Tag: Growth Oriented

Student Ownership of Grades at Lindsay

Teacher Brandy Quintero explains how she holds students acocuntable for keeping track of their progress and grades in Empower.

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Transcript: Brandy Quintero: You’ve probably heard some of those conversations today: “Ms. Quintero, you said I had a 3 on this assignment; look at it. But in Educate it still says a 2.5.” And, again, holding them accountable, because that’s what happens in college, right, you know, nobody’s telling you what your grade is, you need to be checking up on that and keeping track of it. And so we’re trying to prepare them for those situations as well. So I always tell them, “It’s your job to go on Educate, see if I’ve entered it, and if I haven’t, be like, ‘Op, can you fix it?'” You work with them on the conversations on how to do that politely. And we’re teachers, we make mistakes, and “I just missed it, sorry.” So it’s teaching a whole lot of skills within that.

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Using Capacity Matrix as a Learning Agenda at Lindsay

Lindsay teacher Brandy Quintero explains how the district uses a “capacity matrix” to help students understand what they need to learn and the pace they need to learn it.

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Transcript: Brandy Quintero: When we started out with the capacity nature, just it was more like a checklist like, “Do this, do this, do this,” and there weren’t maybe like dates on there; it was just kind of like one to the next. And so we’re actually going to change it next year, because some of our students, especially at the high school and they started it like, “Oh, go at your own pace.” And realize like, okay, a high schooler takes that and says, “I’ll just chill all year long, and in June I’ll do my work.” So we’re having to fix some things. And so we’re going to call it a pacing matrix, and those are already – those have been changed. […] And so the pacing guide has the dates, and what I have done as the teacher is I’ll say, “Okay, I’m the expert in what needs to be taught. I know about how long it should take for each of us,” and so I’ve given the students those dates and they know, “Hey, from 1/25 to 2/3 this is what should be done in this period of time.” Now if they can go faster, great, go faster. And so that’s what the capacity matrix pacing guide – and, again, we’re just going to call it a pacing matrix next year, kind of blend them all together. It lets them know kind of the assignments that have to go along with it. And then we also put the – and different grades do it a little bit different. But we’ve put the standard, you know, so how the kid knows, “Hey, these are like assignments right here and this is the assignment that’s going to go in to Educate, and this is the standard it’s going to go underneath.” […] That’s what the capacity matrix is meant to do is to let them see the whole semester at a glance.

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Reading Plus

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Reading Plus is an adaptive, web-based literacy program for students in elementary through college-ready grades.

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Student Perspective: Working on Multiple Grade Levels at Lindsay

A student explains how she is able to tackle mastery of both ninth and tenth grade standards by using out of school time.

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Transcript:

Student: I’ve been working on ninth and tenth grade. I do ninth grade in class and I do tenth grade by myself.
Interviewer: And how were you able to work on ninth and tenth grade? That’s not something that every student does, right? How were you able to do that?
Student: Well, I use a Lindsay website. LindsayEnglish.com. And it has all my assignments. Sometimes my teacher prints them out but most of the time I go online and search for everything I need.
Interviewer: Okay. And how are you able to actually do tenth grade English while you’re doing ninth grade English?
Student: Well, I usually finish everything for ninth grade in class. Like homework, I don’t really get it ’cause I finish it in class. So I just do everything else at home. With the tenth grade.

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