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Shmoop interSECT 2014: Best Practices Make Perfect Panel Second Half 225 Views
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Description:
Here's the best practices panel from our very own 2014 interSECT conference down in LA, California. This is the second half of the panel, to watch the first half (if you missed it), click this link: /video/shmoop-intersect-2014--best-practices-make-perfect-panel-first-half/
Transcript
- 00:05
Well one of them and it's sort of been the
- 00:08
theme here all day In the sense of what happens
- 00:10
with poverty in the sense of with schools One of
- 00:13
the ways that we approached with having smooth is that
- 00:17
we we know most of our students don't have internet
Full Transcript
- 00:20
at home Um or if they do have internet it's
- 00:23
tao up or if it's a computer that is incredibly
- 00:25
slow today's internet And so this is why we said
- 00:30
we have to reach these kids on campus We have
- 00:32
to open up our library We have to open up
- 00:34
earlier We have to close later to give them the
- 00:37
opportunity to be on the internet and surf the web
- 00:41
on a site that's going to help him be smarter
- 00:43
And it was sort of a cold we needed to
- 00:45
make a cultural shift and this goes from like i
- 00:48
said all the levels might might english learners that are
- 00:50
struggling to pass the cassie part on the way they
- 00:54
see it in english they see it in spanish They're
- 00:56
able to get more comfortable Um and i think that
- 01:01
plays a very large part and why we're able to
- 01:03
skid my e l myself level two's on my cell
- 01:07
level threes to be able to pass that test that
- 01:10
seventy five percent on their initials test that's going to
- 01:13
come in march the one that's coming up in a
- 01:15
couple weeks Um i think this also goes to why
- 01:20
we've been able to be more successful R r I'm
- 01:23
not sure if it's up there Well there's our results
- 01:26
herself is there ourselves One are self twos and threes
- 01:30
This is their pass rate now as eleventh and twelfth
- 01:34
graders and you know sell to sell to us very
- 01:37
limited english A lot of these air newcomers that have
- 01:39
been in the united states less than four years and
- 01:42
they're being able to pass that seventy five percent now
- 01:46
It used to be under fifty percent of these This
- 01:48
led to our dropouts Um and it's just really helped
- 01:55
us get them to be confident walking into the exam
- 01:58
This also i think has been a huge reason why
- 02:01
we've been able to increase our scores on the a
- 02:04
p exam like like philadelphia i track not just the
- 02:09
three four fives we tracked the twos and the reason
- 02:12
why is when i took over the program four years
- 02:15
ago and i always look at the ap european history
- 02:18
exam is my example this is you know typically done
- 02:22
in our high school tenth graders is they're first huge
- 02:26
exam that they take in the sense of a college
- 02:27
level I would say i test about a hundred kids
- 02:30
i would say fifty of them had quit within an
- 02:33
hour of the exam and probably the other forty five
- 02:36
percent had quit about about lunch break um now when
- 02:40
we take that exam because they've been on shmoop and
- 02:43
they've taken two three four practice exams they walk in
- 02:47
with a confidence of i could get a three and
- 02:51
they finish that examined when i say stop three and
- 02:54
hours and forty five minutes later they're like man i
- 02:57
got one more question i can finish it Give me
- 02:59
five more minutes and as an educator it's so wonderful
- 03:03
to see that they want more time to take an
- 03:05
ap exam versus when do we get out of here
- 03:08
Um and that's Why i think why we've seen the
- 03:11
score It is a cultural shift of i could do
- 03:14
better I mean when i took over the program we
- 03:16
had to ap scholars and both of those were students
- 03:19
that were accepted to uc berkeley this past year We
- 03:22
had twenty five um and one of them had our
- 03:26
energies a senior this year He's already passed seven ap
- 03:29
exams and the pressure on our campus right now is
- 03:33
you see the end coming Juniors I want to be
- 03:35
an ap scholar I could past seven I could past
- 03:37
