using the MYP format.
·One school has a sheet for each student to go in the file. It lists the criteria, marks on each task whether it be formative or summative assessments.
·It is very important to educate the parents on the assessment practices.
·“levels” not grades or marks during the semester, the final 1-7 are the “grades”
Report Cards
·You must be reporting against the criteria. It could be a comment or a number.
·What happens if all of the criteria are not marked for a grading period?Some schools do not put on final grade, some use “very good” others put a final grade but with a comment explaining why the criteria is blank.
·What happens when a student enters mid-year? Case-by-case
·We have four quarters, and then with mid-term progress reports. That is eight times per year that teachers need to make them.
·Good idea to put on the AoI, even some schools put on Learner Profile. One school has Learner Profile and AoI in the teachers hands while doing the marks.
Interdisciplinary Units
·Earlier, there was an over-emphasis on these units and schools did too many of them. Today, it is important to do less of them, but to do them to enhance the learning for criteria within the disciplines involved.
·Best way to find ways is Teachers Lounge –
MYP Coordinator
·should have a minimum of 1/3 of their time to coordinate the program.
·All paperwork and orientating new teachers.
Interdisciplinary Unit Practice
Unit Question – What sort of story may be revealed by a graph?
Concepts – Human activity is affected by population fluctuations / Graphs express rates of change
AoI – Environments – how human actions affects the environment
Another example of a good unit question is How is our future written in the stars?
Unit Question – How does binge drinking affect your social and personal well-being?
The effects of drinking on your body and social life.
How many Interdisciplinary units per school year? – each year group should experience one interdisciplinary unit per year. This must happen however and it is important. A fundamental concept in MYP is collaborative planning. St. Dominic’s has a structure in place where the teacher leader of AoI also is assigned a grade level. They are to do two projects per year. The new guide however says to scrap this and go away from unifying themes. It is better to go for small collaborations.
Guiding questions are not the same as unit questions.
A long project (5 – 15 weeks) can easily address all of the criteria and objectives. I might not be assessing all aspects of the criteria. In technology it almost has to with the design cycle. The individual tasks within the objectives.
Moderation
·an optional process where students can earn MYP certificates. Today just under half of students undergo this process
·a second reason is to have the IB assist you with maintaining academic rigor.
·Bundle up one task, 8 samples and send away in March to a moderator, who is a practicing MYP teacher, who re-marks the paper. They are looking at some things like “Is this task a good one?” “Does this task demanding enough, can students reach beyond level 4” “Is the school setting standards too high or too low”
·Next a senior moderator looks at it and then it goes to Cardiff where it is further analyzed.
·In June all of the students grades are sent also to Cardiff and a report is issued in September
·One drawback is schools want to avoid getting a moderation factor that will lower the levels
·IB is looking at the revising the process;
·The record of achievement will be lowered if the teachers are not being too rigorous
·Most of the problem is bad tasks, not the teacher marking. Many do not allow higher thinking.
Fees for the MYP program
·one teacher per subject group do the MYP subject specific training; this applies to all schools
·a large school would send 1/3 of all teachers to one of the three workshops
Another school’s curriculum might not be suited for the culture of the school
No faculty ownership
Adapted – national to our
Local needs covered
Ready to go
No faculty ownership
Confusion
Integrated – bits from everywhere
Faculty ownership
Can take the best of others
Good resource to experience other curriculums
Lots of Time
Continuity
Created – completely new
Will fit the school community well
Faculty ownership
Professional Development
Huge amount of time & $
Continuity
Standard C1 of MYP “developed by the school” “available to all sections of the school community”
Standard C2 of MYP “all teachers plan and reflect in collaborative teams”
<!-How much teamwork do we need? Traditional model is one per month
<!-full faculty, vertical (HOD), horizontal (grade level), MYP or DP
Planning for Teaching and Learning (page 86 in Principles into Practice Book) my reflections
The challenge is trying to find time for all of these different teams and committees;
<!-Vertical planning – HOD with departments; transitions from Grade 5 to Grade 6 and 8 to 9
<!-Horizontal planning – grade level meetings
<!-Documenting curriculum and giving access to community including the unit plans; conceptual understanding and skills;
<!-Areas of Interaction meetings
<! Finally PD – sending teachers to conference (MYP) and in-house PD, and teachers personal PD
Vertical Planning – A subject specific vertical planner for the five years of MYP
Prescribed MYP final objectives Year 5The skills
<!-these come from the 8 subject guides, which have the objectives that you have to follow
<!-the previous years need to planned well so the student can meet the objectives in the Year 5
<!-There are strongly recommended interim objectives for Year 1, Year 3
<!- Schools need to make the objectives for Year 2 and Year 4; not drastic changes from other years
The number of objectives (standards?) per subject change and the number of objectives match the number of criteria (benchmarks?) between 4 – 6 objectives
MYP 1
Objective A
Objective B
Objective C
Objective D
MYP 2
MYP 3
MYP 4
MYP 5
Vertical Planning Topics The Content
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>There are no IB recommendations for the content, topics, units
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>Today John gave us many planning tables to help make the written curriculum so teachers, parents, and students are able to understand what will be taught
MYP 1
MYP 2
MYP 3
MYP 4
MYP 5
Topic 1
Topic 1
Topic 1
Topic 1
Topic 1
Topic 2
Topic 2
Topic 2
Topic 2
Topic 2
Topic 3
Topic 3
Topic 3
Topic 3
Topic 3
MYP 1 (This is a good table for each year.)
Topic
Unit Question
Tasks
Assessment
And others?
The table above will be used as a basis for the unit plans. All of the above needs to occur first before we get the teachers to make their unit plans.
Areas of Interaction The context
Teachers need to make a written document that identifies the planned learning expectations for each AoI for each year of the MYP program.
