AIE Program 2013

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INSPIRE

ADVANCING IMPROVEMENT in EDUCATION

2ND ANNUAL CONFERENCE SEPTEMBER 24–26, 2013 AUSTIN, TEXAS


WELCOME, AIE CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS! I would like to welcome you to the second annual Advancing Improvement in Education (AIE) Conference. The AIE conference is built upon the purpose, principles, and values of the former Texas School Improvement Conference (TSI), the TTIPS and School Improvement Programs, District Institute, and Secondary School Summit. It seems to me that each year is busier than the previous one and that each subsequent year moves more quickly than the last. It was explained to me once that each passing year counts as a smaller percentage of our lives so it actually feels shorter and, therefore, time appears to move faster. The result is we continually try to pack more work into each day, month, and year. I fear that if we are not careful, our focus becomes completion of tasks as opposed to purpose. As we start the new year, it is critical that each of us take a few moments and reflect on why we have chosen to become educators and whether we have established a vision for our role within the educational community. This year’s conference focuses on the “why” of our work. Re-visiting what drives our passion for education can re-energize our work and open our thinking to new ways of looking at school improvement. The annual Advancing Improvement in Education (AIE) Conference is a conference for educators with the mission of connecting leaders to inspire accountability, innovation, and possibility for school improvement through partnerships and research-based best practices.


Conference planners have assembled a cadre of researchers, consultants, practitioners, and educational peers to provide you a variety of opportunities for learning and interaction. This is an outstanding opportunity for educators around the state of Texas to learn new strategies and to share and exchange current best practices. We consider it a privilege to work with you and your school community. I wish each of you a successful and rewarding conference experience.

Terry W. Smith Executive Director Education Service Center Region 13

CONFERENCE MISSION The annual Advancing Improvement in Education (AIE) Conference is a conference for educators with the mission of connecting leaders to inspire accountability, innovation, and possibility for school improvement through partnerships and research-based best practices.


CONFERENCE INFORMATION

CONFERENCE STRANDS This year’s featured conference strands are based on the Critical Success Factors used to drive school improvement efforts. The conference strands embody the mission of connecting leaders to inspire accountability, innovation and possibility for school improvement through partnerships and research-based best practices. Presenters will share approaches, experiences, and results that reflect one of the following strands: ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE USE OF QUALITY DATA TO DRIVE INSTRUCTION LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS INCREASE LEARNING TIME FAMILY/COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT SCHOOL CLIMATE TEACHER QUALITY

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

CONFERENCE PATHS The AIE Conference provides strands inspired through the Critical Success Factors. Each of our sessions is tagged with the strand it represents. As a conference attendee, you may find your inspiration to advance improvement through following one of the critical success factor strands. In addition to the strands, we have suggested PATHS that may also ignite your passion! PATHS are laid out for sessions related to the following: Turnaround, District Leadership, Campus Leadership, Teacher Leadership, and ESCs/PSPs. Take time to study the program through the lens of the 7 Critical Success Factor strands, as well as through the lens of the PATHS, to determine a conference schedule that will most inspire you to advance improvement in education!

TEACHER LEADER PATH SEPTEMBER 25, 2013 Time

Title

9:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. 9:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.

10:15 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.

Page

Featured Speaker Take Matters Into Your Own Hands: Dream Now! – Manuel Scott

Exhibit Hall 5 80

Distinguished Speakers

Option 1 “Simple Strategies the Everyday Hero Can Take to Keep Their Fire Alive!” - Aric Bostick

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Room

Ballroom D

108

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Option 2 Champions of Hope: Inspiration & Ideas to Reach Disengaged Students - Jack Baldermann

Ballroom FG

110

Option 1 What is Non-Traditional About Traditional Schools?

12A

111

Option 2 SUCCESS (STUDENTS) = STUDENTS ^ (COLLABORATION - COMPLACENCY + Weezy)

15

113

Option 3 Maximizing Professional Development to Drive Improvement

16A

114

Option 4 The Peaceful Classroom

EH4-Stage A

119

Option 5 Intervention in the Digital Age

EH4-Stage C

121

12B

123

Option 2 Keep Students In Class through Key Deescalation Strategies

15

125

Option 3 Developing Academic Discourse through Vocabulary

16A

126

10:15 a.m. - 11:15 a.m.

11:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

Breakout Sessions

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Tackling the "At Risk"

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Option 4 This is Not Your Father's School-Nor Do You Want it to Be!

19A

129

Option 5 Ten Minutes a Day to Algebra Readiness and New TEK Implement

Stage B

132

Option 6 Effective Instructional Strategies: 7 Proven Methods

Stage C

133

Ballroom D

134

Ballroom D

139

Ballroom FG

140

Option 2 Violence in the classroom, a sure cure for safety!

12A

141

Option 3 Successful Discipline in Secondary Classrooms

16A

145

12:15 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.

Educator Luncheon

Option 1 Teacher Leadership Luncheon – Dr. Julie Schell 2:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.

Distinguished Speaker

Option 1 Five Fantastic Tips for Becoming An Inspirational and Credible School Leader - Bobb Darnell 2:30 p.m. - 3:30 p.m.

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Assess More, but Grade Less

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Option 4 Teaching Students to Ask Their Own Questions

17A

147

EH4-Stage B

152

Ballroom E

154

Option 2 Teaching Strategies for Closing Achievement Gaps with ELLs

15

159

Option 3 SUCCESS (STUDENTS) = STUDENTS ^ (COLLABORATION - COMPLACENCY + Weezy)

16B

161

Option 4 Embrace "Learning" Rather Than "Teaching" With Data Teams

19A

165

Option 5 USDE Draft - High Performance Parental Involvement

19B

166

Option 6 Using Academic Vocabulary to Increase Math Proficiency

EH4-Stage B

168

Option 5 Using STAAR Mission Math to Improve Instruction 3:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m.

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Fifty Shades of PBIS

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

4:30 p.m. - 5:45 p.m.

Evening Event

Option 1 Conference Extravaganza 5:45 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

Exhibit Hall 4 56

Evening Event

Option 1 AIE Educators Dinner Mark McLeod

Ballroom E

104

“When I went to high school I was completely disengaged and saw no purpose for attending. I just floated through school. By luck, I graduated college in a randomly selected major and was in and out of many “adventures” during my 20’s. I am advancing improvement in education by creating purpose for students going to school. I promote programs of study and a college and career readiness culture for Texas schools. All Texas students should be able to identify their interest and know how to realize their dreams through education.” - Steve Frank

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

TEACHER LEADER PATH SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 Time

Title

8:45 a.m. - 10:45 a.m.

Distinguished Speaker

Option 1 Setting the Table for Success - Bill Cecil

Page

Ballroom D

171

Option 1 Checking for Understanding So Students Can Learn

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174

Option 2 Tooling Around with Teacher Leaders

16B

177

Option 3 Transformational Leaders, Transformational Teachers

17B

179

Option 4 Parent Involvement - We Say Yes, but Act No

19B

181

Option 5 Teaching Math Conceptually Promotes Student Math Achievement

EH4-Stage A

184

8:30 a.m. - 9:30 a.m.

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Room

Breakout Sessions

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.

Distinguished Speaker

Option 1 Family Engagement: Education’s Best Kept Secret - Byron Garrett

Ballroom FG

90

Option 1 Helping Students Develop Effective Content Literacy Skills

Ballroom E

185

Option 2 A Culture Where All Teachers Support All Children

17A

192

Option 3 What's It All About, Anyhow? Life beyond formal schooling

17B

193

Option 4 Getting Practical About Data: Prescriptive, Personal...and Practical

19A

195

Option 5 STAARving for Simple Solutions?

EH4-Stage A

196

Option 6 “The Solution You Have Been Waiting For! Math 180”

EH4-Stage C

198

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203

9:45 a.m. - 10:45 a.m.

11:15 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.

Breakout Sessions

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Teacher Effectiveness in Aldine ISD

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Option 2 Making Leadership Count at Every Level... For All Kids

16B

206

Option 3 Math Is Not Enough: Negotiation of Thought for Rigor

17A

207

Option 4 Proven, Powerful, Fun Strategies to Accelerate Vocabulary Ac

19A

210

“So many of our kids, and the leaders who work with them, are in dire need of hope and practical help, and I have a burden on my heart to help them. That burden has me on the road almost 200 days a year.” - Manuel Scott

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

CAMPUS LEADERSHIP PATH SEPTEMBER 25, 2013 Time

Title

9:00a.m. - 10:00 a.m.

Exhibit Hall 5 80

Distinguished Speakers “Simple Strategies the Everyday Hero can take to keep their fire alive!” Aric Bostick

Ballroom D

108

Option 1 What is Non-Traditional About Traditional Schools?

12A

111

Option 2 Work Less, Produce More, and Still Get the Job Done

12B

112

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115

10:15 a.m. - 11:15 a.m.

Breakout Sessions

Option 3 Moving Schools: Lessons from Exemplary Leaders 14

Page

Featured Speaker

Option 1 Take Matters Into Your Own Hands: Dream Now! – Manuel Scott 10:15 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.

Room

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Option 4 Create Quality Local Assessments with TAG 11:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

120

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Moving from the Data Summary to the “Need”

13AB/14

Option 2 This is Not Your Father's School-Nor Do You Want it to Be!

19A

129

Option 3 Redefining Roles for Seondary Parent Involvement

19B

130

EH4-Stage A

131

Option 5 Support Science by Providing Effective PD 12:15 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.

Educators Luncheon

Option 1 Campus Leadership Luncheon - Principal Panel 2:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.

Exhibit Hall 5

Distinguished Speakers

Option 1 Five Fantastic Tips for Becoming An Inspirational and Credible School Leader – Dr. Bobb Darnell

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EH4-Stage B

Ballroom D

139

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

2:30 p.m. -3:30 p.m.

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Assess More, but Grade Less

Ballroom FG

140

Option 2 100% Culturally Motivated

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143

Option 3 Building a Solid Behavioral RTI Process

15

144

Option 4 Building a Culturally Responsible Family Engagement Program

19B

150

Option 1 Intervention Framework for Academic Success

12B

157

Option 2 The Audacious Transformation of an Alternative School

17A

162

Option 3 Embrace "Learning" Rather Than "Teaching" With Data Teams

19A

165

Option 4 ZOOM-In on Next Steps for Your Campus/ District with Snapshot

EH4-Stage A

167

Option 5 Building Literacy Across the Content Areas

EH4-Stage C

169

3:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m.

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Breakout Sessions

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

4:30 p.m. - 5:45 p.m.

Evening Event

Option 1 Conference Extravaganza 5:45 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

Evening Event

Option 1 AIE Educators Dinner Mark McLeod

#AIEConf

Exhibit Hall 4 56

Ballroom E

104

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

CAMPUS LEADERSHIP PATH SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 Time

Title

8:30 a.m. - 9:30 a.m.

18

Room

Page

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Football, Algebra, and Using Data to Improve Student Learning - Kerry Gain - Distinguished Speaker

17A

178

Option 2 Employing Cultural Competence to Improve Your School

12A

172

Option 3 Accountability to Responsibility in a STAAR World!

12B

173

Option 4 Right Seat on the Bus: Behavioral Event Interviews

EH4-Stage A

182

Option 5 Accelerating Student Achievement with Imagine Learning

EH4-Stage B

183

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.

Distinguished Speakers Family Engagement: Education’s Best Kep Secret - Byron Garrett

Ballroom FG

199

12A

186

Option 2 Transforming Lives: Culture, Achievement & College Readiness

15

189

Option 3 Leadership Support to Move Teachers from Good to Great

16A

190

EH4-Stage B

197

Option 1 CPDI= Complete Campus Climate and Culture Change

12A

201

Option 2 Beyond Academics: Making Each Student a STAR

12B

202

9:45 a.m. - 10:45 a.m.

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Restorative Justice: An Alternative to Suspension

Option 4 STEMscopes Online Science Curriculum K-12 11:15 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.

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Breakout Sessions

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Option 3 Motivation/Teacher Engagement/Student Engagement: Your ticke

16A

205

Option 4 Crucial Conversations for Advancing Improvement in Education

17B

208

Option 5 Shooting for the STAARs: Getting results, changing lives!

19B

211

“To use the gift that was given to me and demonstrating the passion within it. Then and only then will my purpose have breath to help others see their greatness, and attempt to diminish the pressure and overwhelming state that one may be experiencing in the healthiest and best possible way.� - April Briscoe

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

DISTRICT LEADERSHIP PATH SEPTEMBER 25, 2013 Time

Title

9:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.

Option 1

Exhibit Hall 5 80

Distinguished Speakers 18A-D

116

Ballroom E

109

Option 1 Football, Algebra, and Using Data to Improve Student Learning - Kerry Gain - Distinguished Speaker

17AB

128

Option 2 Moving from the Data Summary to the “Need”

13AB/14

10:15 a.m. - 11:15 p.m.

Your Leadership Makes the Difference!- Sheila Bethel Breakout Sessions

Option 1 P.L.U.G.S. for the Drain - Premont IDS's Story of Recovery 11:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

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Page

Featured Speaker

Option 1 Take Matters Into Your Own Hands: Dream Now! – Manuel Scott 10:15 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.

Room

Breakout Sessions

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Option 3 20% jump in scores... WHAT?

16B

127

18A-D

137

Ballroom D

139

Option 1 Teacher Hiring and Development for Active Student Engagement

16B

146

Option 2 Six Practices to Improve School Board-Central Office Partn

18A-D

148

Option 1 Achieving Success for Every Student

Ballroom FG

155

Option 2 Writing an Annual SMART Goal that Will Keep You on Track

13AB/14

12:15 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.

Educator Luncheon

Option 1 District Leadership Luncheon 2:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Option 1

2:30 p.m. - 3:30 p.m.

3:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m.

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Distinguished Speaker Five Fantastic Tips for Becoming an Inspirational and Credible School Leader - Bobb Darnell Breakout Sessions

Breakout Sessions

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Option 3 Creating a District-Wide Professional Learning System to Inc 4:30 p.m. - 5:45 p.m.

Exhibit Hall 4 56

Evening Event

Option 1 AIE Educators Dinner Mark McLeod

#AIEConf

164

Evening Event

Option 1 Conference Extravaganza 5:45 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

18A-D

Ballroom E

104

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

DISTRICT LEADERSHIP PATH SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 Time

Title

8:30 a.m. - 9:30 a.m.

Ballroom FG

199

18A

194

18A-D

209

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 What's in your DNA?

24

180

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 How the PBM System Enhances the TAIS 11:15 a.m. - 12:15 a.m.

18A-D

Distinguished Speakers

Option 1 Family Engagement: Education’s Best Kept Secret - Byron Garrett 9:45 a.m. - 10:45 a.m.

Page

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Launch Leaders Through Succession Planning 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.

Room

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

STATEWIDE SUPPORT PATH SEPTEMBER 25, 2013 Time

Title

9:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.

Page

Featured Speaker Exhibit Hall 5

80

Option 1 “Simple Strategies the Everyday Hero can take to keep their fire alive!” - Aric Bostick

Ballroom D

108

Option 2 Champions of Hope: Inspiration & Ideas to Reach Disengaged Students - Jack Baldermann

Ballroom FG

110

Option 1 Analyzing AMAO Data to Improve Instruction for ELL Students

19A

111

Option 2 36 #SchoolPR Tweets to Learn From

19B

118

Option 1 Take Matters Into Your Own Hands: Dream Now!Featured Speaker – Manuel Scott 10:15 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.

10:15 a.m. - 11:15 a.m.

#AIEConf

Room

Distinguished Speakers

Breakout Sessions

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

11:30-12:30

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Do You Have What it Takes to be a Turnaround Leader?

12A

122

Option 2 20% jump in scores... WHAT?

16B

127

Option 3 This is Not Your Father's School-Nor Do You Want it to Be!

19A

129

Ballroom FG

136

Ballroom D

139

12B

142

12:15 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.

Educator Luncheon

Option 1 Statewide Support Luncheon - Anabel Garza 2:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.

Distinguished Speakers

Option 1 Five Fantstic Tips for Becoming an Inspirational & Credible School Leader - Bobb Darnell 2:30 p.m. - 3:30 p.m.

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Shame, Courage, and Vulnerability: Rehumanizing Education

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Option 2 Using STAAR Mission Math to Improve Instruction

EH4-Stage B

152

Option 3 Critical Thinking – Vital for the Success of our Students

EH4-Stage C

153

Option 1 Achieving Success for Every Student

Ballroom FG

155

Option 2 Lives on the Boundary: From Peril to Promise

16A

160

Option 3 PD through Project Share: Online Resources for Educators

17B

163

3:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m.

4:30 p.m. - 5:45 p.m.

Breakout Sessions

Evening Event

Option 1 Conference Extravaganza 5:45 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

Evening Event

Option 1 AIE Educators Dinner Mark McLeod

#AIEConf

Exhibit Hall 4 56

Ballroom E

104

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

STATEWIDE SUPPORT PATH SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 Time

Title

8:45 a.m. - 10:45 a.m.

Distinguished Speakers

Option 1 Setting the Table for Success - Bill Cecil 8:30-9:30

Option 2 Right Seat on the Bus: Behavioral Event Interviews

12A

172

EH4-Stage A

182

Ballroom FG

199

13AB/14

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Making Leadership Count at Every Level... For All Kids 28

171

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Support Specialist Live! 11:15 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.

Ballroom D

Distinguished Speakers

Option 1 Family Engagement: Education’s Best Kept Secret - Byron Garrett 9:45 a.m. -10:45 a.m.

Page

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Employing Cultural Competence to Improve Your School

10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.

Room

16B

206

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

TURNAROUND PATH SEPTEMBER 25, 2013 Time

Title

9:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.

Page

Featured Speaker Exhibit Hall 5

80

18A-D

116

Option 1 P.L.U.G.S. for the Drain - Premont ISD’s Story of Recovery

Ballroom E

109

Option 2 Moving Schools: Lessons from Exemplary Leaders

17AB

115

Option 1 Take Matters Into Your Own Hands: Dream Now!Featured Speaker – Manuel Scott 10:15 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.

Distinguished Speakers

Option 1 Your Leadership Makes the Difference! - Sheila Bethel 10:15 a.m. - 11:15 a.m.

#AIEConf

Room

Breakout Sessions

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

11:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Do You Have What it Takes to be a Turnaround Leader? 12:15 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.

12A

Educator’s Luncheon

Option 1 Choose One of the Four Lunches that Best Fits Your Current Title or Aspiration! 2:30 p.m. - 3:30 p.m.

103

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Specific Leadership Programs and Tools to Increase Student Achievement Jack Baldermann Distinguished Speaker

Ballroom E

138

Option 2 Stay Calm and Lead On

19A

149

EH4-Stage A

151

Option 3 Turnaround - Impacting Rapid, Dramatic, Positive Change

30

122

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

3:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m.

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Start with WHY: Inspiring Everyone to Take Action 4:30 p.m. - 5:45 p.m.

Exhibit Hall 4 56

Evening Event

Option 1 AIE Educators Dinner Mark McLeod

#AIEConf

156

Evening Event

Option 1 Conference Extravaganza 5:45 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

12A

Ballroom E

104

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

TURNAROUND PATH SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 Time

Title

8:45 a.m. - 10:45 a.m.

Distinguished Speakers

Option 1 Setting the Table for Success - Bill Cecil 8:30-9:30

Option 2 5 Steps to Creating an Exemplary School

171

15

175

16A

176

Ballroom FG

199

12B

187

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 The Calm in the Storm Teacher Leaders

32

Ballroom D

Distinguished Speakers

Option 1 Family Engagement: Education’s Best Kept Secret - Byron Garrett 9:45 a.m. -10:45 a.m.

Page

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Planning, Planning, Planning: The Three Most Important

10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.

Room

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Option 2 Solidifying the Moral Imperative within Education 11:15 a.m. -12:15 p.m.

191

Ballroom E

200

15

204

Breakout Sessions

Option 1 Moving Schools: Lessons from Exemplary Leaders Option 2 20% Jump in Scores... WHAT!

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16B

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

SUPPORT SPECIALISTS LIVE! Are you looking for a calming place to have fun and work on your improvement plan? Then come and grab a refreshment and a comfy seat to join the Support Specialists in the COLLABORATIVE SOLUTIONS LOUNGE! Live and in person you will find Support Specialists providing guidance and support to any of your questions. Whether your questions are about the improvement planning process or template itself, the Support Specialists will be there to meet with you about your needs. Throughout the duration of the AIE conference you can find the COLLABORATIVE SOLUTIONS LOUNGE located in rooms 13A and 13B. The lounge is offered to you on a “come and go as you please” basis, whatever works for you! Looking for something more structured? Concurrently, next door in room 14, there will be three 60-minute sessions provided on the following content that supports the improvement plan:

SESSION 1: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013, 11:30 - 12:30 ROOM 14

Moving from the Data Summary to the “Need”. Objective: Participants will understand how to use the data compiled from the data summary page to formulate the need on the improvement planning template.

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

SESSION 2: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013, 3:45 - 4:45 ROOM 14

Writing an annual S.M.A.R.T. Goal That Will Keep You on Track. Objective: Participants will revisit the essential components to creating an annual goal to effectively measure the implementation of the improvement plan.

SESSION 3: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013, 9:45 - 10:45 ROOM 14

Selecting Strategies and Quarterly Planning. Objectives: Participants will learn how to identify a strategy that is aligned to the need and chunked into manageable quarterly segments.

Each of these structured sessions will be provided to you with the guidance of the Support Specialist in 60 minute segments, the first 30 minutes of content, and the second 30 minutes dedicated to questions and working time. We are excited for the opportunity to meet and talk with you about all of the great work that is taking place, so feel free to come by!

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

INFORMATION DESK With over 100 breakout sessions, including guest speakers, the conference may inspire many questions in participants. Should any questions arise that you cannot find an answer to, please make your way to one of the information booths that are located on the first floor near the registration area and the fourth floor across from the elevator. There will be a conference staff member there to answer any question you may have.

HOW TO DOWNLOAD HANDOUTS Handouts are available to download from the AIE mobile app. You can also download handouts from www.aieconference.net. Participants are encouraged to download handouts to their iPads or electronic devices in lieu of printing.

INTERNET ACCESS The Austin Convention Center offers complimentary WiFi access throughout the entire facility. There is no access code necessary to connect to the WiFi. Connection speed is dependent on the number of participants using the Internet at any one time.

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

CERTIFICATE 1. Visit the E-Campus Workshop Catalog at http://ecampus.esc13.net. 2. Sign in to E-Campus with your username and password. 3. After you successfully sign in, you will be directed to your Portfolio page. Scroll down to the workshop for which you’d like to print a certificate. Find the workshop and click “Take Post-Workshop Survey,” found to the right of the workshop title. 4. Complete the survey for the course. Click “Next,” then “Finish.” 5. You will be redirected to your Portfolio page. Scroll down to the workshop and click “Certificate.” You can now print a copy of your certificate.

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

MEALS PROVIDED Food and beverage service will be provided to registered conference attendees during the conference. We will not be able to provide food and beverage for guests and family members.

NO RUBBER CHICKEN

WELCOME RECEPTION 4:00 p.m.–6:00 p.m.

Snacks/Beverages

Exhibit Hall 4

GRAB & GO AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE Jo’s Coffee stand will be open September 24th–26th for concession purchases in the foyer between Exhibit Halls 4 and 5. Jo’s Coffee offers espresso drinks, hot and cold drinks, baked goods, sandwiches, salads, and other snacks for purchase. Cash and credit cards are accepted.

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

SEPTEMBER 25, 2013 The following meals will be provided for all registered conference attendees: 7:30 a.m.–8:30 a.m. 12:15 p.m.–1:45 p.m.

Breakfast Lunch Buffet

Exhibit Hall 4

As we explore our “why,” our lunch speakers will be serving up a special message for our varied audience members. Please choose the lunch that best represents your role as an educator. • Teacher Leaders Luncheon

Ballroom D

• PSP/ESC Luncheon

Ballroom F & G

• Campus Leaders Luncheon

Exhibit Hall 5

• District Leadership Luncheon

18 A-D

1:45 p.m.–2:15 p.m. 4:30 p.m.–5:45 p.m.

Desserts Light Snacks

Exhibit Hall 4 Exhibit Hall 4

5:45 p.m.–7:30 p.m. AIE Educators Dinner* Ballroom E *$25.00 plate (Additional Fee and Registration Required) SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 7:15 a.m.–8:30 a.m. 9:00 a.m.–11:30 a.m.

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Breakfast Snacks Available

Exhibit Hall 4 Exhibit Hall 4

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

LOST AND FOUND In the event that you cannot find a personal item during the conference, do not fret. Leaving a personal item behind is a natural occurrence when your mind is engaged in the rich content of the Advancing Improvement in Education Conference. If you have lost an item: Check to see if your item has been turned in to the Information Desk (located on the first floor near the registration area). If you find an item: Bring the item to the Information Desk (located on the first floor).

