viernes, 24 de abril de 2020

April 27, 2020

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Kudos
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  • Congrats to Hans Block on the addition of a granddaughter, Tenley, to his family this past week!  Such a cutie!!!
  • Congrats again to Jeri Nettesheim for the additional of her new grandson, Alexander Thomas Beer Born April 21, 10:37 am  8 lbs 6 oz, 19.5 inches long.  Mom and baby are doing well.  Alexander will be joining his siblings Patrick (13), Katelyn (11) Emily (8) and Andrew (6) later today.  Rounding out the family with five total kids... Jeri sure is glad they didn't follow the COVID trend naming trend!  


  • Kudos to our staff members who are on the scheduling committee for the new 6-8 middle school:  Trent Tonn, Eric Sulik, Patti Tenhagen, Andrea Hancock, Barb Berezowitz, Jennifer Pelnar, Rod Stoughton, Dustan Eckmann, Mike Jones, Jon Nelson, Suzanne Dunbar, Justin Novak, Scott Staude, Amanda Thate, Kaitlyn Klipstein, Megan Riviere, Susie Fleischman, & Jenny Trewyn (I hope I didn't miss anyone).  They have been working hard to create a comprehensive schedule, as a team, that best meets the needs of our students and works to blend all three grade levels together as one 6-8 community of learners! 
  • Kudos to Mike Jones and Kurt Rummler for your assistance with our additional academic sections that are shared by both houses!  

Article this week:  

Assessments and Grading in the Midst of a Pandemic

Thomas R. Guskey, Senior Research Scholar, University of Louisville
Originally published in Ed Week, April 13, 2020
The coronavirus pandemic has brought unprecedented challenges to educators throughout the world. Schools have had to change entire instructional programs in widely varied contexts with inequitable access to technology and other vital resources. School closures and requirements for social isolation have created untold hardships for students and their families, especially those with multiple children at different grade levels, whose parents cannot stay at home, whose English may not be the primary language, and where the parents are also teachers.
In making these changes, educators recognize that we can’t do everything we did before. We must examine our purposes, establish priorities, and decide what is truly most important. When it comes to assessments and grading, two major needs influence these decisions.
First is the need to encourage and support student learning. We need to provide the best possible learning experiences for students under these constrained and demanding conditions. We also must do our best to ensure all students learn well, achieve important academic goals, and are not hindered in their learning progress.
Second is the need to document and quantify student learning for the purposes of accountability. Schools need to verify the success of these alternative instructional programs. For students, we also need to complete report cards and fill in transcripts. For graduating seniors in many schools, we need to calculate class ranks, identify the top 10 percent, distribute academic honors, and name a valedictorian.
Unfortunately, under the adverse circumstances we currently face, these two needs pull us in different directions and prescribe different courses of action. To accomplish one means sacrificing aspects of the other. This brings new importance to establishing our priorities, especially in light of issues related to fairness and equity. For educators who make encouraging and supporting student learning their priority, however, the direction is clear.
Assessments
When it comes to assessments, supporting student learning means focusing on feedback instead of a score or grade. It means helping students to see assessments as learning tools that have an integral role in the learning process, rather than as evaluation devices that mark the end of learning. It means making clear to students that the primary purpose of assessments is to verify what they’ve learned and to identify any learning problems so we can work together to remedy those problems. Hence, cheating on an assessment serves no purpose other than to delay our efforts to help all students learn well.
An emphasis on feedback also means we must plainly articulate our learning goals and the criteria we use to determine when students meet those goals. We need to be clear about how we will know if students “get it” and not worry about quantifying their performance on a scale with 101 different levels. Most important, we need to plan alternative approaches to help students when they don’t get it. This change eliminates the need to distinguish formative and summative assessments. If our focus is on feedback, then all assessments are formative until students get it. When results show they get it, then the assessment becomes summative.
Grading
When it comes to grading, encouraging and supporting student learning means ensuring grades accurately reflect what students have learned and are able to do, not when or how they learned it. As schools physically close and move to online learning, most attempt to accomplish this in one of two ways.
In schools required to give grades for the current term, even when not all students have adequate online access, grades are typically based on evidence of student learning gathered up to the time of school closure. But then they do three things:
  1. Add an asterisk to the grade to indicate it is based on the portion of the course completed up to the time of school closure.
  2. Develop specific procedures that allow students to improve that grade by redoing assignments or assessments, even when the grade remains based on only a portion of the course.
  3. Develop additional procedures for students to fulfill all course requirements and complete the course, with assistance from teachers, in order to remove the asterisk from their grade. Schools vary in the timelines they set for both #2 and #3 because the length of school closures remains uncertain. Ensuring fairness and equity for all students remains paramount in making these decisions.

