00:00

RHS Graduate of Promise Program Overview

The RHS Graduate of Promise Program sets high standards for students to demonstrate college and career readiness through completing 9 credentials, serving the community, and participating in various activities. Credentials encompass areas like community involvement, communication skills, content knowledge, career exploration, employability skills, aesthetic literacy, reasoning and thinking, and social and emotional skills. Teachers must validate students' work, and evidence can range from community service hours to coding projects to social and emotional understanding. Choosing the most suitable credential is important, and students can use work from the previous year with teacher approval. The program emphasizes holistic development and offers recognition and honor at graduation.

ensesa
Download Presentation

RHS Graduate of Promise Program Overview

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. A GRADUATE OF PROMISE IS A STUDENT WHO... • Meets the RHS requirements for college and career readiness • Completes all 9 credentials • Serves the community • Participates in senior presentations • Recieves a certificate, cord and special recognition at graduation • Recieves honor and prestige in the community

  2. WHAT IS A CREDENTIAL? • Demonstrates evidence of a student’s college and career readiness • Includes development of personal attributes, experiences, and 21st century skills • Showcases your best work over the course of your high school career • Teachers must sign off on your work for it to count

  3. CREDENTIAL AREAS COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT Service Engagement COMMUNICATION SKILLS Listening Reading CONTENT KNOWLEGE Language Arts Mathematics Speaking Science Writing Social Studies In 1st & 2nd Language

  4. EVIDENCE POSSIBILITIES COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT • Documentation of 60 hours community service (required) • Club memberships • Blood / Tissue Donor card COMMUNICATION SKILLS In 1st and 2nd language: • Projects & presentations • Book reviews • Standardized test scores • Speeches, poetry readings, dramatic performances • Excellent essays CONTENT KNOWLEDGE • Proficient/Exceeding standardized test scores in core content areas • Excellent projects, writing, presentations, etc. • AP test scores of 3 & above

  5. CREDENTIAL AREAS CAREER EXPLORATION EMPLOYABILITY SKILLS Professionalism Leadership Skills TECHNOLOGY SKILLS Application proficiency Coding Savvy use of social media Annual Naviance tasks Resume, interviews

  6. EVIDENCE POSSIBILITIES CAREER EXPLORATION • Completed job applications • Current resume • Results of aptitude test • Naviance planning work • Evidence of job shadowing or interview EMPLOYABILITY SKILLS • Leadership roles in clubs or activities • Senior project • Letter of recommendation • Individual improvement plan • Evaluation from employer TECH SKILLS • Digital presentations • Multi-media projects • Coding projects • Apps created • Digital marketing & design

  7. CREDENTIAL AREAS AESTHETIC LITERACY Appreciation of beauty, nature, REASONING & THINKING Innovative, creative, & critical thinking SOCIAL & EMOTIONAL SKILLS Understanding, Empathy, Interaction, Decisions, Growth culture and the arts Analytical skills

  8. EVIDENCE POSSIBILITIES AESTHETIC LITERACY • Review or critique of a show or exhibit • Participation in artistic production & performance • Public speaking • Review of architecture • Photo essay • Play bill/ concert program REASONING & THINKING • Write an article • Direct a play • Design a science experiment • Engage in formal debate • Design a business model • Solve complex problems • Demonstrate an innovative idea SOCIAL/EMOTIONAL • Guide for Life annual tasks

  9. GO HERE TO ACCESS ALL THE FORMS: ON THE RHS WEBSITE: • ACADEMICS > MOUNTIE ADVISORY > GRADUATE OF PROMISE •

  10. FAQ • CAN I DOUBLE DIP ON CREDENTIALS? • It’s best to choose the one credential that your evidence best demonstrates. • DO I HAVE TO DO EVERY ACTIVITY ON THE CREDENTIAL PAGES TO QUALIFY? • No, those are suggestions. You do have to check all the boxes on the rubric/checklist page. • DOES MY GPA COUNT FOR CONTENT KNOWLEDGE? • No, but standardized test scores do. • CAN I USE WORK FROM LAST YEAR? • Yes, with a teacher signature. • DOES THIS COUNT AS COMMUNITY SERVICE? • YES • Large donations to the dignity closet or a food drive • Being a TA for a class • Being in Link Crew • Collecting recycling for Outdoor Ed • NO • Babysitting for your family • Working for free at a business • Community service mandated by a judge

More Related