Gregory Fisher, Mt. Tabor High School, Winston-Salem NC, A CD that.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Fill in missing numbers or operations
Advertisements

Multiplication X 1 1 x 1 = 1 2 x 1 = 2 3 x 1 = 3 4 x 1 = 4 5 x 1 = 5 6 x 1 = 6 7 x 1 = 7 8 x 1 = 8 9 x 1 = 9 10 x 1 = x 1 = x 1 = 12 X 2 1.
And that means looking for some of the best models out there. There are community colleges like Tennessee's Cleveland State that are redesigning remedial.
/4/2010 Box and Whisker Plots Objective: Learn how to read and draw box and whisker plots Starter: Order these numbers.
AYP Changes for 2007 K-20 Videoconference June 11, 2007 Presented by: JoLynn Berge OSPI Federal Policy Coordinator.
Making a Line Plot Collect data and put in chronological order
Half Life. The half-life of a quantity whose value decreases with time is the interval required for the quantity to decay to half of its initial value.
Southern Regional Education Board 1 Preparing Students for Success in High School.
Together we LEAD!.
Year 5 Term 3 Unit 6b Day 1.
Order of Operations Lesson
The SCPS Professional Growth System
1. I will be respectful of others and not disrupt classroom learning time. 2. I will raise my hand to ask or answer a question and always use complete.
ExCEL August Institute ExCEL After School High School Credit Recovery
Parent Orientation August 30 th, The Forest Creek Elementary learning community will be a model school where: students are first, high academic.
Scoring Terminology Used in Assessment in Special Education
Course Information Fall 2009 Algebra. Course Objective: To provide students with a working knowledge of basic algebraic concepts. This course will cover.
Jeopardy $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $300 $300
Exit Tickets, mastery quizzes, and data…oh my!
Least Common Multiple LCM 2 Methods
Mesa County Valley School District #51 STANDARDS - BASED GRADING AND REPORTING
SEED – CT’s System for Educator and Evaluation and Development April 2013 Wethersfield Public Schools CONNECTICUT ADMINISTRATOR EVALUATION Overview of.
Mrs. Andrea LoCastro Mrs. Cyndy G. Wiggins 856 – 652 – 2700 Ext
Canada The national anthem O Canada our home and native land True patriot love in all thy sons command With glowing heart we see the rise The true North.
Changes to Assessing and Reporting Shawn Whyte Assessment Coach.
Least Common Multiples and Greatest Common Factors
Understanding the Basics
QA # 1 : Review Please be seated and work on your worksheet Please be seated and work on your worksheet We will be going over the make up QA #1 We will.
Before Between After.
Integrated II Workshop August 28, Purpose of Integrated II To assist our weaker science students master the high school science benchmarks To help.
Reaching At Risk Students in Algebra 1 and Algebra 2
Number bonds to 10,
An Interactive Tutorial by S. Mahaffey (Osborne High School)
HSPA Prep Mathematics The HSPA is an exam administered statewide in March to high school juniors. It is designed to test our students’ proficiencies.
Sunday, Dec. 14 (the day before the first day of final exams) TAs Courtney Staycoff and Josh Kressmer will be on duty in the open lab (room 203) to answer.
We’ll be spending minutes talking about Quiz 1 that you’ll be taking at the next class session before you take the Gateway Quiz today.
Order of Operations And Real Number Operations
One step equations Add Subtract Multiply Divide Addition X + 5 = -9 X = X = X = X = X = 2.
We’ll be spending a few minutes talking about Quiz 2 on Sections that you’ll be taking the next class session, before you work on Practice Quiz.
Canada. Provinces/Territories Nova Scotia Nova Scotia Newfoundland and Labrador Newfoundland and Labrador P.E.I P.E.I New Brunswick New Brunswick Ontario.
Lower Canadian Prayer Walk June 15, 2014 Travel from Seattle, WA, USA to Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, prayer walk and continue to Vancouver Seattle.
British Columbia Immigration Source: Citizenship and Immigration Canada Facts and Figures Immigration Overview Annual Number of Immigrants to British.
CANADA.
+ Unit 1: Lesson 1. + Sort and Predict Sort the terms on the left into either Human or Physical Geography Reminder: Human Geography is anything human.
CANADA.
Authors : P K D. 1.Flag of Canada 2.Map of Canada 3.Introduction 4.Big Cities 5.Interesting Places.
ACCELERATED ALGEBRA II HONORS Mrs. Sanchez
Standards Based Grading Stacy Linn.  A way of reporting grades that focuses on what the student knows- not how many problems or worksheets they can complete.
CONFEDERATION of Canada.
Yukon Territory Northwest Territories British Columbia Alberta Pacific Ocean Beaufort Sea Arctic Ocean Saskatchewan Nunavut Manitoba OntarioQuebec Hudson.
Canada. New Brunswick Newfoundland Northwest Ter Nunavut Ontario Prince Edward Is. Quebec Saskatchewan Yukon Alberta British Columbia Manitoba Nova.
The Making of Lotto Max After 1 Year… +100% on Fridays +30% vs. Status Quo +14% Profit vs. LY.
Canada funnyv. What is Canada? Canada is a country in North America.
Canada. War  In the Canada there`s no war 10 provinces and 3 territories  Alberta  Manitoba  New-Brunswick  Newfoundland and Labrador  Nova Scotia.
Instructions Step 1: Try to identify each of Canada’s province and territory. Click on the province to discover the answer Next.
Canada Canada is the 2nd largest country in the world and has a population of about 35 million people. The capital of Canada is Ottawa, Ontario. Canada.
6th Grade Math & World Civilizations Welcome. Math- Individualizing with Technology Rationale: to try and meet the individual needs of each student while.
Canada List three facts you know about Canada.. Government 3 levels of government, Federal, Provincial and Municipal Federal Headed by Prime Minister.
Another Presentation © All rights Reserved
THIS IS With Host... Your ContinentsProvincesCapital Cities More Capital Cities Mixed Questions -
Unit One: Mapping Review
Téma hodiny: English speaking countries – Canada 1.
Maps of Canada All ten provinces and the three territories on separate
Geo Lit What is Geography?
What is the capital of British Columbia?
Canadian Geography 1202 Unit 1.
Canada West to East.
The Capitals.
Capitols Newfoundland and Labrador: St. John’s Alberta: Edmonton
In 2006, 80% of Canadians lived in urban centres
Presentation transcript:

