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Shmoop interSECT 2014: Best Practices Make Perfect Panel First Half 283 Views
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Description:
Here's the best practices panel from our very own 2014 interSECT conference down in LA, California.
Transcript
- 00:15
So first i'd like everybody to just introduce their school
- 00:18
district They're demographics so you can have an understanding of
- 00:21
where they come from and then we can go into
- 00:24
what they've succeeded at within their schools So tracy so
- 00:28
i'm tracy best growth from bird ville texas now what's
Full Transcript
- 00:31
funny about that Is it's actually six different cities We're
- 00:35
a suburb of fort worth texas So birdville is [woman discussing birdville]
- 00:38
the name of the school but there's no longer a
- 00:40
bird ville city by itself Our total population in the
- 00:44
area is one hundred twenty thousand I didn't know that
- 00:46
kristina looked at that for me That's Awesome Our student
- 00:49
population and our thirty one schools We have a total
- 00:53
of about twenty six thousand students three high schools seven
- 00:56
middle schools and twenty one elementary schools As a district
- 00:59
we have an average of about fifty eight percent low
- 01:03
SES for free and reduced However we have a
- 01:06
large disparity so some of our schools might be asshole
- 01:09
aya's ninety percent free and reduced lunch and other schools
- 01:13
might be as low as twenty percent So that's kind
- 01:15
of an interesting thing about our district is what's the
- 01:19
next one and the most interesting thing would be our
- 01:22
changing demographics overtime I can speak to this personally as [demographic chart appears]
- 01:26
i went to school k twelve in this district and
- 01:29
i have had my twenty three year career in this
- 01:32
district so literally i've been there since i was five
- 01:36
so i can describe those changes at a very personal
- 01:39
level But essentially we have a huge shift in what
- 01:43
used to be a very fluent area is now majority
- 01:48
low income and the ethnicity has changed which is something
- 01:52
very unique for our school board for our population of
- 01:56
teachers to relate to our students because many of them
- 02:00
came from the is district as well so they're not
- 02:02
they they've had a hard time with this change It's
- 02:06
also changed the the what's going on in our programs
- 02:11
so like we talked about it's not you know a
- 02:14
lot of times we focus on ethnicity and low scs [BISD program participation chart]
- 02:17
to raise students out of poverty but really we have
- 02:20
also a problem with our low income of white households
- 02:25
and those students performing as well So it's an interesting
- 02:29
dynamic that's going on that i think is really going
- 02:31
on all over the country So i think it's pretty
- 02:34
important to point out and i think that might be
- 02:36
all Okay um thank you tracy Next up is elizabeth
- 02:42
from northeast high school philadelphia Good afternoon everyone As alison
- 02:46
said i'm elizabeth fernandez veena from northeast high school and
- 02:50
we are located in the north east Most portion of
- 02:55
this map it's a school that was built in the
- 02:58
nineteen fifties as a white flight school so public transportation
- 03:02
doesn't really go out to where school is But many
- 03:05
of our students to take public transportation to school it's
- 03:09
become a largely immigrant working class neighborhood So if you
- 03:14
notice in the top left go back that shows our
- 03:19
income which is a thirty thousand dollars a year less [households earnings chart by neighborhood]
- 03:23
per household And then if you look at the bottom
- 03:26
left it shows the senses from two thousand ten which
- 03:30
represents our neighborhood And as you will see our school
- 03:33
certainly represents the demographics of our neighborhood So we have
- 03:40
a twenty nine hundred plus or minus students down from
- 03:44
about thirty eight hundred when i started there Part of
- 03:47
that has happened because of students decided to goto virtual
- 03:51
charter schools charter schools and other neighborhood schools now that
- 03:56
they can decide to travel We have about five hundred
- 04:00
students in our program currently but many of our
- 04:04
students are also exit diesel students so when we look
- 04:07
at our numbers a large percentage of our students were
- 04:10
not born in the united states... Additionally unlike
- 04:17
many schools a third of our school is represented by
- 04:21
a magnet school which was started in the nineteen sixties [woman discussing magnet schools]
- 04:23
as a stem program so ahead of its time and
- 04:27
so these students come from all over the city But