Other schools, however, recognize the extraordinary nature of our current situation and are taking the same path as many elite colleges and universities: They are shifting temporarily to “pass/fail,” “satisfactory/unsatisfactory,” or “credit/incomplete” grading for the current school year. The University of Chicago, Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Stanford University, along with many others, all recently decided to temporarily shift to pass/fail grading after switching to remote learning this semester in response to the coronavirus pandemic.
The key to successful pass/fail grading rests in establishing clear criteria for “pass” and making those criteria challenging, rigorous, and attainable. This doesn’t mean lowering standards. Rather, it means being clear about the standards and doing all we can to ensure students meet them. Excellent examples of similar pass/fail grading include certification examinations in medicine, nursing, law, military, or civil service.
The ancient Greek physician Hippocrates said, “Desperate times require desperate measures.” What he meant is that in adverse circumstances, actions that might have been rejected under other circumstances may become the best choice. And these are certainly desperate times.

Pass/fail or credit/incomplete grades may prove to be the fairest and most equitable grading option available to educators in these desperate times. By making student learning our primary focus; helping students share the same focus; ensuring the criteria we establish for passing or earning credit are clear, rigorous, and attainable; and then doing everything we can to help ALL students meet those criteria; we will make the best of these difficult and trying times.
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Information/Reminders
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New Construction Information 
  • Click HERE to access the new building blog! This was updated this past Thursday, April 23rd!
Overall Information:

  • This is an additional reminder to all staff that it is required that you have a mask and gloves on to enter the building. Please make sure you bring a mask (as we have a very limited supply after donating to our local health care workers) and we have some gloves. Please make sure you follow this expectation.
  • Pass/No Pass
    • Please follow these instructions to convert your gradebook into a pass/no pass calculation versus a letter grade calculation. This needs to be done by Wednesday, April 29th.  
      • When the teacher goes into their grade book they need to click on the grade marks tab for each class.
      • Highlight Pass/No Pass
      • Click on Assign students on the right
      • When the list opens up they need to put a check mark under TR4 for all students  (HS Algebra is the only class where you select Sem2)
      • By doing this grades will stay the same for all of the other quarters posted and Term 4 will be Pass/No Pass.
  • In case you are asking... the staff video: We are in this together, is currently being looked at to ensure we can use the video as the song is a copyrighted song through Disney. It is a good thing we have a radio station in our district as Julie Thomas reached out to Tom Gilding to see if he could help get an answer for this!
  • We added a document to the first page of The Karcher Calendar sharing what our support staff hours are, so that, in the event you need an additional staff member present for a Google Meet you know who is available during which hours. Here is the link as well since your seeing this for the first time.
  • Thursday, April 30th - Student material pick up from 12:00 - 4:00.  
    • Thank you to those staff members who have worked to put materials together for our select set of students needing hard copies or materials. Please make sure you have everything on the document by this Monday, April 27th so we have time to get things organized.  
      • This document is on the first page of our Karcher calendar, I also sent a reminder email relating to this as well.
    • Pam Bauer, Annie, and myself will be here for the material pick up time frame.
  • Student locker clean out & staff room pack up.
    • This document is where we would like certified staff to sign up for a day (from 8:00 - 3:00) to pack up your rooms. You will notice we can have a max of 6 teachers per day, do not go over this amount. Also, be mindful to not sign up for a day if someone right next to you is also signed up to keep things spaced between staff members.
      • Pack up information from the custodians/Mike Wallace:  
        • Boxes will be delivered Monday and placed by the library entrance, along with tape.
        • Their goal is to clean the building like a normal summer, the only difference is the classroom floor care. 
        • Floors:  
          • If a floor is to only be cleaned, teachers can leave bookshelves packed, they would not have to pack up shelf units, wardrobe cabinets and so on. If a classroom looks good enough to wash and polish, that is what would be done. 
          • If the floor is really bad. We would do a scrub and recoat.
        • Staff should organize the teacher desk and counter top area's.
        • Cafeteria, hallways, and specific areas will be scrubbed and waxed. 
        • We will make sure there are garbage cans/dumpsters in the hallways.
      • Click on the "End of the year check-out form" to assist with remembering what all needs to be taken care of on the day you come to pack up your room.
        • Note that one item on this check out is the completion of your SLO and PPG... that may adjust your date you pick for room pack up...
    • Support staff... Annie put down your names, after we met with all of you and sent you this information, but here it is again in the event you need it.
      • Support staff will be assisting with collecting the student materials in lockers and organizing the student items for pick up on May 20th and 21st.
    • All staff have to have a mask and gloves on to enter the building. This is a requirement.
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Pictures from the week
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The Medal of Awesome is alive and well!!!







