Freshman English
Teachers Lay Foundation for FIP Growth
January, 2012 saw the launch of the Focused Instruction
Process (FIP) at Eisenhower High School.
After four days of intensive training, teachers Tasia
Addison, Sara Davis and Teidra Taylor designed and began implementation of this
research-based, eight-step process.
With FIP, every freshmen student receives specific skill
instruction determined by the disaggregation of test data, and articulated on
the instructional timeline. Following that instruction, students receive a
formative assessment. These results are used to inform instruction, and assign
students into tutorial and enrichment groups. Tutorial students are then
retested to assure that follow-up assistance has been sufficient to raise
students’ capacities. Teachers maintain skill knowledge through spiraling back,
building on, and continuously revisiting previous material.
In order to assure a coordinated effort, these teachers meet
collaboratively 3-4 times a month to:
1)
share quality instructional resources and
successful lessons,
2)
conduct assessment evaluations using the
Backward Design Process,
3)
discuss ongoing data and create action steps,
4)
talk about challenges and celebrate successes.
It takes a committed learning community to make FIP a
success. Thanks to these teachers, Freshman Assistant Principal Janice
Ranzy-Allen, Terezka Jirasek, Strategic Learning Initiatives facilitator and
American Institutes of Research coordinator, Teresa Lance, FIP is not only
alive and well at Eisenhower, but will be expanding into more subject areas and
grade levels during the upcoming school year.