- 04:29
something i'd like to highlight is that even though thirty
- 04:32
three percent of our school is represented in the magnet
- 04:35
program it only represents sixty percent of our a p
- 04:40
program and we're working towards even changing that even further
- 04:44
When i started at northeast five years ago eighty percent
- 04:47
of the students in the program or from the magnet
- 04:50
program and so it was seen as an extension of
- 04:53
that school and we're trying to change that So as
- 04:55
we grow the program we're not decreasing the number of
- 04:58
magnet students but we are increasing the number of non
- 05:01
magnet students to sort of make those percentages were
- 05:04
eighty four percent of our students are free and reduced
- 05:07
lunch which is up from forty percent about six years
- 05:11
ago So as you see this increase in free and [student population chart]
- 05:14
reduced lunch which is how we measure our poverty very
- 05:18
and an increase in the demo changing demographics in our
- 05:23
school our AP scores have increasing So is the percentage
- 05:26
of students in ap and then fifty six they're categorized
- 05:30
as special ed Fifty six languages are represented so i
- 05:34
would like to say that there's no majority in no
- 05:36
minority at north east high school on so that's represented by [woman discussing north east high school]
- 05:40
ethnicity which you can see for yourselves It's tough to
- 05:43
read but it's about thirty three percent black twenty two
- 05:47
percent asian nineteen percent white i think it's about seventeen
- 05:52
percent latino I have two can't do the math that
- 05:53
quickly and then a cz you see our ninth grade
- 05:56
classes are pretty large so in our senior class does
- 06:00
go down to below about six hundred So we do
- 06:03
deal with issues of dropout rates and other We have
- 06:07
other issues that many schools in the country face especially
- 06:10
in the inner city And so as i mentioned on
- 06:15
dh weaken just quickly go through this Our student population
- 06:18
has decreased as our free and reduced lunch rate has
- 06:21
increased and so we're really proud of our ap gains
- 06:23
in particular because of that And then elizabeth how many
- 06:29
assistant principals do you have at the school Five four
- 06:34
okay depends so we've had significant budget cuts in the
- 06:37
last year and so we've lost a lot of staff
- 06:41
and were slowly rehiring cem cem folks so we have
- 06:45
no library in we started off the school year with
- 06:47
one counselor for three thousand students Um we lost twenty
- 06:53
six teachers last year and we lost twenty the year
- 06:56
before that So i've been really fortunate to be able
- 06:59
to keep my job and we lost assistant principals Our
- 07:04
entire administrative team with the exception of two people is
- 07:07
new this year Um so so we're dealing with a
- 07:11
lot of change and change that we don't necessarily want
- 07:15
to happen Thank you And next up dr lipkin from
- 07:20
tustin All right i'm gonna go really quick quickly through
- 07:25
this but easiest fine Easiest place to find I couldjust
- 07:29
reference disneyland We're pretty Close to that Most people know [Man discussing Tustin]
- 07:32
where that is but tustin serves three different major cities
- 07:38
in this area It's down in orange county right by
- 07:40
john wayne airport ah tustin irvine in santa ana Um [Tustin shown on map]
- 07:46
so we have twenty eight schools three major high schools
- 07:50
and then there's a continuation adult school that i did
- 07:52
not list there about twenty four thousand kids The thing
- 07:56
that's important A lot of people like working with tustin
- 08:00
from publishing perspective from a research perspective because we have
- 08:05
almost mirror demographics to the state of california So we're
- 08:10
a microcosm of the state on dh it's a fairly
- 08:12
good size sample So a lot of people really like
- 08:15
to look at at us the one place where we
- 08:18
are beating beating the odds i guess when you consider
- 08:22
that sample size we do have a fairly high graduate
- 08:27
and once you extend a little bit it actually gets
- 08:30
up in the about the ninety eight range But our
- 08:33
initial grad rate is ninety six Point two in about
- 08:37
eighty percent of our kids do go on a four
- 08:39
year college So that's a pretty high rate when you [man discussing rates of kids going to college]
- 08:42
consider that we are we do have that demographic set
- 08:45
we have specific for year MUN program AP program i
- 08:51
b and then early college where we actually have about
- 08:54
last year was about sixty kids who get there a
- 08:57
before they get their high school diploma So we have
- 09:02
we have kind of the realm We have a third
- 09:04