six We went from a school that had to three
- 03:42
years ago on the entire campus and now kids air
- 03:44
like i could pass seven I mean it is just
- 03:46
a cultural shift and it all has to do with
- 03:49
then being comfortable with the exam And i brought an
- 03:52
example what we used to do This is a baron's
- 03:57
book two thousand nine english language i have about one
- 04:02
hundred eighty is in the library I think this was
- 04:04
the one that was most used I think paige is
- 04:08
one two and three have some writing in it We
- 04:11
bought these for years and years and years and never
- 04:14
got results and all the books with brand new well
- 04:18
this is now five years old and it didn't work
- 04:22
and now that we've gone to technology kids do it
- 04:24
at home we've been able to show them ways ways
- 04:29
to cheat and get more spines but in essence we're
- 04:31
showing them how we studied in college You sit with
- 04:34
two or three of your buddies that are taking ap
- 04:36
calculus and you hammer out how to get that right
- 04:39
question and it's clicked with them That's not cheating This
- 04:43
is what we need to do and our scores have
- 04:45
gone of last year I don't know why i used
- 04:48
ap calculus every single one of our ap score showed
- 04:52
a measurable gain except ap calculus um which is the
- 04:56
irony and like this year i'm measuring How are students
- 05:01
have done on the for the class of two thousand
- 05:04
fourteen i think it's up there we are expected let's
- 05:09
see it was mentioned earlier Well there's our gains We
- 05:12
have grown thirty eight points on the writing portion of
- 05:15
the this year math thirty for reading forty six we
- 05:21
have increased our levels to where students were scoring a
- 05:25
little bit under four hundred and we used to test
- 05:29
on ly i would say about the top seventy five
- 05:31
students of a class of five hundred which are pretty
- 05:34
much kids We're already going to be a through g
- 05:36
pretty much going to be able to go to at
- 05:38
least a cal state I'm now testing about one hundred
- 05:41
and thirty kids of my graduating class this year so
- 05:45
mathematically my score should have gone down because i'm now
- 05:47
using students seventy six through one thirty but it's sort
- 05:50
of fed into them We could do better They take
- 05:54
those practice tests Um look your example like the math
- 05:57
shack things like this that have been used they're getting
- 06:01
more and more comfortable and they walk out of the
- 06:03
exam thinking they did good instead of walking out deflated
- 06:08
Um you know and we've seen other results i mean
- 06:11
my c a t this year i've seen an increase
- 06:14
of a least one full point in all three portions
- 06:18
of the tea and when i went back i could
- 06:22
go back about six years We've never seen games like
- 06:25
this and the only thing that we really do different
- 06:27
is we've given him shmoop and we walk in and
- 06:30
we kind of tell them they could do it Um
- 06:33
and so we're very happy with what them with the
- 06:36
progress that we made through smith right now and we're
- 06:39
happy to charles s so now it's like teo turn
- 06:44
it over to the crowd for questions as we have
- 06:47
these wonderful educators up on the stage Obviously they have
- 06:51
fantastic stories so hopefully we can find out more of
- 06:57
the things that you would like to ask them Hi
- 07:00
um i teach special ed and i want to know
- 07:02
what it looks like for the spread students Um as
- 07:05
faras they're reading levels are concerned that say they're reading
- 07:08
at the fourth fifth grade level at a high school
- 07:11
So how have you addressed at how his shmoop help
- 07:16
increased their scores I'll take that I also oversee the
- 07:20
special ed department So you think one of the things
- 07:24
that i have done what we have done it indio
- 07:26
high school is a lot of times when you look
- 07:28
at a special ed class the problem is reaching rigor
- 07:30
and this also works with my english learners as well
- 07:33
You need to teach that special wet student or that
- 07:36
english learner at their level And so a lot of
- 07:39
times in the main class it's way below the high
- 07:41
school level But one of the things that we did
- 07:43
is we created support classes Well it with mice with