EMERGENCIES AND GROUP SAFETY The Advancing Improvement in Education Conference staff and the Austin Convention Center want to ensure that, as a participant, you have a safe and successful conference experience. In the unlikely event of a major emergency, please check with conference staff and facility personnel for evacuation directions.

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SHUTTLE INFORMATION AND SCHEDULE Complimentary shuttle service will be provided to and from official AIE Conference hotels not within walking distance of the convention center. Shuttle assignments and schedules will be available at each hotel registration desk. Plan your shuttle departure times carefully to allow for traffic delays and sufficient time to walk to your destination in the convention center. PICKUP LOCATIONS: Route 1: DoubleTree University/Double Tree (Hwy. 290 and IH 35)/ Crowne Plaza Route 2: Wyndham Garden Inn/Holiday Inn (Lady Bird Lake) Route 3: Embassy Suites (Downtown)/Radisson

SHUTTLE SCHEDULE Morning

Afternoon/Evening

9/24

7:00 a.m.–9:00 a.m.

3:00 p.m.–6:30 p.m.

9/25

6:30 a.m.–8:30 a.m.

3:30 p.m.–8:00 p.m.

9/26

6:30 a.m.–8:30 a.m.

11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m.

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CONVENTION CENTER MAPS FOURTH STREET

TRINITY STREET

RED RIVER STREET

CESAR CHAVEZ STREET

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

AREA INFORMATION

PARKING

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CONFERENCE PLANNER SEPTEMBER 23, 2013 Time

Session

2:30 p.m.–6:00 p.m.

Early Check-In Exhibit Hall 4 Atrium

SEPTEMBER 25, 2013: MAIN CONFERENCE­— DAY 1

Time

Session

7:00 a.m.–8:30 a.m. 8:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m. 10:15 a.m.–12:15 p.m.

Presenter

Room

Check-In/Breakfast Exhibit Hall 4 AIE Kickoff and Featured Speaker

Manuel Scott

Exhibit Hall 5

Distinguished Speakers

1st choice 2nd choice 10:15 a.m.–11:15 a.m.

Breakout Session

1st choice 2nd choice 11:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m.

Breakout Session

1st choice 2nd choice

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Time 2:15 p.m.–1:45 p.m.

Session

Presenter

Room

“Advancing Academic Performance” Lunches

Guest

Teacher Luncheon

Julie Schell

Ballroom D

PSP/ESC luncheon

Anabel Garza

Ballroom F&G

Campus Leaders Luncheon

Principal Panel

Exhibit Hall 5

District Leadership Luncheon

Networking

18 A–D

1:45 p.m.–2:15 p.m.

Open Exhibit Hall

2:30 p.m.–4:30 p.m.

Distinguished Speakers

2:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

Breakout Session

Speakers

Exhibit Hall 4

1st choice 2nd choice 3: 45 p.m.–4:45 p.m.

Breakout Session

1st choice 2nd choice 4: 30 p.m.–5:45 p.m.

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Conference Extravaganza

Exhibit Hall 4

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Time

Session

4:50 p.m.–5:05 p.m.

Micro Session 1

5:10 p.m.–5:25 p.m.

Micro Session 2

5:30 p.m.–5:45 p.m.

Micro Session 3

5:45 p.m.–7:30 p.m.

Educators Dinner at the Austin Convention Center (Pre-registration required­­—$25.00/plate)

Presenter

Room

Mark McLeod

Ballroom E

SEPTEMBER 26, 2013: MAIN CONFERENCE—DAY 2 Time

Session

7:15 a.m.–8:30 a.m.

Check-In/Breakfast Exhibit Hall 4

8:30 a.m.–9:30 a.m.

Breakout Session

1st choice 2nd choice 8:45 a.m.–10:45 a.m.

Distinguished Speakers

1st choice 2nd choice 9:45 a.m.–10:45 a.m.

Breakout Session

1st choice 2nd choice

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CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Time

Session

10:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.

Distinguished Speaker

11:15 a.m.–12:15 p.m.

Breakout Session

1st choice 2nd choice

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AIE CHALLENGE 50

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AIE CONFERENCE CHALLENGE INFORMATION

THE AIE CHALLENGE This year’s theme focuses on the “why” of your work. What inspires you to Advance Improvement in Education? Take the AIE Challenge to make new discoveries and open your thinking to inspire greatness within you and among others. After you complete 9 of the 12 components of the challenge, submit your completed challenge sheet to one of the two information tables or the registration booth closest to you. Two AIE Challenge winners will receive free admission to the 2014 AIE Conference. Winners will be individually notified and posted on the AIE website.

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AIE CHALLENGE

MAKING THE MOST OF AIE 2013 Three questions to make this the best conference you have ever attended: What 3 people will I commit to connect with after the conference? 1. 2. 3. What 3 ideas will I take home to ponder and think about? 1. 2. 3. What 3 ideas will I act upon immediately? 1. 2. 3. “I will get out of this conference what I put into it!”

©2013 Bethel Institute www.bethelinstitute.com

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THE CHALLENGE • Download the AIE app to your smartphone

• Take your photo at the AIE photo booth

• Attend the welcome reception

• Attend the optional Educators Dinner with guest speaker Mark McLeod

• Explore the PATH opportunities provided for you • Visit the AIE video booth • Enjoy the Conference Extravaganza! • Tweet your thoughts to #AIEConf

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• Complete an AIE conference evaluation • Visit exhibitor booths • Explore your “Why” at the Why Wall • Visit the AIE Showcase in Exhibit Hall 4

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DOWNLOAD THE AIE APP TO YOUR SMARTPHONE Go to the Android market or the Apple store to download the AIE conference app. Once you have the app on your smartphone or tablet, check out featured and distinguished speakers, discover breakout sessions, and choose the AIE Conference PATH that inspires you!

ATTEND THE WELCOME RECEPTION This year’s welcome reception, located in Exhibit Hall 4, promises to inspire you to advance improvement in education! Visit our many exhibitors, network with colleagues from across the state, and enjoy light snacks. We want to welcome you to the conference and help inspire your conference experience.

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EXPLORE THE PATH OPPORTUNITIES The AIE Conference provides strands inspired through the critical success factors. Each of our sessions is tagged with the strand it represents. As a conference attendee, you may find your inspiration to advance improvement through following one of the Critical Success Factor strands. In addition to the strands, we have suggested PATHS that may also ignite your passion! PATHS are laid out for sessions related to the following: Turnaround, District Leadership, Campus Leadership, Teacher Leadership, and ESCs/PSPs. Take time to study the program through the lens of the 7 Critical Success Factor strands, as well as through the lens of the PATHS, to determine a conference schedule that will most inspire you to advance improvement in education!

VISIT THE AIE VIDEO BOOTH Don’t be shy! We challenge you to visit the AIE video booth and share your thoughts with us. Professional videographers want to capture what inspires you to advance improvement in education. Share your story of what inspires you to be an educator, how you keep your passion alive, or what drives you to do this work every day! Don’t miss out on this opportunity to look and feel like a movie star! The AIE video booth is located in Exhibit Hall 4.

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AIE CHALLENGE

ENJOY THE CONFERENCE EXTRAVAGANZA! The Conference Extravaganza is a unique opportunity for you to enjoy the exhibit hall and all of the many things that we are offering. Relax, enjoy a snack, visit the video booth, participate in the Why Wall, take a picture with your team at the photo booth, and visit exhibitors. While you are enjoying all of the activities, take a moment to check out our microsessions. The microsessions are short, 15-minute informative sessions happening in the three stages located in Exhibit Hall 4. Check them out!

TWEET YOUR THOUGHTS TO #AIECONF All conference attendees are encouraged to share their experience or post any questions they may have on our conference Twitter page using the hashtag #AIEConf. Participants can also follow the conference @AIEConf for any last-minute session changes, answers to questions, and general excitement about the events taking place at the AIE Conference.

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TAKE YOUR PHOTO AT THE AIE PHOTO BOOTH Visit the AIE Photo Booth by yourself, with your team, or with your newfound colleagues and friends from across the state. After you take your picture, have it sent to you electronically! Don’t forget to Tweet your pictures to #AIEConf. The AIE Photo Booth is located in Exhibit Hall 4.

ATTEND THE OPTIONAL EDUCATORS DINNER WITH GUEST SPEAKER MARK MCLEOD Join educator Mark McLeod for dinner September 25th from 5:45 p.m.– 7:30 p.m. Be inspired and re-ignite your passion for education while enjoying opportunities to network. The AIE Educators Dinner requires registration. Please register online or visit the registration booth. (Limited number of on-site tickets will be sold.)

COMPLETE AN AIE CONFERENCE EVALUATION We challenge you to share your thoughts! Take a moment and complete an evaluation after each breakout session. Evaluations are available on the AIE app. If you are unable to access the app, leave your email address with the room facilitator. At the completion of the conference, an overall conference evaluation will be emailed to you. Please share your conference experience with us.

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AIE CHALLENGE

VISIT EXHIBITOR BOOTHS Our exhibitors are here to serve you! Be brave, seek inspiration, and find new resources by making new contacts at the exhibitor booths.

EXPLORE THE WHY WALL WHY ARE YOU ADVANCING IMPROVEMENT IN EDUCATION? Stop by the Why Wall in Exhibit Hall 4 to share your personal why statement with educators across the state. There will also be an opportunity for you to write a thank you letter to someone who has inspired you.

ART SHOWCASE Fine arts serve an important role in developing college- and careerready students. Some will pursue a career in the arts, while others will learn about the arts from participating in extended learning experiences that facilitate the student developmental process. Students learn to understand the role of the fine arts as a vehicle of personal growth, as well as social, political, scientific, and technical expressions of change. Please visit the Arts Display in Exhibit Hall 4. Thank you to Kristen Marstaller and the Austin Independent School District for participating in our Fine Art Showcase. 58

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PRE-CONFERENCE

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PRE-CONFERENCE

PRE-CONFERENCE SCHEDULE SEPTEMBER 24, 2013: Pre-Conference Time 7:30 a.m.–9:00 a.m.

9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.

1:00 p.m.–4:00 p.m.

4:00 p.m.–6:00 p.m.

Session Pre-Conference Check-In Breakfast served on 4th floor near Ballroom D The “State“ of Education Introductions and Welcome—Dr. Terry Smith Opening—Commissioner Williams TEA updates—Shannon Housson Legal updates—Jim Walsh Data Set Go! Using a Data-Driven Inquiry Process to Take Action and Get Results Early Registration/Check-In/Welcome Reception Exhibit Hall 4

MEALS PROVIDED Food and beverage service will be provided to registered conference attendees during the conference. We will not be able to provide food and beverage for guests and family members.

PRE-CONFERENCE 8:00 a.m.–9:00 a.m. 12:00 p.m.–1:00 p.m.

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Breakfast Lunch

Ballroom D Ballroom D

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MICHAEL L. WILLIAMS Commissioner of Education Michael L. Williams was appointed Texas Commissioner of Education by Gov. Rick Perry on Sept. 1, 2012. As Commissioner, he heads the Texas Education Agency, which oversees pre-kindergarten through high school education for approximately five million students enrolled in both traditional public schools and charter schools. During his distinguished career, Williams has served as an assistant district attorney in hometown of Midland, a federal prosecutor in the Reagan Justice Department, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Law Enforcement at the U.S. Department of the Treasury under President George Herbert Walker Bush, and Assistant Secretary of Education for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Education. In 1998, Gov. George W. Bush appointed Williams to the Railroad Commission of Texas, the three-member commission which oversees oil and gas regulation. Texans subsequently elected him to the Commission in 2000, 2002 and 2008. The son of public school teachers, Williams holds a Bachelor’s, Master’s and law degree from the University of Southern California, and has been married to his best friend, Donna, for more than 25 years.

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SHANNON HOUSSON Director, Performance Reporting Texas Education Agency 1701 Congress Ave Austin, TX 78701-1402 Tel: (512) 463-9000 www.tea.state.tx.us Shannon Housson has served as director of the Division of Performance Reporting at the Texas Education Agency since July 2004. His division is responsible for the assignment of the state accountability ratings and distinction designations for all Texas public schools. He was formerly the director of the analysis and reporting team in the Student Assessment Division at TEA. Mr. Housson has a Masters of Business Administration degree from the University of Texas at Austin and a Bachelor of Arts degree also from UT Austin.

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JIM WALSH Attorney at Law Walsh, Anderson, Gallegos, Green and Treviño, P.C. 505 E. Huntland, Suite 600 Austin, TX 78752 Jim Walsh graduated from the University of Texas School of Law in 1975 and began his career in Texas school law by serving as the attorney for the Region XIII Legal Service Program, beginning in 1979. In 1983, Mr. Walsh, Joe Hairston, and Tom Doyal (now retired from the firm) founded the firm, now known as Walsh, Anderson, Gallegos, Green and Treviño, P.C., to focus on representing Texas public schools. He is the co-author of The Educator’s Guide to Texas School Law and the author of The Common Sense Guide to Special Education Law. He is publisher and managing editor of the Texas School Administrators’ Legal Digest, for which he writes the popular “Law Dawg” column. He is the author of a monthly newsletter on special education, This Just In..., and the monthly Walsh’s Word column in the IEP Team Trainer publication, and he is editor in chief and a regular columnist for Texas School Business magazine. He serves on the Advisory Board for LRP Publications. Mr. Walsh has taught school law at the graduate level. He has conducted inservice training sessions at every Education Service Center in the state and at hundreds of school districts. Mr. Walsh is a highly sought-after speaker in Texas and throughout the nation. 64

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TOPIC GOALS OF THE INTERACTIVE KEYNOTE Data, Set, Go! Using a Data-Driven Inquiry Process to Take Action and Get Results Breakout Sessions by Level: Elementary, Middle, and High School Introduction—Introduction to the Data Use Theory of Action Using Questions to Initiate Inquiry—Learn a protocol to identify pressing questions to focus inquiry Analyzing Data–Learn a protocol for Collaborative Data Analysis to refine questions and sharpen focus Engaging Others–Learn how data can be a vehicle to engage others in inquiry and root cause analysis Prepare a Data Overview and Take Data-Based Action–Apply tools and protocols to implement an inquiry-driven engagement effort that will result in action

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PRE-CONFERENCE PRESENTER BIOS JULIE MELTZER, PH.D. Julie has spent the past decade leading research, development, and program evaluation projects related to students’ K–12 literacy development and serving as a literacy, Response to Intervention (RtI), and school and district improvement consultant on national, state, and district projects. Her work is grounded in helping school leaders make the most of their educational data when designing wholeschool improvement initiatives. Julie has led many action planning efforts using A Leadership Model for Improving Adolescent Literacy, a research-based model developed by Julie and co-authors of Taking Action on Adolescent Literacy (ASCD, 2007). The Leadership Model and associated action planning rubrics help educators assess their school, set improvement goals, and develop an action plan. She also coauthored of Meeting the Challenge of Adolescent Literacy (IRA, 2009), and Taking the Lead on Adolescent Literacy: Action Steps for School Wide Success (Corwin, 2010). Other publications include Adolescent Literacy Resources: Linking Research and Practice (Education Alliance, 2002) and Thinkquiry Toolkit I: Strategies for Improving Reading Comprehension and Vocabulary Development Across the Content Areas (PCG, 2011). A sought-after keynote speaker, reviewer, conference presenter, and workshop leader, Julie brings substantive experience as a teacher, teacher educator, and leadership coach to her work in the areas of systemic school improvement, data use, action planning, 66

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capacity building, and design of professional development services and materials. Julie recently left PCG Education where she served as Strategic Education Advisor to take a district position as Director of Curriculum, Assessment and Instruction where she is focusing on establishing and sustaining a culture of data-informed decision-making at all levels of the organization.

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ROBB GEIER Robb Geier is Director of Data Services for PCG Education. Robb has developed tools, protocols, and curricula for establishing district and school data teams focused on improving collaborative data use. He led the development of the District Data Team Toolkit for the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education and currently provides assistance and support to regional data specialists throughout the Commonwealth. He also recently developed a data quality curriculum, which consists of a handbook, facilitator’s guides, and PowerPoint presentations intended to help both data collectors and data users understand and address the issues that may affect the production of high-quality education data. His work also focuses on improving structural supports for data use through the development of curricula and professional development for data coaches and technical assistance providers. Robb also works with district data teams to assess supports for data use and build strategic plans to improve processes, access, and use of data throughout the districts. Robb’s past work with schools includes facilitating school data teams and teacher teams, as well as coaching and training data coaches to lead instructional change driven by data use and inquiry. Further, Robb has served as a Teaching Fellow during the Data Wise summer institute at Harvard University and provided professional and technical assistance for schools and districts related to data use and school reform throughout the United States and Canada.

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MARY ELLEN HANNON Mary Ellen Hannon has over 30 years of successful educational systems experience, including extensive understanding in school leadership, data analysis, curriculum design, and school improvement management. Mary Ellen is currently an executive coach and facilitator for the Florida Rural Turnaround Leadership project. Her responsibilities include developing and facilitating training for superintendents, school board members, and district leaders on turning around low-performing schools and districts. At PCG, Mary Ellen focuses on supporting districts to use data for school improvement. Recently, Mary Ellen presented a webinar with Dr. Bena Kalick titled RTI, PLC, and Social Learning: A Powerful Marriage of Data and Knowledge for teachers and administrators that articulated the potential of data use and technology to increase student achievement. Prior to joining PCG Education, Mary Ellen served as a superintendent of schools in New Hampshire. Under her leadership, the district was recognized by New Hampshire Department of Education as a leader in data-based decision making. Mary Ellen also made presentations for the NH DOE on using data in a district to improve student achievement. Prior to that, she served as adjunct professor at Rivier University, assistant superintendent, curriculum director, and teacher.

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MARK TORNOW Mark Tornow has over 30 years of successful educational systems experience, including extensive understanding of school leadership, data analysis, and school improvement management. Mark is currently Director of Special Projects for the Tennessee Academic Specialists program, where he is responsible for the application, interview, and hiring process to engage 125 independent contractors/educators to assist in Tennessee’s high-priority schools. In addition to the data use professional development that he provides in Tennessee, he recently presented at the Florida Reading Association conference in Orlando on the use of data to impact classroom instruction. His experience in effective data use spans the building to statewide level. Prior to joining PCG Education, Mark served as an elementary principal near Nashville, Tennessee. Under his leadership, the school was recognized by the U.S. Department of Education as an NCLB Blue Ribbon School in 2006 because of its significant improvement in student achievement, despite its high student poverty rate. Mark also served as executive director of a nonprofit educational organization and was a program manager with the Tennessee Department of Education in the Division of Assessment and Evaluation. Prior to that, he served as a principal, an assistant principal, a teacher, and a coach in elementary and high school settings.

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BRETT BISHOP A Senior Consultant with PCG’s Focus on Results, Brett Bishop began his education career as a physical education and earth science middle school teacher for the Springfield Massachusetts Public Schools. During thirteen years in the district, Brett served as a teacher and assistant principal before becoming the principal of the East Street School in Ludlow. Under his leadership the school made significant gains in student achievement and was removed from In Need of Improvement status and the district was one of only two in the state to move out of Corrective Action. The school was also recognized by the Massachusetts Legislature for outstanding work in creating trauma-sensitive learning environments. Brett received his Master’s Degree in educational administration from Springfield College and spent two years on the teacher preparation faculty teaching methods courses and supervising student teachers.

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JANICE HANADA A Senior Consultant with PCG’s Focus on Results, Janice has been a principal for 17 years in Glendale Unified School District in Glendale, California with a total of 35 years in the district. Most recently, she has served as the principal at Cerritos Elementary, a Title I school with 88% on free/reduced lunch, 70% Hispanic, and 50% ELL. She has served as presenter and curriculum writer for all Focus on Results district trainings. Through the hard work and dedication to instructional leadership, Janice and her staff have consistently met all AYP targets in both ELA and math, including targets for all subgroups. Her school is a frequent site for other school teams interested in learning more about the power of having a school-wide focus.

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LINDA WURZBACH Linda Wurzbach is the president and founder of Resources for Learning, a consulting company that she formed in 1998 to carry out her vision of providing systemic support to educational organizations so that all students achieve success. As president of RFL, Ms. Wurzbach has facilitated numerous statewide initiatives in Texas and other states. Initiatives include beginning teacher support, advanced academics, professional development for fine arts educators, fine arts integration with core content areas, teacher licensure performance assessment for the state of New Mexico, awareness campaigns for new standards and testing requirements, and the Texas Best Practices Clearinghouse. Additionally, Ms. Wurzbach has overseen a number of statewide evaluations, such as Texas Migrant Education, Comprehensive School Reform Grant Program, Middle College/Early College Grant Program, Texas High School Redesign and Restructuring Grant Program, and the Legislative Budget Board’s Statewide Curriculum Review, as well as numerous district evaluations. Before founding RFL, Ms. Wurzbach served as Senior Project Associate for the Interstate New Teacher Assessment and Support Consortium (INTASC), Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO), in Washington, D.C. She also served as a project director at the Texas Education Agency, where she managed the development of Texas educator standards and assessments. Ms. Wurzbach began her career as a special education teacher and has an MEd in Special Education from the University of Texas at Austin.

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JUDY JENNINGS, PHD Judy Jennings specializes in project management across curriculum areas and involving a variety of assessments. Her interests include the integration and interpretation of student and school performance measures, as well as integration of curriculum. Dr. Jennings’s expertise includes analysis of inter-rater reliability for performance assessment, elements of integrated curriculum, state education data, test administration procedures, and standard setting. Dr. Jennings serves as the project manager for RFL’s work with Regional Education Service Center XIII on the Texas Performance Standards Project, and she also creates and presents professional development in assessmentrelated topics for the Center for Educator Development in Fine Arts (CEDFA) conference. Before coming to RFL, Dr. Jennings was a manager in the Division of Performance-Based Monitoring for the Texas Education Agency. Prior to working at TEA, Dr. Jennings was a project manager for Evaluation Software Publishing, where she managed Web-based access to accountability data for teachers and administrators in school districts. She has also been a researcher at the University of Texas Measurement and Evaluation Center, where she assisted with data analysis using SAS and SPSS software.

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GROUPS PRESENTING ABOUT PCG EDUCATION Since its founding, PCG Education has offered products and services that help states, districts, and schools achieve equity for all students, accountability for results, and continuous improvement. PCG Education staff members draw on a wide range of tools and approaches, including PCG Education—developed models, resources, and software, to build systemic capacity through the application of research-based knowledge, sustained professional development and coaching, cutting-edge technology, and collaborative partnerships. PCG Education currently has contracts in 37 states; Ontario and British Columbia, Canada; and Poland. Additionally, PCG has served 13 of the largest 25 school districts in the United States.

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ABOUT RESOURCES FOR LEARNING Resources for Learning, LLC (RFL) is a woman-owned business begun by company president Linda Wurzbach in March 1998. RFL offers comprehensive services aligned with its mission of promoting learner success by building the capacities of educational organizations. To accomplish this mission, RFL applies to all projects its core values of collaboration, diversity, equity, flexibility, innovation, integrity, and quality. RFL provides a multi-faceted approach to projects and offers a wide range of services, including project management; professional development; evaluation; research, grant writing, and editing; assessment; and graphic and multimedia design. The organizational structure of RFL includes four teams: program evaluation, curriculum and assessment, professional development, and creative services. RFL staff members bring deep knowledge of pre-K–12 school systems to any project. RFL staff members understand the complexity of school and district instructional delivery and governance issues and are experienced in working with local education agencies in using multiple sources of data to assess current practices and advocate for change. With our experience as public school educators, RFL has built credibility among educators for its collaborations with schools and districts. Further, RFL staff members have extensive experience in school and district evaluation and leadership of statewide projects related to assessment, accountability, curriculum, educator standards, and professional development.