of our kids on free and reduced But then we
- 09:06
also have ah third of our kids whose attorney will
- 09:10
talk to you are their nanny every time you know
- 09:13
that there's an issue So you deal with the wide [Man discussing peoples issues in schools]
- 09:16
variety of people and it's a it's a great city
- 09:19
and a great place to work because you get that
- 09:21
full gamut Um i think that's pretty much it Okay
- 09:25
great And charles is a high I'm i'm charles mazzei
- 09:29
thie assistant principal in indio high school Um for most
- 09:33
of us even know indio it's more in the area
- 09:35
of the palm springs area California desert So me coming
- 09:39
out here It's actually cold Um just real quick Ah
- 09:43
lot of your students would probably know where we are
- 09:46
We are the home of the world famous coachella fest
- 09:48
which happens every april And if your country western fan
- 09:51
of two week long events called stage coach we also [events staged in indio]
- 09:54
have the tamale festival which is pretty international around We
- 09:57
have about a thousand companies come out and do that
- 09:59
in our city My high school is about two thousand
- 10:03
We used to be a little bit larger but five
- 10:05
years ago we opened up a second high school
- 10:07
in the city of india So we went from about
- 10:09
twenty seven hundred down to two thousand My high school
- 10:12
was ninety five percent hispanic Um forty eight percent of
- 10:16
them are english learners Um and we are i think
- 10:21
this year about eighty eight percent frame reduced lunch No [Man discussing ethnicity in high school]
- 10:26
we are the the poorer school in my school district
- 10:29
We are also in this in the school district that
- 10:32
includes cities such as retch rancho mirage indian wells palm
- 10:36
desert the country club cities And so we are definitely
- 10:39
the the opposite side of the tracks in the sense
- 10:42
of our area Great Thank you So we have the
- 10:45
desert We have disney We have philadelphia in texas So
- 10:49
obviously you can see there's a vast geographical difference demographic
- 10:55
difference but in terms of accomplishing great things with digital [Woman discussing high schools]
- 10:59
curriculum thes four individuals have done an amazing job incorporating
- 11:06
Shmoop as well as a variety of other resource is
- 11:10
so at this point i'd like for each of you
- 11:13
to just talk about some of the biggest challenges and
- 11:16
what your goal was to do with in your district
- 11:20
Well when i started in this position i really wanted [Woman discussing challenges]
- 11:24
to find ways to help teachers target content needs and
- 11:28
diagnosis those content needs appropriately especially with ap teachers that's
- 11:33
really difficult to talk about because they don't think they
- 11:37
have any content needs they understand it and so they
- 11:41
don't necessarily think they need much help with it but
- 11:44
so that was also a barrier but really what i
- 11:47
wanted was for them to not think of the shmoop
- 11:52
offering as online prep but to take those little quotations
- 11:57
from around the words online so that it's really about
- 12:00
a student taking ownership and response ability for their own
- 12:04
needs that a student can leave their classroom and choose
- 12:08
to do preparation for their course that that teacher doesn't
- 12:12
necessarily build or lead or directly instruct And when you
- 12:17
talk to ap teachers about that That makes them a
- 12:19
little frightened because they're a little controlling I don't know
- 12:22
if you've met any of them but so that's really
- 12:26
we could I could say all day long that the
- 12:28
barriers were you know we don't have the one toe
- 12:30
one initiative we have bring your own device but we
- 12:33
don't have enough band with I mean we could talk
- 12:35
about those those issues that come with devices all day
- 12:38
long But it's really about the concept of how teachers
- 12:41
and students view preparation and confidence in the content And
- 12:46
so that's what we faced i faced Sure so one
- 12:53
of our initial goals was really it's really started from [Woman discussing initial goals]
- 12:55
changing from having a very fixed mindset about ourselves and
- 12:59
our students tohave to changing to having a growth mindset
- 13:02
So what i mean by that is that we could
- 13:04
reflect and think about our practice what we were doing
- 13:06
in the classroom what we were providing for our students
- 13:09
and thinking about our students and what resource is an
- 13:11
access they had So we overhauled the entire program on
- 13:17
dh Many of the teachers initially said well i teach
- 13:19
the ap students they're the best in the brightest and
- 13:21
we're doing everything we can to make sure that they
