viernes, 24 de febrero de 2017

February 27, 2017

KARCHER STAFF BLOG



Karcher 2016-2017 School Calendar


Student's of the week for 
February 20 - February 24

  • Olivia Henningfield: (Silver) 
    • Olivia is a quiet leader, always turning in outstanding work and always willing to help others succeed!
  • Katie Rummler: (Diamond) 
    • Katie is a student leader that always gives her best effort in class. She has the respect of her peers as well as staff. She always goes above expectations and is a great example of someone who follows the Karcher Way.
  • Riley Brossard: (Karcher Character Bucks) 
    • Riley is a responsible student that works hard inside and outside of the classroom. He is a great representative of someone that always follows the Karcher Way.
  • Tanner Sylvester: (Onyx) 
    • Tanner is a good leader in the classroom. He regularly participates and helps his peers. He also throws a wicked fast ball. Thanks for always being a role model of the Karcher Way.
  • Jonathan Brau: (Applied Academics)  
    • Jonathan has been consistently on task during class, making sure to catch up on his projects. He brings a great sense of humor and attitude to STEM everyday.
  • Maxwell Meier: (Hive) 
    • Maxwell has put forth exceptional effort in his classes. His leadership and cooperation with his peers is tremendous especially in ELA.


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Kudos
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  • Katherine Botsford was chosen as the KCB STAFF OF THE WEEK!  Congrats Katherine and thank you all for continuing to reinforce our 8 character traits. 
  • Bonnie Crist will be here on March 3 if you did not have a chance to say goodbye to Bonnie.  She did a GREAT job in the health office!  We know we will still see her around as she promised us some cheese cake!  
  • Please welcome Amanda Wilks to our Karcher team!!!  She will be our new health aide here at Karcher.  Amanda was previously working at Dyer and is excited to join or team!  She will be participating in some training next week and then will be full force starting March 6.  Please also be patient as she is truly learning on the job!  Welcome to Karcher Amanda!  
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Reminders
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  • Teachers:  Staff Budgets were due to Kim on February 24 - But... due to Internet issues this past week you can have until Monday at 3:00 to turn in your budgets.  Please make sure you are sharing your documents with Kim and letting her know you have shared them with her!  
    • When naming your below documents please use this naming convention so that it is easy to search:  Last Name - Budget Requisition Order Form,   Last Name - 2017-2018 Budget Worksheet Form   (Example:  Ebbers - Budget Requisition Order Form)
    • Budget Requisition Order Form
    • 2017-2018 Budget Worksheet Form
  • Parent Blog has been updated... here it is in case you want to see what is shared with parents/guardians.  This is always accessible on our Karcher website.
  • Monday, February 27 - Staff Meeting for those who did not attend the informational referendum meeting last week.  
    • In the library at 2:40.  All staff, including all support staff, are encouraged to attend.
  • Tuesday, February 28 - A few of our staff will be assisting with splitting houses and beginning the initial stages of scheduling.  
  • Wednesday, March 1 - We will be adjusting our PLC due to the 70 degree weather last week so this PLC will be our literacy PLC within our groups.  Click HERE to see who your partner's are!  
  • Teachers:  The below two links are for our student led conferences.  
    • The first link is the form parents were sent to fill out in order to select the time and date they would like for their conference. 
    • The second link is to the responses we have so far.  What we would like to see happen is that you pull the responses up (already sorted by advisory teacher) and remind students who are not listed to have their parents sign up! 
    • Then... Starting the week of March 6 please call the students who are not on the responses list and while you have their parent on the phone fill out a form (the first link) to secure a spot for them.  
    • Kim will email advisory teachers the names of students who do not have a live email address so that you can call those advisory students, and fill out their form, in order to assist those families.  
    • Student Led Conference Form 
    • Student Led Conference Form - Responses
  • When you hold a celebration during the lunch period please make sure you are emailing/contacting Judy Heinz to let her know the number of students involved so they can plan food accordingly!  Thank you!!!  
  • Monday, March 6 - BLT Meeting 
  • Monday, March 6 - Band O Rama 
    • Students in band will be going to the high school at 12:50 and returning to Karcher at 2:15.  
    • Come watch grades 5 - 12 perform together @ BHS @ 7:00pm
  • March 13 & March 21 - Student Led Conferences
    • Student Led Conferences will occur in the library, ULab and Conference Room from 4:00 - 8:00.  Again - please see above in regard to assisting with ensuring all students schedule for a time.  
    • Parent/Teacher Conferences will occur in teacher's classrooms from 4:00 - 8:00.  
    • Informational Referendum Meetings will take place in the auditorium at:
      • 4:00 - 4:20, 5:00 - 5:20, & 6:00 - 6:20
    • The Book Fair will be set up as well... working on determining the best location for this still... but it will be available during both dates as well.  
  • March 16 & March 22:  Community Informational Referendum nights from 7:00 - 8:00.
    • These will involve informational meetings in the library followed by tours of the building.  
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    Pictures from the week
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    Students in Ms. Pelnar's class working on 2D architectural perspective drawings.