Gregory Fisher, Mt. Tabor High School, Winston-Salem NC, A CD that has the Algebra II units, a newly compiled Algebra I unit, question bank for Algebra I&II, and other activities will be given at the end of the workshop. Special appreciation for Burroughs-Wellcome Fund who provided funding for the development of the Algebra I unit and for the CD

 1. Ontario  2. Quebec  3. Nova Scotia  4.New Brunswick  5. Mannitoba  6. British Columbia  7. Prince Edward Island  8. Saskatchewan  9.Alberta  10.Yukon Territory 10: 100 9: 95 8: 90 7: 85 6: 80 5: 40 4: 30 3: 20 2,1: Toronto 2. Montreal 3. Halifax 4. Fredericton 5. Winnipeg 6. Victoria 7. Charlottetown 8. Regina 9. Edmonton 10. Whitehorse

 Riding a bicycle  Cooking  Multiplication tables  National Board Certification  Using technology  Fiscal matters  Driver’s License  Marriage  Test corrections with accountability

Student can continue to retake assessments, relearn the material, retake assessments, relearn material, retake assessments, relearn the material etc… until they have shown that they have “Mastered it” or run out of time or given up. 1.All students take the assessment together. 2.Teacher grades the assessment and returns it to the students. 3.Students who want to improve the grade seek remediation and retake another version. 4. Repeat Steps 2&3 repeat if necessary

℧ Individualized instruction/review (It can be even used for slower Honors Students) ℧ Provides focus for students to study ℧ Prepares them more for the EOQ’s and EOC’s test ℧ Students can improve their grade and more likely to learn/retain the material ℧ Very easy to grade multiple-choice questions especially with “clickers” that are student led.