- 13:25
succeed and unfortunately they're not We were at eighty percent
- 13:28
eighty percent of our exam score tto one at that
- 13:30
time and we started thinking about extending class time with
- 13:36
limited resource is how do we do that Our students
- 13:38
have smart phones So how do we connect with them
- 13:42
What spaces are available in the building for them to
- 13:44
come together to study What can we do with saturday's
- 13:47
Our building's open on saturdays for recreation Why can't we
- 13:51
take advantage of the classroom So we started thinking about
- 13:53
everything that we had not necessarily the obstacles We put
- 13:56
everything on paper and then said what is feasible and
- 14:00
and that's how we started to change So our initial
- 14:02
goal was really toe lower ones and to make sure
- 14:06
that we were providing for our students and then it
- 14:09
just became a it just i see everyone looking back
- 14:14
so what's back there on building community So we started
- 14:19
also having community building events we go ice skating Now
- 14:22
every year we go to a Phillies game at the
- 14:24
end of the year after ap exams And so now
- 14:27
it went from students taking ap classes to students becoming
- 14:30
ap students and ap scholars and that was an unintentional [Woman discussing AP students]
- 14:35
outcome of what we started doing And i really think
- 14:40
that just by taking baby steps and not to use
- 14:43
the words that we use this morning becoming intoxicated with
- 14:45
potential but just taking it one step at a time
- 14:48
is really how we got to where we are wonderful
- 14:53
grant All right andi i put all my answers on
- 14:56
the slide so i don't know but some of the
- 14:59
things that some of the things that i didn't share
- 15:02
before though really quickly um we really did face a
- 15:06
lot of obstacles but a lot of our obstacles are
- 15:09
also advantages when you really look at it Um we
- 15:12
have jonathan blackmore is in the back he's the tustin
- 15:15
high principal but he's been working with his school for
- 15:19
about four years I believe with shmoop um and has
- 15:23
had a lot of tremendous success with ap but we've
- 15:26
also been really fortunate in our district that band with
- 15:29
issues are not a problem We got one hundred and
- 15:31
thirty million dollars tech bond that we have to use
- 15:33
just for technology S o r infrastructure is just ridiculous
- 15:39
and we have one two one programs and things like
- 15:41
that that we're putting into place so we're really looking
- 15:44
for ah full digital transformation on dh not just put
- 15:49
a you know a book onto a device or just
- 15:52
have a really cool website but really to change teaching
- 15:56
on dh really change learning night and day from what
- 16:00
it wass on dh we don't have huge problems we
- 16:03
have high socioeconomic six overall so we're trying to force
- 16:07
change in an area where a lot Of people think
- 16:09
we didn't need a lot of change and that is
- 16:11
kind of ah hard time but with common core We
- 16:14
thought it was perfect timing to do something like that
- 16:18
So a lot of the things that we have for
- 16:20
major obstacles with this curriculum rob's obstacles that handing uh
- 16:25
ipad as well or something like that to a student
- 16:27
to walk home through three gang neighborhoods with eight hundred
- 16:31
dollars in their back pocket you know So we had
- 16:33
different things like that to consider whether they have internet
- 16:37
at home which we have solutions for those things just
- 16:40
the sheer size of it But also how are we
- 16:43
going How are we really going to change things with
- 16:46
this Are we gonna get better results How are we
- 16:50
going teo Change teaching in the classroom How we can
- 16:53
extend the school day and then really take the tutor
- 16:58
market away We have a really strong tutoring market and
- 17:02
it creates such an imbalance between our rich and are
- 17:05
poor You especially see that in a p and i
- 17:09
think it's the genius of what shmoop can do on
- 17:12
and it's also the genius of people That are visionary
- 17:16
like jonathan and are able to see that this helps
- 17:19
lower and close that gap because for free essentially for
- 17:25
our kids once they log in their ableto access ap
- 17:31
is a perfect spot because they can't take those tests
- 17:34
five seven times I can't remember how many times but
- 17:37
at least five times practicing in the past only the
- 17:40
rich kid that could get a kaplan book or go
- 17:44
sign up for ah crash course or something like that
- 17:48
actually has that access or can pay for a tutor
- 17:51
or something like that This really levels the playing field
- 17:54
um and provides a lot of those opportunities for kids