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Notes:

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GUEST SPEAKERS 78

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FEATURED AND DISTINGUISHED SPEAKERS We are proud to welcome the AIE Distinguished Speakers. Each of these speakers will help us dig deeply into the “why” of our work and give us useful tools and strategies to Advance Improvement in Education. Each of these speakers will focus on one of the critical success factors, all of which are also highlighted throughout our suggested paths. Manuel Scott—AIE Conference Featured Speaker Jack Balderman—Increased Learning Time Sheila Bethel—Leadership Effectiveness Aric Bostick—School Climate Bill Cecil—Teacher Quality Dr. Bobb Darnell—Leadership Effectiveness Kerry Gain—Use of Quality Data to Drive Instruction Byron V. Garrett—Family/Community Engagement

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FEATURED SPEAKER

Manuel Scott Take Matters Into Your Own Hands: Dream Now! One of the original Freedom Writers—Inspiring Educators to Reach Out and DREAM The AIE Conference is pleased to announce featured speaker Manuel Scott. An original Freedom Writer whose story is told in the Hollywood movie, Freedom Writers, Manuel’s unique message is one that has inspired, educated, and empowered almost a million people, helping them make the most of their lives. At the age of 14, Manuel dropped out of school, and his English grammar was so poor that he was classified as an English as a Second Language student (ESL). He had already lived in 26 different places by the age of 16. At an early age, he began using drugs and alcohol. He says, “When I look back, I now see that I was heading down a path that would have destroyed me.” However, due to an amazing transformation, Manuel has defied all of the odds stacked against him. “I was once dismissed as ‘unreachable’ and ‘unteachable,’ says Scott, “but something special happened, and I love sharing that message 80

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FEATURED SPEAKER with others.” The high school dropout now holds degrees from the University of California at Berkeley and Trinity International University. He is currently working on his PhD in Chicago, Illinois.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AIE PRESENTATION:

Wednesday, September 25, 2013 9:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Exhibit Hall 5

www.mannyscott.com Twitter@InkByMannyScott YouTube http://youtu.be/oA1tKKbKSBU

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INCREASED LEARNING TIME

Jack Baldermann Champions of Hope: Inspiration and Ideas to Reach Disengaged Students Jack Baldermann, currently principal of Westmont High School in Illinois, has been an educational leader for over twenty years serving as a teacher, principal, director of secondary schools and superintendent. He has also presented to hundreds of school districts in 43 states and Canada. The teams he has worked with have consistently realized significant student learning increases. His team at Westmont achieved A.Y.P. and improvement in test scores and graduation rates. As superintendent and principal at Riverside Brookfield, the school was recognized as one of the most improved and top performing high schools in the state and nation and ranked by Newsweek as one of the top 100 high schools in America. During his time as principal at Carl Sandburg High School (enrollment 3,500), Jack and his staff created a learning environment that led to a series of innovative programs and success in raising student achievement. He also supervised a talented group of 82

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INCREASED LEARNING TIME educational leaders for the Hartford Public Schools. Jack offers practical solutions and ideas to benefit practitioners and help them achieve success with all students.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AIE PRESENTATION:

Wednesday, September 25, 2013 10:15-12:15 Ballroom FG

Wednesday, September 25, 2013 2:30-3:30

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LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS

Sheila Bethel, PhD Your Leadership Makes the Difference! Business savvy and people smart, Sheila understands how and why people perform at their best and what it takes to build and sustain a successful business. She is a thriving entrepreneur and has built three successful companies. Sheila holds a PhD in Philosophy with a major in Communications and has served on the adjunct faculty of Indiana Purdue University, San Francisco State University, and the University of Southern California. She is a currently a member of the Advisory Council for Amsted University based in Malaysia. Her books are used as course material and are in libraries in 127 universities and colleges worldwide.

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LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS Why are you advancing improvement in education? The two most important structures that make our nation strong and sustainable are healthcare and education. Without well-educated people we cannot and will not move ahead and succeed, as people and as a country. Education is the very backbone of everything we dream of and hope for. I began my professional career in education. I saw firsthand the power of passionate, committed, competent leaders. This is not a top-down issue; it is broad, wide, and deep within every successful education system. It is incredibly exciting to see people at every level of education pick up the challenge to build strong teams with shared values and then take them out to every school and community and, eventually, to each child and family. It is thrilling to be able to help in any way that I possibly can. It is personally rewarding and motivates me to continue my work. —Sheila Bethel, PhD ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AIE PRESENTATION:

Wednesday, September 25, 2013 10:15 a.m.–12:15 p.m. Room: 18 A–D PATH—District Leadership www.bethelinstitute.com Twitter@DrSheilaBethel

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SCHOOL CLIMATE

Aric Bostick Simple Strategies the Everyday Hero Can Take to Keep their Fire Alive! Aric Bostick has spoken to over half a million teens and adults leaders of youth across the country and holds the top Google search for “teen speaker” and “teen success speaker.” His success and leadership camp, The Camp of CHAMPS, is #1 in the search for Gen Y Camp, the name given to today’s generation of teenagers. He is known for helping kids set clear goals and develop their own plans for success so they can start living their dreams, not later in life, but right now. As an extension of his work with kids, Bostick also helps parents, educators, and adults learn how to “speak teenager.” He taps into what makes kids tick and shows the adults around them how to communicate effectively, respectfully, and authentically. “So much of what adults want to communicate to kids is great, but unfortunately, it gets lost in translation,” says Bostick. “My hope is to inspire adults to empower the kids they parent, teach, or employ.” While his speaking engagements with kids are highly effective, it’s the adults and educators who are “in the trenches” each day with our students whom Aric 86

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SCHOOL CLIMATE works tirelessly to educate. “Our kids, although they sometimes seem so tough on the outside, are so impressionable. They can be lost with just one word, one look. Adults need to be aware of what they are saying, what they are not saying, and their manner of delivery in order to ensure success with today’s students.”

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AIE PRESENTATION:

Wednesday, September 25, 2013 10:15 a.m.–12:15 p.m. Ballroom D

PATH—Teacher Leader/Campus Leader/PSP/ESC www.aricbostick.com Twitter@aricbostick

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USE OF QUALITY DATA TO DRIVEN INSTRUCTION

Kerry Gain Moving From the Data Summary to the “Need” Kerry Gain is in her 17th year in education. Her career path has led her to the high school classroom, where she taught students to love literature and writing; to the elementary school building, where she monitored instruction, discipline, and (literally) put out fires; and to the regional education service center, where she became the accountability and assessment “go-to” person for over 100 school districts and charter schools in the Dallas area. Kerry currently serves as the Director of Curriculum in Wylie ISD, where she monitors curriculum, instruction, assessment, and accountability for over 13,000 students...including her own daughter. For the past 10 years, Kerry has worked with school districts on analyzing data and understanding accountability implications. She has presented accountability information to teachers, school administrators, school boards, graduate students, and community groups. Some of her most impactful work was with a group of Dallas area high schools on the cleanup completion rate. In her time at the Region 10 ESC, she initiated a collaboration with area PSPs that led 88

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USE OF QUALITY DATA TO DRIVEN INSTRUCTION to increased improvement efforts for schools, and she assisted in the development of a number of accountability-related tools for school administrators. She is a member of ASCD and currently serves on the board of the North Central Texas ASCD. Kerry and her husband, Chris, live in Murphy, Texas, with their daughter, Kendall, a second grader who loves to dance, and their son, Connor, a four-year-old whose dream is to work at PetSmart.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AIE PRESENTATIONS:

Wednesday, September 25, 2013 10:15 a.m.–11:15 a.m. Room: 16B Thursday, September 26, 2013 8:30 a.m.–9:30 p.m. Room: 17B

PATH—Campus Leader/District Leader/PSP/ESC Twitter@WISDCurriculum

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FAMILY/COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

Byron Garrett Family Engagement: Education’s Best Kept Secret One of the most compelling voices of our time, Byron V. Garrett is Chairman of the National Family Engagement Alliance (NFEA), a nonprofit dedicated to transforming education through meaningful family engagement. Byron serves as the Director of Innovative Schools for Microsoft and an Executive Consultant for Scholastic. Throughout his career, he has been a visionary agent of change, promoting the idea that everyone has an obligation and opportunity to serve the best interests of our nation’s most precious resource—children. Byron writes a monthly column, “Parent University,” for Parenting Magazine and serves on their Editorial Advisory Board. Byron served as a lead strategist and planner for NBC News Education Nation and produced the first annual Building a Grad National Summit for the America’s Promise Alliance, featuring Vice President Joe Biden. The former CEO of the National PTA, Byron has a unique combination of experience from both the nonprofit and governmental sectors, having served as the first Chief of Staff for the Office of Public Affairs at U.S. Customs and Border Protection (an agency of 90

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FAMILY/COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT the U.S. Department of Homeland Security). Prior to this, Garrett served as National Program Leader for the National 4-H Headquarters at the U.S. Department of Agriculture for the program’s 7 million participants and 90,000 clubs. While at USDA, he was appointed by the White House as co-convener of the Helping America’s Youth initiative, an interagency effort to address challenges facing youth and to promote successful solutions.

Why are you advancing improvement in education? I am advancing educational improvement because we have a shared and collective responsible to ensure that ALL children, not some, have an opportunity to achieve their dreams and education is central to that dream. -Byron Garrett ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AIE PRESENTATION:

Thursday, September 26, 2013 10:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Ballroom FG

PATH—Teacher Leader/Campus Leader/PSP/ESC www.byrongarrett.com Twitter@Byronvgarrett

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TEACHER QUALITY

Bill Cecil Setting the Table for Success Bill Cecil is a 26-year veteran teacher for the Waverly Community Schools in Lansing, Michigan. Bill believes that every teacher is a leader with a team to lead. He has created a program called “Best Year Ever!” that provides teachers with a clear vision, blueprint, and proven strategies to create a positive, safe, and productive learning environment where individuals strive for their personal best while working together to achieve team goals. Bill graduated with honors from Western Michigan University. While attending Western, Bill earned four varsity letters playing on the men’s soccer team and discovered his love of teaching while coaching youth soccer camps for the Broncos. Not only did Bill discover teaching through soccer, he learned the potential power that a group of individuals have when they work together with a shared purpose or set of goals. He has incorporated those same team-building strategies into his own teaching with great success. Bill was chosen Michigan Teacher of the Year for 2003–2004. Bill spent that year on sabbatical working for the Michigan Department of Education. 92

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TEACHER QUALITY He set an ambitious goal to meet with as many educators, legislators, community members, and teachers-in-training as possible, in an effort to spread an “epidemic of hope and determination” by employing the message, “Now is still a great time to be involved in education.” In addition to teaching full-time in his classroom, Bill continues to speak at various colleges and universities, sharing ideas and strategies from the book he has written called Best Year Ever! Winning Strategies to Thrive in Today’s Classroom.

Why are you advancing improvement in education? As leaders, we can help to uplift our students, each other, and our profession by collectively sharing best practices and strategies that will help us lead and teach more effectively. - Bill Cecil ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AIE PRESENTATION:

Thursday, September 26, 2013 8:45 a.m.–10:45 a.m. Ballroom D

PATH—Teacher Leader/PSP/ESC www.aieconference.net/keynotes.html#sthash.mufcYS9Q.dpuf

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LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS

Dr. Bobb Darnell Five Fantastic Tips for Becoming an Inspirational and Credible School Leader Dr. Bobb Darnell has taught and been a professional developer for over 30 years. He is an author, an international speaker, and a consultant for schools and corporations. Bobb has been on the board of trustees for a number of professional organizations and on numerous national educational task forces. His high-energy workshops are filled with “edutainment� and practical ideas that have resulted from blending research and tested practice. He is truly committed to helping teachers build high-performance classrooms and strong parental support for schools and learning.

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LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS Why are you advancing improvement in education? Credible and inspirational leaders can improve teacher and organizational effectiveness and they can increase student learning. It is important that school leaders have the knowledge, skills, and tools necessary to articulate a clear vision, inspect the school environment, and provide tangible support for the school stakeholders. Leaders must know how to create a positive, respectful, and productive learning and working environment that ignites and invites motivation and high achievement. -Dr. Bobb Darnell

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AIE PRESENTATION:

Wednesday, September 25, 2013 2:30 p.m.–4:30 p.m. Ballroom D

PATH–Teacher Leader/Campus Leader/PSP/ESC www.achievementstrategies.org/

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GUEST SPEAKERS Lunch Speakers Dr. Julie Schell – Teacher Luncheon Principal Panel – Principal Luncheon Stacy Morris – Woods Intermediate School RoseMary Garza – Smith Elementary Leeann Bartee – Richland Middle School Kermit Ward – Westview Middle School Monica Quintero – Lee High School William Stewart – Palestine High School Anabel Garza – Statewide Support Luncheon

Dinner Speaker Mark McLeod – AIE Educators Dinner

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ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

Dr. Julie Schell Teacher Leader Luncheon Dr. Julie Schell is the incoming Director of OnRamps and Strategic Initiatives at the Center for Teaching and Learning at The University of Texas at Austin. Before joining UT, Dr. Schell served as the senior educational researcher in the Mazur Group at the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at Harvard University, where she also completed a postdoctoral fellowship with Professor Eric Mazur. She received her doctorate in higher education from Teachers College, Columbia University and has an MS in Educational Psychology with an emphasis in instructional technology from the University of Nevada, Reno. Her dissertation, Venturing Toward Better Teaching: STEM Professors’ Efforts to Improve Their Introductory Undergraduate Pedagogy at Major Research Universities, was selected as Dissertation of the Year from the Higher and Postsecondary Education Division of the American Educational Research Association in 2010. Dr. Schell is an international expert in instructional innovation, specializing in collaborative, blended, and flipped learning.

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ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Why are you advancing improvement in education? Education has always been the great equalizer. Over time we’ve lost sight of the power of schooling to pave the road to true self-actualization. We need to recognize that the true genius of education rests in the heart of the teacher and find ways to awaken and support teachers’ inner innovator. Only then, by privileging one of our oldest vocations, will education serve its true purpose in American schools. -Dr. Julie Schell

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AIE PRESENTATION:

Wednesday, September 25, 2013 12:15 p.m.–1:45 p.m. Exhibit Hall 5

PATH—Teacher Leader Twitter@julieschell

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PRINCIPAL LUNCHEON

Stacy Morris Elementary Principal Panel Stacy Morris is an 18-year educator with over 12 years in administrative experience in both urban and rural schools. Mrs. Morris currently serves as the principal for Woods Intermediate School in Wills Point ISD. Woods Intermediate is a rural,Title I campus with a diverse student population supported by educators who are committed to excellence. - Whatever It Takes!

RoseMary Garza Elementary Principal Panel RoseMary Garza is a graduate of Corpus Christi Independent School District public school, Del Mar College, and Texas A&M University Corpus Christi, Texas. Ms. Garza has a bachelor’s degree in elementary education with an Early Childhood and Bilingual Certification and a master’s degree in Educational Administration. Ms.Garza has been an educator for 30 years and has been in the positions of an elementary classroom teacher, assistant principal, and for the past 16 years as an Elementary Principal in Corpus Christi ISD. 100

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PRINCIPAL LUNCHEON

Leeann Michalek Bartee, Ph.D. Middle School Principal Panel As a secondary administrator of 9 years, Leeann Michalak Bartee has worked with school transformation funded by grants for Smaller Learning Communities, DATE, and TTIPS. Dr. Bartee develops learning communities based on reciprocal accountability, learning by doing, and building leadership capacity. She believes that the promise of school reform rests in the development and empowerment of teachers.

Kermit Ward Middle School Principal Panel Kermit Ward joined Pflugerville ISD as assistant principal at PHS in 2009. He became principal of Westview Middle School in January 2012.The bulk of his experience in education is in Waco ISD, where he was a teacher, instructional specialist, assistant principal and principal, leading Wiley Middle School from 2006-2008. He holds a bachelor of science from Baylor University, and a master’s degree from Tarleton State University.

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PRINCIPAL LUNCHEON

Monica Quintero High School Principal Panel Monica grew up in Houston, Texas. She received her bachelor’s degree from the University of Houston and a Master degree from Sam Houston State. Monica’s experience in Elementary, Middle and High School equip her for the challenges involved with taking on an Apollo 20 High School. Monica believes that all students can achieve at high levels and demonstrates a “no excuses” philosophy.

William Stewart High School Principal Panel Mr. William Stewart is the principal at Palestine High School. In the 2 years as principal, he has transformed the culture and climate of the campus to help improve student attendance and create an atmosphere of engaged learners. Under his leadership, data driven decisions have significantly improved the quality of instruction and learning on the campus. Mr. William is a graduate of Commerce A&M.

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STATEWIDE SUPPORT LUNCHEON

Anabel Garza Statewide Support Luncheon Anabel Garza is the Principal of John H. Reagan Early College High School. She has been selected as a Leader in Social Justice by the University of Texas and The Austin Human Resource Management Association. She was featured in a national article, “Tackling the Toughest Turnaround-Low-Performing High Schools in Phi Delta Kappan.” Selected as the Principal of the Year for AISD in 2011 She is the founding Principal of the District’s International High School, a now nationally recognized program for English Language Learners. The work done with first generation Immigrant students is detailed in the book “ Care and Advocacy: Narratives from a School of Immigrant Youth.” Ms. Garza has served as Principal at Reagan High School since her appointment in 2008. Under her direction Reagan High School has left behind a history of low performance and instability to open it’s doors in 2011 as an Early College High School. The new designation will allow students to graduate with up to 60 college credit hours at no cost to the student. Ms. Garza has earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Texas at Austin, and a master’s degree from Southwest Texas State University. Her work at Reagan High School was featured in the recently released book, “Saving the School” by Micheal Brick. Related articles have been featured in Texas Monthly, Latina Magazine, Oprah Magazine, Austin Woman’s Magazine, The Chronicle, The Washington Post and

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SCHOOL CLIMATE

Mark McLeod Featured Speaker: AIE Educators Dinner Known for his dynamic and motivating presentations, Mark McLeod is a rare speaker who can speak to the heart of an educator. He knows what it is like to “be in the trenches.” Recognized as one of Mississippi’s top school administrators, Mark has shared his expertise at state and national conferences and conducted many workshops and keynotes for schools and districts throughout the United States. As a lifelong educator, his educational experience includes teacher, coach, assistant principal, and principal. He was twice selected as Teacher of the Year for Lumberton Public School District. In 2002, he was selected as Covington County School District’s Administrator of the Year and Mississippi’s Region Four Administrator of the Year. He is currently a full-time motivational speaker, professional development instructor, and educational consultant.

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SCHOOL CLIMATE His enthusiastic and encouraging presentations leave participants inspired to plant seeds of success in their students. He currently resides in Purvis, Mississippi with his wife, Kelli, and two children, a daughter, Erin, and a son, Ryan.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AIE PRESENTATION:

Wednesday, September 25, 2013 5:45 p.m.–7:30 p.m. Ballroom E www.markmcleodpresentations.com www.aieconference.net/keynotes.html#sthash.uTUgQSfR.dpuf

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DAY 1

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SCHEDULE FOR THE DAY Time

Session

7:00 a.m. – 8:30 a.m.

Breakfast and Check-In—Exhibit Hall 4

8:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.

AIE Kickoff and Featured Speaker Manuel Scott/ Sheila Bethel—Exhibit Hall 5

10:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.

Distinguished Speakers

10:15 a.m. – 11:15 a.m.

Breakout Sessions

11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.

Breakout Sessions

12:15 p.m. – 1:45 p.m.

“Advanced Academic Performance” Lunches with Guest Speakers

1:45 p.m. – 2:15 p.m.

Open Exhibit Hall—Exhibit Hall 4

2:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m.

Distinguished Speakers

2:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.

Breakout Sessions

3:45 p.m. – 4:45 p.m.

Breakout Sessions

4:30 p.m. – 5:45 p.m.

Conference Extravaganza—Exhibit Hall 4

5:45 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.

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Educators Dinner with Mark McLeod Pre-registration required—$25.00/plate

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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

BALLROOM D, 10:15 –12:15 Simple Strategies the Everyday Hero Can Take to Keep Their Fire Alive! SCHOOL CLIMATE Being in the education field is one of the most rewarding fields one can choose to work in. However, it is also one of the most challening, underappreciated, and exhausting jobs one can possibly take on. If you have ever lost your focus, lost your passion or simply felt burnout by the enormous taks of being all things to all people, then this training will be just what the doctor ordered. Get ready to be rejuvinated, refocused and fired up to make a difference once again!

ARIC BOSTIC

Attendees will receive a FIRED UP Guide and will learn how to take the 7 steps to being FIRED UP! Attendees will learn how to implement these seven strategies to being FIRED UP and make an action plan to implement into their daily lives, as well as, learn tips, tools and techniques for building relationships with the students and educators they work with. Get ready to be FIRED UP!!!

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PLUGS for the Drain—Premont ISD’s Story of Recovery LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS

ERNEST SINGLETON ehsingleton@gmail.com

IGNACIO SALINAS JR. ignaciosalinasjr@ gmail.com

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Most schools are challenged with meeting the needs of diverse student populations that enter their doors each day. Many times, they refuse to acknowledge problems that are right in front of them. As a result, schools resist change because they are fearful of the impact that their decisions may have on the organization. Attend this session and hear how a small, rural South Texas school district freed itself from “Circling the Drain” to avoid closure by the Texas Education Agency. During this session, participants will learn about PLUGS through conversations about the importance of Paying attention to reality, the benefits of implementing effective Leadership Strategies, the power of Understanding Change, the impact of Guided Communication, and the dividends of a Successful Environment. By the end of the presentation, participants will leave knowing that it is possible for a district to take bold steps to defuse panic and act with urgency.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

BALLROOM E, 10:15 – 11:15

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BALLROOM FG, 10:15 – 12:15 Champions of Hope: Inspiration and Ideas to Reach Disengaged Students SCHOOL CLIMATE In this highly interactive session, research from 20 years of effectively working with disengaged/unmotivated students will be shared. The presentation will offer practical ideas and solutions that will make the difference in the lives of our students that struggle the most.

JACK BALDERMANN

We will focus on why students become disengaged and specific interventions that are researched based and have proven to be successful to increase learning for all students.

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What Is Non-Traditional About Traditional Schools? LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS

MATT POPE popem@hayscisd.net KRISTYNA BREWER brewerk@hayscisd. net

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Public schools are governed, to say the least, by federal and state guidelines. As leaders in education, how do we comply with those guidelines and still cultivate a school that clearly “thinks outside of the box” to increase academic performance for all students? In this session, leaders in education will learn about a school that has been able to accomplish this and more. Attendees will learn about our mission, vision, and goals, as well as, the primary structures, systems, and policies that work together to create an organization that is proactive on behalf of every student at every turn.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

12A, 10:15 – 11:15

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12B, 10:15 – 11:15 Work Less, Produce More, and Still Get the Job Done LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS By setting reading levels, differentiating non-fiction text based on each student’s unique academic profile, and continually assessing and increasing the complexity of text, you will achieve solutions that steadily increase students’ ability to read, comprehend, apply and communicate information derived from complex texts­—prerequisites for success in school and beyond graduation.

DR. CORDELL JONES cordell@ahisd.net

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ROHNY ESCARENO rohny.escareno@ gmail.com

SUCCESS(STUDENTS)=STUDENTS^(COLLAB ORATION-COMPLACENCY+Weezy) INCREASED LEARNING TIME Piñatas, scooters, Xboxes, Lil Wayne, and duct tape continue to work alongside word walls, data disaggregation, team planning, and goal setting and attainment in the recent successes actualized by Edcouch-Elsa High School’s Math Department. Confronting the challenges facing a Stage 5 school and new-and-increased academic requirements, the EEHS Math Department has instituted an eclectic approach to extended learning opportunities, student investment, academic vocabulary, and team collaboration to help raise student math scores to some of the highest in the region for the second year in a row—and meet federal AYP required improvement levels for the first time in nearly a decade.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

15, 10:15 – 11:15

Our session will focus on strategies for increasing successful collaborative opportunities within and among departments; utilizing vocabulary strategies for LEP, SPED, and struggling learners; developing positive and exciting tutorial atmospheres; and tailoring instruction, assessment, and data usage to positively impact student success.

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16A, 10:15 – 11:15 Maximizing Professional Development to Drive Improvement TEACHER QUALITY Now more than ever, teachers are tasked with acquiring new skills to drive school improvement, a reality that has only increased the need for professional development that directly meets teachers’ needs. While wellintentioned, many professional development efforts fail to permeate the classroom as teachers face the challenge of transferring their learning from training to the classroom. This session addresses this fundamental challenge by providing school leaders and teachers with a context and structure for Teacher-Driven Observation (TDO), a schoolwide peer observation process that places professional development in the context in which teachers work each day: their classrooms. Through the utilization of peer-collected classroom data, TDO equips teachers to engage in professional learning that fosters immediate instructional improvements and student achievement. This session also examines how TDO enables school leaders to better leverage existing improvement efforts, ensuring that these efforts directly impact classroom instruction.

DR. TRENT KAUFMAN tkaufman@ eddirection.com DR. DAVID DOTY ddoty@cicerogroup. com

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Moving Schools: Lessons From Exemplary Leaders ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

DR. MAX THOMPSON maxthompson64@ gmail.com

JOE CLIFFORD jclifford@learningfocused.com

A recently released evaluation project conducted on 400 Title I schools has identified specific practices that leaders in exemplary schools engage in consistently and pervasively that leaders in typical or struggling schools do not. Research from this study identified the specific patterns and practices that each of these 400 previously struggling schools used to directly attribute to their successes. By implementing the common practices that will be presented, each of these schools was ultimately able to raise its achievement by at least 35 points. This session identifies the distinct exemplary leadership practices that every leader needs to start immediately and provides strategies for implementing each one

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

17AB, 10:15 – 11:15

effectively.

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18A-D, 10:15 – 12:15 Your Leadership Makes The Difference! LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS There has never been a time when inspired leaders have been needed more. The most powerful question anyone in a leadership position can ask is “Why?” Your answer is the basis for all that you do and hope to achieve. It is your personal mission–vision for making a difference. In this fast-paced, interactive track, Dr. Bethel helps clarify and identify the essential leadership qualities of commitment, leading by example, being a change master, pursuing personal excellence, and the power of servant leadership. These qualities are a fixed beacon, giving direction and purpose to every member of your organization. When you inspire others by leading with these qualities, leaders are more engaged, productive, and committed. Leadership is not something conferred upon only the most highly educated, rich or powerful. You can be an inspired leader who makes a difference.