- 07:46
my special ed department we tune math at the special
- 07:49
wet level but in their support class we use a
- 07:52
lot of shmoop and we use the high school exit
- 07:55
exam on the shmoop program as the rigor And so
- 07:58
we've been able to not only expose them to the
- 08:01
problems and when you look at like the math shack
- 08:04
it will bring down the rigor to the level which
- 08:06
is very basic in the sense of the standards they
- 08:08
need to do to pass the exit exam And they're
- 08:11
exposed to something that they could Accomplish and slowly we're
- 08:14
able to ramp up the rigor to what they need
- 08:16
to do to pass the california exit exam Now in
- 08:19
california special ed students can grant a waiver two they
- 08:23
don't have to pass the exit exam to graduate Our
- 08:26
kids know that but we've been able to get more
- 08:29
than fifty percent of my stc students to successfully passed
- 08:33
the exit exam through them being exposed to the rigor
- 08:37
of the california exit exam through shmoop i think the
- 08:41
other the other piece toe addie did a great job
- 08:44
answering that but the s a lab i think is
- 08:47
the other component of it especially for you especially when
- 08:51
you're talking about passing a casey or something like that
- 08:55
It's not rocket science to pass that you know the
- 08:58
people say well how does a computer teach you too
- 09:01
Right You know and and a lot of i'm not
- 09:04
trying to offend any english teachers that are out there
- 09:06
but um but it's really not ah rocket science thing
- 09:11
in orderto pass the casey there's a certain level and
- 09:14
it's the same it's the same thing where i've seen
- 09:16
it be very effective in in a special ed from
- 09:19
a special ed approach to is that you have to
- 09:22
learn to write formulaic lee to a certain extent just
- 09:24
the past on dh Then you khun talk about the
- 09:27
arty later Um so i think there's a lot of
- 09:31
things that can be learned and can be gained from
- 09:34
a little bit of formulating grating on dh in the
- 09:38
assay lab is able to produce that in a number
- 09:40
of different ways and it has the ability to teach
- 09:43
kind of the flowery outside stuff too but but we've
- 09:47
seen definitely the use of it i think and i
- 09:50
could go back to the continuation side of things too
- 09:52
It's the same same deal So for ill for special
- 09:55
ed for continuation especially when you're just trying to get
- 10:00
close those gaps and move kids up You gotta walk
- 10:04
before you can run and i think that's a lot
- 10:06
of steps kids up really really well i think the
- 10:09
literature learning guides as well i think every piece of
- 10:12
literature you can think of is listed alphabetically and then
- 10:16
it gives a summary for them in and you know
- 10:21
kid language So it's not difficult For them to grasp
- 10:27
that summary piece and it models for them What a
- 10:31
good summary is of a story or of a poem
- 10:34
Um i think it also helps teachers as well Help
- 10:38
that Take a piece that might be above the especially
- 10:42
for il l their level of comprehension And bring it
- 10:45
to the student level so that then they can move
- 10:48
to rigor This question goes teo the aspects of houston
- 10:55
the middle school i'm a middle school teacher and i
- 10:58
want to know how they were receptive to the use
- 11:03
of shmoop but also how do you change or how
- 11:07
did you address the culture of using technology on campus
- 11:10
such as a mobile device without it being oh you're
- 11:14
using your device give it away and because there is
- 11:17
a large phobia of using mobile devices for any kind
- 11:21
of sort of things that we have to um i
- 11:24
think i think it was that for me because it's
- 11:27
hard to them Okay exactly Um first of all the
- 11:30
phobia issue of using your own device which that's what
- 11:34
we have to do because we don't have a wonder
- 11:36
one We began a bring your own device initiative several
- 11:41
years ago it's been met with some resistance in some
- 11:44
areas middle school is one of those but honestly i
- 11:49
think this has helped them see the benefit of a
- 11:52
student getting their own mobile device out and using it
- 11:56
for a purpose in class which has been phenomenal and
- 12:00