- 17:56
so we were really looking for for that home from
- 18:00
a teacher training perspective We were really worried as well
- 18:04
that are are certain demographic of teachers that were pretty
- 18:07
set in their ways and not digital native we're just
- 18:11
going to be afraid of using the internet period But
- 18:14
with that hundred thirty million dollar tech bond we hired
- 18:17
thirteen digital learning coaches that are specifically to train teachers
- 18:22
on dh provide p d every day all day amendments
- 18:26
where people so so a lot of things that i
- 18:30
could complain but i'm i would not have a lot
- 18:33
of sympathizers i don't think and then the other things
- 18:36
that we're concerned about is obviously cost too when we're
- 18:39
talking about the scale that we have weii what had
- 18:44
some big ambitious goals but we had things like plato
- 18:48
and we have all of these other digital re sources
- 18:50
that are out there and they cost a fortune and
- 18:53
digital books and then you throw in eight hundred dollar
- 18:55
ipad on the top of it or whatever and it
- 18:57
starts dad up one hundred thirty million dollars It sounds
- 19:00
funny but it doesn't go very far with twenty four
- 19:02
thousand people over thirty years so we have so much
- 19:06
to take in a consideration but from a curricular perspective
- 19:11
the bang for your buck with this particular program and
- 19:15
his wide ranging is it is it's just incredible You
- 19:20
know if you look at a digital even the most
- 19:22
interactive digital textbook about sixty two teo eighty dollars is
- 19:26
about as cheap as you can get it So this
- 19:29
is just a tremendous value for what we've been able
- 19:31
to get so we were and i don't work for
- 19:34
smooth by the way so but anyway it really we're
- 19:39
also looking for a one stop shop way needed We
- 19:43
want one log in for everything to make it easy
- 19:46
for parents to make it easy for kids so we
- 19:48
don't have to hire an entire i t person just
- 19:50
to manage everything that was going on And this also
- 19:53
serves that purpose so thank you Thanks graham You're hired
- 19:57
if you'd like tio uh charles Um well the story
- 20:02
with shmoop in indio high school actually goes back about
- 20:04
four years ago Um when california decided to push for
- 20:08
the race for top grant um my high school was
- 20:11
put on the chronically underperforming list We had an a
- 20:15
p i that was pretty much stuck around six Forty
- 20:18
and so were placed on this list and pretty much
- 20:21
we were given a year to turn it around Um and so were placed on this list and pretty much
- 20:21
we were given a year to turn it around Um
- 20:26
we came up with a bunch of plans One of
- 20:28
our plans was to start um we went from the
- 20:30
six periods scheduled to an eighth period schedule to design
- 20:33
more support classes for definitely are struggling students That left
- 20:37
us with a sort of a good problem and we
- 20:40
weren't exactly sure what to do with our top students
- 20:43
on And so i was assigned with the task of
- 20:45
finding some curriculum for low level students our middle level
- 20:49
students and are high achieving students I was up at
- 20:54
a conference and i happened to run into paul tailor
- 20:58
and he started telling me about what we could help
- 21:00
you with Cassie we could help you with the eels
- 21:03
We could help you with a p we cannot be
- 21:04
with us and we could help you with and i
- 21:07
said okay and i wouldn't talk to some other people
- 21:10
They were much more expensive so i came back to
- 21:12
paul tailor come on And that sort of began our
- 21:15
relationship Um he mentioned earlier the one thing that i
- 21:19
think was the easiest for me to sell my staff
- 21:23
was that it was one website want every student cause
- 21:27
i have students that are english learners that aaron ap
- 21:29
classes that are struggling to pass the math portion of
- 21:32
the exit exam and they have one log in one
- 21:35
website and a teacher that is they were able to
- 21:38
go to that one website and so we started using
- 21:41
the word shmoop shmoop points all over campus That is
- 21:45
like ninety five percent hispanic Um but i think because
- 21:50
of that i also was able to reach my staff
- 21:53
in a very easy way In the sense of there
- 21:56
was only one stop for pretty much all of our
- 21:58
problems Um with the support from the extra support classes
- 22:03
from going to the eighth period over two days blocks
- 22:05
get going we were able to raise their test scores
- 22:09
We would we didn't get fired Thankfully um but we
- 22:12
also have seen an incredible growth in our students on
- 22:15
our all of our higher tv in students in the
- 22:17
sense of a p a c t as they became
