Meet challenging standards by promoting students′ authentic intellectual work
Educators have long called for more rigor and engagement in classroom work, alongside calls for enhancing equity. Yet classroom practices and student outcomes have been slow to change.
A promising solution is the research-backed, real world-tested potential of the Authentic Intellectual Work (AIW) framework to meet intellectually challenging standards including Common Core. This book provides
- Richly detailed case studies of successful AIW implementation at the statewide, districtwide, and individual school levels
- Illustrations of collaborative teaming to advance higher-order thinking, disciplined inquiry, and value beyond school
- Exemplars of how AIW transforms professional development and evaluations and increases coherence and alignment of initiatives
There is no such thing as a simple formula for school improvement, but the AIW approaches presented in this book will help school- and district-based teams improve the quality of instruction, assessment, and curriculum for more rigorous and more equitable student learning
‘It is inspiring to read these educators’ testaments to the profound personal and professional impact of their efforts to promote students’ authentic intellectual work.’—Fred M. Newmann, Emeritus Professor
University of Wisconsin-Madison
‘AIW is an instructional game changer. It has brought coherence across our district’s schools as we help our teachers help students become 21st-century learners.’
—Michael Duncan, Superintendent
Pike County Schools, GA
Table des matières
Foreword – Fred M. Newmann
1. Improving Instruction for Excellence and Equity: Teaching for Authentic Intellectual Work – M. Bruce King
2. Professional Learning for Authentic Intellectual Work: Iowa’s Statewide Initiative – Dana L. Carmichael and Rita Penney Martens
3. Meeting State Accountability Requirements Through AIW – Fred Nolan and Jake Nelson
4. Focusing on the Right Thing: Using AIW to Build Coherence and Align Initiatives – Gretchen Kriegel, Shannon Guyer, Jessica Hillers, Kim Carlson, Robyn Ponder, Jean Kehoe, and Sarah Goldsmith
5. AIW Transformational Learning: The Pilot Year – Dana L. Carmichael, Mary B. Segal, Christina Brewer, Amy Adkins, and Allison Mc Grath
6. Curriculum and Professional Development Practices Transformed Through the AIW Framework – Patricia Briese, Michele Dirkx, Joe Mueting, and Elli Wiemers
7. Ensuring the Right Work Within Collaborative Teams: Enhanced PLCs Through the AIW Framework and Protocols – Becca Lindahl and Shelly Boley
8. If It’s Right for Kids: Evaluations That Promote Teachers’ Learning and Implementation of AIW – Kathy Lemberger, Tammy O’Connor, and Jim Bukowski
9. Transforming Professional Development and Student Learning: Evaluating Impact – Susan E. Peterson, Christina Wahlert, Tammie M. Mc Kenzie, and Hope Bossard
10. Schools and Districts Promoting Authentic Intellectual Work – M. Bruce King
A propos de l’auteur
Dr. M. Bruce Kingis a Faculty Associate with the Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Analysis (ELPA) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His work in ELPA concentrates on teaching courses on instructional leadership and teacher capacity, coordinating the Wisconsin Idea Ph D cohort program in K–12 leadership, and building effective partnerships between the department and schools and districts.Bruce has been a researcher with the Wisconsin Center for Education Research, where he contributed to two studies focused on Authentic Intellectual Work, the Research Institute on Secondary Education Reform for Youth with Disabilities and the Center for Organization and Restructuring of Schools. He received his Ph D in curriculum and instruction from UW-Madison and taught upper elementary, middle, and high school for 11 years in Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Quito, Ecuador.Bruce has been a research fellow at the University of Newcastle, New South Wales, and has consulted on two research projects in Australian schools that extended the body of research on AIW. He serves as associate editor for the international journal Teaching and Teacher Education, and has published in national and international research and practitioner journals. Currently, he provides professional development as an AIW coach in Wisconsin and Georgia.Along with colleagues Fred Newmann and Dana Carmichael, Bruce recently published a companion book to this volume, Authentic Intellectual Work: Improving Teaching for Rigorous Learning (Corwin, 2015).