Our Finest Hour - A silent mentoring program - by Todd Bloomer
Todd's school is mentoring students in a very different way. "The key to our program is that the student is not told they are part of a mentor program." Click below to read all about it...
I am planning on having my classes work more collaboratively this year, so I've arranged my classroom accordingly. The only problem is that I'm not sure what to do when it comes time to test. Does anyone have any solutions besides moving desks on those days or giving different tests to each group member? Thanks!
Unfortunately, our desks don't fit together too well and it would be difficult to put anything up and the student still have room to work :-( But thanks for the suggestions!
Well... the one year I did it I found the greatest challenge is simply that kids hate PE. And most PE instructors respond by treating it like Marine boot camp which only makes the kids hate it more. What's the point of PE? If the point is to torture kids then my school does a good job with it. My organizational suggestions would be - figure out what your goal is. Is it just keeping order?
1 out of every 3 kids are obese - we have a national problem to say the least. It's costly to a society - we're all paying for the medical problems that overweight kids and adults have. So it's just me but if I'd go back to PE these days, I'd try - for the sake of the country and well as the kids - to take the 'hate' out of PE. The 'you have exactly two minutes to change' and grim rigidity doesn't help them to become fit. We don't draw them in with that, we alienate them.
Maybe it's hopeless - maybe there's no way to make PE palatable. I know some schools have put in those climbing walls and bought inline skates etc. to try to spice up PE and make it palatable for kids.
And maybe it's hopeless too to try to get kids to be more fit and to understand the value of exercise. Kids all think they're immortal and despite those like you and me who keep fit, like it, and take pride in it - something like 2 out of every 3 adult Americans are obese. We're a minority.
What's your goal I guess is my question. If it's order above and beyond all other things, take the traditional approach - two minutes to change, shrieking whistle, etc. I think if I went back to PE, I'd swear I'd just take them on walks. I think walking them for a half hour twice a week would be doing more good for them and the country than anything else. At least that way they'd be getting some exercise twice a week which is more than most of them get on their own.
I don't know if I'd do BMI with them - some are going to be very embarrassed. But overall over many years of teaching I've come to believe that what we say as to school being preparation for life is nonsense and the year I spent as a student teacher in PE showed me PE was the same. The curriculum was not directly attached to fitness in any way. Everyone had to do the same number of laps regardless of the level of fitness they came in with. Then we switched up activities so often giving them a smattering of basketball - anyway it didn't make sense to me. Maybe modern PE curriculum is related to reality but it surely wasn't then.
My comments are similar to others. AP purists will tell you there is no such thing as "passing" an AP test. The 5 to 1 levels refer to standards of preparedness (sorry cannot think of the words College Board uses; is it "qualified"?). Search AP score results 2014 and you can probably find some results info. The numbers of 5's (and other levels) vary widely from test to test. Calculus results are typically high, as are those for Chinese for example. The Biology test was revamped 2 years ago and ever since then number of 5's has been way down as is the number of 1's. I would think your administration or guidance department could help you determine if your results were consistent with the students you had. As for changing what you do for the next year, I cannot imagine reflecting on student scores of any type and not looking for ways to improve instruction. Did you get your Instructional Planning Report? I would expect this might be of help as well.
This year, I had 8 who took Language--4 passed. That was as much as I could have hoped for out of that group. Three of them really should not have taken the test in the first place and one who didn't take the test should have. We have had years where 1/3 has passed. Overall, I do not think 1/3 is bad at all. The tests replace college classes and they are very rigorous, as they should be.
Also, does the entire class take the test or do they choose? That makes a difference.