- 22:20
a priority and getting also the help that they needed
- 22:24
at a low income school Wonderful So to segway to
- 22:28
that let's talk about the results that i would like
- 22:31
for each of you to brag about You have seen
- 22:34
tremendous improvements with your test scores So let's we'll go
- 22:39
back around start with tracy i think their slides but
- 22:45
so they're okay All right so with shmoop and actually
- 22:49
what's up there right now has changed But i did
- 22:52
buy this district wide for all three of our high
- 22:55
schools and some middle schools if they would convince me
- 22:58
they had reason to be on it I said yes
- 23:01
i've essentially told no one know which is a fun
- 23:05
offend a fun thing to do but since this since
- 23:08
i did this alison came out and we did a
- 23:11
go visit the world and in february alone i've signed i did this alison came out and we did a
- 23:11
go visit the world and in february alone i've signed
- 23:16
up almost five hundred more students because of that push
- 23:21
and our number of hours on the program has increased
- 23:25
by in just one month i think by over three and our number of hours on the program has increased
- 23:25
by in just one month i think by over three
- 23:28
hundred hours So really this goes back to that goal
- 23:32
that i had in the beginning about students realizing they
- 23:36
can take responsibility for their learning and do things on
- 23:39
their own So even if they've signed up under even
- 23:42
if they joined a teacher's class they're still having to
- 23:44
do this most likely on a device that is not
- 23:48
school provided because we don't have a one to one
- 23:51
initiative and i just dropped everything and she's picking it
- 23:53
up for me So that is extremely exciting to know
- 23:58
that the students are on their own Realizing that prepping
- 24:03
for a p s a t s yeah can't be
- 24:07
done on their own and that is extremely exciting The
- 24:10
other thing i think there's another slide maybe are we
- 24:14
just talking about shmoop results or okay i only have
- 24:17
one life so there my my shmoop results are awesome
- 24:21
and to be determined on this year scores ah and
- 24:24
now elizabeth can you please brag about the wonderful results
- 24:29
that you've seen despite librarians counselors money anything so i'd
- 24:34
like to add that our student to computer ratio is
- 24:38
i was going backwards but it's one tonight so we
- 24:40
have nine students for everyone computer and if you really
- 24:44
break that down and think about the desktops that aaron
- 24:47
classrooms it's actually worse than that So when thinking about
- 24:51
how to implement shmoop we had to think about what's
- 24:55
feasible as i said before and what do all of
- 24:58
our students have access to Not all of them have
- 25:01
access to a smartphone but most do now and most
- 25:05
of them have access to a library down the street
- 25:08
and up until last june they had access to our
- 25:10
school library which has about forty computers So when we
- 25:16
talked about the change that we made in our program
- 25:18
it was about student autonomy students taking control of their
- 25:22
learning and we were just there to guide them and
- 25:25
provide them with opportunities so that's how we were able
- 25:27
to use shmoop so if you look at this bar
- 25:29
graph the bottom number shows the number of students involved
- 25:33
with our ap program in two thousand eleven you'll see
- 25:37
an increase in students and that's because we had an
- 25:41
increase in federal funding and so we were able to
- 25:43
have an eight periods school day We now have a
- 25:46
seven periods school day which limits the number of ap
- 25:49
course offerings that we can have and therefore the number
- 25:52
of students who can take them You can also see
- 25:55
on an increase in the number of exams ordered and
- 25:59
i'm happy to say that this year i will be
- 26:00
ordering about seven hundred exams so our numbers have stayed
- 26:04
the same but the number of student taking each exam
- 26:08
has or the number of exams each student will be
- 26:10
taking his increased i also have to add that all
- 26:13
of the data that i'm going to share represents all
- 26:16
of our students taking the exam because the school district
- 26:19
thankfully does pay for every student to take our exam
- 26:22
So when i show you our data it represents the
- 26:25
entire population of ap students Okay so this this graph
- 26:33
is the one i'm most proud of and seems to
- 26:36
be the most popular if you see the top line
- 26:40
It shows the number of one's our students scored over
- 26:43
the years so we were seventy six percent in two
- 26:45
thousand seven and now we were down to forty six
- 26:50
percent last year and so the middle number the middle
