Pathways to the Prize, School Winners | Page 49

• All three schools emphasize student-centered instruction. Whether students understand material is more important to these schools than whether teachers simply cover material in their lessons. This represented a shift for many of the schools’ teachers who were initially more accustomed to examining what they taught rather than what students learned. Student-centered instruction has also required teachers to spend more time developing engaging and challenging material, resulting in lessons that show students the relevance of what they are learning. • Professional learning communities have been established to build teacher capacity and advance various reform efforts. Specifically, the schools use these groups as a venue for examining data for instructional planning purposes, discussing effective instructional practices, diagnosing student misconceptions, and identifying students in need of additional interventions. Using Data to Enhance Student Learning Each of the SCORE Prize winners has leveraged the power of data to improve student achievement. They have each used data to track student progress, inform what happens in classrooms, and foster collaboration. • Each SCORE Prize winner takes steps to help teachers become data-savvy. In all of the schools, teachers are taught how to analyze test scores so that they can easily identify what students have learned, which instructional strategies appear to be most effective in facilitating learning, and what additional remediation students might need. • John Sevier, Rose Park, and Covington all publicly display data and share it with different stakeholders. These practices are based on the notion that displaying data are key to fostering the kind of collaboration that is needed to help students improve. At Rose Park, the staff members use a data wall to ensure that all students are improving between benchmark assessments. At John Sevier and Covington, spreadsheets are used to track student mastery and identify areas where insufficient progress has been made. At all schools, data are shared with students and families so they know how students are progressing toward their goals. • All of the schools have strong formative assessment practices. All three schools assess students daily or weekly, through exit tickets, quick checks for understanding, or mini-assessments. All use interim assessments at least every nine weeks, and analyze the data as soon as they are available so that they can quickly determine needs for re-teaching or intervention. Pathways to the Prize Lessons from the 2012 SCORE Prize School Winners 48