    Students in Ms. Waki's STEM class working through their design process and making adjustments for their trebuchets.  



    Rollercoaster designs for Ms. Waki's STEM class...

    Mr. Sulik's spin on student's reading logs.  Students are recording their responses to questions given to them in regard to their independent reading.  This is an example as Mr. Sulik asked a few students to share their recording in order for other students to get a sense of how this type of reading log would work!


    Article of the week: 

    From the book:  Grading Smarter, Not Harder

    by Myron Dueck

    Chapter 1. Grading

    Imagine you're a student on the first day of class. In reviewing the class norms and expectations, your teacher addresses the issue of bathroom breaks as follows:
    Although we all know you should use the bathroom during your break so that you don't interrupt my teaching or your learning, you will each receive five tokens that you can use throughout the semester whenever "nature calls" during class. Once you have exhausted your five tokens, you will be deducted 1 percent of your grade at the end of the course for each additional time that you use the bathroom during class. Because I believe in fairness, the converse will be true as well: for every token you have left over at the end of the course, I will add 1 percent to your final grade.
    I hope that very few educators would agree that bathroom visits should be tied to measures of learning outcomes! An online search for "frequent urination" should convince even the most steadfast supporter of this token system that someone who needs to use the bathroom frequently is probably not doing so by choice. Pregnancy, bladder infection, stress, diabetes, and a host of other conditions can cause someone to have to urinate frequently.
    To what extent do members of the educational community introduce nonacademic variables into the grading of student learning? How many of these variables lie outside of students' direct control? These two questions will help guide the conversation in this chapter.