℧ The B,C,D (High level 2 and level 3 students) students thrive because of the opportunity to raise the grade and to know exactly what to study. Some F students also thrive. ℧ It’s a sneaky way of reteaching/reviewing material. ℧ It’s a way to avoid giving partial credit for skills that need to be done correctly. (factoring, solving etc…) ℧ Guided Remediation

 More preparation work for planning the assignment/assessments  More time to grade the assessments  Teaching to the test  Time constraints on students for retaking  Students don’t study for the first test

 Students should be remediated before retaking an assessment.  Give specific times on when you will remediate for that section. (Usually two choices)  It’s okay to release the first test but not the second test.  Allow time at the end of the quarter for students to retake the assessment.  Communicate with the parents and supervisors especially if using different grading scales.  Give clear standards of what should be mastered.

 No partial credit because students have a chance to get it right again.  Give higher points if students score more than mastery threshold (60-70%) and fewer points if below the threshold Example of grading scale for a 10-question test with a mastery threshold of 70% : 10: 100 9: 93 8: 86 7: 79 6: 48 5: 40 4: 32 3: 24 2: : 8 Rationale: A lower grade could motivate the students to come back and relearn it (You can always go back and raise their grade.) Suppose a student got 8 right and got partial credit on the other two. They would still have around a 88.

 Small quizzes that require accuracy (factoring, solving equations.) “Drill and Kill is sometimes necessary!”  Normal Tests at the end of units especially key units (slope, factoring, right triangle trig etc..)  Exam at the end of the year (7 sections of 10 questions.) A student who gets higher at least 7 right then gets 15 points for that section. A student who gets less than 7 correct gets zero points (or 1 pt for every correct question). Students the higher grade between this method and normal percentage of correct problems. (Be sure to have another teacher to help grade or the clickers) (Students didn’t go back and relearn the material!)   Review for the EOC or Final Exam

EOC Curriculum divided into 6 sections. Each section had:  Notes with example problems and about 21 problems for the students to try.  A 13-question quiz (with different versions of scrambled answer choices)  A quiz retake (never released to the students) Target Questions were based on Released EOC Test and EOC study questions

Grading: The normal lesson tests counted as test grades and these quiz grades counted as test grades Grading Scale (# right out of 13): 13: : 95 11: 90 9,10: 85 8: 60 (remediation not required to retake) 7:50 6:40 4,5: 30 2,3: 20 0,1:10 Remediation required to retake

(48 Min. classes all year) Started about 8 weeks before EOC  W: Give out worksheet to students  Th: Spend about 15 min. on worksheet 30 min. on lesson  F: 45 minutes on lesson (or normal lesson quiz)  M: Collect the worksheet for a grade 40 min. on lesson. Remediation before or after school for previous M.L section  T: Go over missed problems on worksheet (15 min.) 30 min. on lesson  W: Mastery Learning Quizzes (30 min.) and 15 min. on the lesson. Students retook the assessments before/after school or during lunch Two other teachers just did the Mastery Unit beginning in early May Weak Honors Students were given a contract (grade raised to a C or D) and came in before school to take the Mastery Quizzes

 School went from 70% proficient to 88% to 89% proficient and got 2 nd highest in the district (about 4 th in all other subjects)  Algebra II EVAAS Growth of School: 3 and 3.6  Only 2 of my 160 students have dropped a proficiency level from prediction and about 70 have raised a level (30 were already predicted to be level 4)

 Broke the EOC review into meaningful units with assessments.  Projected Level III/IV students studied for the mastery units and then got IV’s on the EOC.  Weak Honors Students were highly motivated (I only had to change grade of one student because of high exam grade raised the grades normally)  Easier for older students to get rides for the required remediation and retake the quizzes

 Name the capitals of the following provinces:  1. Quebec  2. Saskatchewan  3. Alberta  4. Nunavut  5. New Brunswick  6. Newfoundland and Labrador  Name the provinces that have the following capitals:  7. Winnipeg  8. Toronto  9. Victoria  10. Halifax 10: 100 9: 95 8: 90 7: 85 6: 80 5: 40 4: 30 3: 20 2,1: 10 1.Montreal 2.Regina 3.Edmonton 4.Iqaluit 5.Fredericton 6.St. Johns 7.Mannitoba 8.Ontario 9.British Columbia 10.Nova Scotia