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2013
November
C
CCSS: Needs Assessment - revised 11/18
CCSS: Needs Assessment - revised 11/18
Common Core State Standards Teacher Needs-Assessment
Exit Survey
Name
How many years have you been teaching?
0-3
4-7
8-10
11-15
16-20
20+
Tell us where you work.
Elementary
High School
K - 8
Middle School
Where do you work?
A. M. Winn Elementary
Abraham Lincoln Elementary
Bowling Green Chacon Elementary
Bowling Green McCoy Elementary
Bret Harte Elementary
Camellia Elementary
Caroline Wenzel Elementary
Cesar Chavez Elementary
Crocker Riverside Elementary
David Lubin Elementary
Earl Warren Elementary
Edward Kemble Elementary
Elder Creek Elementary
Ethel I. Baker Elementary
Ethel Phillips Elementary
Golden Empire Elementary
H. W. Harkness Elementary
Hollywood Park Elementary
Hubert H. Bancroft Elementary
Isador Cohen Elementary
James W. Marshall Elementary
Leataata Floyd
John Bidwell Elementary
John Cabrillo Elementary
John D. Sloat Elementary
Mark Twain Elementary
Matsuyama Elementary
Nicholas Elementary
O. W. Erlewine Elementary
Oak Ridge Elementary
Pacific Elementary
Parkway Elementary
Peter Burnett Elementary
Phoebe A. Hearst Elementary
Pony Express Elementary
Sequoia Elementary
Susan B. Anthony Elementary
Sutterville Elementary
Tahoe Elementary
Theodore Judah Elementary
William Land Elementary
Woodbine Elementary
Where do you work?
American Legion
C. K. McClatchy High
Capital City School
George Washington Carver
Health Professions High
Hiram W. Johnson High
John F. Kennedy High
Luther Burbank High
New Technology High
Rosemont High
School of Engineering and Sciences
The Met High School
West Campus High
Where do you work?
Alice Birney Waldorf-Inspired K-8
Caleb Greenwood K-8
Fr. Keith B. Kenny Elementary
Genevieve F. Didion K-8
John H. Still
John Morse Therapeutic Center
Leonardo da Vinci K-8
Martin Luther King, Jr. K-8
Success Academy
Where do you work?
Albert Einstein Middle
California Middle
Fern Bacon Middle
Kit Carson Middle
Rosa Parks Middle
Sam Brannan Middle
Sutter Middle
Will C. Wood Middle
Home/hospital and independent study
Do you teach ELA and Mathematics?
Yes
No
Which do you teach?
ELA
Math
Other
Instructional Shifts
Beginning the Process
In Process
Fully Implemented
Text Complexity:
I strategically engage my students in a range of texts that grow in complexity.
Adding evidence is optional.
Text-Based Answers:
I engage my students in rich and rigorous conversations and writing tasks that require citing evidence from texts to support arguments and claims.
Adding evidence is optional.
Academic Language:
I explicitly address the language demands of complex texts.
Adding evidence is optional.
College & Career Descriptors
Beginning the process
In Process
Fully Implemented
Respond to the Varying Demands of Audience, Task, Purpose, and Discipline:
My students adapt their communication, appreciate nuances, choose different types of evidence, and set and adjust purposes for reading, writing, speaking and listening, and language.
Adding evidence is optional.
Comprehend as well as Critique:
My students work diligently to understand precisely what an author or speaker is saying, but also questions an author's or speaker's assumptions.
Adding evidence is optional.
Value Evidence:
My students cite specific evidence when supporting their own points in writing and speaking, making their reasoning clear to the reader or listener, and constructively evaluate others' use of evidence.
Adding evidence is optional.
Literacy Content Knowledge
Beginning the Process
In Process
Fully Implemented
Close Reading of Texts:
My students engage in close reading that progresses through Reading Standards 1-10 of grade-level appropriate complex text.
Adding evidence is optional.
Speaking/Listening: Student-Led Discussions:
My students take leadership of their own discussions following agreed-upon classroom protocols.
Adding evidence is optional.
Writing: Opinion/Argument:
My students engage in opinion/argument writing in which they attend to audience, task, and purpose.
Adding evidence is optional.
ELA TEACHERS ONLY
Language: Linguistic Features of the Genre (Opinion/Argument)
(i.e. text-, sentence-, phrase-, and word-level features): Within a unit of study my students: Analyze the linguistic features commonly found in opinion/argument genres (e.g. responses to literature essays, books, reviews, literary analysis essays, etc…)
Adding evidence is optional.
ELA TEACHERS ONLY
Language: Linguistic Features of the Genre (Opinion/Argument)
(i.e. text-, sentence-, phrase-, and word-level features): Within a unit of study my students: Strategically and purposefully apply linguistic features to produce written and oral responses to literature
Adding evidence is optional.
You have completed this portion of the needs assessment. To exit the survey, select "Exit Survey". To continue to Mathematics select "Continue to Mathematics".
Exit Survey
Continue to Mathematics
Mathematics Instructional Shifts
Beginning the Process
In Process
Fully Implemented
Deep Understanding:
I effectively teach students to demonstrate deep conceptual understanding of the critical Common Core grade-level math concepts by applying them to new situations, as well as writing and speaking about their understanding.
Adding evidence is optional.
Application:
I provide opportunities for my students to apply math concepts in real-world situations.
Adding evidence is optional.
Standards for Mathematical Practice
Beginning the Process
In Process
Fully Implemented
Reason Abstractly and Quantitatively:
My students make sense of quantities and their relationships in problem-solving. They are able to represent quantities symbolically and manipulate the corresponding symbols.
Adding evidence is optional.
Construct Viable Argument and Critique the Reasoning of Others:
My students understand and use stated assumptions, definitions, and previously established results in constructing arguments while listening to the reasoning of others.
Adding evidence is optional.
Look for and Make Use of Structure:
My students look closely to discern a pattern or structure when solving math problems.
Adding evidence is optional.
Mathematics Content Standards
I need help building my content knowledge in the following domains:
Beginning the Process
In Process
Fully Implemented
N/A
K: Counting and Cardinality:
Know number names, the count sequence, and compare numbers
Adding evidence is optional.
K-2: Operations and Algebraic Thinking:
Represent and solve problems involving addition and subtraction and work with equal groups of objects to gain foundations for multiplication.
Adding evidence is optional.
K-2: Numbers and Operations in Base Ten:
Understand place value and properties of operations to add and subtract.
Adding evidence is optional.
3 - 5: Operations and Algebraic Thinking:
Represent and solve problems involving multiplication and division, write and interpret numerical expressions, analyze patterns and relationships.
Adding evidence is optional.
3-5: Numbers and Operations in Base Ten:
Understand the place value system, perform operations with multi-digit whole numbers and with decimals to hundredths
Adding evidence is optional.
6-7: The Number System:
Apply and extend previous understanding of multiplication, division, and numbers to fractions and the system of rational numbers
Adding evidence is optional.
8: Expressions and Equations:
Work with radicals and integer exponents; understand the connections between proportional relationships, lines, and linear equations; analyze and solve linear equations and pairs of simultaneous linear equations.
Adding evidence is optional.
8: Functions:
Define, evaluate, and compare functions to model relationships between quantities
Adding evidence is optional.
High School: Math 1 Creating Equations:
Create equations that describe numbers or relationships
Adding evidence is optional.
High School: Math 1 Building Functions:
Build a function that models a relationship between two quantities and build new functions from existing functions
Adding evidence is optional.
High School: Math 1 Congruence:
Experiment with transformations in the plane; understand congruence in terms of rigid motion; prove geometric theorems and make constructions
Adding evidence is optional.
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