    Behaviors Versus Academics

    Let's examine some hypothetical scenarios that involve missing student assignments. For each scenario, let's assume we know the intricate details of each student's experience and ability.
    Scenario 1: Tim is walking to school with a completed science assignment safely secured in his backpack when a thief suddenly accosts him and forces him to surrender his backpack. Is the fact that Tim arrives at school without his homework a measure of his learning or ability? Clearly, the answer is no. If any measure were to be applied here, it would be of his bad luck or poor choice of school route.
    Scenario 2: Sally chooses not to bother even starting her science assignment, though she's a very capable student and would likely do well on it. In this instance, is the absence of an assignment a measure of learning or ability? Again, the answer would be no: because Sally did not complete it, her teacher can't measure its merit. If any measure were to be applied here, it would be of her stubbornness or poor decision making.
    Scenario 3: Lee is new to his school, having moved into town with his family a few months ago. He struggles with his English speaking and writing skills. He has no friends at school and remains very quiet in class, sitting by himself and seldom asking for help. Though he misses the due date for his science assignment, his teacher can't determine whether or not he is able to complete it because he is so quiet. The fact is that Lee, uncertain of his ability to complete the assignment, never even starts it. His weak English skills make it hard for him to convey what little understanding he has on the subject. Is Lee's lack of work a measure of learning or ability? Although his choice not even to try completing the assignment is a behavioral decision, it is partly due to a lack of linguistic confidence and a fear of failure. An academic measure might be applied in this case, but determining it would be very difficult.
    Scenario 4: Clark tries to complete his science assignment but gives up in frustration. He crumples it up and throws it in the garbage. When his mom demands that he take the assignment out of the trash and complete it, Clark dumps her coffee on it, slams the front door, and goes off to hang out with his buddies at the skate park. Although this scenario is the closest to allowing for a measure of academic ability, there is no evidence available of Clark's level of understanding, and it is unlikely that anyone is willing to sift through the city landfill to find it.
    I decided a few years ago that I would only measure hard evidence of the extent to which students understood and could meet established learning goals. To be clear, the behaviors my students exhibit in class and throughout the school are very important to me. As educators, we must preserve and guard our role in forming and encouraging positive behaviors among young people. That said, I have chosen to make every attempt to avoid factoring student behaviors into my grading unless I am explicitly asked to do so by prescribed learning outcomes. Fairly applied, this approach must go both ways: if we decide not to penalize students for negative behaviors, then conversely we should not inflate grades on account of positive ones.
    Ultimately, behaviors will factor into grading whether or not we explicitly attempt to measure them. Students who show up to class on time, arrive with the necessary materials, attempt to complete their homework, and treat others nicely will likely benefit academically—just as students who make poor decisions will suffer academically. If teachers make every effort to collect evidence of learning and measure this alone, behaviors will result in their logical consequences. As my friend and colleague Chris Terris put it, "I care far more about my son's behavior indicators than I do about his academic grade; if he is trying hard, paying attention, and doing what he is supposed to, his grade will fall where it belongs."

    "Lates" and Zeros

    When addressing punitive grading measures in this chapter, I will be speaking mainly of deductions for late assignments ("lates") and zeros. Any discussion of zeros must include a distinction between a 4-point scale and 100-point scale. Doug Reeves (2010) explains the difference very well:
    On a four-point scale, where "A" = "4," "B" = "3," and so on, the zero is accurate, because the difference between the "A," "B," "C," "D," and "F" are all equal—one point. But assigning a zero on a 100-point scale is a math error; it implies a 60-point difference between the "D" and "F," while the other differences are typically about 10 points. It makes missing a single assignment the "academic death penalty." It's not just unfair—it is not mathematically accurate. (p. 78)
    The majority of the zeros I see getting handed out are on a 100-point scale. Both lates and zeros are attempts to affect behavior by statistically incorporating punitive measures into the grading scheme.
    Here are some examples of how lates and zeros are typically used in grading decisions:
    • 10 percent of the grade is deducted per day after the assignment's due date.
    • A 50 percent deduction is applied to the assignment following an arbitrary number of days beyond the original due date.
    • After the due date, the assignment is graded on a pass/fail basis; if awarded a "pass," 50 percent of the grade is still deducted.
    • If the assignment is not handed in by the due date, it receives an automatic zero.
    Other grading schemes incorporate penalties in less obvious ways. Here are a few such examples I have encountered:
    • A teacher gives a quiz as soon as class begins, and anyone who arrives late is not allowed to take the quiz. Any student who does not take the quiz is given a zero. As a result, students who arrive late to class receive a grade based entirely on their lack of punctuality on a quiz designed to measure learning.
    • The top aggregate score a student can have on a summative unit test is reduced based on the number of missing assignments or homework tasks during that unit—so, for example, if Sally only completes 80 percent of the homework assignments, the maximum score she can receive on the unit test is 80 percent.
    • Missed tests are given a zero unless students agree to attend a mandatory tutorial session. The session is offered at 6 p.m. on Friday evenings and must be booked via written application two weeks in advance. The make-up test is administered one week after the tutorial—also at 6 p.m. on Friday. Because of the rigidity and inconvenience of this "tutorial support," very few students go through with it.