SHEILA BETHEL

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Analyzing AMAO Data to Improve Instruction for ELL Students USE OF QUALITY DATA TO DRIVE INSTRUCTION

DIANA MADRID diana.madrid@esc20. net

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The purpose of Title III Part A of the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act is to help ensure that ELL children, attain English language proficiency and meet the same challenging academic content and achievement standards that all students are expected to meet. Schools must use Title III Part A funds to implement language instruction educational programs designed to help ELL students achieve standards and are accountable to measure the effectiveness of their English language development programs in helping ELL students attain English language proficiency. In this session, teachers, instructional specialists and administrators will learn how to use Annual Measurable Achievement Objectives (AMAO) data to inform instruction and develop strategies to promote English language acquisition.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

19A, 10:15 – 11:15

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19B, 10:15 – 11:15 36#SchoolPR Tweets to Learn From FAMILY/COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT In a world that communicates with 140 characters or fewer, who has time for intense training? This rapidfire session will present 36 School PR pointers with breakneck speed. You’ll have to listen fast if you want to assimilate it all, but you’ll leave with some great advice on crisis communications, media relations, customer service, community engagement, and more.

BRAD DOMITROVICH braddomitrovich@ gmail.com

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The Peaceful Classroom ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

D’ETTE GRIFFIN dettegriffin22@ hotmail.com

Featuring dynamic, teacher-empowered encouragement, and excellence in every classroom, Time To Teach is a research-based program that increases test scores and lowers discipline referrals. We will show you how to eliminate low-level behavior problems with a common-sense approach: teaching students exactly what you expect from them. Based on the wisdom and skills of Coach John Wooden and Dr. Madeline Hunter and backed by current research, we will give you real systems for maintaining a safe and fun learning environment. If you have ever been frustrated because you knew what to do in the face of student challenges, but believed you had no options to handle the situation, we will give you real, tested, and practical methods that will ease the tension and restore your sanity. Time To Teach will give you real

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

EH 4-STAGE A, 10:15 – 11:15

tools to create and maintain a peaceful classroom.

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EH 4-STAGE B, 10:15 – 11:15 Create Quality Local Assessments With TAG ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Learn how DMAC’s online test item bank of more than 50,000 questions can help you create customized assessments using quick filters, quality content, and user-friendly settings.

PAULA JORDAN pjordan@esc7.net BEVERLY MARTIN bmartin@esc7.net

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Intervention in the Digital Age ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

JASON DANIEL jason.daniel@ saplinglearning.com

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This collaborative talk will explore current best practices being utilized to address students who require intervention in high school science courses. We will discuss how digital content is changing the landscape of intervention. We will look at digital solutions for tracking student progress in the classroom and provide supplemental instructional material, and we will consider early intervention to prevent misconceptions.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

EH 4-STAGE C, 10:15 – 11:15

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12A, 11:30 – 12:30 Do You Have What It Takes to Be a Turnaround Leader? LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS What do the most effective principals do to get dramatically successful results in chronically underperforming schools? What abilities and DIANE FLAIM behaviors set them apart from their colleagues? Learn diane.flaim@esc13. what bold leaders do well to create significant, lasting txed.net change. This session will examine the 10 turnaround leader competencies identified through research of LACEY PADGETT organizational turnarounds. All leaders can enhance lacey.padgett@esc13. their effectiveness by cultivating their skills in these 10 txed.net competencies.

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Tackling the At Risk FAMILY/COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

MARIO BRACAMONTES mario.bracamontes@ psjaisd.us

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Involve the highly at-risk student to become part of a positive team with the collaboration of the community. This session will share how a student mentoring program will work for a campus in promoting positive relationships within the school and community. The motivation is for students to attend, stay in school, learn, and increase their self-esteem to hopefully become successful members of society. The collaboration of local organizations has helped promote the relationship between the school, students, parents, and community.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

12B, 11:30 – 12:30

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14, 11:30 - 12:30 Support Specialists Live!

Moving from the Data Summary to the “Need” ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Participants will revisit the essential components to creating an annual goal to effectively measure the implementation of the improvement plan.

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Keep Students in Class Through Key DeEscalation Strategies INCREASE LEARNING TIME

LIN KUZMICH kuzenergy@gmail. com

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Students who are sent out of classrooms repeatedly cannot learn and achieve gap-closing results. This session targets increased learning time and the improvement of school climate through key strategies that all teachers and administrators should know but are not taught in preparation programs or most PD. Learn 10 essential strategies that help staff de-escalate behavior problems before students get sent to the office or kicked out of class. It is essential to take back control of your learning time and reduce office interventions to improve student achievement. Learn about results that other schools achieved using the strategies. These proven methods are easy to implement. Leave with all you need to kick off the school year with increased learning time, better parent communication, and success for all students.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

15, 11:30 - 12:30

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16A, 11:30 - 12:30 Developing Academic Discourse Through Vocabulary TEACHER QUALITY Many students lack the academic language necessary to attain academic success. By not providing students with the opportunity to obtain language necessary for academic discourse, teachers are hindering student learning. Participants will go through the basics of understanding and comprehending why vocabulary development and academic discourse are crucial to the success of English Language Learners. They will also learn what to look for pertaining to academic discourse and vocabulary development when conducting classroom observations and walk-throughs.

DR. GENE SHEETS gsheets@ muleshoeisd.net JENNIFER DE LEON jdeleon@esc17.net

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20% Jump in Scores...WHAT? INCREASE LEARNING TIME

TAUSHA ROBINSON tausha.robinson@ amaisd.org MARY GAMBREL mary.gambrel@ amaisd.org

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See how a 90% low socioeconomic, 33% ESL (10 countries represented, including asylee and refugee students) school achieved a 20% increase in eighth-grade reading scores and an 11% jump in eighth-grade math scores. There is no magic silver bullet—it is hard work, dedication, and belief in the teachers, administration, and students.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

16B, 11:30 – 12:30

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17AB, 11:30 - 12:30 Football, Algebra, and Using Data to Improve Student Learning USE OF QUALITY DATA TO DRIVE INSTRUCTION Data is everyhere, expectations are high, and the stakes are even higher. But how does a campus administrator really use data to improve practices on a campus? In this session, participants will receive practical tools and tips on how to choose the right data, how to analyze that data, and how to truly improve what happens in the classroom based on that data.

KERRY GAIN

#AIEConf


This Is Not Your Father’s School—Nor Do You Want It to Be! FAMILY/COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

FRANCISCO RODRIGUEZ frodriguez@esc17.net TORI MITCHELL tmitchell@esc17.net

#AIEConf

Communication is the key to parental and community engagement. District personnel and campus leadership will recognize the effectiveness of proactive and engaging communication practices. Participants will examine various forms of parent survey data to determine implementation of best practices. Participants will determine next steps to effectively communicate expectations to parent and community members in order to ensure school and student success.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

19A, 11:30 – 12:30

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19B, 11:30 – 12:30 Redefining Roles for Secondary Parent Involvement FAMILY/COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT Appropriate audiences are intermediate, middle, and high school educators who have responsibility for school improvement, transition, college and career readiness, and parent engagement. Participants will review a meta-analysis done by Nancy Hill, PhD, on 50 research studies showing what types of parental involvement work in secondary schools to promote academic success. Building on that knowledge, they will become familiar with parenting strategies that are critical success factors in promoting academic socialization and lifelong learning. Parallels will be made with the goals for college and career readiness and the objectives for effective transitions from upper elementary school through middle school and high school and on to college and career.

DR. LUCY LONG drlucylong@gmail. com

#AIEConf


Support Science by Providing Effective PD ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

KATHY REEVES kathy@ scientificminds.com

#AIEConf

Learn how you can provide meaningful, researchbased professional development to improve teacher effectiveness. Scientific Minds offers complimentary Web-based professional development for all schools using the Science Starters program. Science Starters provides 100% TEKS coverage and can be used as a curriculum framework or a supplement to your existing curriculum. Professional development includes best instructional practices, the 5E model; vocabulary activities; and strategies for remediation, intervention, and English proficiency. Teachers love the professional training, and students benefit. Available for grades 1–8 science, biology, and chemistry.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

EH 4-STAGE A, 11:30 – 12:30

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EH 4-STAGE B, 11:30 – 12:30 Ten Minutes a Day to Algebra Readiness and New TEK Implementation ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Make teaching easy with these daily assignments created by teachers for teachers! Prepare your students for algebra in just 10 minutes a day, and watch them experience confidence and success in mathematics. Learn how to implement the new TEKS into your classroom in a way that is stress free for your students. Let us show you how we recycle skills in our classrooms to enhance students understanding of algebraic concepts, making word problems and project-based learning fun! Learn how we use distributed practice and spaced repetition to enhance retention of base skills necessary for success in mathematics.

RHONDA BRADY rbrady@ algrebrareadiness educators.com KATHERINE LACHANCE klachance@ algrebrareadiness educators.com

#AIEConf


Effective Instructional Strategies: Seven Proven Methods ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

BOB PARRISH bob@excelmath.com

#AIEConf

Presented with instructional strategies for effective direct instruction, attendees will learn tips to engage and reach all students regardless of their learning styles. Using a well-balanced mathematics curriculum with seven successful strategies, teachers will be able to track the successful development of student learning. This facilitates development of knowledge and skills as specified in TEKS standards.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

EH 4-STAGE C, 11:30 – 12:30

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BALLROOM D, 12:15 – 1:45 AIE Teacher-Leader Luncheon ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE We want to celebrate teacher leaders Advancing Improvement in Education! Please join us for lunch and hear from distinguished speaker Julie Schell. Connect, network, and learn from other teacher leaders across Texas and re-connect with the “why” of your work. This luncheon is of no additional cost and is specially designed for teacher leaders across Texas. Thanks for joining us!

JULIE SCHELL

#AIEConf


STACY MORRIS Wills Point Intermediate ROSEMARY GARZA Smith Elementary LEEANN BARTEE Richland Middle School KERMIT WARD Westview Middle School

AIE Campus Leader Luncheon ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE We want to celebrate campus leaders Advancing Improvement in Education! Please join us for lunch and hear from a powerful panel of principals across the state. Connect, network, and learn from other principals and re-connect with the “why” of your work. This luncheon is of no additional cost and is specially designed for campus leaders across Texas. Thanks for joining us!

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

EH5, 12:15–1:45

MONICA QUINTERO Lee High School WILLIAM STEWERT Palestine High School

#AIEConf

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BALLROOM FG, 12:15 – 1:45 AIE Statewide Support Luncheon ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE We want to celebrate Educators Advancing Improvement in Education through providing support to districts and campuses across the state! This lunch is designed for ESCs and PSPs across the state. Please join us for lunch. Connect, network, and learn from other PSPs and ESC representatives and re-connect with the “why” of your work. This luncheon is of no additional cost and is specially designed for PSPs and ESCs. Thanks for joining us!

ANABEL GARZA

#AIEConf


AIE District Leadership Luncheon ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE District level administrators face unique challenges, frequently blazing new trails in leadership. This networking luncheon provides an opportunity for administrators to connect with their counterparts of similar districts and circumstances to share ideas, innovative and promising strategies, and leverage the power of collective thinking. Topics are loosely structured to launch conversations and allow them to flow in directions of most benefit to busy executives. Good food, good people, and good information is guaranteed to make this a valuable use of time.

#AIEConf

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

18 A-D, 12:15 – 1:45

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BALLROOM E, 2:30 – 3:30 Specific Leadership Programs and Tools to Increase Student Achievement INCREASE LEARNING TIME This session will offer practical leadership tools, templates, rubrics, interventions and programs that have been proven to increase student achievement. The ideas presented are supported by significant research and have been implemented in a variety of school settings resulted in measurable learning increases over time.

JACK BALDERMANN

#AIEConf


Five Fantastic Tips for Becoming an Inspirational and Credible School Leader LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS

DR. BOBB DARNELL

#AIEConf

Discover how to become the powerful engine needed to increase achievement and reduce achievement gaps. Examine the knowledge, skills, and attitudes necessary to gain commitment to improvement initiatives and to earn leadership credibility that inspires colleagues to take decisive action. Explore how to expect and direct continual improvement and create a collaborative culture of inquiry and positive action in professional groups. Observe ways to efficiently inspect existing conditions and improvement progress. Feel what it is like to respect both effort and accomplishment. Learn how to encourage colleagues to continually reflect about current practices and celebrate incremental progress.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

BALLROOM D, 2:30 – 4:30

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BALLROOM FG, 2:30 – 3:30 Assess More, But Grade Less ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE One of the most misused, misunderstood, and mistrusted issues in public schooling is how we have communicated student achievement and progress to our students and parents. Grades must communicate to parents, students, and teachers exactly what students know and are able to do. However, in many cases, grades do not reflect relative mastery of what a student has learned. Students need to be assessed frequently, even daily, to determine their level of understanding. These frequent and ongoing assessments are considered as “checkpoints” on students’ progress and the foundation for feedback given. Often, these assessments should not be counted as part of a student’s “grade,” as they are simply a form of checking for understanding. Summative assessments are used by the teacher at the end of instruction to evaluate a student’s learning and assign grades. Participants will distinguish formative assessment from summative assessment and discuss how grading fits into assessments.

DR. ALAN VEACH alan.veach@sreb.org

#AIEConf


Violence in the Classroom, a Sure Cure for Safety! SCHOOL CLIMATE

CHRIS CANNON Chris@ Fighting4Youth.com

#AIEConf

Every classroom has its issues; violence seems to be the overwhelming problem in classrooms around the country today. Learn the strategies to eliminate pesky and low-level behaviors that disrupt class time, distract students from learning, and strain relationships between teachers and administrators.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

12A, 2:30 – 3:30

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12B, 2:30 – 3:30 Shame, Courage, and Vulnerability: Rehumanizing Education SCHOOL CLIMATE This session will provide educators with an understanding of how shame exists in education, creates barriers to creativity and innovation, and what we can do about it. Participants will learn how the courage to be vulnerable in our approach to education can lead to cultural shifts through empathy and honest feedback.

LIZ GARCIA liz.garcia@esc13. txed.net

The information presented in this session is based on the work of research professor, speaker, author, and storyteller Dr. Brené Brown who has spent the past decade studying vulnerability, courage, worthiness, and shame. Your presenter, Liz Garcia, has been following Brené’s work for over two years and is in the process of completing her certification in The Daring Way™.

#AIEConf


100% Culturally Motivated SCHOOL CLIMATE

NITA PAGE npage@eisd.org

KIMBERLY LITTLE klittle@eisd.org

#AIEConf

Do you want 100% graduation? Do you want buy-in from your staff and students? Do you want to change the culture of your campus? Striving to do the impossible, Everman High School, serving a student population of 85% low socioeconomic status, has accomplished these major challenges. Participants will gain insight on how to motivate staff and students to buy in to the vision/mission of your campus; learn how to implement a team approach yielding a 100% graduation rate; and understand how to develop a positive rapport with all students, which will help to increase attendance rates, as well as, decrease behavior issues. District/campus administrators and teacher leaders: come to hear how the “Fearless Leader” and “The Team” made it happen by using “out of the box” thinking.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

14, 2:30 – 3:30

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15, 2:30 – 3:30 Building a Solid Behavioral RTI Process INCREASE LEARNING TIME This session will focus on the process of building a successful behavioral Response to Intervention process. The discussion will include how to create your own Universal Screening Process, as well as information on building teams, creating intervention strategies, and collecting data. The objectives are to offer options for addressing behavioral issues on a budget, with minimal, yet key, participants, and to present information on collecting data in a simplified fashion. This session will present research-based, practical information for educators across the spectrum, specifically behavior specialists, administrators, counselors, and teachers.

CHARLOTTE GOUDEAU charlotte.goudeau@ hotmail.com

KAREN ADAMS kmadams66@yahoo. com

#AIEConf


Successful Discipline in Secondary Classrooms TEACHER QUALITY

JENNIFER DEGRAAF jmdegraa@episd.org

#AIEConf

By the time our students reach middle and high school, they have figured out that not all teachers are created equally. They will modify their own behavior to your expectations. It is critical that teachers implement solid classroom management techniques to motivate the most at-risk students. There are key strategies that do not require a lot of time, energy, or planning. The purpose of this session is to discuss these key strategies and provide methods for teachers to implement, execute, and maintain successful classrooms year-round. This session is intended for secondary classroom teachers, administrators, and other school personnel interested in improving the learning outcomes of students by building a solid discipline plan.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

16A, 2:30 – 3:30

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16B, 2:30 – 3:30 Teacher Hiring and Development for Active Student Engagement TEACHER QUALITY Increasing active student engagement starts with the hiring and employee initiation processes. A strategy that requires applicants to use the creativity and skills desired in the interview process helps in the identification of employees who will be successful with active student engagement once hired. In addition, the professional development provided before the teacher enters the classroom can set the expectations and provide the support for further success. This session looks at one school that requires evidence of creativity with projectbased learning in a video during the interview process, and workshops that model what is expected in the classroom once hired.

DR. WESLEY HICKEY whickey@uttyler.edu ELI CROW jcrow@uttyler.edu

#AIEConf


Teaching Students to Ask Their Own Questions INCREASED LEARNING TIME

DR. CORY DUTY cory.duty@sreb.org RAFFY GARZAVIZCAINO rgvizcaino@hotmail. com

#AIEConf

Participants will learn how many educators are using a step-by-step process developed at the Right Question Institute called the question formulation technique (QFT). The process is easy to teach—it requires only about 45 minutes the first time it is used. Students will become proficient at writing their own questions. They become the leaders of their own learning, and teachers become facilitators of the learning.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

17A, 2:30 – 3:30

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18A-D, 2:30 – 3:30 Six Practices to Improve School BoardCentral Office Partnerships LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS Through an interactive exploration of six practices to build school board/superintendent partnerships that amplify the individual capacity of each party and lead to improvements in teaching and learning district wide, participants will understand how the roles of leaders can be best positioned to support professional learning and student achievement across a system. Participants will leave equipped to put practices in place that will enable them to leverage the partnership between the school board and superintendent more effectively.

DR. DAVE DOTY ddoty@cicerogroup. com DR. TRENT KAUFMAN tkaufman@ eddirection.com

#AIEConf


Stay Calm and Lead On LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS

JOHN SAMARA tcpoffice@ curriculumproject. com

#AIEConf

Instructional leadership is not so much about the personality traits of the building’s leaders; rather it is defined by the concrete actions that building leaders perform. Step 1 involves defining the instructional techniques that will serve your students well. Step 2 involves identifying simple instructional leadership actions that support implementation of selected strategies. Step 3 involves organizing the actions into a plan. Join me for “Stay Calm and Lead On,” and I will encourage you to lead with specificity, perseverance, and positivity.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

19A, 2:30 – 3:30

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19B, 2:30 – 3:30 Building a Culturally Responsible Family Engagement Program FAMILY/COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT This session highlights a school’s journey to becoming a culture of acceptance and care. Participants will be introduced to principles for becoming more culturally competent to effectively engage culturally diverse families. Participants will have the opportunity to discuss and brainstorm ways to effectively connect in multicultural communities. Current research will be highlighted. Extensive handouts will be provided.

TERRI STAFFORD terri.stafford@esc16. net

#AIEConf


Turnaround–Impacting Rapid, Dramatic, Positive Change ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

DIANE FLAIM diane.flaim@esc13. txed.net

#AIEConf

Are you looking for strategies that will impact student achievement in a rapid and dramatic way? The Texas Turnaround Leadership Academy (TTLA) is an effective strategy identified by the Texas Education Agency (TEA) as an initiative to build district- and campuslevel capacity to support the turnaround efforts at the district and campus level. This initiative empowers high-potential school leaders and positions them for turnaround through systemic professional development and ongoing customized support to turnaround academically under-performing schools.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

EH 4-STAGE A, 2:30 – 3:30

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EH4-STAGE B, 2:30 – 3:30 Using STAAR Mission Math to Improve Instruction ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Learn how the Web-based program of mathematics instruction, STAAR Mission Math, can be used to not only help students succeed but also to help teachers gain a better understanding of the 5E instructional model and inquiry-based learning. Participants will experience the video, printable, and projected components of a 5E math lesson and then discuss how lessons like the one experienced could be used to grow teachers and improve instruction. Preliminary data will be shared demonstrating the effectiveness of STAAR Mission Math in increasing student performance as measured on state assessments.

DR. PAUL GRAY paul@ cosenzaassociates. com GARY CONSENZA gary@ cosenzaassociates. com

#AIEConf


Critical Thinking—Vital for the Success of Our Students ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

LESLI LAUGHTER Lesli@ learningblueprints. com

#AIEConf

Creating an atmosphere of critical thinking is crucial; learn practical strategies for putting critical thinking into action. Topics include an overview of critical thinking, implications from research, integrating critical thinking with instruction, how to get critical thinking in students’ hands, and getting parents to reinforce critical thinking at home.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

EH4-STAGE C, 2:30 – 3:30

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BALLROOM E, 3:45 – 4:45 Fifty Shades of PBIS SCHOOL CLIMATE This session features how Lanier High School successfully implemented PBIS school wide. We will give details about how PBIS positively influenced our school climate and drastically improved our discipline data. Participants will be engaged in reflective activities and will leave equipped with great ideas and knowledge to plan PBIS implementation on their own campus. We will share our victories, data, ideas, and struggles and will leave plenty of time for Q&A.

KELLY VEALE kelly.veale@austinisd. org JENNIFER SMITH jennifer.smith@ austinisd.org

#AIEConf


Achieving Success for Every Student INCREASE LEARNING TIME

DR. ALAN VEACH alan.veach@sreb.org CASSANDRA MENDOZA

#AIEConf

The culture of assessment needs to reflect that every student is capable of—and expected to—produce acceptable work. Sub-standard work will not be accepted as final until it meets the grade-level and course standards. This type of grading embraces the conviction that all students can and will learn. Almost all students can and will make the effort to learn gradelevel and course standards if adults in the school create the right conditions. Students should not have the option not to turn in work. Participants will explore a range of strategies (e.g., grading, extra help, redo/revision, and re-teaching practices) to ensure that more students meet or exceed grade-level standards in academic courses.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

BALLROOM FG, 3:45 – 4:45

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12A, 3:45 – 4:45 Start With WHY: Inspiring Everyone to Take Action SCHOOL CLIMATE WHY do you do what you do? People don’t buy in to WHAT you do; they buy in to WHY you do it. Therefore, it follows that if you don’t know WHY you do WHAT you do, how will anyone else? This fun and introspective session will help provide you with learning your personal WHY to inspire and lead with clarity of purpose. Join Dr. Rob O’Connor and John Schumacher as they share and actively involve participants to learn how to use their “WHY” to effect and enhance their culture.

DR. ROB O’CONNOR roconnor@mfisd. txed.net JOHN SCHUMACHER jschumacher@mfisd. txed.net

#AIEConf


Intervention Framework for Academic Success LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS

NATOSHA SCOTT natosha.scott@ region10.org JAN MOBERLY Jan.Moberley@ region10.org

#AIEConf

This session is designed to assist administrators and/or leadership team members in the process of developing an intervention program on their campus. Participants will be provided a framework that is similar to the Response to Intervention (RtI) process but with key differences. Participants will also receive an intervention program quality checklist designed to assess the current intervention system. The intervention framework addresses the CORE Program and classroom-embedded interventions, which directly relate to Tier I of the RtI process. In addition, Formalized Interventions will be addressed in correlation to Tier II of the RtI process. Despite the similarities between the Framework and the RtI process, the framework is merely a structural plan for supporting at-risk students.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

12B, 3:45 – 4:45

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14, 3:45 – 4:45 SUPPORT SPECIAST LIVE!

Writing an Annual S.M.A.R.T. Goal That Will Keep You on Track ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Participants will revisit the essential components to creating an annual goal to effectively measure the implementation of the improvement plan.

#AIEConf


Teaching Strategies for Closing Achievement Gaps With ELLs ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

DR. MARYLN APPELBAUM shannon@ atiseminars.org

#AIEConf

Participants will recognize and understand researchbased facts and strategies to use for teaching English language learners. In this session, participants will learn about optimal classroom organizational strategies for teaching ELLs and be exposed to teaching strategies specific to stages of language development. Whether you are a K–5 educator or a 6–12 educator, this session will address teaching strategies applicable to both levels.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

15, 3:45 – 4:45

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16A, 3:45 – 4:45 Lives on the Boundary: From Peril to Promise TEACHER QUALITY When 69% of your students are reading two to four years below grade level, their lives are on the boundary of peril! In this session, participants will learn how a highpoverty school district moved students from peril to promise by implementing a district-wide reading model that resulted in 98% of students reading on or above grade level at every grade level within three years. The intended audience for this session includes district and campus administrators and teachers.