domingo, 12 de abril de 2020

April 12, 2020

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Kudos
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  • Thank again to Briana Harris and Suzanne Dunbar for taking the lead and working to put a lip singing video together on behalf of Karcher staff!  It was great to see the participation!  Thank you to all who were willing to put yourselves out there!  Excited to see the final product!  
  • Also, thanks again to Stephanie Rummler, Suzanne Dunbar, and our leadership students for putting together the chalk drawing video, that will come out soon!  It is a great way to get our students engaged and connected to each other!  
  • Stephanie Rummler also worked with our leadership students to get some Karcher dress up days going!  Below is the list of days!  
  • Scott Staude and his family welcomed their newest family member, Louie!  He slept through the night starting day one!!!  But... from the time he woke up he made 7 mistakes in the house is a very short period of time!  House training here we come right!!!  Louie is a double doodle! What a cool Easter gift!!!  Congrats Staude family!  



Article this week:  
This is a GREAT article talking about the balance of teaching and parenting at the same time!  We know a lot of our staff are continually working on "finding the balance" of taking care of our Karcher students while also maintaining "normalcy" with your own families at the same time.  May this article be of some help and reflection.   

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Information/Reminders
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New Construction Information 
  • Click HERE to access the new building blog!
This week:

  • Monday, April 13: Inservice Day!
    • 8:00 - 12:00 is Essential Skill time throughout the school district.
      • As we talked with all staff this week, please focus on your Essential Skill work that is necessary when thinking that come August 17th we will be using a standards-based gradebook.
      • Updating rubrics (tweaking them), tweaking/creating drafts of common formatives or common summatives, and/or overall needs for your Essential Skills.
      • Please make sure your "Essential Skills at a Glance" is up to date and accurate. Remember... then language noted in your at a glance document is what you will see in your gradebook in Skyward.
      • Annie and I will have a Zoom up and running throughout the time frame from 8:00 - 12:00. We will invite everyone into the Zoom... only come in if you have any questions! You can come in, go out, come back in, etc throughout the time frame. This will allow for an easy way to ask questions, etc throughout your Essential Skill time.
    • Scheduling Committee Meeting for those on the committee will be from 1:00 - 2:00. Information pertaining to the committee was sent to committee members last week!
  • Team meeting schedule (due to 4 day week)
    • Tuesday: Onyx 7:30 - 8:15, Student Services 8:15 - 9:00
    • Wednesday: Normal schedule
      • Silver 7:30 - 8:15, Interventionists 8:15 - 9:00, ESL 9:00
    • Thursday: Hive 7:30 - 8:15, Diamond 8:15 - 9:00
    • Friday: Normal schedule 
      • Electives 7:30 - 8:15
  • A parent request...
    • Could staff share out, during their first time they share for the week, what skills will be assessed or "turned in" for that week. This could help students keep track of what is "turned in" skill wise versus what is supportive tools for a skill being learned.
    • I know the elective team started thinking about this as a potential additional way to help students navigate what skills you are wanting to assess and when... thinking that putting things in the gradebook ahead of time shows students what they need to complete skill wise for the week.
    • Please think about how to streamline your "what" from your "how" items so students know explicitly "what" you are asking from them in order for you to give them feedback around a specific skill.
  • Thank you to our Silver House, BLT, and leadership students for thinking through how to provide students with more focus per day as feedback has been trying to do all 7 classes everyday has been tough for students. Therefore, the below schedule was created by our teams and will start on April 14th! Thanks again for your care and concern of our students to ensure they are having success at home.
    • This has been emailed home to all families and students.