    The Four Conditions for Punitive Action

    Penalties should be just, reasonable, and linked as closely as possible to the offense if the threat of their enactment is to effectively change behaviors. Here's an example. As a young car driver, I received a lot of speeding tickets. Paying over $1,200 in fines, though inconvenient, did little to curb my speeding habit. What eventually compelled me to lay off the accelerator was a meeting I had at the government-licensing branch. "One more ticket in the next 365 days, Mr. Dueck, and you will have your license suspended for one year," proclaimed the humorless adjudicator. That is all it took for me to go from being pulled over four times a year to getting pulled over once every four years. The threat of losing my license for a year worked well to modify my behavior because it met the CARE guidelines mentioned in the introduction to this book:
    • Care: The prospect of not being allowed to drive my car for a year terrified me. To say I that cared would be a massive understatement.
    • Aims: The government wants safer roads and fewer emergency calls. Speeding drivers should pay for the costs that they incur.
    • Reduction: Since that meeting in 1994, I have had three speeding infractions and I have never been summoned for another licensing meeting.
    • Empowerment: I had power over my own speeding and it was up to me to slow down. Only I could improve my time management, leave earlier for important events, and turn on the cruise control feature.
    Where the threat of losing my driver's license met the CARE guidelines for punitive action, behavior-based grading does not. Here is why.

    Care

    Many students do not appear to care about grading consequences. Consider the following conversation I had with a frustrated educator who used late penalties:
    Teacher: I use late penalties of 10 to 20 percent reductions and I will tell you why: I am tired of working harder than my students. I put in the effort, the time at lunch or after school, and they don't.
    Me: I have felt the same frustration. Do most of these students seem to care about a 10 or 20 percent deduction to their grades?
    Teacher: (Pause.) No, and that is a huge frustration as well. I keep applying the same penalty to the same students.
    Some students care about grading penalties and others don't. Those who are very concerned about getting into a good college might work hard to avoid grading penalties, whereas others might prefer to suffer the penalties than to actually complete their assignments. Students who ask questions like "If I don't hand in my work, what is my grade going to be?" or "If I get a zero on this assignment, am I still passing?" are probably debating whether or not to consider the assignment optional. When students opt to ignore assignments, penalties may serve to make teachers feel as though they've addressed the issue, but they do not increase student accountability or responsibility. Academic threats have lost their potency for students who are already disillusioned with their school experience and thus inclined to think, "If I'm already failing, why should I care about another zero?" Many students confront issues that loom much larger than late or missing assignments.
    For many years I handed out penalties for late assignments like they were candy. It took me too long to recognize that school is like society at large: if we are building more prisons, something isn't working.

    Aims

    Punitive grading does not complement my overall aim to measure learning outcomes, increase student confidence, and provide an environment of fairness and equity. My job requires me to measure evidence of learning or capacity against a set of standards. If my grades reflect behavioral penalties, then they do not relate directly to learning outcomes. Furthermore, applying lates and zeros does not inspire academic confidence in my students, some of whom may be very capable academically but struggling with behavior patterns. And despite popular belief, punitive grades diminish fairness and equity in the classroom: the moment I apply grading consequences to factors outside my classroom, some students will be penalized more than others for factors that are not in their control.

    Reduction

    Punitive grading may not result in a reduction of the negative behavior. Consider, for example, that an estimated 20 percent of people are chronic procrastinators (Marano, 2003). Students in this cohort who have trouble meeting deadlines and who struggle with organization will undoubtedly feel frustrated and discouraged by lates and zeros. (I can speak from experience as someone who struggles with punctuality and due dates—traits directly linked to my speeding violations.)
    Many systems in our society account for the fact that humans will predictably miss deadlines. Airlines appear to set the boarding time for the flight further in advance than is actually required; the state of Iowa has a 60-day grace period for those who forget to renew their driver's licenses on or before their birthdays. Those who think teachers are all punctual and time-conscious might be disappointed at the reality that many teachers struggle with due dates. In every school in which I've worked, a certain percentage of teachers tended to arrive late for staff meetings. I do not know if they were penalized for this, and I am not suggesting that they should have been; for all I know, these teachers were late because they were helping students or giving injured athletes first aid.