I am attending an introductory conference to the Middle Years Program (MYP) (grades 6-10) of the International Baccalaureate (IB). It is being held in the RAI Convention Center in Amsterdam, Holland. I am in the Introductory Workshop for Administrators. The conference is open to schools from Africa, Europe, and the Middle East.
This post are my notes and reflections on ideas I have learned from the conference.
The keynote speech this morning was by Tristian Stable, the head of program development for the IB Diploma.
<!–[if gte mso 9]> Normal 0 false false false EN-GB X-NONE X-NONE <![endif]–><!–[if gte mso 9]> <![endif]–> The point of the presentation is to show the relationship between the MYP and DP program.
The Big Ideas
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>There is a coherence of the MYP / Diploma continuum
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>Curriculum is an on-going process
coherence = balanced
consistency = skills & ideas are sensibly arranged and ordered; for deep understanding, they have to experience repeatedly
My goal: Identify three leadership and three management strategies to improve practice and plan for their implementation in your school.
Curriculumdefn –
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>What the students experience not the intended curriculum
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>Should be what we value, but in many schools instead it is what can be assessed!
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>Too much content and it is bad if it is driving the curriculum
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>Transmission of the culture – IBO is very geared towards the USA/UK/Australia universities
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>What skills and ideas do they need for their future – “Does it equip students for life?”
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>You don’t need the same curriculum for all levels at the school –
Teachers are trusted to implement, develop, and deliver the curriculum (creative teacher professionalism). Administrators are there to support, develop, and holding teachers accountable.
IBO is Euro-centric, Western, for example “inquiry-based”; but it is good in that it encourages students to experience the thinking and feelings of others;
Theory of Knowledge – supposed to be the “glue” that sticks the different disciplines together, not a single subject
It is important that students take formal exams and students learn how to cope with stress and test-taking strategies.
Scheduling is critical; strong leadership is huge because of the teacher independence;
<!–[if !supportLists]–>1)<!–[endif]–>Clearly defined roles (job description)
<!–[if !supportLists]–>2)<!–[endif]–>Prioritize
<!–[if !supportLists]–>3)<!–[endif]–>On-going curriculum evaluation [look at every program every year to critique]
<!–[if !supportLists]–>4)<!–[endif]–>Have all three Student / Teacher / Parent Profiles
Do we give each of the eight subjects equal time in the 5 years of the MYP program?
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>Technology is a key issue and the only subject that can be integrated into the rest of the subject areas. Rarely is it integrated properly.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>Minimum number of hours per subject is 50 hours per school year
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>Physical education different from extra curricular sports program, the sports does not fulfill the physical education criteria.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>Find the MYP technology curriculum for Paul, our new Technology Coordinator for PK-12 next year.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>I need to look at the Design & Technology curriculum and ICT curriculum; the huge idea is the design
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>Every year they need to do all eight subject areas.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>It is okay to for IEP’s and ESL to put in extra classes and take away from other areas, because the students are in the center of the octagon.
The MYP Octogan Points
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>The Areas of Interaction (AoI) are the context in which the students learn the subject areas and they are the “glue” or links between subjects.
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>The AoI are different colored lenses; and they see the same subjects through a different color as you move the wheel
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>AoI are the whole world issues that give relevancy of the subjects to “real” life
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>The Learner Profile is wrapped around the student/ teacher / parent in the middle
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>What are the student learning outcomes, as regards the areas of interaction? Someone needs to write the specific student outcomes under each area for each of the 5-year MYP programs – it is all explained in the MYP From Principles Into Practice
The Standards of MYP
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>New standards are coming out in March 2010 – they will be streamlined and examples of evidence
At the end of the MYP experience, students can get two certificates:
<!–[if !supportLists]–>1)<!–[endif]–>The regular certificate of completing the entire program; you have to do the last two years at minimum, plus score a minimum on the personal project;
<!–[if !supportLists]–>2)<!–[endif]–>Record of achievement – this gives a listing of classes and the grades
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>PYP(doesn’t matter)MYP (4 or 5 years)DP (2 years)– work backwards from start of university
<!–[if !supportLists]–>·<!–[endif]–>MYP can be 4 years, as long as it is the last four years before the DP.
I uploaded the other shot I discussed in the previous blog post. Above, Vlade makes a shot lying down at half court. He makes the shot in four attempts. I believe he did this shot in a television commercial and one of the students asked if it was a trick shot. He promised us that he would make on in five attempts or less. I tried to do it and couldn’t make it to the rim. He makes it look much easier than it is.
We had a special visit to our high school boys’ basketball practice. Former NBA All-Star Vlade Divac stopped by to help the student athletes with aspects of their game. He talked about doing the little things right, like crisp passing, wide elbows on rebounds, boxing out, have a repetitive free throw ritual, etc. The students were truly inspired.
At the end of practice he had a little fun with us. In the video above, he is telling a story of a trip to China. He demonstrates the one-handed, back-to-the-basket, half court shot. All net in one attempt. Truly amazing. He also laid down at half court and made the basket from the floor in three attempts.
I can see why he is a basketball legend. Great size combined with attention to detail, athleticism, and lots of hard work. Thanks to Mik J. for the video above. The start shows his hand as he was taking his camera out of the bag. Vlade appears shortly after the start.
It has been wonderful this week with so much snow falling. With 9 inches on the ground, more of the white stuff came down! Many students and teachers at our school have been wanting a school cancellation or delay. Being from the Upper Midwest, the current snow is actually fun and a nuisance, but not a impediment for arriving at school. Temperatures are around the freezing mark, so the major roads are wet and clear, while side roads have slushy snow. It has taken me back to my youth and learning to drive in Michigan.
The view above is looking towards the east wall of our high school campus.