Distance Learning and Instructional Materials
The Role of High-Quality Instructional Materials to Support Distance Learning Webinar Notes.CDE Presenters:
- Rachael Maves, Deputy Superintendent, Instruction and Measurement Branch
- Shanine Coats, Director, Curriculum Frameworks and Instructional Resources Division
CalCurriculum Presenters:
- Shannah Estep, Senior Outreach Specialist, EdReports.org
- Allison Carter, Vice President, Education Programs, Pivot Learning
- Manny Barrera, Program Manager, Pivot Learning
Key Takeaways
- CDE: Instructional Materials Support
- Standards, curriculum frameworks, and instructional resources part of process to ensure use of high-quality, accessible materials
- IQC advises SBE on curriculum/instruction
- CFIRD supports IQC, oversees instructional material adoption, produces specialized media
- Webinar will address how instructional materials can support learning models for next year
- California Curriculum Collaborative
- Partnership between Pivot Learning, EdReports, and CDE
- Supports California districts in search for instructional resources
- EdReports provides reports on educational materials
- Pivot Learning works with districts to improve learning through adoption of high-quality materials
- Overview
- Learning Goals
- Reflect on current varied teaching/learning contexts
- Understand selection of materials according to context
- Identify guidance/support for planning for next school year
- Distance Learning means student and instructor are in different locations
- Includes use of technology or print materials
- Synchronous or asynchronous
- Learning Goals
- There are a wealth of resources. School sites will benefit from considering what materials to select, how to use them, and understanding the rationale - the why
- There is a wealth of distance learning resources
- Educators need guidance on What to select, How to use them, and Why
- Best practices for distance learning are general best practices
- Must meet needs of all students, include assessment and interventions, and align to standards/research
- Connections
- Standards are result of legislation, SBE approval
- Frameworks provide guidance on implementing standards
- Instructional materials align to standards/frameworks
- Guiding principles in frameworks still apply in distance learning context
- Instructional materials support instruction on standards
- Instructional materials are adopted through a review process involving CDE, SBE, and the IQC
- There is a wealth of distance learning resources
- Need for high quality in distance/in-person learning and hybrid models
- Instructional materials significantly influence teaching and learning
- District vignettes
- District A––Materials from many sources, often unvetted
- District B ––High-quality instructional materials, little training, accessibility issues
- District ––Struggled to transition adopted materials to distance learning, accessibility issues
- District D–– High-quality materials, support, collaboration
- Key questions include
- What is your vision for teaching (in person/DL) in all content areas?
- How do high-quality materials support the vision?
- What guidance is there to support coherent/systematic DL instruction?
- Why Materials Matter
- Materials are important to help mitigate instructional challenges
- Challenge #1––Educators are overwhelmed by choices
- Challenge #2––Equity/Access (three-quarters of instructional hours on assignment not at grade level)
- High-quality materials make transition to DL easier
- Key Elements of quality material
- Alignment to standards
- Support all learners
- Include tools for DL
- CalCurriculum/EdReports help evaluate materials
- Important to also evaluate systems
- Vision
- Technology
- Professional Learning
- Student experience with DL
- Consider Community Experience
- Technology access
- School communication
- Support for families accessing materials
- Prepare for next fall by establishing a plan and expectations
- Materials are “low hanging fruit”
- DL adds extra layer of investigation
- Materials are important to help mitigate instructional challenges
- Preparing for Ongoing Distance Learning
- Plan for a variety of scenarios-in-person, DL, Hybrid
- Learn from spring experience
- Plan for summer professional learning
- Gather data from diverse stakeholders
- Equitable Learning Recovery Toolkit
- Plan for 2020–2021 school year
- Refer to CDE guidance
- Attend to unfinished instruction, supports for accessing high-quality materials, delivering high-quality instruction, and parents helping students with DL
- MTSS thresholds may need to be adjusted
- Focus should be recovery, not remediation
- Use valid, reliable screeners
- Implement high-quality interventions
- Center equity during planning
- Develop systems to monitor access to technology and materials and respond accordingly
- Account for DL in resetting instructional vison
- Communicate equity expectations for DL instruction
- Provide ongoing professional learning for DL aligned to high-quality instructional materials
- Support parents/guardians with guidance on caregivers’ role in DL and materials
- Plan should include materials adoption, pacing/assessment calendar, instructional expectations, access for priority populations, coaching scope/sequence
- Implementation of plan should include strong communication with stakeholders, progress monitoring, ongoing professional learning
- Develop plans for a variety of scenarios that support a wide range of needs, student population, conditions
- Strengthen communication, collaboration, and virtual professional learning systems
- Plan for a variety of scenarios-in-person, DL, Hybrid
Questions:
Curriculum Frameworks and Instructional Resources Division | DistanceLearning@cde.ca.gov | 916-319-0881
Last Reviewed: Friday, September 13, 2024
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