    Empowerment

    Students being penalized must have power over the causational variables. Of the four conditions that must be satisfied in order for me to apply a penalty, this is arguably the most powerful. As Ross Greene (2009) puts it, we have to believe that "if a kid could do well, he would do well" (p. 49). Many of the factors that affect students' abilities to succeed in school lie outside of their control. Here are some examples:
    Poverty. Around 22 percent of students in the United States live in poverty (Felling, 2013; National Poverty Center, 2013). Many of them lack basic amenities such as electricity, heat, and access to computers or the Internet, and face such additional hurdles as utility disconnection, depression, overcrowded homes, and physical abuse (Jensen, 2009). Because nobody chooses to be poor, any of the effects of poverty that contribute to students' lates and zeros in school are by definition outside of their control.
    Ability. Student may not have the ability to complete certain assignments, whether because of learning disabilities, gaps in learning due to school transfers, health issues, inadequate mentoring, truancy, or lack of background knowledge.
    Confidence. Lack of confidence can prevent students from even attempting assignments, or cause them to surrender at the first sign of difficulty. Such students may find it easier to avoid their work entirely than to take another hit to their self-esteem, and may also lack the confidence to ask for help. Such negative patterns can extend over generations, as the inability to self-advocate is often an inherited trait (Gladwell, 2008).
    Environment. Students from lower-income families are more likely to live in households where violence or neglect is present, or that are simply exceptionally loud or busy (Jensen, 2009). Many students wait until late in the evening, when the likelihood that arguments or other disturbances will erupt wanes dramatically, to complete their homework.
    Substance abuse and emotional struggles. Concentration and ability can be severely inhibited by drug and alcohol issues and by emotional struggles due to conflict, isolation, or neglect. Research indicates that success in math and languages is most adversely affected by students' emotional states (Medina, 2008).
    Parents. As both a teacher and an administrator, I have witnessed the positive and negative effects of parenting decisions. In many cases, parents enable negative student behaviors by excusing their children's truancy. Conversely, some parents will refuse to excuse their children when they skip a test, thus flinging open the door to all of the grading penalties at the teacher's disposal. Such differences in parenting affect both to whom and to what extent penalties are levied.
    Many educators still hold on to the assumption that parents are capable, grounded, and in control of their children. Add this to the list of traditional mind-sets in need of an overhaul. Too often, children are more capable than their parents, often attempting to balance schoolwork with raising younger siblings, buying groceries, and masking their parents' substance abuse and violence issues.



    domingo, 19 de febrero de 2017

    February 20, 2017

    KARCHER STAFF BLOG



    Karcher 2016-2017 School Calendar


    Student's of the week for 
    February 13 - February 17
    • Dara Herold: (Silver) 
      • Silver house choose Dara because she is a conscientious student who is always willing to lend a helping hand to others who need it.  We appreciate her positive attitude and bright smile.
    • Kaitlyn Beardsley: (Onyx) 
      • Kaitlyn has continued to show positive growth this year. Her smile, work ethic, and positive attitude are greatly appreciated by her teachers and peers. Keep up the great work Kaitlyn!
    • Tyler Rutkowski: (Karcher Character Bucks) 
      • Tyler treats his teachers and peers with kindness and respect. He has a positive attitude and works well with others. 
    • Drew Stutzman: (Diamond) 
      • Drew is a quiet leader that always puts forth his best effort in every class. He is a great example of a student who always follows the Karcher Way.
    • Cheyanne Hammiller: (Hive) 
      • Cheyanne is an outstanding young lady, She displays leadership throughout our building, including safety patrol. Her responsible work ethic and courage in speaking up in class are admirable.
    • Marissa Post: (Applied Academics) 
      • Marissa is an outstanding student who uses leadership to help her fellow peers succeed.

