1 / 20

Curriculum 2.0: Standards-Based Grading and reporting

information for parents. Curriculum 2.0: Standards-Based Grading and reporting. What is Standards-based Grading and Reporting and Why are W e Implementing It?. Why did we change?. Traditional grading is often subjective and combines everything in a subject into a single grade

reece
Download Presentation

Curriculum 2.0: Standards-Based Grading and reporting

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. information for parents Curriculum 2.0: Standards-BasedGrading and reporting

  2. What is Standards-based Grading and Reporting and Why are We Implementing It?

  3. Why did we change? • Traditional grading is often subjective and combines everything in a subject into a single grade • Since each subject has multiple skills that must be learned, the grade does not tell you anything about what particular areas a student mastered or what areas are still in progress. • Traditional grades are often not consistent from one teacher to the next.

  4. How is this better? • More consistent standards across classrooms • Measures all students on a comparable scale • More accurately shows families specific areas of strength and areas that are in development • Tells us what students have actually learned • Looks at knowledge over time; moving toward proficiency

  5. What is the same • What we value is still the same, what has changed is the way in which we communicate the information to you. • We want all students to learn, to become responsible, and to provide information to families about achievement

  6. Why are we implementing standards-based grading and reporting? New • ES, P, I, N • Grades based on quality or depth of learning (proficiency and mastery) • Objective specific Old OLD • O, S, N or A, B, C • Grades based on the quantity or amount a child mastered (percentages and points) • Subject specific

  7. Levels of Performance Instruction begins at the grade-level standard. How the student performs at the grade-level standard determines level of proficiency. Exceptional (ES) Exceptional at the grade-level standard. Instruction on the Measurement Topic Proficient (P) Meets the grade-level standard by demonstrating proficiency of the content or processes for the measurement topic. How the student responds Inprogress (I) In progress toward meeting the grade-level standard. Not yet or minimal (N) Not yet making progress or making minimal progress toward meeting the grade-level standard.

  8. What is the goal? PROFICIENCY!!!!!

  9. How are Curriculum 2.0 and Standards-based Grading and Reporting Aligned?

  10. Curriculum 2.0 Organization Measurement Topics • Related learning goals are organized into Measurement Topics. • Each content in Curriculum 2.0 contains two or more Measurement Topics.

  11. Measurement Topics Civics Culture Social Studies Geography Economics History

  12. What are the Components of the Curriculum 2.0 Report Card?

  13. Reporting Progress The goal is for all students to get a P This may take more time for some than others ES is not automatically given to students above grade level; instructional level and proficiency on measurement topics are separate areas It is about quality, not quantity or speed

  14. Standards-based Report Card Subject Measurement Topic

  15. Standards-Based Report Card Social Studies (Grade 1) P ES P P P

  16. Reporting the Reading LevelKindergarten, Grade 1, and Grade 2

  17. Math Enrichment/Acceleration

  18. Learning Skills Kindergarten Personal and Social Development Kindergarten – Grade 3 Thinking and Academic Success Skills Grades 1 – 3 Work Habits • Analysis • Collaboration • Effort/Motivation/Persistence • Elaboration • Evaluation • Flexibility • Fluency • Intellectual Risk Taking • Metacognition • Originality • Synthesis • Follows classroom rules and routines • Interacts easily with peers • Shows initiative and self-direction • Uses classroom materials appropriately • Follows rules and routines • Completes tasks

  19. Learning Skills: Codes

  20. Additional Information • Your child’s teachers • School principal • A Parent’s Guide to Curriculum 2012-2013 http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/curriculum/elementary/guides.aspx • Curriculum 2.0 website: http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/curriculum/2.0/

More Related