- 26:55
line represents the number of college eligible exams which is
- 26:58
threes fours and fives Our goal for this year is
- 27:01
toe have those lines flip flop so that we have
- 27:06
mawr college eligible exams than then one so that's what
- 27:09
we're working towards this year No and i just wanted
- 27:14
to also that we had zero ap scholars in two
- 27:16
thousand seven and twenty two last year so the number
- 27:21
of students getting a three or more on three or
- 27:23
more exams has also increased dramatically I'm our schoolwide college
- 27:31
going rate in terms of matriculation is sixty three percent
- 27:35
but for our ap students i just dis aggregated the
- 27:37
data and it's at eighty six percent and this year
- 27:42
if you see ccp is the largest so this to
- 27:45
the left you'll see where our students have been accepted
- 27:48
to and where they've decided they're not where they said
- 27:50
to go where they've been accepted to and ccp is
- 27:52
our community college in philadelphia Now if you go to
- 27:56
the slide with the college acceptances for this year these
- 28:01
air the schools to which our students have been accepted
- 28:03
to thus far as of last friday at northeast so
- 28:08
you'll notice some changes We have lots of local top
- 28:14
tier schools and our students are exploring schools other than
- 28:17
temple penn state lasalle drexel which our local university So
- 28:22
we're really happy about that We also have had students
- 28:25
this year with interviews to stanford m i t princeton
- 28:29
eso we're keeping our fingers crossed for them These are
- 28:32
our statewide standardized test scores there included simply because it
- 28:36
shows the school wide performance on our state test Our
- 28:40
state tests recently changed but it's about fifty four percent
- 28:43
so way have definitely have some work to do But
- 28:46
this is sort of teo give you an idea of
- 28:48
what type of school were coming from and i don't
- 28:55
know if there's anything else can you tell the story
- 28:58
about the ap computer science program that you're gonna put
- 29:01
together next year So this year we have five students
- 29:06
I probably shouldn't say their names going to be difficult
- 29:08
Who approached me in the beginning of the year in
- 29:10
said ms fernandez if we teach ourselves computer science and
- 29:14
put together of course and we teach it ourselves um
- 29:19
can we take the test at the end of the
- 29:20
year And so i said well if you prove to
- 29:23
me that you have the content knowledge to do that
- 29:25
then sure because the school district pays for the exam
- 29:29
so they've been saying after school teaching themselves a p
- 29:33
computer science and actually using shmoop to help them along
- 29:36
the way because we don't have a teacher to help
- 29:38
them and i just gave them their practiced us and
- 29:42
they will be taking the exam So then some underclassman
- 29:45
approached me and said miss fernandez can we get a
- 29:48
p computer science next year And i always like to
- 29:50
say yes so i said yes but you have to
- 29:53
put together a proposal and get thirty three Signatures Because
- 29:57
that's the number of students that we need to have
- 29:59
in a class to be able to have a teacher
- 30:01
for them on each of those students needs to write
- 30:04
Why computer Why they want to take this So last
- 30:08
week i got a proposal on my desk with thirty
- 30:10
three signatures And now i have to figure out how
- 30:13
to actually approach my administration to get this class But
- 30:16
i think what this story shows is that not only
- 30:20
are teachers taking initiative in our school but students are
- 30:24
to make things happen And when you do have a
- 30:26
grassroots culture like we haven't northeast things can happen Change
- 30:31
can happen despite everything that's going on both locally on
- 30:37
dh also nationally in terms of of the political scene
- 30:41
So this story's just telling about how our school culture
- 30:45
has changed and how student ownership is really important when
- 30:49
thinking about making change in the school Thank you and
- 30:54
that's what Six snow days already that you've accumulated at
- 30:57
six snow days Yeah we no longer have spring break
- 31:01
on now on tio tustin and grant way we have
- 31:07
expanded now so all of our high school students have
- 31:10
access and now all of our middle school students have
- 31:13
access so they're using it that's new this year our
- 31:18
best data on shmoop use comes from tustin high so
- 31:23
i have that information right here Um and you can
- 31:27
kind of see the longitude no results of this but
- 31:29
this is with a fairly stable number of kids involved
- 31:34
with the school but our number of test takers hasn't