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    Kudos
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    • Andrea Hancock was chosen as the KCB STAFF OF THE WEEK!  Congrats Andrea and thank you all for continuing to reinforce our 8 character traits. 
    • Kudos to Andrea Hancock, Barb Berezowitz, Kim Moss, and Marian Hancock for your assistance this past week with our 7th grade students entering their course requests into Skyward!  And to Jane Peterson for running the show while the rest of us were assisting with Skyward!  It as been a lot of behind the scenes work and we thank you for your assistance as we discussed and checked every student's selections!
    • Kudos to Harvey Kandler for your assistance this week with a few sick students.  Harvey is always willing to come to the rescue when needed in order to ensure the learning environments are conducive for students!  Thank you Harvey!
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    Reminders
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    • February 20, Monday - Staff Meeting @ 2:40
      • This pertains to teachers as we will be focusing on making some adjustments to our literacy PLCs based on observations and conversations with our Literacy Mentors. 
    • February 21, Tuesday - Half Day with building level inservice in the afternoon. 
      • Special Education Aides will have training from 1:30 - 3:30 at our Cooper Elementary in the gym with Gail Spitzenberger.  
      • Teaching Staff we will meet in the library from 1:00 - 3:00.
        • 1:00 - 2:15 we will be doing an assessment audit.
          • Please bring a few (3ish) assessments you are currently using along with your essential skills folder.  
        • 2:15 - 3:00 we will be working with Jodi Borchardt on our Table Top in regard to active shooter.  
    • February 22 - Academic teachers:
      • Please turn in your teacher recommendations sheets to Kim or Marian by the end of the day on the 22.  
    • February 22, Wednesday - Literacy PLC, more information on Mondays' meeting will shed light for everyone with how this will look.  
    • February 23, Thursday - Staff Meeting for all staff 
      • 2:40 - 3:00 in the library with Peter Smet.  
      • Peter will be coming to Karcher on the 23 (Thursday) and the 27 (Monday) 
        • You can pick which one you want to attend, you could listen/come to both as well.
      • Peter will be providing information in regard to the referendum.  
      • Everyone is encouraged to attend. 
    • February 24, Friday - Staff Budgets are due to Kim via Google Docs.  Please make sure you are sharing your documents with Kim and letting her know you have shared them with her!  
      • When naming your below documents please use this naming convention so that it is easy to search:  Last Name - Budget Requisition Order Form,   Last Name - 2017-2018 Budget Worksheet Form   (Example:  Ebbers - Budget Requisition Order Form)
      • Budget Requisition Order Form
      • 2017-2018 Budget Worksheet Form
      • If you do not know your Function Number (Example:  English 122200) email or ask Kim and she will help with what your number is.  
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      Pictures from the week
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      7th and 8th grade girls volleyball is well on their way now!!!  




      8th grade students in Ms. Sturdevant's and Ms. Weis's class dissecting sheep eyes!













      Students utilizing our new Buddy Bench!

      8th grade students working with Mr. Berezowitz on their freshmen course selections and four year plans for BHS.


      8th grade students in Ms. Rummler's social studies class conducting their summative Civil War Battle between the north and the south. At the beginning of the unit, students assume the identities of actual Civil War soldiers.  They research them and role play them throughout the unit.  As the unit goes on the command structure builds. The students run their own discipline and award promotions as earned.  The week before our battle we study key battles and analyze the actions taken by each side. Because students are so invested in their roles by this time, the information lives and breathes for them.  They see their own characters succeeding or failing and internalize the significance in it's historical context.  Throughout the unit they write journal entries from the biased perspective of their army.  They know this battle is coming and they build their strategy as they go.