DR. LARRY LEWIS larrydlewis@hughes. net PATRICIA G LEWIS patricia.lewis@gpisd. org

#AIEConf


ROHNY ESCARENO rohny.escareno@ gmail.com

SUCCESS(STUDENTS)=STUDENTS^(COLLAB ORATION-COMPLACENCY+Weezy) INCREASE LEARNING TIME Piñatas, scooters, Xboxes, Lil Wayne, and duct tape continue to work alongside word walls, data disaggregation, team planning, and goal setting and attainment in the recent successes actualized by Edcouch-Elsa High School’s Math Department. Confronting the challenges facing a Stage 5 school and new and increased academic requirements, the EEHS Math Department has instituted an eclectic approach to extended learning opportunities, student investment, academic vocabulary, and team collaboration to help raise student math scores to some of the highest in the region for the second year in a row – and meet federal AYP required improvement levels for the first time in nearly a decade. Our session will focus on strategies for increasing successful collaborative opportunities within and among departments; utilizing vocabulary strategies for LEP, SPED, and struggling learners; developing positive and exciting tutorial atmospheres; and tailoring instruction, assessment, and data usage to positively

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

16B, 3:45 – 4:45

impact student success.

#AIEConf

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17A, 3:45 – 4:45 The Audacious Transformation of an Alternative School ACADEMIC PERFOMANCE This session will illustrate how an alternative school of choice met the needs of the whole student by addressing the nutritional, physical, psycho-social, emotional, and educational needs of their students, 150 pregnant or parenting girls aged 13–21. Learn how a failing school was able to transform from an enabling culture to one of empowerment and success. This session will show how our school instilled exercise and proper nutrition into a normal day through simple expectations and adult leadership. Learn how positive expectations; zero tolerance for drama, and earning the right to remain at our school through good grades, attendance, and behavior changed the culture from one of enabling to one of empowerment. Teachers, administrators, and teacher leaders will learn how refinement of teachers’ pedagogy leads to more targeted and focused instruction, ultimately improving the relationship between teacher and student to create student academic success.

VERA CANCELLARE vkcancel@episd.org ALISON CUNDARI

#AIEConf


PD Through Project Share: Online Resources for Educators TEACHER QUALITY

KERRY BALLAST kerry.ballast@tea. state.tx.us

#AIEConf

This session will provide an overview of online professional development opportunities available to Texas public school districts through Project Share, the statewide online learning network. Participants will receive information on current and future PD courses and instructions on how to find and enroll in courses. The session will also include a demo of the Project Share Gateway and a discussion of how online resources can be used in and out of the classroom.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

17B, 3:45 – 4:45

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18A-D, 3:45 – 4:45 Creating a District-Wide Professional Learning System to Increase Educator Effectiveness LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS SEED: the System for Effective Educator Development, developed by the Texas Center for Educator Effectiveness at ESC 18, is a district-wide professional learning system for educators including teachers, principals and district leaders. Learn how this professional learning system grows out of district professional development goals and school needs, providing a tiered, systemic structure for delivering quality professional development. Also, learn how SEED can foster alignment with your district’s curriculum, programs, and initiatives.

DR. TAMMY KREUZ kmcdonald@txcee. org

#AIEConf


Embrace “Learning” Rather Than “Teaching” With Data Teams USE OF DATA TO DRIVE INSTRUCTION

STACY MORRIS stacy.morris@wpisd. com

#AIEConf

Do you believe that it’s not about us and that it’s all about them? If so, let’s change the professional dialogue we have from teaching to learning. What do we want students to learn? How will we know when they have learned it? What will we do differently if they are not demonstrating learning? What will we do differently if they are demonstrating learning? See firsthand how these guiding questions drive a collaborative process that inspires and empowers professionals to improve teaching, learning, and leadership for all. Come to be inspired and empowered!

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

19A, 3:45 – 4:45

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19B, 3:45 – 4:45 USDE Draft—High-Performance Parental Involvement FAMILY/COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT What does high-performance parental involvement look like? The USDE will be emphasizing effective, high-performance family engagement. In this session, participants will have a better understanding of “building capacity” as one pathway to success. Yet, family engagement is about building relationships. Participants will grasp ideas that will improve the likelihood for two-way communication through faceto-face meetings and by way of leveraging technology. Handouts and resources will be provided.

VICTOR FORSYTH skip.forsyth@esc16. net

#AIEConf


Zoom in on Next Steps for Your Campus/ District with Snapshot ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

ROBIN WARDSOUTHALL robin.ward@esc13. txed.net SEAN MARCOULIDES sean.marcoulides@ esc13.txed.net

#AIEConf

Come find out how a Snapshot can help you zoom in on prioritized opportunities for improvement at the campus or district level. Choosing a clear focus for improvement efforts is dependent upon a comprehensive and accurate assessment of current conditions. This innovative, site visit–based process utilizes multiple data perspectives to deeply examine campus or district systems for supporting student achievement. Visit the District Leadership Initiatives (DLI) booth to explore the benefits a Snapshot holds for your organization.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

EH 4-STAGE A, 3:45 – 4:45

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EH4-STAGE B, 3:45 - 4:45 Using Academic Vocabulary to Increase Math Proficiency ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE A review of Robert Marzano’s research on emphasizing academic math vocabulary as it relates to math proficiency will be discussed. Strategies to master the meaning of math terms will be reviewed, as they relates to instruction and the utilization of math intervention software.

BETSY SAPIENZA betsy@txedsol.com

#AIEConf


MITZI BRENNER mitzi.brenner@ achieve3000.com TIFFANY HICKS tiffany.hicks@ achieve3000.com

#AIEConf

Building Literacy Across the Content Areas ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Improving literacy is the surest path to preparing students for college and career; Achieve3000® believes in the power of truly differentiated online instruction to enable significant and sustained Lexile®/ reading growth—a belief supported by a decade-plus of scientifically proven performance. We also believe that the need for differentiated instruction has never been greater. With the increased demands of the Texas State Standards, the imperative for students to become independent readers of complex texts grows by the day. By setting reading levels, differentiating non-fiction text based on each student’s unique academic profile, and continually assessing and increasing the complexity of texts, Achieve solutions steadily increase students’ ability to read, comprehend, apply, and communicate information derived from complex text—prerequisites for success in school and beyond graduation.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2013

EH4-STAGE C, 3:45 – 4:45

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#AIEConf #AIEConf


Setting the Table for Success ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

BILL CECIL

“Setting the Table for Success” will provide teachers with four powerful strategies to help boost student achievement while providing a positive, safe learning environment for all learners in their classrooms. They will discover and implement the same philosophy and techniques that many of America’s best companies use to build successful teams with high morale, infectious enthusiasm, and increased performance. Teachers attending this high-energy presentation will explore the power behind the team approach to teaching, and receive an easy-to-follow blueprint to use with their students in helping to build, lead and be a member of their very own winning team. They will walk away with innovative ways to increase valuable teaching time by using classroom-tested ideas and strategies for establishing rules, dealing with conflict, creating a sense of teamwork, and organizing procedures that students will learn to follow each day.

#AIEConf

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

BALLROOM D, 8:45 - 10:45

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12A, 8:30 – 9:30 Employing Cultural Competence to Improve Your School SCHOOL CLIMATE This session will focus on developing and using cultural competence and self-awareness to build strong teams that will support the transformation of a school environment into a learning organization. As a result, leaders will develop a better understanding of how to build and increase capacity of teachers and other leaders to positively impact student achievement in schools. Participants will have an opportunity to take “scaled-down” research-based personality assessments. Research has shown that assessments help leaders learn more about their leadership and explore possible preferences or predilections. While assessments can be used to help leaders create a leadership development plan, they can also provide structures for learning more about team members in an engaging and nonthreatening way. Assessments can also help leaders identify individuals who might feel more comfortable at particular tasks. Finally, assessments can help leaders determine areas of growth and blind sides, especially

DR. MARK GOODEN gooden@austin. utexas.edu

relative to marginalized learners.

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Accountability to Responsibility in a STAAR World! SCHOOL CLIMATE

TY DUNCAN tduncan@esc17.net SHAUNA LANE slane@esc17.net

#AIEConf

This session will detail the implications of the accountability system as we move forward in Texas. We will explore both the procedural and cultural implications of STAAR on our districts and campuses, as well as, look at practical ways to ensure that campuses and districts are meeting student needs, while also meeting the goals of the accountability system in Texas. It is our contention that we can meet our responsibility to the students whom serve while working within the confines of a sophisticated accountability system. Come prepared to look at data and research that will influence your culture in a positive way.

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12B, 8:30 – 9:30

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14, 8:30 – 9:30 Checking for Understanding So Students Can Learn ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Does this sound familiar: “I taught it, but they just didn’t get it”? Checking for understanding goes far beyond asking, “Are there any questions?” or “Does everybody understand?” In their book, Checking for Understanding Formative Assessment Techniques for Your Classroom, Fisher and Frey state that “most of the checking for understanding in schools is ineffective.” This session will explore effective strategies to check for understanding as a systematic approach to formative assessment, to improve instructional delivery, and to provide student feedback throughout the teaching and learning process.

DOLORES RAMON dolores.ramon@ pledge2teach.com LYNDA CAVAZOS lynda.cavazos@ pledge2teach.com

#AIEConf


Planning, Planning, Planning: The Three of the Most Important Aspects of Teaching LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS

KELLY BEVISWOODIEL kelly.bevis@esc2.us & SUZY HARTMAN suzy.hartman@esc2. us

#AIEConf

Reflective educators are always exploring ways of improving their practice. They are lifelong learners who have the desire to continually improve and are determined to succeed. To meet the demands of school improvement, identifying the essential elements of a lesson and implementing reflective practices has never been more important. Join me as we discuss precision and accuracy when identifying student progress in lesson development. Topics will address beginning with the end in mind and working backwards to design lessons that target assessed concepts within a lesson.

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15, 8:30 – 9:30

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16A, 8:30 - 9:30 5 Steps to Creating an Exemplary School LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS Based on the presenter’s proven success as a turnaround principal in a large Title 1 middle school, participants will learn the five key strategies necessary in creating an exemplary school. These most crucial practices include the importance of structured visibility, delegation to collaboration to change, common core culture, eliminating students at-risk, and coaching strategies at work. Implementing these strategies brought a failing school to one of high regard, resulting in the principal’s selection as Principal of the Year. Specific evidencebased examples will be used, along with references to successful business practices. This session is geared to the needs of school leaders at all levels. Participants will come away with practical and proven practices, which can be implemented immediately to create a school where teachers and students are working together and where everyone is appreciated and respected.

DR. ALLAN BONILLA abonilla1@yahoo. com PAT BONILLA pat.bonilla@yahoo. com

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Tooling Around with Teacher Leaders LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS

SHIRLENE BRIDGEWATER sbridgewater@mfisd. txed.net KENDRA POWELL Kpowell@mfisd.txed. net

#AIEConf

Districts in Texas are struggling with the transition from TAKS to STAAR. Teacher leaders, armed with effective tools, can dramatically help re-design and transform a school—with a focus on learning, collaboration, and results—to make that transition smoother. This session will provide all educational stakeholders with a tool belt full of ideas and strategies to build student-focused learning and collaborative teams. At the center of the teacher team: the heart.

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16B, 8:30 - 9:30

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17A, 8:30 - 9:30 Football, Algebra, and Using Data to Improve Student Learning USE OF QUALITY DATA TO DRIVE INSTRUCTION Data is everyhere, expectations are high, and the stakes are even higher. But how does a campus administrator really use data to improve practices on a campus? In this session, participants will receive practical tools and tips on how to choose the right data, how to analyze that data, and how to truly improve what happens in the classroom based on that data.

KERRY GAIN

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Transformational Leaders, Transformational Teachers ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

ROBYN FENDER robyn.fender@esc20. net CYNTHIA ZARAGOZA cyndi.zaragoza@ esc20.net

#AIEConf

Students with a strong sense of efficacy are self-confident and motivated, perform at high levels, and have the belief that they can reach educational goals. A student’s selfefficacy increases with positive educational experiences and successes. Campus leaders and teachers are able to support efficacy building in students by engaging in activities that empower and allow for reflection and refinement of learning and thinking processes. Join us as we explore some of these opportunities.

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17B, 8:30 - 9:30

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18A-D, 8:30 - 9:30 Launch Leaders Through Succession Planning LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS What happens when key leaders leave the organization? How do we identify and cultivate new leadership? How deep is your leadership bench? Successful organizations actively identify and cultivate leadership talent and poise themselves for sustaining forward momentum. Learn what the research indicates schools and districts are doing to achieve new results. Come to this session to: •

Understand succession planning and why it is important.

Take away tangible steps and tools to implement immediately and grow your organization’s leadership pipeline.

Reflect on your own goals as a leader and plan your path for success.

DONNA JANSSEN donna.janssen@ esc13.txed.net

#AIEConf


Parent Involvement—We Say Yes, But Act No FAMILY/COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

SCOTT WARREN scott.warren@sreb. org

#AIEConf

We say we want parent involvement, but do we really just send a lip-service message that we want parents involved? In this session, middle and high school teachers, counselors, and leaders will learn strategies to align actions to thoughts and move from parent involvement to parent engagement.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

19B, 8:30 – 9:30

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EH 4-STAGE A, 8:30 – 9:30 Right Seat on the Bus: Behavioral Event Interviews ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Beep! Beep! Here comes the bus to success! Come and see how your district can utilize Behavioral Event Interviews (BEI) to effectively place administrators in the DIANE FLAIM right seat on your bus to help drive turnaround. BEIs diane.flaim@esc13. are research-based effective tools that can provide a txed.net more in-depth look at the turnaround competencies that your administrators may possess. BEIs can also LACEY PADGETT assist with hiring individuals that you are looking for lacey.padgett@esc13. to help turnaround a campus. We will discuss why this txed.net innovative way to interview is critical to the success of turning around a campus and how it can be utilized to maximize the competency growth of your campus administrators for your journey on the road to success. All aboard!

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Accelerating Student Achievement With Imagine Learning ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

CLAYTON RENFROE clayton.renfroe@ imaginelearning.com

#AIEConf

To prepare our students to be college and career ready, we must embrace the power of technology and learn how it can be used effectively in the classroom. Experience how students are achieving academic success through the power of the effective technology-driven language and literacy intervention, Imagine Learning. Learn how research-based instruction, strategic first-language support and a sound, dynamic approach can enhance instruction and provide real-time assessments to help drive differentiated instruction for struggling readers, special needs, English language learners and all early childhood students, preparing all students for success. Enhance instruction, increase student achievement, and get students excited about learning, all with the power of technology.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

EH 4-STAGE B, 8:30 – 9:30

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EH 4-STAGE C, 8:30 – 9:30 Teaching Math Conceptually Promotes Student Math Achievement ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE This session will demonstrate how a visually-based approach to teaching math builds deeper conceptual mathematical understanding for students. Participants will experience the visual approach to teaching math, discover how these practices can be integrated into daily teaching, and explore the research demonstrating the effectiveness of this approach. Students embrace problem solving and challenge when learning through discovering and questioning, rather than being told how to solve a problem. These techniques have been proven to drive student achievement on state tests and enable all learners to succeed. The intended audience is for elementary school educator, including teachers and administrators.

DANA LUTHER dluther@ mindresearch.net

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Helping Students Develop Effective Content Literacy Skills ADCADEMIC PERFORMANCE

DR. DONNA KNOELL dknoell@sbcglobal. net

#AIEConf

This speaker will offer research-based strategies to help students in grades 1-12 read and comprehend informational texts, and to read successfully across the curriculum. She will incorporate strategies to build domain-specific vocabulary and other academic vocabulary necessary to read and learn important concepts in all academic subjects. She will actively engage attendees with word-building activities, including the use of word roots and affixes. She will actively engage attendees with the identification of expository text structures, and with interactive strategies to construct meaning with content-rich text. She will demonstrate active thinking strategies and help attendees utilize discourse and visible thinking strategies to help students construct meaning of text and build background knowledge. She will demonstrate the power of visuals to communicate factual information. Attendees will receive classroom-ready materials to help them engage learners and increase student achievement. Handouts provided.

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BALLROOM E, 9:45 – 10:45

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12A, 9:45 – 10:45 Restorative Justice: An Alternative to Suspension SCHOOL CLIMATE Restorative justice is focused on the belief that those affected by harm can work together to repair it and that this collaboration leads to true accountability. This session will focus on the basic principles of developing a restorative justice model on your campus. What are restorative practices and principles? How do restorative practices align with your multi-tiered levels of intervention that already exist? What do restorative meetings look like in a school? How does this impact suspension and expulsion rates on a campus? These questions and others will be answered, and participants will leave the session with enough information to begin to implement a restorative model on their respective campuses. These strategies can be implemented at a classroom, school-wide, or district level, so teachers, counselors, administrators, and central office personnel are encouraged to attend.

ALBERT FELTS albert.felts@esc13. txed.net SHERRY DIMARCO sherry.dimarco@ esc13.txed.net

#AIEConf


The Calm in the Storm—Teacher Leaders SCHOOL CLIMATE

VALERIE CAREY valeriecarey@ celinaisd.com KIM TINGLE kimtingle@celinaisd. com

#AIEConf

What is the glue that holds a campus together and makes sure that change is sustained for improved academic performance? Teacher leaders provide passion, focus, collaboration, and longevity in the face of frequent turnover that occurs in high school campus administration. Processes used to sustain focused improvement are conversations with teachers, leading book studies, impacting campus belief systems, and analyzing and leading teachers through data analysis, all with a constant focus on improving student achievement. Even though campus administration changes, teacher leaders sustain the focus and change to meet the needs of students for all students to be successful. When changes in administration occur, teacher leaders assist new administrators in understanding the culture, climate, and vision of the campus for collaborative decision making and shared leadership to exist.

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12B, 9:45 – 10:45

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14, 9:45 – 10:45 SUPPORT SPECIAST LIVE!

Selecting Stragtegies and Quarterly Planning ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Participants will learn how to identify a strategy that is aligned to the need and chunked into manageable quarterly segments.

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Transforming Lives: Culture, Achievement and College Readiness SCHOOL CLIMATE

DR. SAMUEL AYERS sayers@lubbockisd. org

#AIEConf

Estacado High School was designated a “persistently low performing” campus. During the past three years, the campus has experienced incremental growth and improved culture, climate, attendance, achievement, AP participation and pass rates, dual credit participation, college acceptances (79%), and participation in extracurricular activities. The presentation will focus on specific strategies that can be duplicated or modified for implementation on other secondary campuses.

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15, 9:45 – 10:45

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16A, 9:45 – 10:45 Leadership Support to Move Teachers From Good to Great LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS Learn what successful principals and other teacher leaders do to help ordinary teachers become great teachers. This session will focus on research-based strategies for supporting teacher collaboration and will include evidence from the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. Principals and teacher leaders will learn what looks different in schools that get the most from their students and be provided the tools necessary to duplicate these efforts in their current schools.

DR. GARY WRINKLE gary.wrinkle@sreb. org

#AIEConf


Solidifying the Moral Imperative Within Education LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS

ERIC PENROD epenrod@mfisd.txed. net LEE COURVILLE hcourville@mfisd. txed.net

#AIEConf

Campus and district transformation is difficult. In fact, it is downright exhausting! Join Eric Penrod and Lee Courville as they provide critical examples of the moral purpose of school leadership and it’s essential role in rediscovering the passion of public education. While exploring the moral imperative at the campus and district level, Eric and Lee will provide state-recognized examples of continuous improvement that shaped the reform efforts of a disconnected and struggling district.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

16B, 9:45 – 10:45

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17A, 9:45 – 10:45 A Culture Where All Teachers Support All Children ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE The purpose of the session is to gain an improved understanding of collaborative work organized around the core work of a school: teaching and learning. Is the culture of collaboration translating into gains throughout the whole school? Where is the school’s “momentum” located? How do you get past the “stuck” spot? Is faculty rallying around data-identified, student-centered problems? Extensive data review and questioning strategies, along with interactive discussion and sharing, will provide participants with additional learnercentered sources and strategies for additional steps that their school can implement collectively to improve their culture of learning for both students and adults.

DR. LURA DAVIDSON davidsonlura@ hotmail.com

#AIEConf


What’s It All About, Anyhow? Life Beyond Formal Schooling ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

LINDA COTTLE linda.cottle@ devineisd.org

#AIEConf

Participants will experience potentially life-changing strategies to help kids think beyond high school and college, through life choices. This session will provide research assignment ideas that connect community members and students in meaningful ways. Rediscover your purpose in life as you are invited to reflect on your dreams and aspirations.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

17B, 9:45 – 10:45

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18A-D, 9:45 - 10:45 How the PBM System Enhances the TAIS LEDERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS The Texas Accountability and Intervention System combines all intervention systems: federal accountability, state accountability, and PerformanceBased Monitoring (PBM). Professional service providers and consultants have worked with federal and state accountability, but they may not be as familiar with the PBM system. This session will assist PSPs to learn how the PBM system and Performance-Based Monitoring Analysis System (PBMAS) report enhance the other intervention systems. PSPs will understand the PBM system to assist campuses to utilize the PBMAS data in conducting needs assessments and developing an improvement plan. What is the PBMAS report integrated with in the federal and state accountability system? How do I know what the report is telling me? How does the campus understand how it contributes to the district’s performance in the system? These questions and others will be answered to give PSPs the clear picture of how PBM is a vital part of TAIS.

JUDY STRUVE Judy.Struve@tea. state.tx.us TED KERR Ted.Kerr@tea.state. tx.us

#AIEConf


Getting Practical About Data: Prescriptive, Personal,...and Practical USE OF QUALITY DATA TO DRIVE INSTRUCTION

DR. CAROL HARLE carolharle@ harlandale.net REYNALDO MADRIGAL rey.madrigal@ harlandale.net

Research conducted by Schmoker, DuFour, and Reeves depicts educators in “gap-closing� schools using data to collaborate and plan more frequently. One of the most powerful activities to improve instructional decision making is a mini data wall. Ideally, it is a portable display that utilizes a cardboard three-panel display typically used for science fairs. Each panel represents a different data source with aligned activities/goals. The mini walls are campus customized with educators sharing with each other at several Data Days. The data walls provide a robust source of information about successful initiatives. S.M.A.R.T. goals add a layer of depth for continued implementation. The mini data walls, when developed and used frequently, can be the focal point for PLCs, as well as department and team discussions regarding improving student achievement and enhancing teacher efficacy. Participants will see several mini data walls and

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

19A, 9:45 - 10:45

hear about successful strategies from HISD educators.

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EH-4-STAGE A, 9:45 - 10:45 STAARving for Simple Solutions? ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Is STAAR preparation leaving you STAARved for time, STAARved for space and STAARved for sanity? Join master teacher Sandra White in a hands-on, engaging session to learn simple solutions to stave your hunger. Feed your students minds with engaging visuals, activities and time-saving instructional tips. Leave this session “full” of inexpensive ideas sure to be gobbled right up by your students. Sandra will serve a fine menu of calorie-friendly solutions sure to streamline your STAARvation!

MS. SANDRA WHITE snannyw@aol.com

#AIEConf


STEMscopes Online Science Curriculum K–12 ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

LISA LASTER LLaster@stemscopes. com

STEMscopes™ is a digital online STEM curriculum developed by Rice University’s Center for Digital Learning and Scholarship. STEMscopes™ provides educators and students with the keys to science achievement through online instructional materials that address the rigor of the STAAR and EOC state assessments and the newly adopted science TEKS. This comprehensive resource is 100% aligned to the new TEKS and STAAR readiness and supporting standards for the following grade levels and subject areas: kindergarten through eighth grades and biology, chemistry and physics. Each TEKS objective is built into a SCOPE, or unit, centered on the research-based 5E method of teaching with additional resources for intervention and acceleration.

#AIEConf

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

EH 4-STAGE B, 9:45 - 10:45

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EH 4-STAGE C, 9:45 - 10:45 The Solution You Have Been Waiting For! MATH 180 ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE Join Nickie Rizzo, and be one of the first to hear about the development behind this personalized, blended solution that incorporates instructional strategies to build coherency between both conceptual and computational frameworks and targets the rigorous skills for problem solving applications to prepare students for algebra and beyond. Learn about the “Teaching Ecosystem�, which embeds professional development opportunities with high leverage teaching practices and videos of expert teachers modeling classroom strategies, all powered by Math Solutions, the premiere math pd organization founded by Marilyn Burns.

NICKIE RIZZO nrizzo@ mathsolutions.com JACK DARDEN

#AIEConf


Family Engagement: Education’s Best Kept Secret FAMILY/COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

BYRON GARRETT

Research shows that meaningful family engagement is equal to an additional $1K of per-pupil funding. More importantly, an engaged family is the leading indicator of student achievement. Come prepared to discuss and dialogue about the challenges of getting families engaged in the success of their children. Dispelling the myths that parents don’t care, we will focus on practical strategies to improve engagement beyond the classroom that will directly impact student success in the classroom.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

BALLROOM FG, 10:00 – 12:00

In this session, participants will comprehend that the family structure has drastically changed; utilize pop culture and current events as a means to connect to families; and gain the understanding that regardless of data and demographics, every family is different.

