1 / 18

Raleigh Charter High School

Raleigh Charter High School. Graduation Project: Info for Parents. What We Will Address. State Graduation Requirements RCHS Graduation Project Philosophy Components of Graduation Project How RCHS will support your student Timeline for Graduation Project How you can help your student.

iden
Download Presentation

Raleigh Charter High School

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. Raleigh Charter High School Graduation Project: Info for Parents

  2. What We Will Address • State Graduation Requirements • RCHS Graduation Project Philosophy • Components of Graduation Project • How RCHS will support your student • Timeline for Graduation Project • How you can help your student

  3. New Graduation Requirements Changes affect all NC students, beginning with the Class of 2010. In addition to course requirements, students must: • Complete Graduation Project • Pass five End of Course Tests • Algebra I • Biology • English I • Civics and Economics • US History

  4. The State’s Role in the Graduation Project • In 2006 the NC Department of Public Instruction mandated a graduation project for all NC public schools. • A committee of RCHS teachers developed a project according to state guidelines and will evaluate it based on state mandated rubrics. • Beginning with the class of 2010 ALL STUDENTS MUST COMPLETE THIS PROJECT TO GRADUATE!

  5. Our Approach • The graduation committee developed a meaningful project that connects with our goal of graduating citizens of the world. • Students select a problem or issue that they care about, research it, and then to “do something” about that problem or issue. • Project integrates some of the school’s most innovative programs, including Citizenship and Flex.

  6. Benefits to Our Approach • Fulfills school mission to • Graduate citizens of the world • Develop independence, ownership of learning • Creates a Meaningful experience • “What will YOU do?” • Develops skills, problem-solving • Rounds out RCHS experience • Showcases student work

  7. Graduation Project Components State Requirement: THE FOUR Ps 1. Portfolio 2. Paper 3. Product 4. Presentation

  8. Portfolio Collects student reflections on nature of citizenship, specific plans for Graduation Project: • Four Interdisciplinary Flex Reflections • Two citizenship reflections • Definition of Citizenship paper • Initial proposal for the project • Project log of work on the student’s product • Final Reflection on the project as a whole Many components completed during school activities

  9. Paper • Research paper on a problem or issue of interest to the student will be completed over two summers. • Section 1: History of the issue • Section 2: Current state of the issue • Will help student understand topic, plan for product • Given specific instructions and guidance for each step • Due at start of school • Given guidance on revision to meet state requirements

  10. Product • Developed and completed during senior year • Student directly addresses chosen issue • Plan should stem from research on the topic • Does not include volunteering in established program • Many possibilities. For example: Make a website to help an organization Produce a video for education or training Create an organization Propose legislation Run a drive Create art

  11. Presentation • Presentations given to advisory in spring of the student’s senior year • Includes a visual aid such as a power point presentation or presentation board • Students will tell what they did and reflect on how it went • Celebrates student work, raises awareness at RCHS • Special Gala to share work with larger RCHS community

  12. How are Projects Evaluated? • a panel of evaluators will evaluate all parts of the project • Panel includes teachers, other faculty, and community members • State rubrics used for evaluation • Rubrics available on Grad Project web site • Students made aware of rubric requirements for each step

  13. How is RCHS Helping? • Graduation Project Advisors • Portfolio writing during school activities • Flex reflections, Citizenship paper, etc. • Special senior year workshops and workdays • Product proposal workshops • Community Workdays for Product/Presentation • Web resources • Topic ideas, writing help, assignment specifics • Awareness as a school • Spreading project over 3 years

  14. Graduation Project Timeline Sophomore Year students will: • Be introduced to Graduation Project • Write definition of citizenship paper • Write ID Flex and citizenship service reflections • Write a proposal for a topic • Meet Graduation Project Advisor

  15. Proposal for Project • Discusses the issue or problem they want to study • Will be explained this week in English class • Due after Spring Break • Helps prepare them for summer writing

  16. Graduation Project Timeline, cont. Between Sophomore and Junior Year students will: • Write 1st half of research paper Junior year students will: • Revise research paper with help • write ID Flex and Citizenship service reflections

  17. Graduation Project Timeline, cont. Between Junior and Senior year students will: • write 2nd half of research paper • Begin thinking about possible products Senior year students will: • write ID Flex reflections • complete the product and product log • present their work • write the final project reflection

  18. Your Role as a Parent or Guardian • Help students pick an engaging topic • Focus on issue, not eventual product • Be aware of project requirements and timeline • Encourage students to stay on task, but not to get ahead of themselves • Keep an eye on your student’s progress • Encourage students to seek community contacts • Come see their presentations

More Related