      The day of the battle the Generals have full command.  They have the battle plan, and on their orders they create the defensive structures from the boxes. The South gets more boxes because they fought a defensive war.  The North has more ammunition because they had more supplies.  The students all know their worth is based upon their rank.  

      After the battle students regroup to tally the toll of the conflict.  On Monday, students will be writing an account of their battle, comparing it to the real battles fought and drawing similarities to their strategy, their mistakes, and their triumphs with those of the historical battles they have studied. 







      8th grade pictures from our Character Assembly last week!  I apologize for not having them in last week's blog but 
      here they are now :)













      Article of the week: 
      Here is the second half of last week's article!

      February 2017 | Volume 74 | Number 5 
      Literacy in Every Classroom Pages 24-29

      The Writing Journey
      Kelly Gallagher

      A California school district provides a case study in how to improve student writing across the curriculum.

      Over the past several years, I have been fortunate to work with an incredible array of teachers from across the United States who have given me valuable insight into their professional challenges. For a while now, I've started each workshop by asking the same question: "How many of you are seeing a decline in your students' writing abilities?" Sadly, no matter where I'm presenting or what the demographic of their students, the teachers' responses overwhelmingly confirm my worst fears: Wide swaths of students are not developing their writing skills—skills we know to be foundational to their literate lives.

      Why are writing skills in decline? To answer this question, one might start by reading a recent study of U.S. middle schools conducted by the Education Trust (2015), in which the researchers examined a key question: Do classroom assignments reflect today's higher standards? Their findings were sobering. Only 38 percent of assignments were aligned with a grade-appropriate standard. About 85 percent of assignments asked students to either recall information or apply basic skills and concepts. (The assignments were "largely surface level," the report noted.) Only 1 percent of assignments required students to think for extended periods of time; most assignments could be completed in one class period.

      This lack of rigor was especially evident in schools' writing expectations for students in middle school (see fig. 1).

      Start of the second half of the article... 

      Two Key Questions

      After the Anaheim teachers had a deeper understanding of why students should write more, they were asked two questions that would drive a yearlong study of writing in their respective departments:

      • What kind of writing will help students get smarter in your class?
      • When and where should that writing occur?

      Over the next several months, teachers met in subject-area teams to wrestle with these questions. The teams generated even more questions: Does a lab report in Teacher A's chemistry class look the same as a lab report in Teacher B's chemistry class—and should it? What does an argument essay look like in a government class? Is there a place in a math class for the narrative essay? What balance should we strike between on-demand writing and process writing? These are tough questions, and the answers were not handed down from the district office. Teachers were asked to use their professional judgment to generate responses to these questions. For instance, at Magnolia High School, world history teachers decided that their sophomores would benefit from a range of specific writing experiences, as shown in Figure 2.

      Figure 2. Writing Experiences for World History Sophomores at Magnolia High School

      Argumentative writing
      Informational/Explanatory writing
      Narrative writing
      • Arguments spun from answering research-based argumentative questions (DBQs)

      • Arguments to prepare for Socratic Seminars

      • Explanations of student-created propaganda posters

      • Arguments for or against political-cartoon positions
      • Arguments spun from answering research-based informative questions (DBQs)

      • Research papers

      • Historical biographies

      • Short-answer writing

      • Explanations of political cartoons

      • Letters, journals, and diaries from the perpective of historical figures

      • Reading and responding to children's books as a way of building background knowledge about historical events

      • Character narratives

      Bringing teachers together for these discussions also sent the message that writing is an expectation in all classes. Whether or not a student writes should not be contingent on which teacher she has for world history. It is now a departmental expectation that students will write in all teachers' classes. In some departments, units and lessons were modified to build in more time for students to write.

