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Welcome Students and Parents

Welcome Students and Parents. Classes of 2008-2009. Mt. Hope High School’s Diploma System. RI High School Diploma System Highlights at MHHS. 24 Carnegie units (course credits) Statewide Assessments Proficiency in Mt. Hope’s School Wide Expectations

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Welcome Students and Parents

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  1. Welcome Students and Parents Classes of 2008-2009

  2. Mt. Hope High School’s Diploma System

  3. RI High School Diploma System Highlights at MHHS • 24 Carnegie units (course credits) • Statewide Assessments • Proficiency in Mt. Hope’s School Wide Expectations • Proficiency in the State of Rhode Island Grade Span Expectations (GSE)

  4. Expectations • Mt. Hope Graduation Expectations encompass all of the following: • Demonstration of proficiency in the Mt. Hope School Wide Academic Expectations (NEASC) • Demonstration of proficiency in the Grade Span Expectations for ELA, Math, Science, Social Studies, the Arts, Technology

  5. Strategies • Mt. Hope has chosen two strategies for the demonstration of proficiency: • End of Course Exams • Digital Portfolio

  6. Graduation Portfolio • Our school’s graduation portfolio is a collection of evidence that a student has the skills and knowledge expected of any graduate from Mt. Hope High School.

  7. Graduation Portfolio: A Subset Report on elections All student work Chorus concert Graduation Portfolio Service Learning Project Science Fair Project 9th grade Autobiography Civil Disobedience Paper 10th grade essay 11th grade research paper

  8. How is the portfolio created? • Collect • Minimum number of entries from each course • Select • Student determines which entries provide the best evidence to answer end of year reflection prompts • Reflect • Student reflects on overall content

  9. 3 Types of Evidence • Teacher-Generated Tasks • Performance Based Tasks from Exams • Common assignments that ALL students are exposed to, regardless of level or teacher • Student-Initiated Tasks • Assignments completed in class that have not been deliberately selected by the classroom teacher • Student-Independent Tasks • Tasks completed by student outside of class. • Examples: reading logs, community service, recommendations, Eagle Scout/Gold Award, etc.

  10. How do we evaluate the portfolio? • Student will exhibit their portfolio to a committee once per year • The committee will view the portfolio and determine whether the student has met the expectations • Formality of “exhibition” will increase as the student approaches graduation

  11. FAQ: Students and Parents When will I have opportunities to complete portfolio worthy tasks? • All students will have opportunities on the midterm and final exam in every course • Teachers will create tasks throughout the year that are proficiency based and portfolio worthy • Students may include out of school activities that satisfy expectations What am I expected to do this year? • Minimum of 20 artifacts • End of year reflections How can I access my child’s portfolio? • Instructions will be available on the MHHS Website as of December 1, 2005

  12. Thank you!

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