Looking ahead:  

  • Our schedule starting April 20th... 

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Pictures from the week
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Some pictures that will be in the chalk video - from staff and students!





domingo, 5 de abril de 2020

April 6, 2020


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Kudos
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  • Kudos to Briana Harris for wanting to get a video of our staff together for our students!  If you are interested in participating please fill out THIS Google Form.  One of our character traits is courage... you can do this!!!  Students would love it!  
  • Kudos to Stephanie Rummler for getting the Chalk Drawing Quest also going in the background... 
    • Here is Stehpanie's email to staff regarding this:  
      • The News Crew students are putting together a segment building off the idea of the uplifting chalk drawings appearing in driveways.  We are trying to get as many photos as possible to make a montage. If you are willing to create a message and take a picture of it, send it to me or Suzanne and we can compile them. Be in the pic or not - sign it or not - whatever you can send. All inappropriate messages will be filtered out... :)  Thank you!!  Example...  -Steph and the SC Officers
  • Thank you to Kris Thomsen and Kim Moss for assisting with our material printing/organization.  Everything from staff needed for student pick up on Monday has been organized and brought over to Dyer.  
    • Remember... if you are needing students to pick materials up please make sure you collaborate with your peers and decide who is sending the district message to ONLY the students who need the message.  I am sure you did this already, as pick up is tomorrow!  
  • And... kudos to all staff as we all know this is a learning process for everyone, including ourselves!  I truly appreciate that you are reaching out to your students and asking them about the work load, is the information easy to understand, and/or what else they could use or need to be successful from home!  Below is a great list of our successes so far at Karcher! 
    • 7th grade science students discovered the difference between angiosperm and gymnosperm methods of reproduction and demonstrated their skill of analyzing and interpreting data from multiple sources through online formative assessments.
    • Art had several students that took the Famous Faces Remake Drawing Project a step further to incorporate their own personality/unique spin on the project! 
    • Seventh grade ELA students learned  to take Cornell Notes before online schooling and have been using this newly acquired skill to comprehend a set of nonfiction online texts.
    • 8th grade social studies classes are creating WWI One Pagers to incorporate significant events, advancements, and figures in the war - students are choosing whether to upload their own drawings or create digital collages - fun to see their choices and efforts. (Silver House)
    • Our Wellness students just finished a text dependent analysis about the negative effects of vaping.
    • 8th grade ELA students have been honestly documenting living through this unprecedented time in their Living History Journals.
    • Advanced Spanish students demonstrated mastery of using the construction ir+a+infinitive using a completely new platform for assessment.
    • Intro Spanish students are rocking out the Spanish-speaking countries/capitals unit online with questions and comments galore.
    • 8th grade science students explored the properties of mixtures, solubility, melting, and dissolving 
    • 8th grade science students are working on their first “virtual lab” for determining whether substances are acids or bases.  Using a screencastify, they are reading results from pictures of a lab (that I performed at home) and creating a data table to communicate the results.
    • 8th grade social studies (hive house) students have gained an understanding of the causes for WWI
    • STEM students are learning about the Bernoulli Principle this week. The Bernoulli Principle helps explain that an aircraft can achieve lift because of the shape of its wings.
    • 8th grade math has been doing an extensive review of the big topics we have worked on this year so far and are ready to move ahead with new learning.  Kids are working hard from home and asking great questions when necessary.
Staff news!!!  
Remember... if anyone has anything to share shoot me a quick email and picture! Would love to keep everyone connected! Maybe you painted a room in your house, remodeled something, got a new puppy, etc! Anything and everything!