      After teachers decided what kinds of writing would benefit their students, they were asked to consider when and where that writing should occur. In the second half of the school year, each department at each school created Writing Journey maps for every course. In our English department, for example, teachers agreed to start the year with a narrative unit because we believe the ability to write a story is a skill that students will use when they write in other discourses. From narrative writing, we mapped out a year in which our students would progress into writing arguments, inform-and-explain pieces, and multi-genre papers. This Writing Journey became a department-wide expectation.

      Later, teachers met as departments to align their maps vertically. For example, a student might take six years of science in this order: life science (grade 7), physical science (grade 8), earth science (grade 9), chemistry (grade 10), biology (grade 11), and physics (grade 12). Looking at this vertical pathway raised new questions: How should writing assignments progress in these classes? What writing gaps or redundancies are present in these pathways? Are certain kinds of writing better in certain kinds of classes? And most important, what should a student's Writing Journey look like after six years of science instruction?

      These discussions were valuable because they required teachers to look beyond their classrooms and consider the bigger picture of students' literacy development. This, in turn, prompted teachers to be more intentional in their teaching. By the end of the first year, Anaheim teachers had decided what to teach and when to teach it.

      Next came the hard part.

      The Shift to How

      After all content-area teachers had Writing Journey maps in place, the district's focus shifted to how. How do we support teachers in implementing the Writing Journey? How do we move beyond simply assigning writing and toward teaching writing effectively? It's one thing to recognize that students should write more; it's another to figure out how to help teachers teach writing skills.

      The district distributed a survey to all teachers asking them to rank their greatest professional development needs in writing. Teachers in one school, for example, indicated that their top need was to motivate reluctant writers, whereas teachers at another school asked for help in handling the paper load. The district used the survey results to offer tailored staff development, both in after-school workshops and during department and PLC time. In many of these meetings, teachers shared and discussed student writing over the course of many months. Writing is not a "one-and-done, flavor-of-the-month" focus. It is continually revisited throughout every school year.

      As a result, the instructional culture of the Anaheim Union High School District is beginning to shift. Three years into the Writing Journey, principals and department chairs at every school report significant increases in the quantity and quality of student writing. Some schools have started to explore department-wide or schoolwide end-of-the-year portfolios. Going forward, the district will continually revisit its plans to support teachers so that writing remains in the forefront of every classroom.
      This quest raises a final thought: Earlier in this article, I referred to Anaheim's Writing Journey as an initiative, but it's really not. The word initiative implies that the project will fade over time. But AUHSD continues to take steps to remind teachers that writing is simply foundational to deeper learning. This is why the district continues to gather all its teachers in one place at the beginning of every year to revisit its commitment to the Writing Journey. In short, the district recognizes that the Writing Journey is not just an initiative; it is good teaching.

      EL Online

      For a discussion of building students' mathematics writing skills, see the online article "Why Should Students Write in Math Class?" by Tutita M. Casa, Kyle Evans, Janine M. Firmender, and Madelyn W. Colonnese.
      References
      Conley, D. T. (2005). College knowledge: What it really takes for students to succeed and what we can do to get them ready. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
      Conley, D. T. (2007). The challenge of college readiness. Educational Leadership, 64(7), 23–29.
      Education Trust. (2015, September). Checking in: Do classroom assignments reflect today's higher standards? Retrieved from http://edtrust.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/CheckingIn_TheEducationTrust_Sept20152.pdf
      Graham, S., & Perin, D. (2007). Writing next: Effective strategies to improve writing of adolescents in middle and high schools. Retrieved from www.all4ed.org/files/WritingNext.pdf
      Langer, J. A., & Applebee, A. N. (1987). How writing shapes thinking: A study of teaching and learning. Urbana, IL: National Council of Teachers of English.
      National Commission on Writing for America's Families, Schools, and Colleges. (2004). Writing: A ticket to work … or a ticket out. New York: College Board.


      Kelly Gallagher is an English teacher at Magnolia High School in the Anaheim Union High School District in California. He is the author of several books, including In the Best Interest of Students (Stenhouse, 2015) and Write Like This (Stenhouse, 2011). Follow him on Twitter.