really it's been because i didn't do it school wide
- 12:04
for middle Schools i presented it to some middle school
- 12:07
teachers and said if this is something you want to
- 12:10
do let me know and so it has you know
- 12:14
it has to be in that regard it's kind of
- 12:16
opposite from high school because of high school i've just
- 12:18
been flooding flooding flooding hey kids here's a trick to
- 12:22
get you around your teacher's kind of toe trick them
- 12:24
into getting online would really I was having the same
- 12:27
presentations for their teachers but at middle school i didn't
- 12:31
really it was teachers if you want to do this
- 12:34
and so i've had a lot of teachers on their
- 12:36
own take that initiative and say this is how i
- 12:39
think i can use it Will you let me so
- 12:41
that's been very exciting I foresee you know the next
- 12:45
step being we would then do that push to get
- 12:49
middle school students on it school Why Just like we
- 12:52
are at the high school But it's become more of
- 12:55
a grassroots at middle school Kind of like what you
- 12:57
described then it has been at my high school campuses
- 13:01
because at my high school campuses it was this is
- 13:03
what we have and let's let's make everyone use it
- 13:06
and love it and they do once they get on
- 13:08
it they love it It's just the question of getting
- 13:10
them there There's one other question What about if students
- 13:15
were walking around and i know they were talking about
- 13:17
the gamification aspects before three kids there at lunch or
- 13:22
a pre time they're walking around they're actually like the
- 13:25
cat in the competition trying to beat each other's shmoop
- 13:28
scores Have you had any of those incidents on the
- 13:31
high schools are side like i dream of those incident
- 13:34
given ward i would i would give i would give
- 13:37
i would buy steak dinners for those students but no
- 13:41
we haven't had that issue happened Um yet but someday
- 13:46
she weigh our shmoop ing over the world So someday
- 13:51
you know one of the things i would say and
- 13:53
this also falls along with all the common core stuff
- 13:56
that's going down I know what My site It has
- 13:59
forced us to get more computers on our campus Um
- 14:03
my district is really large under the chromebooks So last
- 14:07
year i bought five class sets that were sort of
- 14:10
designed for Classes that were sort of having to do
- 14:14
in essence shmoop or other stuff like that on And
- 14:16
i know this this year um we're buying where are
- 14:21
my district's buying mohr So i'm gonna have about a
- 14:24
thousand chromebooks on my campus Well actually have now they
- 14:27
just haven't given to the teachers We just got him
- 14:30
this week Um so there's gonna be a lot more
- 14:34
and i think schools are going to get a lot
- 14:36
more of these devices on campus because of all the
- 14:38
money that came from from the governor because of common
- 14:40
core and i think i think that's gonna have to
- 14:43
disappear really quickly I mean i know my prince my
- 14:45
prince has been inside for twenty two years and he
- 14:48
doesn't believe in cell phones and so it's like that
- 14:51
that attitude has got to change because there's so much
- 14:54
good available on the internet right now to help us
- 14:57
get through this transition that we're gonna have to embrace
- 14:59
it And a hope that you use your technology money
- 15:02
to buy devices the kids could use and be mobile
- 15:05
in some way we didn't get that common core money
- 15:12
So one of our responsibilities i think is teach students
- 15:16
to use the devices they have in front of them
- 15:18
well and to take advantage of what is there so
- 15:21
our students are going to be on their phones whether
- 15:23
texting or communicating otherwise so why not teach them to
- 15:27
use these tools to enhance their learning Our students take
- 15:30
public transportation to school every day and so do i
- 15:34
and it's great to see a student looking at flash
- 15:38
cards on their phone or putting a post on it's
- 15:41
like facebook for schools we use school aji for their
- 15:44
classmates to see you're answering a question or we had
- 15:47
an issue it's a real issue two years ago where
- 15:50
students created a hashtag for their a push class before