- 31:38
changed dramatically but the number of scores three or above
- 31:42
have gone up dramatically since the start of on shmoop
- 31:47
use at this particular school also i think that's the
- 31:52
biggest thing is that it's not hard for us to
- 31:55
convince kids to take ap classes or take on dh
- 32:00
and this is our lowest From a socioeconomic perspective this
- 32:03
is our lowest socioeconomic high school thea other too two
- 32:07
are considerably higher from a socioeconomic perspective there especially the
- 32:12
one that's located in irvine they have many many more
- 32:17
students that are taking ap and many more people who
- 32:20
are um who are taking multiple ap tests but the
- 32:27
biggest growth has been with closing that achievement gap in
- 32:30
providing a level playing field and jonathan has done an
- 32:34
excellent job of of utilizing this and his and making
- 32:38
this known to his teachers and you can see that
- 32:42
here jonathan i know i'm putting you on the spot
- 32:45
but is there anything i'm missing about your school in
- 32:47
particular I think most importantly with us for shmoop it
- 32:52
in one of these is that we dealt with was
- 32:54
was the hole issue of equity and access for our
- 32:59
students and we do have a very very large avid
- 33:02
population We did it we we encourage our avid students
- 33:08
to take advance placement courses especially their eleventh and twelfth
- 33:12
grade year We also used the ap potential program identified
- 33:16
ap students and and encourage them to enroll in advanced
- 33:20
placement So knowing that we're taking students that have you
- 33:24
know historically not not taken a college preparatory course load
- 33:28
that they don't have help at home they're going to
- 33:30
be first generation college students when they go to college
- 33:33
What could we do to help them and make the
- 33:36
curriculum accessible for them And that's really where Shmoop has
- 33:38
bridged the gap for our students and it's Our students
- 33:43
have become drivers of shmoop and they drive the teachers
- 33:47
especially ap teachers especially within our abbot program especially within
- 33:50
our honors and ap courses The teachers are the students
- 33:54
learn it is quickly or more effectively And then they
- 33:57
go back and teach the teachers which has been a
- 33:59
really really great transformation for us Can we go to
- 34:03
the side That was right before this really quick something
- 34:06
that i know jumped out at me specifically this year
- 34:09
And i'm really anxious to look at scores about it
- 34:13
We have never used this in our continuation high school
- 34:17
before on dh this year our continuation high school principal
- 34:21
was became aware of it on dh They put it
- 34:24
in a really heavy use with casey and passing the
- 34:29
high school exit exams and s oh it's a high
- 34:32
heel population very low socioeconomic typically and we had i
- 34:39
think we only had fifty students who needed to pass
- 34:41
it this year in forty three kids Were some of
- 34:45
the heaviest users of shmoop in the casey prep area
- 34:49
forty three of the seventy two kids that we had
- 34:51
that were really focusing in that area they spent something
- 34:54
like nine hundred hours on casey prep on shmoop and
- 34:59
i think nine hundred hours might be more hours than
- 35:03
they have gone to some of these kids have gone
- 35:05
to school onda and that is kind of a funny
- 35:08
statement to think about but you don't end up at
- 35:11
continuation by having stellar attendants and s so it's really
- 35:16
amazing it struck a chord with that particular group of
- 35:19
kids where they believe in it it's entertaining it's kind
- 35:24
of funny and they get immediate feedback those air all
- 35:28
things and they get shmoop ants they get all of
- 35:30
these little extrinsic things that they may not get with
- 35:33
somebody else they don't have to connect with the teacher
- 35:35
they don't have to show up on time they can
- 35:37
pull it up wherever they want to it's just it's
- 35:40
available on bits quality and i can't wait for scores
- 35:45
to go up so i can say that's why so
- 35:48
it's kind of ah ah cool thing But i'm really
- 35:51
anxious to see what those forty three kids that spent
- 35:53
that alone of time I know that they passed the
- 35:56
exit exam So that's a good thing Yeah but i
- 35:59
can't wait to see you know whitmore Quantifiable data on
- 36:02
those forty three kids right And that's Ah great segue
- 36:05
way over to charles because charles dunn has done a
- 36:07
fantastic job video being all levels within test prep In
- 36:13
increasing the key see rates increasing the ap scholars as
- 36:16
well as a city and
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