Tag: Time

Roots Executive Director Discussing How Much Time Students Spend on Online Programs

Roots ED and Founder, Jonathan Hanover, discusses how the school thinks about time spent online for learning (currently roughly 25% of the day).

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Transcript: Jon Hanover: the 25-percent is by no means a magic number; it’s kind of a – that’s really driven by where we see the quality of digital content out there and kind of what mix makes sense for an individual. And it varies by scholar, right? There’s some kinds who, just like ST math is their jam and like they’re just cruising through it and really deeply retaining the information, and so they might spend, you know, as much as 35 or 40-percent of their time on digital learning. There’s other kids who like physical manipulatives really make a big difference, they want to be able to like physically write in a portfolio, and get more out of that experience, and they might be spending 10 to 15-percent of their time on digital apps – on digital learning. So it varies by scholar, and I think as I would expect over the coming years, as the market for digital curriculum improves, that number will probably go up as there’s more kind of high-quality instructional experiences available online.

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Teacher Discusses Schedule Coordination at Roots

Roots teacher, Mackenzie Wagner, discusses the structure of her school day

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Transcript: Mackenzie Wagner: Our day is broken up into a lot of different parts, and so it’s basically a matter of organizing those different parts of the day in your head. So, in the morning, it starts with morning circle and breakfast. And then after that, basically, the day is broken up into grove stations – so, flex time is what we call it, and then content rotations. So as a teacher, I know I always start with 45 minutes of flex rotations. And during that time, I’m always conferencing with kids. So that’s the first chunk of my day. The next chunk is content. So, when you have the more – what you guys saw in there, the more typical like, about 25 kids, whole-group instruction, which then goes into another flex, and then another content. And the same thing repeats itself in the afternoon. So, it’s basically just a matter of like, organizing the different types of instruction between like, small group one-on-one and whole-group throughout the day.

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Teacher Use of Master Calendars at Roots

Roots teacher, Samantha Gambino, talks about how teachers use Google Calendar to schedule time with students.

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Transcript: Samantha Gambino: all of us are able to just like, in Google Calendar – once every scholar has an e-mail address, like you would have that’s connected to your calendar as a grown-up. And so, we can pull up just their calendar to see where they are for the entire day. So, if I particularly want to schedule a child for a reading small group, I can say okay, here’s your master calendar where you should be for your small groups. Are you free during this time? And I can pull them there. There’s also a teacher master calendar where we can pull up everywhere teachers are at all times. So if we need to conference quickly with Ms. Wagner or something about a literacy skill, I can go and find her calendar and find her, and see where she is.

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Roots Executive Director Discusses Structure for Scheduling

Roots ED and Founder, Jonathan Hanover, discusses the norms and routines used for scheduling student and teacher activities.

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Transcript: Jon Hanover:basically what we did is we split our content team as – for growth, there’s four different content teachers, two that are kind of – that we talk about as the humanities team, and one that we talk about as the STEAM team, which is STEM plus arts. And basically, we structure it, we split the day into two halves, and the humanities has dibs on scheduling the first half of the day, the STEAM team has dibs on scheduling the second half of the day for scholars. And then every Wednesday night, dibs is up for the next week, which means then anybody can go wherever and schedule kids. And the reason to do that, and it’s been working well for us is, all of our content teachers have a handful of lessons that they are going to be planning pretty far out in advance that might be recurring. You know, you do one round of competency-based data assessments and say okay, for the next six weeks or so, I’m gonna – I want to do guided reading with these six kids, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 8:30 to 8:45 with these eight kids from 9:45 to – you know, et cetera. And, within your dibs time, you can just schedule those recurring lessons out indefinitely. And then, once dibs is up for the next week, you can then do the more kind of – okay, you know what? I want to get a double-dip with these guys, and I want to meet with this scholar and we can kind of see who’s free to plan that.

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Roots Student View of Academic Event in Calendar

This is a screenshot of an individual event for a student at Roots. The color tells the student where they need to be, a picture of the teacher tells them who they should be working with, and the activity tells them what they need to be doing. Students only see one “appointment” at a time and will not see their next learning activity until the next transition.

This is a screenshot of an individual event for a student at Roots.

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Roots Student Schedule

This picture shows two students Monday and Tuesday schedules at Roots so that you can see how flexible scheduling allows for personalization.

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Roots Calendar Example (Teacher View)

Roots has each student follow an individual Google calendar for that day’s tasks at hand. This view shows student schedules from the teacher’s point of view. Roots has developed a simple app that pull from this calendar to show a student exactly what is next on their schedule in a simplified manner.

Roots has each student follow an individual Google calendar for that day's tasks at hand.

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