Andrea Hancock and family added an addition of little Milo, a teddy bear puppy, to the family!


Article this week  
March 12, 2020

People in medical suits dance for patients.
In a mass-quarantine center in Wuhan, the megacity where this coronavirus first emerged, women have turned to karaoke to lift the spirits of sequestered groups.
Photograph by Wang Yuguo / Xinhua / Redux



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Information/Reminders
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New Construction Information 
  • Click HERE to access the new building blog!
This week:

  • BASD guidelines for pass/fail.
    • We have talked about this with staff throughout the week during our daily team meetings and I wanted to share the information that is a working document within the district. If you have questions please bring them up during our morning meetings!
      • This is also linked on our Karcher Calendar.
  • Pictures!  Sharing our story!
    • We need pictures for social media! This connects everyone together!!! We know you cannot see students online but perhaps you could reach out to students asking them to take pictures of themselves doing classwork at home, pertaining to a specific topic or activity you are having them do!
    • Annie has been working on getting The Medal of Awesome back up and running! She will communicate with you about the "how" once the medal comes to you!
  • Monday, April 6 - Forward Exam testing will begin...
    • Oh wait... never mind! But it is crazy to look at the calendar and see what we are not able to do while teaching through virtual learning.
  • Monday, April 6 - District Material pick-up at Dyer.  
    • The pick up will be from noon until 6:00pm.  If a student asks you about pick-up they can either have their parent/guardian drive over to Dyer any time in that window or they (the student) can walk to Dyer to get their materials, either way will work!  
    • Any student that still has materials at Dyer after the pick up window will have their materials brought to them via delivery.  We want everyone to come to Dyer but if they cannot know we will still get them their materials!  
  • Tuesday, April 7 - School Psychologist position 
    • We conducted a first round of interviews for the open school psychologist position.  
    • We are bringing 3 of the 7 candidates back on Tuesday for a second round of interviews. The candidate pool was strong!  
    • Side note... right before the last interview I wanted to take a hot lap around the 2nd floor of Karcher as I was sitting all day.  I get back to the library and realize I locked myself out of the library/office area!  My school keys, phone, and car keys were all in my office and the next interview started in 2 minutes!  Normally someone else is in the building right... not right now!  Thank GOD I have an apple watch (which I never wanted but was given one as a gift  - again - thankful) and I stood close to my office, called Connie Zinnen from my watch, and she came to let me in!  
      • Embarrassing!  
  • Friday, April 10 - No school 

Looking ahead:  

  • Monday, April 13 - Inservice Day 
    • This will continue to be an inservice day throughout the school district.  There is work to be done when it comes to Essential Skills so we will be using the  morning from 8:00 - 12:00 to work on Essential Skills.  
    • Please coordinate with your colleagues your plans to "meet" virtually.  
    • Annie and I will leave a Google Meet "on" from 8-12 so that any group can jump into the Google Meet to ask a question throughout this time.  
    • We may also send you a Google Meet to check-in!  
    • 12:00 - 4:00 will be teacher work time... time for you to use however you want!  
  • Monday, April 13 - Scheduling Committee 
    • Those on the scheduling committee I will send you an invite for us to meet starting at 1:00 - 2:00.  I do think keeping it to an hour is important when we are working from home as we all realize you have other things you may want to be working on seeing as this environment is new to us!  So... I will send that invite to the committee!  Just FYI... 
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Pictures from the week
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We need some!!!!!!