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BALLROOM E, 11:15 - 12:15 Moving Schools: Lessons From Exemplary Leaders ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE A recently released evaluation project conducted on 400 Title I schools has identified specific practices that leaders in exemplary schools engage in consistently and pervasively that leaders in typical or struggling schools do not. Research from this study identified the specific patterns and practices that each of these 400 previously struggling schools used to directly attribute to their successes. By implementing the common practices that will be presented, each of these schools was ultimately able to raise its achievement by at least 35 points. This session identifies the distinct exemplary leadership practices that every leader needs to start immediately and provides strategies for implementing each one effectively.

DR. MAX THOMPSON maxthompson64@ gmail.com JOE CLIFFORD jclifford@ learningfocused.com

#AIEConf


CPDI = Complete Campus Climate and Culture Change SCHOOL CLIMATE

KAREN BUCKLAND kbuckland@ palestineschools.org JANICE MAGEE jmagee@ palestineschools.org

#AIEConf

Participants in this session designed for secondary schools will learn the basics of the Collaborative Professional Development Initiative (CPDI), which is the teacher-created and data-driven initiative responsible for the culture and climate change at Palestine High School. Teacher leaders will share the design, research, and results of this job-embedded professional development project that addresses the campus as a unified body of active learners and includes the students, in addition to building capacity for teacher leadership through the seamless integration of professional learning communities. Participants will leave with ideas for their own campus initiatives and practical information for implementation.

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12A, 11:15 – 12:15

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12B, 11:15 – 12:15 Beyond Academics: Making Each Student a STAR SCHOOL CLIMATE By identifying students in need of mentoring, schools can move students beyond perceived expectations. The STAR mentoring program implemented three years ago at Celina High School has increased student academic achievement, improved responsibility of at-risk students, and provided opportunities for students to investigate post-secondary education. Participants will leave this session with an outline/protocol for the year, knowledge of how to begin a mentoring program, and examples of forms/meetings conducted. All administrators, teacher leaders, and teachers on campuses can benefit from learning the process for creating a successful mentoring program.

SHERRY HUDDLESTON sherryhuddleston@ celinaisd.com COLETTE PLEDGER rccrpledger@att.net

#AIEConf


Teacher Effectiveness in Aldine ISD LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS

DR. JOHN SCHACTER schacter@sbcglobal. net DR. SELINA CHAPA schapa@aldine.k12. tx.us

#AIEConf

Recent research has confirmed what Aldine school leaders have known for decades. That is, the best way to increase student learning is to provide each child with a highly effective teacher. Discover how Aldine ISD is using statistical learning growth data (i.e., student growth percentiles) to evaluate and pay teachers based on performance. In addition to improving teacher quality through evaluation, Aldine ISD is also using learning growth data to assign each student to an effective teacher and to individualize the curriculum, time, and resources necessary for students and teachers to reach their potential. This session will show school leaders how to use data to better meet individual student and teacher needs.

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14, 11:15 – 12:15

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15, 11:15 – 12:15 20% Jump in Scores...WHAT? INCREASED LEARNING TIME See how a 90% low socioeconomic, 33% ESL (10 countries represented, including asylee and refugee students) school achieved a 20% increase in eighthgrade reading scores and an 11% jump in eighth-grade math scores. There is no magic silver bullet—it is all achieved through hard work, dedication, and belief in the teachers, administration, and students.

TAUSHA ROBINSON tausha.robinson@amaisd.org

TAUSHA ROBINSON tausha.robinson@ amaisd.org MARY GAMBREL

MARY GAMBREL

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Motivation/Teacher Engagement/Student Engagement: Your Ticket to Student Success! TEACHER QUALITY

THERESE SAMPERI htherese@swbell.net KIMBERLY CARROLL kimberly.carroll@ fortbend.k12.tx.us

Getting tickets to the game will provide participants with techniques for change which include motivation, teacher engagement, and student engagement. The following “Tickets to the Game,” will allow participants to change the campus environment: • “Motivation” will include techniques needed to get students, staff, and the community involved in the school’s vision for improvement.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

16A, 11:15 – 12:15

• “Teacher Engagement,” using the research of Jon Saphier, will provide participants with practical ideas to get teachers to begin the process of being engaged in the learning prior to the students being involved. • “Student Engagement” will use the techniques taught by Eric Jensen to engage students and keep them involved in each lesson. • At the end of the session, the participants will walk away with three tickets showing the design needed for school improvement, and they will also walk away with a plan to use these tickets for improvement on their respective campuses.

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16B, 11:15 – 12:15 Making Leadership Count at Every Level... All for the Kids LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS “Making Leadership Count at Every Level...All for the Kids” is a session appropriate for all audiences and levels of leadership. Participants will consider how servant leadership with its particular skill set for building trust, has the capacity for elevating the level of thinking for solving complex problems. Attendees will learn to retell old stories (change mental models), learn to become more critically conscious, and will use action learning to clearly define the real problems confronting them so that intentional action planning can be accomplished.

SANDRA ELLINGTON ske1222@aol.com

#AIEConf


Math Is Not Enough: Negotiation of Thought for Rigor ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

DR. TERI FOWLER tfowler@tamut.edu SHANNA BURTON sburton@dallasisd. org

#AIEConf

This session highlights a Stage 4 school’s journey to meeting the rigors of STAAR and increasing Level III performance by emphasizing thought processes required to answer dual-coded items. STAAR blueprints will be used to determine relevance and specific strategies using question stems and visualization, and positive presuppositions will be described. This session is appropriate for stakeholders interested in increasing instructional rigor and helping all students achieve Level II performance standards and more students achieve Level III performance standards.

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17A, 11:15 – 12:15

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17B, 11:15 – 12:15 Crucial Conversations for Advancing Improvement in Education TEACHER QUALITY Dialogue requires more than just one person being heard. When others haven’t been involved in conversations, we make decisions based on limited data. This causes others to have less conviction in their follow-through because they haven’t been involved. We want to be able to honestly and accurately share our views in a way that encourages others to share their perspective as well. “You can argue as strongly as you want for your opinion, as long as you are equally vigorous in encouraging others to disagree.” —Ron McMillan

LIZ GARCIA liz.garcia@esc13. txed.net

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What’s in Your DNA? LEADERSHIP EFFECTIVENESS

DIANE FLAIM diane.flaim@esc13. txed.net LACEY PADGETT lacey.padgett@esc13. txed.net

#AIEConf

A district needs assessment is the best way to make evidenced-based decisions for the overall health and success of the district. This is a protocol that can be built into the systems and activities of your district. We will discuss an ongoing process, not a one time event, to gather, analyze, and prioritize data to determine the needs of the district. You will leave the session with practical protocols and tools that you can immediately use to enhance the process in your district.

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19A, 11:15 – 12:15 Proven, Powerful, Fun Strategies to Accelerate Acquisition of Academic Vocabulary—Making Words REAL! USE OF QUALITY DATA TO DRIVE INSTRUCTION Gaps in vocabulary, clearly impede academic success. Using high-quality instructional strategies, teachers can create an enriched learning experience that will accelerate the acquisition of core vocabulary and critical literacy skills. Come experience neuroscience-based strategies that are proven to dramatically increase student-to-student opportunities for listening, speaking, reading, and writing using academic language. Acquire the skills needed to turn vocabulary lessons into multisensory interactive experiences as you learn to tap into the power of music and imagery. Learn to create and implement card sorts, multimedia trailers, sentence puzzlers, vocabulary-in-a-bag, and word games to expand academic language and increase content comprehension and retention.

JOANNE BILLINGSLEY jbillingsley@satx. rr.com

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Shooting for the STAARs: Getting Results, Changing Lives! ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

RHONDA BARNWELL Rbarnwell@dallasisd. org ASHLEY TOOLE Atoole@dallasisd.org

#AIEConf

At J. L. Long Middle School, our students with designated learning disabilities (SpEd) outperformed the district average for all students on the Math STAAR. In this session, you will learn how we are closing the achievement gap by focusing on our most needy students. If you are a teacher, administrator, or central office staff member, we invite you to come with us as we lead you through our journey from AYP Stage 4 to our current status as the top-performing comprehensive middle school in our district on both the Reading and Math STAAR. Within the past three years, we have put in place a system of supports based on a commitment to an inclusive philosophy, strategic planning, and fidelity of implementation.

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19B, 11:15 – 12:15

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Exhibitors 212

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EXHIBITORS

EXHIBITORS The AIE Conference is proud to showcase innovative companies that are at the forefront of technology and provide cutting-edge resources and tools. Exhibitors strive to advance improvement in education through their introduction of quality products and services to attendees. Please join our exhibitors in the exhibit hall to explore what they have to offer by visiting their booth or by attending an exhibitor session.

Don’t forget to visit the exhibit hall often to re-energize your spirit and re-connect with your ”why”.

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Plan4Learning.com is the most used DIP/CIP planning tool in Texas. It allows your campus to focus on ambitious, clearly defined targets, while eliminating all efforts to format your document. Strategically focus your efforts on actions that will increase student achievement, build capacity, easily involve more staff, and shape school culture. mhailey@806technologies.com www.806technologies.com Booth #: 433

\ Academic Core Group, Inc. is constantly working on removing the confusion from the STAAR test by providing easy-to-use, easy-to-comprehend products that are formatted in the exact style and format as TEA’s materials, and most importantly, as the STAAR exam. katie@academiccoregroup.com www.academiccoregroup.com Booth #: 813

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ACHIEVE3000

Achieve3000 offers a differentiated, online literacy solution for grades 2–12 that reaches every student at his or her individualized LexileŽ/reading level. Achieve3000 closely aligns with the TEKS to give students the content area literacy skills they need to succeed on STAAR and prepares students for college and career. mitzi.brenner@achieve3000.com www.achieve3000.com Booth #: 707

AimTruancy Solutions is an early identification and intervention program for chronic truants. Aim is a proven, innovative truancy reduction program that identifies at-risk students and gets them back into the classroom and on track to graduate. Aim partners with schools, law enforcement, juvenile justice, and community-based organizations. sperez@aimtruancy.com www.aimtruancy.com Booth #: 431

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ALEKS is a unique, online math program for grades 3–12 that provides personalized instruction on topics a student is ready to learn next. This innovative approach results in a highly engaging and effective learning experience that meets the diverse needs of each student while ensuring math success. info@aleks.com www.aleks.com Booth #: 409

ALGEBRA READINESS EDUCATORS, LLC

Ten Minutes a Day to Algebra Readiness: Algebra Readiness Builders for Grades 6-8, Algebra 1, Geometry, and Algebra 2. Make teaching easy with these daily assignments! Come see how algebra readiness skills are recycled daily to enhance your students’ understanding of algebraic concepts. klachance@algebrareadinesseducators.com http://www.algebrareadinesseducators.com Booth #: 414

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PEIMS DATA Plus is a Web-based district data warehouse. No complex report writing skills needed! Simply upload PEIMS, TAKS, and STARR data files into the system, and the files are automatically disaggregated into thousands of reports. There is no need for the user to learn complex report writing. ppolasek@aloesoft.com www.aloesoft.com Booth #: 827

Bookshare is an online library of accessible eBooks for people with print disabilities. Funded by the U.S. Dept of Education OSEP, it is free for all qualified U.S. students. Accessible Books for Texas is funded by the TEA and provides free, customized support for educators of students with print disabilities mckenzie.e@benetech.org www.bookshare.org Booth #: 301

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A privately-owned, fast-growing educational publishing company, Curriculum Associates specializes in affordable, research-based standards preparation materials, online intervention, supplemental reading and math programs, and special education assessment and instruction to help students succeed. KWalsh@cainc.com www.CurriculumAssociates.com Booth #: 926

DISTRICT LEADERSHIP INITIATIVES

District Leadership Initiatives (DLI) provides tools, strategies, and support to districts across the state of Texas. Putting research-based processes in the hands of district leaders to move their schools forward, DLI assists with leadership development, long-range planning, and models for systems of support to campuses. donna.janssen@esc13.txed.net http://www.tcdss.net Booth #: 436

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DMAC SolutionsÂŽ offers Web-based software to efficiently enhance the quality of education provided to students. Schools select from a suite of applications to assist with STAAR data analysis and reporting, local assessments, student achievement, progress monitoring (RtI, PGP), credit acquisition, campus/district improvement plans, PDAS, generating custom online forms, and more. lsingleton@esc7.net www.dmac-solutions.net Booth #: 633/732

DynaNotes Tools for Explosive Learning: student review guides in printed cardstock, tablet apps, teacher CDs, and booklet formats, plus TEA charts, card decks, intervention programs, and more for grades 3–12 (math, science, social studies, ELA, and Spanish versions). Come learn how DynaNotes tools help build strong foundations for higher-order thinking. eharris@dynastudy.com www.dynanotes.com Booth #: 530 220

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Our purpose is to support districts in their role to educate our students. haley.keith@esc13.txed.net WWW.ESC13.net Booth #: 400

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EDUCATION SERVICE CENTER REGION 20

We will be showcasing the Accountability Guide and Education Coaching Track. yvette.gomez@esc20.net www.esc20.net Booth #: 438

The mission of ETA hand2mind is to support P–12 educators in their quest to inspire and champion learning by going with research-based, hands-on solutions. The company’s innovations in mathematics, science, and literacy provide instructional curriculum, custom-kit options for content providers, manipulatives, interactive digital applications, and teacher coaching and development. jciborowski@hand2mind.com hand2mind.com Booth #: 426

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Excel Math is K–6 math materials that successfully build proficiency and raise test scores. The cost is $11 per student per year. An intervention/ afterschool curriculum is also available. bob@excelmath.com www.excelmath.com Booth #: 506

FORDE-FERRIER LLC

STAAR workbooks, activities, common assessments, and training for grade levels 2–8. fmarianne27@aol.com www.forde-ferrier.com Booth #: 806

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GENERATION READY

Generation Ready is a provider of school leader and professional development services that support and sustain teacher skills and capacity to ensure a tight connection between professional development and student achievement. nancy.fowler@generationready.com www.generationready.com Booth #: 501

IMAGERY GRAPHICS

Imagery Graphics is a distributor for Variquest Learning Tools, including Poster Maker (Color and Monochrome, Digital Die Cut System and Awards Maker). jskaggs@imagerygraphic.com www.imagerygraphic.com Booth #: 631

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Imagine Learning is an award-winning language and literacy software program used by students around the world. Through nearly 3,000 engaging activities, students in pre-K through eighth grade learn essential reading and speaking skills, including academic language. shelly.scofield@imaginelearning.com www.imaginelearning.com Booth #: 818

STAAR Preparation—K-EOC Assessments in English and Spanish, TEKSbased board games, software for scoring assessments, data reporting and management, and professional development. kmichael@kamico.com www.kamico.com Booth #: 730

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Knowsys has a secondary math remediation program, a secondary vocabulary program, and a college readiness curriculum that focuses on study skills. Knowsys has a professional development program to assist teachers with classroom management, especially with at-risk students. kgriffith@ktprep.com www.myknowsys.com Booth #: 825/924

For over 20 years, Learning-Focused has provided teachers and school/ district leaders with professional development on research-based strategies and exemplary practices for increasing teacher effectiveness and accelerating learning. With Learning-Focused, you will get engaging professional development, impressive resources, and access to ongoing quality support. Most importantly, you get great results. dmarlett@learningfocused.com www.learningfocused.com Booth #: 315 226

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Lone Star Learning is a teacher-owned curriculum development company offering unique, easy-to-use visuals and interactive bulletin boards that give students specific practice needed to achieve mastery in math, science, and language arts. We strive to decrease teacher effort while increasing student success with our innovative products! gala@lonestarlearning.com www.LoneStarLearning.com Booth #: 424

IXL LEARNING

IXL is a math practice website completely aligned to all state standards and the Common Core. IXL offers unlimited questions from pre-K through high school in a fun, visuallystimulating format that students love. Plus, teachers can view detailed reports on students’ progress and trouble spots—including complete question histories for individuals.

orders@ixl.com www.ixl.com Booth #: 436

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The Markerboard People offer student dry erase markerboards and response boards in class sets. Great for instant response and assessment. Unbeatable prices! Single- and double-sided boards available. Perfect for math, science, language arts, graphing, handwriting, and more. Long-lasting, non-toxic, ultra-low odor markers, too! feedback@dryerase.com www.dryerase.com Booth #: 808

Math GPS provides supplementary math curricular support materials for grades 2–8. If you are preparing to improve curriculum delivery or support for STAAR, please visit our booth. Our new second-grade material is correlated to the new TEKS—a pivotal resource for the 2013–14 school year. info@mathgps.org www.mathgps.org Booth #: 402 228

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Mentoring Minds provides instructional materials that reflect the rigor, structure, and format of STAAR. Our resources include math, reading, writing, and science supplementary products, STAAR Standards and Strategies Flip Charts; RtI tools; intervention and instructional strategies; critical thinking; and vocabulary development. info@mentoringminds.com www.mentoringminds.com Booth #: 912/914

MIND RESEARCH INSTITUTE

MIND Research Institute’s ST Math™ is a fully Web-delivered solution that allows students to access the program from any computer or tablet. ST Math concepts are initially taught visually, with minimal or no abstract symbols or math vocabulary. This strategy provides access for students, especially English Language Learners. mlimon@mindresearch.net www.mindresearch.net (right click to open in new tab) Booth #: 721

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New print and online products for the STAAR. msakow@peoplesed.com www.PeoplesEducation.com Booth #: 930/932

Visit Pitsco’s booth, and discover new and exciting opportunities to teach science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) concepts. You will find a robust array of hands-on activities and tools: dragsters, trebuchets, alternative energy, structures, robotics, and more popular activities that provide real-world relevance to STEM subjects. goquinn@pitsco.com www.pitsco.com Booth #: 719

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Renaissance Learning™ is a leading provider of technology-based school improvement and student assessment programs. Renaissance Learning’s tools provide daily formative assessment and periodic progress-monitoring technology to enhance curriculum, support differentiated instruction, and personalize practice in reading, writing, and math. Renaissance Learning is also a leading provider of school-improvement solutions. peggy.packer@renlearn.com www.renlearn.com Booth #: 833

Reaching Individual Goals through Online Readiness (RIGOR) is a quickly growing privately owned online educational company that focuses on EOC/STAAR Assessment. That is, STAAR Algebra 1, STAAR Biology, STAAR English/Reading and more to come. RIGOR is data-driven coursework with data-driven results of 90–95% mastery in English/Spanish. pnich25bab@yahoo.com Booth #: 503

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Created and supported by educators, Sapling Learning’s online curriculum and homework drive student success and save educators time. diana.balakirov@saplinglearning.com www.saplinglearning.com Booth #: 532

SCHOLASTIC

Scholastic is the most trusted name in learning, specifically in literacy and math intervention. Come see the brand-new Math 180 and how it can help you turn around your struggling math students who are not algebra ready! jdarden@scholastic.com www.scholastic.com Booth #: 327

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Scientific Minds is an award-winning, K–12 company specializing in online resources for science education. Products are research based and TEKS aligned and will enhance any curriculum. They include strategies for RTI, bilingual support, and vocabulary enrichment. Online professional development is available, including “Launching Literacy with Science Starters” and “Chunk the Science Standards.” travis@scientificminds.com www.scientificminds.com Booth #: 831

SPIRIT MONKEY

Spirit Sticks® are the latest schoolyard craze, and educators love them! They offer rewards and incentives with measurable results. lisa@spiritmonkey.com www.spiritmonkey.com Booth #: 600

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STAAR Mission Math is a Web-based program of instruction covering mathematics for grade 3 to algebra 2. Each grade level contains vertically and horizontally aligned 5E lessons developed by Texas educators to address the depth and complexity of the TEKS. This teacher tool contains videos, activity sheets, practices, and assessments. gary@cosenzaassociates.com www.staarmission.com Booth #: 709

STAAR One™ 2.0, a Texas STAAR-aligned assessment item bank with over 60,000 aligned assessment items, creates quality benchmarks in all STAAR assessed content areas, transadapted for ELLs and maximally accessible for students receiving special education services. Easily publish benchmarks by selecting readiness/supporting standards and levels of cognitive complexity. tmcintyre@esc1.net www.esc1.net/staarone Booth #: 508 234

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Easy-to-use progress monitoring and benchmark assessment software. Our STAAR-aligned item bank is also available in eduphoria! Call 800-9308378 to learn more. shill@progresstesting.com www.STAARTestMaker.com Booth #: 412

STEMscopes™, a digital online STEM curriculum developed by Rice University, provides educators and students K–12 the keys to science achievement through instructional materials that address the rigor of state assessments and new science standards. Each SCOPE is centered on the 5E method of teaching with resources for intervention and acceleration. lwebber@rice.edu www.stemscopes.com Booth #: 607/609

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TEXAS

COLLEGE AND CAREER

READINESS

The Texas College and Career Readiness Profile Planning Guide was developed by a 19-member, statewide task force and funded by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board. Discover this popular tool through your local ESC. Build a strong college- and career-ready culture in your school today! stevefrank@austin.rr.com www.esc13.net Booth #: 325

Sole source providers of award-winning, research-based software. Programs deliver instruction and provide remediation in reading and math for grades preK–12. Programs include Lexia Reading, Mindplay Virtual Reading Coach, Fluent Reading Trainer, RAPS 360, HELP Math Program, Virtual Nerd, Symphony Math, PBS Kids Play, Orchard Learning software, and PIPO Spanish software. betsy@txedsol.com http://www.txedsol.com Booth #: 815 236

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Test Prep Seminars offers intensive SAT and ACT boot camps held on campus, during a selected school day, targeting sophomore, junior, and senior class students. This is a convenient and economical program based on specific test strategies and time management tools that can also be applied to current class activities. dmanning@testprepseminars.org www.testprepseminars.org Booth #: 706

Think Through Math is America’s premier math differentiation system—a Web-based curriculum proven to raise math achievement for students in grades 3 through algebra I. The program is designed to meet the rigors of the Common Core and accelerate students to grade level. azappasodi@thinkthroughmath.com www.thinkthroughmath.com Booth #: 708

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THINKING MAPS, INC.