- 15:53
the exam and and that's how they were setting So
- 15:58
i think we need to take advantage of the tool
- 16:00
that they have in front of them instead of telling
- 16:03
them put it away because that's when we're going to
- 16:05
face the most problem i think if we if we
- 16:08
make it taboo to use the tool then they're going
- 16:11
to use it for reasons that we don't want and
- 16:15
so let's take advantage of what the powerful tool that
- 16:17
they have in front of them i think we were
- 16:20
were obviously we benefit by the fact that our community
- 16:25
wants technology and they wrote it in a bond and
- 16:28
are willing to pay their own tax dollars for that
- 16:30
i'm so our community in essence wants this but the
- 16:33
one thing that we learned when we went for this
- 16:35
bond as we flew all over the country looking at
- 16:38
places that had done one two one programs and bring
- 16:41
your own device programs and everything else and it's all
- 16:44
with philosophy from the top down our superintendent believes in
- 16:49
it our city council believes in it Our school board
- 16:52
preaches it we give training's too all of them we
- 16:55
give training's the parents we give training so everybody so
- 16:58
that you can take the phobia of what kids are
- 17:00
doing with a device away And so then what the
- 17:04
benefit is if they're you if they're structured well so
- 17:07
that takes me to structure it Well you know we
- 17:12
if there's anything that i think was done right that
- 17:16
i've seen done right and other parts of the country
- 17:18
And other and done horribly wrong in other parts of
- 17:21
the country where they had to learn the lesson the
- 17:23
hard way was you have to have the infrastructure You
- 17:26
have to have the board policy that supports this You
- 17:29
have tohave parents that believe in it You have to
- 17:32
have teachers that air trained But nothing replaces the teacher's
- 17:37
ability to control their own environment in their classroom having
- 17:41
high expectations for kids and structuring their lesson to truly
- 17:45
use the device to be a positive contributing factor if
- 17:50
free time is a killer and that's why killer whether
- 17:53
you got a phone in front of you are anything
- 17:55
else If you're giving them just free unstructured time that's
- 17:58
not moving you towards your target in the class kids
- 18:03
they're going to manipulate that so your high end third
- 18:06
are probably not there going to be the ones on
- 18:08
the flash cards and things like that But the middle
- 18:12
bottom are going to mess with that if they get
- 18:15
the free time and you so a lot of it
- 18:17
is Are you planning your lessons Well Are using time
- 18:20
effectively Are you using that device and telling kids how
- 18:24
To use it well enough so they go after mohr
- 18:27
content so that they're collaborating more so that they're setting
- 18:31
up the different opportunities that you've heard But the downtime
- 18:34
is the killer and uh but i would say i
- 18:37
honestly i'm not being sarcastic when i give the kid
- 18:40
who's using it at lunch an award they're going to
- 18:43
text anyway I mean i've seen kids text through their
- 18:45
pants better than you honestly like any it's it's sad
- 18:50
but i mean the kids that i've expelled there suspended
- 18:53
for drug dealing those kids text through their pants better
- 18:56
than any person i've ever seen they don't want to
- 18:58
give it away that they're setting something up but that's
- 19:01
just the worst case scenario of what they're doing with
- 19:04
that The best case scenario is i've also had kids
- 19:07
check out projectors and computers and things like that because
- 19:10
they're having a pee movie night at somebody's house and
- 19:14
they're gonna pack forty kids into a room to watch
- 19:16
videos You know whether it's videos from here or elsewhere
- 19:20
so you gotta see the good with the bad You've
- 19:24
got a structure the downtime and then it's a positive
- 19:27
Experience I i want to follow up with the They're
- 19:33
comment about exposing the students to the rigor I want
- 19:39
to know How do you know that the students have
- 19:42
mastered the rigor besides the drill and the amount of
- 19:46
time that they've spent on that particular subjects Is that
- 19:52