Thinking Maps endeavors to transform schools and increase student performance by providing specific visual patterns for limitless learning. Our training provides a clear, concise framework, derived from brain-based research, for teachers, students, and entire learning communities to share a common visual language that connects throught processes to promote critical thinking. kristie@thinkingmaps.com thinkingmaps.com Booth #: 337

TITLE I STATEWIDE SS/FACE INITIATIVE

We will be showcasing all of the parental involvement publications that TEA has requested. terri.stafford@esc16.net www.esc16.net Booth #: 602

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Leading provider of high-quality, supplemental, instructional materials for K–12 education. Literacy, math and ELA products are designed for supplemental, enrichment, or intervention strategies in the areas of core curriculum, enrichment curriculum, RTI, and special education. Materials are fully aligned with the TEKS and steeped in scientifically based research. kscott@triumphlearning.com www.triumphlearning.com Booth #: 820

VELAZQUEZ PRESS

Velazquez Press develops tools and resources for teachers and students that help with academic vocabulary and testing accommodations. The goal of Velazquez Press is to improve students’ understanding of the teacher and textbook by enhancing academic language skills and helping English learners improve test scores by using word-to-word dictionaries effectively in class and on tests. jruiz@academiclearnigcompany.com www.VelazquezPress.com Booth #: 339

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WORD WALLS BY AMY LITTLETON

Word walls based on the TEKS tested on STAAR. Sold in PDF form to be used in presentations and lectures on any device. Kindergarten through high school in all subjects now available. Sign up for a free word wall with chances to win twice daily. abeaman70@aol.com www.wordwallsbyamylittleton.com Booth #: 407

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Special Thanks

Andie Hadeed, AISD’s Bowie Theatre Department and Directors Betsy Cornwell and Marco Bazan Austin ISD Fina Arts Program and Kristen Marstaller, Fine Arts Instructional Coordinator

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PRESENTER BIOS AND EMAIL ADDRESSES KAREN ADAMS Karen Adams is presently a Behavior Specialist with Crosby ISD directly responsible for Behavior RTI and all Behavioral programming. She taught Elementary for twelve years before becoming a Related Services Counselor working with multiple districts. Adams has a Master’s Degree in Counseling. kmadams66@yahoo.com

DR. MARYLN APPELBAUM Dr. Maryln Appelbaum is a sought after presenter on today’s tough issues facing educators and parents. Dr. Appelbaum has a Doctorate in Psychology and Master’s degrees in both Psychology and Education. Her credentials include being a family therapist, a crisis consultant and a best-selling author. She has appeared on ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN and Fox and has authored more than 30 “how to” books for educators and parents. shannon@atiseminars.org

DR. SAMUEL AYERS Dr. Sam Ayers is an educator with 29 years experience in schools located in San Antonio and Lubbock. He has served as an elementary, middle school and high school principal. He has served as a central office administrator and an adjunct professor at Lubbock Christian University. Dr. Ayers has made presentations to audiences at multiple state and national conferences and writes non-fiction and biographies targeted for elementary and middle school readers. sayers@lubbockisd.org

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KERRY BALLAST Kerry Ballast is the Director of Special Projects, Standards and Programs, at the Texas Education Agency. kerry.ballast@tea.state.tx.us

RHONDA BARNWELL Rhonda Barnwell has been in education for six years, all of those years she has been both at Long Middle School and Special Education. During her first year as a teacher, she worked in the Behavior Unit, after that she became an Inclusion teacher in the English Language Arts Department. She has also been the Special Education Department Chair for the last four years. During such time students have shown gains across subject areas. Rbarnwell@dallasisd.org

KELLY BEVIS-WOODIEL Kelly Bevis Woodiel is the Associate Director of Instructional Services at the Education Service Center, Region 2 in Corpus Christi, Texas. Prior to working at ESC 2, Kelly worked at ESC 20 in the areas of curriculum, school improvement, and special education. kelly.bevis@esc2.us

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JOANNE BILLINGSLEY Joanne Billingsley, is a consultant, author, keynote speaker and internationally- acclaimed lecturer for the Bureau of Education & Research and Greenleaf Brain Institute. She is the recipient of numerous teaching awards, including regional Texas Teacher of the Year 2007. jbillingsley@satx.rr.com

DR. ALAN BONILLA Dr. Allan R. Bonilla is an educator experienced as a teacher, counselor, assistant principal, and principal. He holds a Master’s in Counseling and a Doctorate in School Administration & Supervision. He currently serves as a Leadership Coach through ESC, Region 13 and has completed his first book on school leadership to be published by Corwin Press. His claim to fame is being selected Principal of the Year in the Miami-Dade School System. abonilla1@yahoo.com

PAT BONILLA Pat Bonilla completed a career as a teacher in grades K-8 and holds a Master’s in Exceptional Student Education and Computer Education with an endorsement in Gifted Education. pat.bonilla@yahoo.com

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MARIO BRACAMONTES Mario Bracamontes is currently the Principal at Liberty Middle School in Pharr, Texas. Mr. Bracamontes has worked in public education in various capacities for over 12 years. He started his teaching career as an 8th grade History teacher and taught for 9 years. mario.bracamontes@psjaisd.us

RHONDA BRADY Rhonda Brady graduated from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington in 1992. She has a Bachelors Degree in Education with a specialization in Mathematics and Science and has 15 years teaching experience. Brady was selected as Teacher of the Year for her campus in 2013. rbrady@algebrareadinesseducators.com

MS. MITZI BRENNER Mitzi Brenner is an instructional specialist, curriculum writer and former teacher and administrator in Texas schools for over 20 years combined. Mitzi has a passion for building literacy for all students and for improving instructional strategies for English Language Learners and struggling readers. Mitzi received her undergraduate and Master’s degrees from Texas State University and currently serves as Regional Director of Sales in Central and North Texas for Achieve3000. mitzi.brenner@achieve3000.com

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KRISTYNA BREWER As a classroom teacher in language arts, Kristyna Brewer always managed to make an indelible impression on her students and change their academic lives through her classroom intervention. As a teacher leader, through her dual role as a coach for both Instruction and Literacy at Simon Middle School, she guides teachers toward instructional practices that are both student-centered and research-based. brewerk@hayscisd.net

SHIRLENE BRIDGEWATER Shirlene Bridgewater is currently an ELA Teacher Leader at Marble Falls HS. Considering teaching a “calling,� she strives to inspire educators--with compassion and a love of words-to focus on student-centered learning, collaboration, and data to achieve optimal results. Her honors include Texas Region 13 Secondary Teacher of the Year; Outstanding Teaching of the Humanities Award given by Humanities Texas; and MFHS AP Teacher of the Year. Shirlene also serves as a board member of Humanities Texas. sbridgewater@mfisd.txed.net

KAREN BUCKLAND Karen Buckland has been teaching high school English Language Arts for more than 10 years to students whose skills range from illiterate to gifted. She teaches English III and serves as English Department Chair at Palestine High School in Palestine, Texas. kbuckland@palestineschools.org

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SHANNA BURTON Ms. Shana Burton is the associate principal at Hillcrest High School in Dallas ISD. She has experience as a classroom teacher and assistant principal at both middle and high school levels. She is active in campus planning, working with PLCs, and providing professional development to campus stakeholders. sburton@dallasisd.org

VERA CANCELLARE Vera Cancellare is the Principal of School-age Parent Center in El Paso, Texas. She has been an educator for 33 years and all of her educational experience has been spent in at-risk schools. For the last 10 years, she has been a principal in EPISD Alternative schools and has helped lead each of them to educational excellence through high expectations, enthusiasm and love. Education is her passion not just her job! vkcancel@episd.org

CHRIS CANNON Chris Cannon, author of WINNING back our BOYS is a national youth development trainer, whose mission is to empower and equip teachers to maximize their interaction with today’s youth. He developed his key insights from being on the frontlines and working with youth and educational systems across the country. As a national trainer, former high school teacher and coach, he’s earned a reputation as one who knows first hand how to effectively reach today’s youth. Chris@Fighting4Youth.com

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VALERIE CAREY Valerie Carey has 32 years of teaching and leading experience on secondary campuses. She has led the math department for over 10 years in informal and formal manners. With a masters degree from TWU, she leads with passion, focus, and drive that encourages all around her to always do what is best for students. valeriecarey@celinaisd.com

KIMBERLY CARROLL Kimberly Carroll has 18 years of experience in Fort Bend ISD where she served as an English teacher, counselor, assistant principal, associate principal and currently serves as the principal of Lake Olympia Middle School. As a first year principal, Ms. Carroll was selected to be the principal of an Academically Unacceptable campus where she has set a structure for student success. kimberly.carroll@fortbend.k12.tx.us

DR. SELINA CHAPA Selina H. Chapa, Ed.D. is Director of Human Resources at Aldine Independent School District in Houston, Texas. She received a doctorate degree in Educational Leadership from the University of Houston, a master degree in Administration from Texas A&M International, and a bachelor degree in Elementary Education from Texas A&I University. Mrs. Chapa has 27 years of experience in the field of education. In addition to her current position, she has served the district in the role of assistant principal and principal. Prior to joining Aldine, she was a teacher and assistant principal at United ISD in Laredo, Texas. As a teacher she received the Teacher of the Year award, served as grade level chair and as a teacher mentor.

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PRESENTER BIOS AND EMAIL ADDRESSES As assistance principal and principal, she was the instructional leader for the Title I schools and lead district initiatives that promoted high student achievement. Her greatest growth has come as a member of the Human Resources Department. She serves as the project director for the districts reform initiative to develop a new teacher evaluation system. She also wrote, was awarded, and served as the project director for an initiative to implement a comprehensive mentor program.

JOE CLIFFORD Joe Clifford is a retired school administrator with thirty-eight years of experience. He has worked as a state social worker assisting developmentally disabled adults and as a classroom teacher working with emotionally disturbed, disruptive and disinterested teenagers. Prior to entering the administrative arena, he was an elementary and high school guidance counselor. Clifford has been fortunate enough to garner a reputation as a building principal that transitions schools which have been struggling to higher performing levels. In this capacity, he was able to bring a middle school, which was also an exceptional student education center school and a Title I eligible school, from a perennial “C” school to a letter grade of “A” and, upon his retirement in January, was able to move one of his district’s high schools, which was perilously close to a letter grade of “F”, to within six points of an “A”. He attributes part of his professional success in transitioning struggling schools to his concentrated attention to the Learning Focused philosophy. jclifford@learningfocused.com

GARY CONSENZA Gary Cosenza is the President and CEO of Cosenza & Associates, LLC, and is also a project manager for the Institute for Public School Initiatives at the University of Texas at Austin. Gary

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PRESENTER BIOS AND EMAIL ADDRESSES has over 40 years of experience in education, including experience as a classroom teacher, regional mathematics specialist, director of curriculum, and project manager. As a classroom teacher, Gary taught mathematics, and has extensive experience in curriculum development and delivery of professional development. gary@cosenzaassociates.com

LINDA COTTLE A professional educator since 1979, Linda Cottle has taught in New Mexico, California, and Texas. Her experience includes every size high school from 1A to 5A, Community College, Junior College, University, and online university classes. In 2010, Linda received the Outstanding Teaching of the Humanities award given by Humanities Texas. Cottle lives with her husband and two teenaged daughters in Devine, Texas. Her Navy Rescue Swimmer son is currently stationed in Norfolk, VA. linda.cottle@devineisd.org

LEE COURVILLE Lee Courville has been in education for 24 years, beginning his career as a classroom teacher in Title I schools. Recently, he served as the Coordinator of the School Improvement Program with the School Improvement Resource Center, providing support to campuses and districts throughout the state of Texas failing to meet Adequate Yearly Progress. Currently Mr. Courville is the Director of Elementary Academics in Marble Falls ISD. hcourville@mfisd.txed.net

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ELI CROW Eli Crow is the superintendent of the Innovation Academy Charter School. This university charter uses a STEM framework to promote active student engagement through projectbased learning. jcrow@uttyler.edu

ALISON CUNDARI Alison Cundari is an instructor at the School-age Parent Center, El Paso, Texas. She received her Bachelor of Arts Degree in History from Northern Illinois University. After moving to Texas she took a Master of Arts in History from the University of Texas at El Paso. She has taught 19 years for the EPISD and has worked as part of the district’s American History curriculum writing team for the last 9 years.

JASON DANIEL Jason Daniel is a customer experience agent and content author with Sapling Learning. He has 10 years of experience as a science teacher and 4 years experience as a school administrator. jason.daniel@saplinglearning.com

JACK DARDEN Jack is the Scholastic Inc. Account Executive for Central Texas.

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DR. LURA DAVIDSON Lura Davidson has over 20 years within school improvement. Her doctorate is in Curriculum & Instruction/Administration. She has teaching/admin work experience from PreK through graduate classes. As a former superintendent, after five years of cultural change through focused school improvement using the John Goodlad model of Restructure, Reform and Renewal, the district was identified “Distinguished” for improved learner achievement results. davidsonlura@hotmail.com

JENNIFER DE LEON Jennifer Saldaña De Leon received her BS in Biology/Wildlife Sciences and worked for the U.S. Department of the Interior for 9 years. She received her Alternative Teacher Certification in Bilingual Education and taught mathematics, science, and English Language Arts. Mrs. De Leon served as Administrative Assistant to the campus principal and earned her master’s degree in Educational Administration. Currently, Mrs. De Leon is an Education Specialist for Region 17. She and her husband have three children. jdeleon@esc17.net

JENNIFER DEGRAAF Jennifer DeGraaf has spent the past 16 years educating students in El Paso ISD. She began as a SPED paraprofessional, eventually teaching ESOL, English, Reading, and Special Education. In 2006 she became an instructional coach for EPISD and in 2012 became an assistant principal at Irvin High School in El Paso, Texas. jmdegraa@episd.org

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SHERRY DIMARCO Sherry DiMarco, LCSW, has over 15 years of experience working with children, adolescents, and adults in the areas of mental health, school social work, school-based mental health and foster care. Ten of those years have been spent working directly with schools to design and implement services to increase the academic success of children experiencing difficult situations. sherry.dimarco@esc13.txed.net

DR. DAVID DOCKTERMAN David Dockterman is chief architect, learning sciences at Scholastic Education where he provides guidance on turning research into practice and programs. Over his 25-plus years in the industry, Dockterman has led the development of scores of award-winning instructional technology programs, including Decisions, Decisions; Thinking Reader; FASTT Math; and TimeLiner. Most recently he served as a key adviser for the creation of Scholastic’s MATH 180. ddockterman@scholastic.com

BRAD DOMITROVICH Brad Domitrovich is a veteran communications and public relations professional with over thirty years of experience in the academic, entrepreneurial, and corporate environment. An accomplished speaker and presenter, he has accepted invitations to present at leadership conferences and seminars throughout Texas and the United States. Brad is a Past President of the Texas School Public Relations Association and spent six years serving on the TSPRA Executive Committee. His areas of expertise include: school public relations, customer service, crisis communications, and strengthening community partnerships.

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DR. DAVE DOTY During his time as a school district superintendent, Dr. David Doty built districtwide structures for professional development and teacher collaboration that resulted in consistent improvements in student learning. In addition to his role as a district leader, Dr. Doty has also served as a university professor and classroom teacher. Dr. Doty holds a law degree and Ph.D. in Educational Leadership from BYU, as well as a master’s degree from Stanford University’s Graduate School of Education. ddoty@cicerogroup.com

TY DUNCAN Ty Duncan is currently Coordinator of Accountability and Compliance at Region 17 in Lubbock. He and his team work hard to create compulsory learning environments. Duncan is currently serving on the Accountability Technical Advisory Committee for the Texas Education Agency. Big Red Raider!! Wreck’em Tech!! tduncan@esc17.net

DR. CORY DUTY Cory Duty is presently serving as a School Improvement Consultant for SREB, a school improvement initiative originating from the Southern Region Education Board in Atlanta Georgia. Cory has served as an elementary and secondary principal and teacher at the elementary and middle school level. Cory has worked in San Antonio, Austin, and the Central Texas area districts as well as a school improvement coach in Texas, New Mexico, Louisiana, and Mississippi. cory.duty@sreb.org

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SANDRA ELLINGTON Sandra K. Ellington has been an administrator and ESC consultant for leadership professional development focused on the principalship. She is CEO of Administrative Leadership Development & Life/Leadership Coaching. She authored two SBEC approved principal assessments used across the state. She has served as a PSP since before 2009, a mentor coach for CLDC, and currently coaches statewide leaders for that organization. She was a coach for TEPSA’s CLASS and worked with senior leaders across Texas. ske1222@aol.com

ROHNY ESCARENO Rohny Escareño graduated from Harvard University with a degree in Visual & Environmental Studies and returned to his native Rio Grande Valley to positively impact student postsecondary success.

Mr. Escareño has taught SAT & ACT Preparation/College Success,

Geometry, and Precalculus over the past 5 years at Edcouch-Elsa High School. He serves as UIL Mathematics Coach, National Honor Society Advisor, and Mathematics Department Head. He was recently voted EEHS and District Secondary Teacher of the Year. rohny.escareno@gmail.com

ALBERT FELTS Albert Felts is the Senior Coordinator of the Learning Systems team with the Region 13 Education Service Center. He has worked with Region 13 for the last 13 years. He has extensive knowledge in the areas of behavior, mental health, school safety, and school-wide change processes. albert.felts@esc13.txed.net

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ROBYN FENDER Robyn Fender has been an educator for over 23 years, teaching at both elementary and secondary levels. She also worked in a leadership role as an instructional coach on a high school campus for five years. Currently, she serves on the School Support Team at Educational Service Center, Region 20, providing professional development and technical assistance to districts and campuses in all stages of improvement. robyn.fender@esc20.net

DIANE FLAIM Diane Flaim is currently the Project Coordinator for the Texas Turnaround Leadership Academy. She has been a classroom teacher, principal, district director and education specialist over the course of her career. The majority of her work has been with high risk schools, implementing systems that move those schools from missing state and national targeted mandates to exceeding those expectations for all student groups. diane.flaim@esc13.txed.net

VICTOR FORSYTH Skip Forsyth entered the education profession in 1995: 8 years as a middle school and high school science teacher and 10 as years a consultant at Region 16. Prior to that he was a pastor at El Paso, Texas and Sydney, Australia. He enjoys golf, camping, hiking, and photography. He has been married for 33 years - one wife! He is blessed she has put up with him that long. skip.forsyth@esc16.net

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DR. TERI FOWLER Teri Woods Fowler is a Professional Service Provider for Dallas ISD and a graduate instructor at Texas A&M University-Texarkana. She has experience as a campus principal, Special Education Director, and Executive Director of School Improvement. She has participated in the Oxford Roundtable and visited schools in Hong Kong, New Zealand, Mexico City, and Scotland. She is a graduate of Leadership Texas and is included in the 100 Distinguished Alumni of Texas A&M University-Commerce. tfowler@tamut.edu

MARY GAMBREL Mary Gambrel has been in education for 17 years (all at Travis Middle School). However, all of her previous job duties have revolved around training. Her passsion is her students and she takes it personally when they are not successful. Gambrel’s goal is to continue to see her students become better mathematicians and ready for college. mary.gambrel@amaisd.org

LIZ GARCIA Liz Garcia is an Educational Leadership Coach; a Life Coach; teacher; student; and a facilitator of learning for conversations, holding people accountable, influencing change, and the Daring Greatly curriculum created by Brene Brown. She has a master’s degree in Educational Administration and is currently working to complete her doctorate degree in School Improvement from Texas State University. liz.garcia@esc13.txed.net

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RAFFY GARZA-VIZCAINO Raffy Garza Vizcaino is presently serving as a School Improvement Consultant with Making Middle Grades Work, a school improvement initiative originating from the Southern Region Education Board in Atlanta Georgia. Raffy has served as an elementary and middle school principal, as well as, a Master teacher and instructional coach in the English Language Arts area and, has also served as Austin ISD’s Principal Academy middle school principal coach and mentor. rgvizcaino@hotmail.com

DR. MARK GOODEN Dr. Mark A. Gooden’s research interests include the principalship, anti-racist leadership, urban educational leadership and legal issues in education. He currently serves on the Executive Committee for University Council for Educational Administration (UCEA). Mark has served as a secondary mathematics teacher and department chairperson who facilitated professional development workshops for and with teachers and educational leaders. He has spent 11 years in higher education developing and teaching courses in leadership, diversity, law, and research methods. gooden@austin.utexas.edu

CHARLOTTE GOUDEAU Charlotte Goudeau is a Certified Special Education Teacher, School Counselor, Certified Special Education Counselor, and Certified Principal. She has taught students in Resource and in Behavior Adjustment Classes. In addition, she has been an Elementary Counselor, High School Counselor and District Related Services Counselor. Goudeau has also served as

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DR. PAUL GRAY Dr. Paul Gray is a curriculum developer and professional development consultant for Cosenza & Associates, LLC, as well as a project manager for the Institute for Public School Initiatives at the University of Texas at Austin. Paul has also served on several statewide committees: President of the Texas Council of Teachers of Mathematics (TCTM), Secretary of Texas Association of Supervisors of Mathematics (TASM), and President of the CAMT Board of Directors. paul@cosenzaassociates.com

D’ETTE GRIFFIN D’Ette Griffin taught Special Education in Northern New Mexico for 8 years and taught in residential treatment facilities, BIA schools and for New Mexico Public Schools. She has worked extensively with the ancillary staff and school psychologists and was responsible for setting up an alternative school in a residential treatment facility. Having taught life-skills, resource, full inclusion and pull out, Griffin holds two Masters Degrees, one in Behavioral Science and one in Teaching and Learning in Technology. dettegriffin22@hotmail.com

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DR. CAROL HARLE Dr. Carol Harle received her PhD in Curriculum Studies at the University of Texas at Austin and has been a teacher, an academic Dean/Vice Principal for Academics, Professional Development Coordinator, Curriculum Director Pre-12, Executive Director for School Improvement PreK-12, Professional Service Provider and is currently the Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum and Instruction in Harlandale ISD, San Antonio, Texas. carolharle@harlandale.net

SUZY HARTMAN Suzy Hartman has been touching the future through education for 21 years. She was a teacher at Three Rivers ISD for 10 years and a Reading First Grant Coordinator for 3 years. After living out of the country for one year, she could not wait to get back to Texas students and schools. Suzy returned to her passion of teaching in Calallen for two years as a Reading Intervention Specialist. Subsequently, she was an elementary school principal for 5 years with GregoryPortland ISD where she led an Exemplary and Title I Distinguished School. Most recently, Suzy joined the staff at the ESC, Region 2 where she works with NCLB, Title I, Homeless and Turnaround Programs. suzy.hartman@esc2.us

DR. WESLEY HICKEY Wes Hickey is an associate professor of educational leadership at The University of Texas at Tyler. He has worked as a Professional Service Provider for several years with many different school districts. whickey@uttyler.edu

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TIFFANY HICKS Tiffany Hicks has been an active member of the education community for 20 years, with 7 years of experience in the classroom combined with 13 years of experience in educational publishing and solutions. She has worked with all levels of students in education, as well as a variety of learners, with a special interest in educational technology and student engagement. An alumnus of Texas Tech University, she currently serves as Regional Director of Sales for Achieve3000. tiffany.hicks@achieve3000.com

SHERRY HUDDLESTON Sherry Huddleston has over 30 years of teaching experience. She currently teaches CTE courses, as well as serves as the CTE/mentoring coach for Celina High School. She is focused on meeting the needs of diverse students to give them the opportunity to become responsible for his/her academic success. sherryhuddleston@celinaisd.com

DONNA JANSSEN As Coordinator of District Leadership Initiatives (DLI) at the Texas Center for District and School Support, Donna Janssen contributes her knowledge of leadership and over two decades of experience in Texas educational administration. Her current work includes development and oversight of district level tools and support to hone effective district practice based on solid research. Donna is also an executive leadership coach and leadership development trainer. donna.janssen@esc13.txed.net

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DR. CORDELL JONES Cordell Jones has been in education for 20 years, serving as an administrator at the elementary, middle and high school levels. In 2012, he was the HEB Elementary Principal of the Year for south Texas. Currently, he is principal of the Alamo Heights Junior School. Additionally, Cordell is on the Executive Board of the School Leaders Network and is the past President of the Alamo Area Association of Supervision and Curriculum Development. cordell@ahisd.net

PAULA JORDAN Paula Jordan trains educators across the state in the use of a web-based software suite of applications designed to improve the quality of education provided to students. Jordan has presented at regional service centers and school districts across the state. Jordan worked as an educator at the elementary and middle school levels. She holds an A.A. in Accounting, a B.S. in Business Administration and Management, and a Master of Education/ Educational Leadership. pjordan@esc7.net

DR. TRENT KAUFMAN Dr. Trent Kaufman developed a strong interest in the ways in which data is used in schools during his time as a high school teacher and administrator. After earning his Ed.D., he used his collective experience to found Education Direction, a school reform organization. He is an author of Collaborative School Improvement (HEP, 2012) and The Transparent Teacher (Jossey-Bass, March 2013). Dr. Kaufman has supported implementation of TDO in dozens of schools across the country. tkaufman@eddirection.com

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TED KERR Ted Kerr serves as one of the managers for the Division of Program Monitoring and Interventions. He has been with the Texas Education Agency for nine years. Prior to coming to the agency, he served as a coach, teacher, principal, and superintendent. He has been vital in developing the integrated intervention system for PBM. Ted.Kerr@tea.state.tx.us

DR. DONNA KNOELL Dr. Donna Knoell is an educational consultant, author, and instructional specialist.

She

has a proven record of working with schools throughout the USA, to help improve academic achievement of students. She is a recognized expert in content reading, reading comprehension, and vocabulary development, and is also recognized for her expertise in K-8 mathematics, science and social studies. She has spoken internationally and at IRA, LDA, CEC, IDA, NCTE, ASCD, NCTM, NSTA, NCSS, and TAGT. dknoell@sbcglobal.net

DR. TAMMY KREUZ Dr. Tammy Kreuz is Executive Director at the Texas Center for Educator Effectiveness (ESC 18). Kreuz previously served as Director for Educator Quality Initiatives at the Institute for Public School Initiatives and as a program manager at the TEA. She began her career as a high school business teacher. Kreuz holds a B.B.A. and an M.B.A. from Texas State University. She also holds a Ph.D. in Educational Administration from the University of Texas at Austin. kmcdonald@txcee.org

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LIN KUZMICH Lin Kuzmich is a consultant and bestselling author. She served school districts in several roles as a regular and special education teacher K-12, principal and district administer. Lin currently works with schools struggling to meet the needs of diverse learners, requirements of AYP, and challenging standards. Lin’s work with schools improves achievement results, as PSP she helped two schools off AU status. Lin is passionate about helping educators prepare students for a successful future. kuzenergy@gmail.com

KATHERINE LACHANCE Katherine LaChance graduated from Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas in 2001. She has a Bachelors Degree in General Studies with a specialization in Mathematics and has 12 years teaching experience in Mathematics. LaChance was selected as Teacher of the Year and is a Reaud Excellence in Education Award nominee. klachance@algebrareadinesseducators.com

SHAUNA LANE Shauna Lane is currently a School Improvement and School Counseling Specialist at Region 17 in Lubbock. Shauna served as Curriculum Director and School Counselor in Region 17 before moving to the Service Center in April. She has worked extensively in testing and program coordination and brings a wonderful perspective to improving our systems. slane@esc17.net

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LISA LASTER Lisa Laster is currently the sales and training representative of STEMscopes™ where she oversees East and South Texas accounts. She was a 5th-8th grademath teacher and 6th grade science teacher. Lisa left the classroom after 14 years to become a science and math content specialist for Lee and Fannin Elementary schools in the Grand Prairie ISD. For the past 2 years, Lisa has served as a trainer and sales rep for Rice University STEMscopes online science curriculum. LLaster@stemscopes.com

LESLI LAUGHTER Lesli Laughter served 32 years in public schools as an assistant superintendent, middle school principal, elementary principal and teacher. As a principal, Lesli led both her elementary campus and middle school campus to Exemplary ratings. As Assistant Superintendent over Curriculum and Instruction, Lesli facilitated the implementation of a comprehensive curriculum management system resulting in higher levels of academic achievement. Lesli is passionate about creating and sustaining systems where all students succeed. Lesli@learningblueprints.com

DR. LARRY LEWIS Dr. Larry D. Lewis has been on the cutting edge of education reform for many years. While currently serving as the Coordinator of Student Achievement and Involvement, Dr. Lewis has experience as Superintendent, Principal, Assistant Principal, Teacher and Consultant. Dr. Lewis is committed to ALL children learning at the high end of academic excellence and ALL means ALL! larrydlewis@hughes.net

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PATRICIA G. LEWIS Patricia G. Lewis, Chief School Improvement Officer in Grand Prairie ISD, is a gifted and committed educator. Her expertise in teaching and learning is only surpassed by her love for the students. With over 30 years of experience, Mrs. Lewis consistently encounters former students and parents who thank her for IMPACTING their lives and family. With her colleagues, she has earned the utmost trust and respect. Mrs. Lewis makes everyone and everything better! patricia.lewis@gpisd.org

KIMBERLY LITTLE Kimberly Little is the 12th grade Assistant Principal of Everman High School. She taught English for seven years in grades 6-12 and was AVID Coordinator and teacher for three years. klittle@eisd.org

DR. LUCY LONG Lucy Long Ph.D. is an educational consultant who worked 35 years in public education as an English teacher, school administrator and executive director of parent education and family services. The majority of those service years were in Richardson ISD (1975-1995) and Plano ISD (2002-2008). Since 2002, her focus has been on creating parent engagement programs that are easy to implement, culturally comfortable for families, and bring about academic improvement. drlucylong@gmail.com

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DANA LUTHER Dana Luther taught high school math in Philadelphia before moving out to California to pursue a career with MIND Research. She trained educators for a year on how to use the software, and then moved into the Product Management department. Dana is now the Associate Product Manager, focusing on customer usage, understanding, and satisfaction with the range of ST Math products. dluther@mindresearch.net

DIANA MADRID Diana Madrid is currently a Coordinator of Bilingual/ESL Programs and Early Childhood at Education Service Center, Region 20 in San Antonio, Texas. In this role, she oversees the support provided to local education agencies to ensure accountability and implementation of best practices for English language learners in the San Antonio and surrounding areas. Diana has also worked as an elementary bilingual educator, literacy leader and a bilingual reading intervention teacher in the El Paso/New Mexico area. diana.madrid@esc20.net

REYNALDO MADRIGAL Rey Madrigal has served as Superintendent of the Harlandale ISD since 2012. He graduated from Harlandale High School, received his BS from University of Texas at San Antonio, his Master of Science in School Administration from Texas A&M University at Kingsville and his Superintendent’s Certification from the Region 20 Texas Superintendents’ Certification. He was a Special Education Teacher, a Coach, and an Athletics Coordinator. He served as Principal at both Harlandale Middle and Harlandale High School where he led “transformation” from AU to Recognized status. rey.madrigal@harlandale.net

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JANICE MAGEE Janice Magee has been teaching math for more than 15 years and has education experience at every level from elementary through high school. She currently teaches Algebra and Geometry at Palestine High School in Palestine, Texas in addition to serving as Math Department Chair. jmagee@palestineschools.org

SEAN MARCOULIDES Sean Marcoulides is currently the Technical Specialist for Statewide Snapshot housed within the District Leadership Initiatives work-group of TCDSS. He has served as the heart of the innovation and improvements that have made the Snapshot program a success. Sean manages and makes meaning of the collection of statewide snapshot data. He also develops and provides ongoing technical assistant to Education Service Center staff members and educational consultants across the state of Texas. sean.marcoulides@esc13.txed.net

BEVERLY MARTIN Beverly Martin trains educators across the state in the use of a web-based software suite of applications designed to improve the quality of education provided to students. Martin worked as an educator in a variety of roles at multiple grade levels for more than 20 years. bmartin@esc7.net

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CASSANDRA MENDOZA Ms. Mendoza is currently the Career Academies Dean for Dr. Leo G. Cigarroa High School in the Laredo ISD. Her duties include overseeing all of the academic departments and all grant activities. She works closely with all consultants in implementing best practices to provide quality teaching for all students. Ms. Mendoza received her Bachelor’s and Master’s Degree from Texas A&M International University. Prior to being an administrator, Ms. Mendoza taught secondary English for ten years.

TORI MITCHELL Tori Mitchell has been in education for 17 years. She has served as a classroom teacher and program coordinator. Currently, Tori serves on the Accountability and Compliance Team at Region 17 Education Service Center. tmitchell@esc17.net

JAN MOBERLY Jan Moberley is the Director of Instruction at Region 10 Education Service Center where she leads programs related to content area instruction, special programs, student and counselor support, school improvement, federal programs and curriculum and assessment. She has served as the national assessment consultant for several textbook publishers and developed many instruction and planning products over the years. A veteran of urban, suburban, and rural schools, she has worked in creating audit tools across many programs. Jan.Moberley@region10.org

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STACY MORRIS Stacy Morris is an 18-year educator with over 12 years in administrative experience in both urban and rural schools. Mrs. Morris currently serves as the principal for Woods Intermediate School in Wills Point ISD. Woods Intermediate is a rural,Title I campus with a diverse student population supported by educators who are committed to excellence. - Whatever It Takes! stacy.morris@wpisd.com

DR. ROB O’CONNER Dr. Rob O’Connor received his doctorate from Texas A & M Commerce in Educational Leadership in 2011. Over the last 8 years, he has served as Superintendent of schools. As a superintendent, he has had two high schools make double digit gains in math and science on state assessments. Dr. O’Connor has served in public education over 20 years having worked on all grade levels from K-12. roconnor@mfisd.txed.net

LACEY PADGETT Lacey Padgett is currently an Education Specialist for the Texas Turnaround Leadership Academy. She has been a teacher, mathematics curriculum specialist, district director, and principal over the course of her career. The majority of her work has been a focus on building a culture of teaching and learning through data driven instructional decision making. She has been effective at closing achievement gaps and raising the bar for all learners. lacey.padgett@esc13.txed.net

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NITA PAGE Nita L. Page, an educator for 21 years, has taught High School English; served as an Assistant Principal for four years; Principal of Spring Lake Middle School in Spring Lake, North Carolina for four years; Principal of North Crowley Ninth Grade Campus for three years; and is currently serving as Principal of Everman High School (5th year). npage@eisd.org

BOB PARRISH Bob Parrish has been the Executive Vice President of AnsMar Publishers Inc, publishers of Excel Math, for 17 years. He has presented at numerous conferences speaking on effective direct instruction. Before coming to AnsMar Publishers he worked for 21 years at KFMB-TV, a CBS affiliate, in San Diego. bob@excelmath.com

ERIC PENROD Eric Penrod has fourteen years of experience in education at the secondary level. He has served as a biology teacher, high school assistant principal, and high school principal in several districts. Currently, he serves as the Director of Secondary Academics in Marble Falls ISD. He is also the proud husband of an educator and father of three girls, ages 6, 7 and 8. epenrod@mfisd.txed.net

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COLETTE PLEDGER Colette Pledger has served as a teacher, campus administrator, and central office administrator including District Shepard for TTIPS at Celina High School. With a Masters degree in Educational Administration, she has led campuses and districts to improve student performance by following the transformation process using the critical success factors. For the past four years, working in Celina ISD as District Director of Instruction, she currently serves as Director of Curriculum and Instruction in Robinson ISD. rccrpledger@att.net

MATT POPE After achieving success in the classroom, Matt Pope’s passion for making change happen moved him to seek leadership roles. After a short tenure as an Elementary Instructional Coach, he became Assistant Principal at Simon Middle School. At the age of 30, he was chosen to be the Principal at Simon and quickly achieved remarkable success, making a name for himself as a leader unafraid to make difficult, brave choices in the name of student success. popem@hayscisd.net

KENDRA POWELL Kendra Powell, a graduate of Texas Tech University with a B.S. in Biology, is currently the Secondary Content Specialist for Science in Marble Falls ISD, where she has also served as the high school science Teacher Leader and Department Chair. She has also spearheaded curriculum writing for the district. Kendra has presented at the Texas Middle School Conference and CAST. She is a recipient of a Highland Lakes Legacy Foundation Teacher of the Year Award. Kpowell@mfisd.txed.net

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DOLORES RAMON Dolores Ramon is co-founder of pledge2teach, an education coaching and consulting company. She currently serves as a consultant and DCSI for a charter school and works as a Field Supervisor for Alamo Colleges. She has over thirty years of experience in public education and has taught in United ISD, Conroe ISD and has served as a teacher, vice-principal and principal in North East ISD. dolores.ramon@pledge2teach.com

KATHY REEVES Kathy Reeves, the founder and president of Scientific Minds LLC, is an award-winning science educator. With 24 years of teaching and department chair experience, she developed the highly effective Science Starters program.

She continues to develop technology-based

programs built on sound brain research and best instructional practices. kathy@scientificminds.com

CLAYTON RENFROE Clayton Renfroe, Area Partnership Manager for Imagine Learning serving ESC Regions 9, 11, 14, 16 and 17 in Northwest, Texas has been an active member of the education community for over 12 years. Clayton has trained educators across the state helping them to improve passing rates in ELA by using differentiated software. He has worked as the regional manager of the journal in education, “The Wall Street Journal�. He obtained a BA degree from Texas Tech University in History and English. clayton.renfroe@imaginelearning.com

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NICKIE RIZZO Nickie Rizzo, an educator for 30 years, is currently the Director of Professional Development for Math Solutions. She recruits new consultants and ensures quality professional learning opportunities for all consultants. Nickie is a former K-12 math instructional specialist and middle school mathematics teacher for North East Independent School District in San Antonio, Texas. She lives in San Antonio, TX. nrizzo@mathsolutions.com

TAUSHA ROBINSON Tausha Robinson has been an Assistant Principal of Travis Middle School for seven years. She was previously a 7th grade science teacher and a high school chemistry teacher before going to Travis. Robinson’s entire career in education has been at Title 1 schools and her passion is to break the vicious cycle of poverty through a commitment to education beyond high school. tausha.robinson@amaisd.org

FRANCISCO RODRIGUEZ Francisco Rodriguez has been with Region 17 ESC for over six years. Mr. Rodriguez started as a Migrant Education Program Facilitator where he began his work with many families and students on a one-to-one basis. Mr. Rodriguez currently serves on the Accountability & Compliance team as an Education Specialist in the following program areas: No Child Left Behind/Elementary and Secondary Education Act, the Migrant Education Program, and Parental Involvement. frodriguez@esc17.net

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DR. IGNACIO SALINAS, JR. As an educator for 24 years, Ignacio Salinas, Jr. has served Texas public schools as a teacher, principal, and superintendent. Before recently taking over leadership at Premont ISD, Ignacio served as superintendent in two other South Texas school districts, one of which was in crisis and under TEA monitoring status. His expertise in leadership development, curriculum design, financial systems, and community partnerships has helped empower school districts to successfully transform their organizations. ignaciosalinasjr@gmail.com

JOHN SAMARA John Samara, Director of The Curriculum Project, has served as a classroom teacher, coordinator of a gifted program, instructor at university sites, and coordinator of a university outreach program. Currently, he provides staff development, administrator training and long term technical assistance to education agencies implementing the Model Classrooms Project (MCP). Studies have confirmed a “statistically significant improvement in student performance on standardized test scores� as a result of continued use of strategies embedded in MCP. tcpoffice@curriculumproject.com

THERESE SAMPERI Ms. Samperi served 36 years in Aldine ISD as a teacher, counselor, assistant principal and principal. During this time she was the principal of two different high school campuses. The first campus held a rating of exemplary. Under her leadership, the second campus moved from Year 1 AYP to no longer being in trouble with AYP. Currently, Ms. Samperi is serving as an External PSP, through the PSP Network where she works with three campuses. htherese@swbell.net

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BETSY SAPIENZA Betsy Sapienza has served as a Curriculum and Instruction Director for Chartiers Valley School District, a Principal for Chartiers Valley Middle School for 17 years and a teacher of Family and Consumer Science. She is a DDI Certified Trainer and Consultant and is Hands on Math certified. betsy@txedsol.com

DR. JOHN SCHACTER John Schacter, Ph.D. has served as vice president of research for the Milken Family Foundation, Senior Fellow at Stanford’s Educational Leadership Institute, and currently teaches at San Jose State University. Dr. Schacter has been invited to testify to numerous state legislatures on the topics of teacher evaluation, comprehensive school reform, & statistical growth analyses. John has appeared on National Public Radio, and been cited in USA Today, The LA Times and other prominent national newspapers. schacter@sbcglobal.net

JANA SCHREINER Jana Schreiner has been in education for 17 years. She started as an English teacher and has taught journalism. She has worked as an assistant principal and as a district Coordinator of Accountability and Assessment. Jana is currently the consultant of Accountability and Assessment at Region 10. Jana’s believes that educators should know the data in order to meet the students where they are because all students can learn. jana.schreiner@region10.org

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JOHN SCHUMACHER John Schumacher has 29 years of experience in education. He has had the privilege to teach, coach and be an administrator at all levels at some time during his career. He currently serves as the Principal at Marble Falls Middle School, in Marble Falls ISD. In the past two years, he implemented systemic changes that have increased learning by double digits. He is married and has four children and five grandchildren. jschumacher@mfisd.txed.net

NATOSHA SCOTT Natosha works at the Region 10 Educational Service Center as the Program Coordinator of the State and Federal Initiatives Team. She has been in education for 14 years and worked as a general education teacher, special education teacher, Educational Diagnostician and as a Lecturer at the University level. She is passionate about working with under-served and under-considered students. She believes that if we empower our studentsand their parents then nothing can stop their success. natosha.scott@region10.org

DR. GENE SHEETS Gene Sheets received his B.S.Ed. and M.S.Ed. from Abilene Christian University. He taught math for 5 years and was a Secondary Principal for 5 years in Abilene, Texas. He received his Doctor of Education degree from Texas Tech University. He was Superintendent in Hedley ISD for 2 years, Hamilton ISD for 2 years, and Muleshoe ISD for 13 years. He has been married to Melody for 40 years, and they have three children. gsheets@muleshoeisd.net

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ERNEST SINGLETON For the past thiry-one years, Ernest Singleton has served educational organizations throughout Texas as teacher, principal, curriculum director, TEA and ESC2 program and leadership specialist and superintendent. His motivation and energy is driven by his passion to ensure success for every child. Practical and successful experiences in transformational change has earned him credibility in school districts across the state, motivating them to also take bold and courageous steps to turn around and reinvent their organizations. ehsingleton@gmail.com

JENNIFER SMITH Jennifer Smith is a teacher of Social Studies at Lanier High School in Austin ISD. She is a graduate of Southeastern Louisiana University. She participated in a four year professional development partnership with Dr. Aida Walqui at QTEL and is a certified QTEL Building the Base professional developer. During the 2012-2013 school year, Jennifer served on the PBIS committee that spear headed the campus-wide implementation of PBIS level I interventions. jennifer.smith@austinisd.org

TERRI STAFFORD Terri Stafford is the Coordinator for the Title I Statewide School Support and Family & Community Engagement Initiative and specializes in the areas of family engagement, school support, school climate, and communication. For 15 years, Terri has been developing and presenting techniques that are practical and easy-to-use within a traditional educational system. Her innovative presentations are characterized by her hands-on, no-nonsense approach combined with her humor and personal experiences to teach, challenge, and inspire audiences. terri.stafford@esc16.net

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PRESENTER BIOS AND EMAIL ADDRESSES

JUDY STRUVE Ms. Struve serves as one of the managers for the Division of Program Monitoring and Interventions. She has been with the Texas Education Agency for seven years. Prior to coming to the agency, she worked in all aspects of special education in school districts and Region 17 ESC. She has been vital in developing the integrated intervention system for PBM. Judy.Struve@tea.state.tx.us

DR. MAX THOMPSON Dr. Thompson is the Project Director and Leadership consultant for the Learning-Focused Schools Model with a specialty on academic performance through leadership coaching. He has participated and directed numerous district and school evaluations for projects through the US DOE, authored numerous articles, chapters, teachers’ handbooks and guides, and delivered a number of presentations and workshops across the United States, Canada, and in Europe. He has been a teacher, school/district administrator, and university professor. maxthompson64@gmail.com

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PRESENTER BIOS AND EMAIL ADDRESSES

KIM TINGLE Kim Tingle has 23 years of teaching experience, and three years in a department leadership capacity. By devoting herself to science department improvement, she has led the science department at CHS to utilize best practices in the classroom, update equipment to meet current standards which allow for science project based learning to occur, and led others to collaboratively plan within a unified environment. kimtingle@celinaisd.com

ASHLEY TOOLE Ashley Toole moved to Dallas in 2011 to begin teaching as part of Teach For America and has been at J.L. Long Middle School for 2 years as the 7th grade Math Inclusion Teacher and Special Education Case Manager. Because of her expertise, she is a member of the Campus Instructional Leadership Team and is also part of a non-profit organization aspiring leaders program focused on urban schools and the closing of the achievement gap. Atoole@dallasisd.org

DR. ALAN VEACH Alan Veach is in his eighth year as a Lead School Improvement Consultant with SREB. Alan served as a middle and high school principal for over twenty years in Texas. Three of his schools were selected as State Mentor Sites and one earned the National Blue Ribbon Award for Excellence. Alan was recognized as State Principal of the Year in 1995. Alan has also served as an adjunct professor at The University of Texas alan.veach@sreb.org

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PRESENTER BIOS AND EMAIL ADDRESSES

KELLY VEALE Kelly Veale has a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and a Master’s degree in Education with a focus in school counseling. She has been a special education teacher for 6 years and has received training on effectively dealing with a variety of behaviors. Veale has 6 years of experience using a positive reinforcement system in her own classroom and successfully led her PBIS team through their first year of implementation in the 2012-2013 school year. kelly.veale@austinisd.org

ROBIN WARD-SOUTHALL Robin Ward-Southall is currently the Project Coordinator for Statewide Snapshot housed within the District Leadership Initiatives work-group of TCDSS.

She has served at the

classroom, district, regional and state levels over the course of her career. The majority of her work has been focused on developing and supporting systems of continuous improvement for campuses and districts. robin.ward@esc13.txed.net

SCOTT WARREN Scott Warren was a mathematics and physical education teacher, basketball coach and school administrator in Indiana, Kentucky and the Department of Defense Dependent Schools. He was selected as a Highly Skilled Educator by Kentucky’s Department of Education and provided technical support to low-performing schools in the state and led a team that developed Kentucky’s School Standards. Since 2000 he has led efforts working with low-performing schools across the country as they implemented the HSTW/MMGW improvement framework. scott.warren@sreb.org

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PRESENTER BIOS AND EMAIL ADDRESSES

SANDRA WHITE Sandra White’s passion is teaching! She successfully taught elementary and middle school students for 24 years, receiving awards including Region XVII Teacher of the Year and Texas Tech’s Distinguished Teacher Award. She has presented extensively at state and national conferences and provides teacher training across the state giving practical ways to ensure every child’s success. She has written Mastering Multiplication in Ten Minutes a Day for Ten Days and games for Lone Star Learning. snannyw@aol.com

ADAIRE WOODING Adaire Wooding is currently the Primary Language Arts Coordinator in Alief ISD. Adaire supports 24 schools by providing professional development for classroom teachers, Language Arts Specialists, Reading Interventionists and district leadership teams in reading and writing. Adaire has taught and learned from children for 24 years. She builds upon current research to provide practical and realistic application in the classroom. adaire.wooding@aliefisd.net

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PRESENTER BIOS AND EMAIL ADDRESSES

DR. GARY WRINKLE Dr. Gary Wrinkle serves as the lead school improvement consultant for Texas High Schools That Work. Prior to his current position, Dr. Wrinkle served a number of Texas schools as an administrator, teacher, and adjunct professor and also consulted independently in Texas, Ohio, and North Carolina. In addition he was selected as the “High School Principal of the Year� for Region III in 2000. Today, Dr. Wrinkle works tirelessly helping fellow educators improve their schools. gary.wrinkle@sreb.org

CYNTHIA ZARAGOZA Ms. Zaragoza has worked as an educational specialist at Education Service Center, Region 20 for the last 6 years. Although currently part of the School Support Team working to assist schools in improvement, she previously provided training and technical assistance as a math specialist. Prior to becoming a specialist at ESC20, Ms. Zaragoza was a middle school math teacher and instructional coach. cyndi.zaragoza@esc20.net

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CONTACT INFORMATION

AIE CONNECTIONS Contact

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Phone Number Email

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CONTACT INFORMATION

TEXAS CENTER FOR DISTRICT AND SCHOOL SUPPORT Contact

Phone Number

Email

Adrienne Aldaco

512-919-5141

adrienne.aldaco@esc13.txed.net

John Andrews

512-919-5114

john.andrews@esc13.txed.net

Dixie Binford

512-919-5174

dixie.binford@esc13.txed.net

April Briscoe

512-919-5106

april.briscoe@esc13.txed.net

Blaine Carpenter

512-919-5134

blaine.carpenter@esc13.txed.net

Nicole Cortez

512-919-5132

nicole.cortez@esc13.txed.net

Angie Currie

512-919+5481

angie.currie@esc13.txed.net

Amy DeAnda

512-919-5277

amy.deanda@esc13.txed.net

Pam Dowd

512-919-5488

pam.dowd@esc13.txed.net

Diane Flaim

512-919-5407

diane.flaim@esc13.txed.net

Lisa Gonzales

512-919-5173

lisa.gonzales@esc13.txed.net

Mike Hanson

512-919-5133

michael.hanson@esc13.txed.net

Krystal Herrington

512-919-5492

krystal.herrington@esc13.txed.net

Janet Hodges

512-919-5483

janet.hodges@esc13.txed.net

Cody Huie

512-919-5117

cody.huie@esc13.txed.net

Jennifer Irrobali

512-919-5458

jennifer.irrobali@esc13.txed.net

Allison Ivey

512-919-5202

allison.ivey@esc13.txed.net

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CONTACT INFORMATION Donna Janssen

512-919-5136

donna.janssen@esc13.txed.net

Janette Johnson

512-919-5491

janette.johnson@esc13.txed.net

Christine Kent

512-919-5493

christine.kent@esc13.txed.net

Millie Klein

512-919-5105

millie.klein@esc13.txed.net

Sean Marcoulides

512-919-5230

sean.marcoulides@esc13.txed.net

Yvonne Martinez

512-919-5422

yvonne.martinez@esc13.txed.net

Garrett Matthews

512-919-5135

garrett.matthews@esc13.txed.net

Erin O'Keiff

512-919-5455

erin.okeiff@esc13.txed.net

Lacey Padgett

512-919-5211

lacey.padgett@esc13.txed.net

Valerie Phipps

512-919-5250

valerie.phipps@esc13.txed.net

Stacey Shackelford

512-919-5226

stacey.shackelford@esc13.txed.net

Rachel Simic

512-919-5461

rachel.simic@esc13.txed.net

Brandon Spenrath

512-919-5169

brandon.spenrath@esc13.txed.net

Randall Taylor

512-919-5255

randall.taylor@esc13.txed.net

Robin Ward-Southall

512-919-5176

robin.southall@esc13.txed.net

COLLEGE AND CAREER READINESS

288

Contact

Phone Number

Email

Steve Frank

512-919-5221

steve.frank@esc13.txed.net

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CONTACT INFORMATION

ESC TURNAROUND TEAM LEADS Region

Contact

Phone Number

Email

1

Tina McIntyre

956-984-6027

tmcintyre@esc1.net

2

Kelly Bevis

361-561-8551

kelly.bevis@esc2.us

3

Charlotte Baker

361-576-4804

cbaker@esc3.net

4

Kelly Ingram

713-744-6596

KIngram@esc4.net

5

Monica Mahfouz

409-923-5411

mmahfouz@esc5.net

6

Ingrid Lee

936-435-8294

ilee@esc6.net

7

Diana McBurnett

903-988-6909

dmcburnett@esc7.net

8

Karla Coker

903-575-2731

kcoker@reg8.net

9

Micki Wesley

940-322-6928

micki.wesley@esc9.net

10

Jan Moberley

972-348-1426

jan.moberley@region10.org

11

Kathy Wright-Chapman

817-740-7546

kwc@esc11.net

12

Stephanie Kucera

254-297-1154

skucera@esc12.net,

13

Jennifer Womack

512-919-5308

jennifer.womack@esc13.txed.net

14

Emilia Moreno

325-675-8674

emoreno@esc14.net

15

Dean Munn

325-658-6571

dean.munn@netxv.net

16

Shirley Clark

806-677-5130

shirley.clark@esc16.net

17

Ty Duncan

806-281-5832

tduncan@esc17.net

18

Kaye Orr

432-567-3244

kayeorr@esc18.net

19

Tony Fraga

915-780-6553

afraga@esc19.net

20

Yvette Gomez

210-370-5420

yvette.gomez@esc20.net

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