for me Anybody for anyone Charles well yeah i mean
- 20:02
i guess i would just look at the data in
- 20:05
the sense of when i see an sec student pass
- 20:08
a portion of the exit exam we celebrated within the
- 20:11
special ed department and we celebrate it when we have
- 20:14
a low e l stood way also do it Bye
- 20:16
bye lingo alternative program at our school we really celebrate
- 20:20
when a student passes the exit exam that is that
- 20:23
is the bar that we've sort of said for them
- 20:26
and i know what like four years ago they weren't
- 20:30
passing and so it almost was there was no celebration
- 20:33
because none of them were passing or only one or
- 20:35
two were passing And now like i said this year's
- 20:38
seniors class i believe i have we'll have about seventeen
- 20:41
stc students i believe seven of them have passed at
- 20:44
least one portion of the exit exam and most not
- 20:48
my school If you're classified sstc you're very pretty low
- 20:52
so i mean it's it's a it's a real struggle
- 20:55
for them to pass but they've been able to embrace
- 20:57
it and it's just been another tool that we've used
- 20:59
i mean that's the only empirical data i have i'd
- 21:02
say other than i mean it's really nice to see
- 21:05
a student that's really low say i want to study
- 21:08
math i mean normally it's like oh i'm ditching math
- 21:11
class you know And like no we're gonna go work
- 21:13
on points we're gonna get more points today i mean
- 21:15
it's that that that should be enough evidence alone that
- 21:18
it's working that they want to study math and i
- 21:21
think exposure to rigor is also something that are at
- 21:25
least in texas are teachers have to get used to
- 21:27
a swell We went from a minimum standards test called
- 21:30
tax to an end of course star test called star
- 21:34
that's essentially an achievement test of that year's content and
- 21:39
all of the questions or double coded So what i
- 21:41
mean by that is one question might have one or
- 21:44
two processing skills along with a content skill and so
- 21:48
no longer are the questions just a tte the knowledge
- 21:51
level on their tests that they take it the end
- 21:54
of the year So our teachers air having to practice
- 21:57
this open ended questions higher higher levels of thinking you
- 22:01
can go through costas you can go through lots of
- 22:05
open ended discussions and dialogues but one of the things
- 22:08
that i see shmoop is being able to allow is
- 22:12
having those big ideas and big questions for students and
- 22:16
those comparisons of literature to pop culture because they are
- 22:20
being exposed to it and they don't even realize it
- 22:23
It just becomes part of what they're doing but it
- 22:27
really is exposing them to that higher level that's required
- 22:31
of them again on whatever state we're talking about The
- 22:36
thing that jumps out to me about rigor is the
- 22:39
i'm excited about some of the future editions that i've
- 22:43
heard with wish shmoop being able to search it with
- 22:46
depth of knowledge for example being ableto go through there
- 22:51
um and i really am a big believer in that
- 22:54
and i think the other piece of it is too
- 22:56
if you're talking about blended instruction or flipped instruction or
- 22:59
anything like that you have to get the lower levels
- 23:02
of depth of knowledge You've got to get the factual
- 23:04
knowledge so you can go to a greater death Andi
- 23:07
i think what this does is assure the one in
- 23:09
two so that it allows the teacher to be a
- 23:12
teacher and a facilitator and a person who can help
- 23:16
kids collaborate and get you to those higher levels of
- 23:19
death of knowledge in those higher rigor levels once you
- 23:22
getting class But being able teo once you can identify
- 23:27
what's a three or four you know dok question when
- 23:32
you're talking about building courses and things like that i
- 23:36
i want to push that rigor but i want i
- 23:39
want to guarantee the baseline one into knowledge and so
- 23:42
that i know as a teacher i'm confident with coming
- 23:44
in tomorrow with much harder questions because i know where
- 23:47
the base line on my kids is So i think
- 23:50
that's a value and something i'm excited about for the
- 23:53
future a specific example that that reminded me up in
- 23:55
my district for middle school We have the requirement in
- 23:59
pre ap social studies classes that they all begin to
- 24:02
be accused of sixth grade so and then they increase
- 24:05
in the numbers they go up but the teacher can
- 24:07
go on and look at any of the a p
- 24:10
social studies courses and get an example a good well
- 24:14
organized example of a d b q that they could
- 24:17
show in middle school whereas that teacher may not have
- 24:21
had access to that before they do now because middle
- 24:26
school teachers i don't know about how it works in
- 24:29
your state but in our state we have a lot
- 24:30
of generalists who became middle school teachers and so they're
- 24:33
content knowledge is sometimes part of the issue when we're
- 24:37
talking about raising rigor in a middle school classroom because
- 24:40
they don't have the content knowledge and background So i've
- 24:43
also seen this as ways to help those teachers learned
- 24:48
that rigorous need in their content I think the other
- 24:53
part two is in order to be funding you have
- 24:55
to be fairly smart Andi the sum of the witty
- 24:59
humor that's involved with the site in general Um if
- 25:03
you want to get the joke you have to kind
- 25:05
of understand it S o i think it really motivates
- 25:09
the higher end kid tio if they didn't get that
- 25:13
it kind of hurts you know So they have to
- 25:17
understand why why it was funny and i think that
- 25:20
you know kind of a back side away or maybe
- 25:23
that i know that wasn't the intent with the funny
- 25:25
maybe but but it comes back and helps you with
- 25:29
the differentiation in that sense too And now i think
- 25:32
that new hover feature too that it will be able
- 25:34
to explain it to the kid who maybe didn't get
- 25:36
it Um i think that's going to help and again
- 25:39
it's a levelling of playing fields So yep why is
- 25:42
this funny will be on shmoop soon Was there one
- 25:46
more question out there Two questions questions one Well for
- 25:51
one question for me and that is you guys have
- 25:54
talked a lot about the curriculum axe back the ap
- 25:58
casey all of those how do you do any of
- 26:01
you work on the sort of the non core side
- 26:04
of like the d m v or the job or
- 26:07
the job smorgasbord or any of those How do you
- 26:10
how do you uh let the teachers know about those
- 26:16
the career one i've demoed a lot for our alternative
- 26:21
campus and for middle schools that's one that's one that
- 26:26
i've done i haven't done any of the others at
- 26:28
my school we all of our freshmen take a class
- 26:31
which is sort of design Tio i don't get on
- 26:34
a focus of a career of some kind and they're
- 26:37
starting to use the career I don't know what it's
- 26:40
career path or career career test test and they're starting
- 26:44
to look at it I know it's called real poop
- 26:47
all the has but it has a lot information on
- 26:49
and i know attacks about you know all the kids
- 26:51
think they're going to be rappers or movie stars or
- 26:55
mba or whatever and you know i love it how
- 26:58
it has like the odds of you becoming like you
- 27:00
know n b a all star and i don't know
- 27:03
what it is but like you know one in three
- 27:04
million and so i've seen that more and more on
- 27:08
my campus where all right let's look it up You
- 27:11
think you're going to be a rapper That's let's look
- 27:13
it up You think you're going to be an astronaut
- 27:14
that's looking up to see how much money you're gonna
- 27:15
make I know on our campus we dio i just
- 27:19
was in a class on friday and they were looking
- 27:21
up This is in our computer tech classes do we
- 27:24
do in a place certification Class and they were looking
- 27:28
upon shmoop how much a computer tech makes and they
- 27:31
were going through all the stuff they need how much
- 27:33
education they make and i think on it it says
- 27:35
well if you have this degree you would be starting
- 27:37
at like forty two thousand dollars or something like that
- 27:40
and if you get a bat masterson here's something you'll
- 27:42
perhaps starting around sixty thousand and so this was something
- 27:45
that we're using in classes that it would never intended
- 27:47
something that we never would never introduce too smooth but
- 27:51
it's just the word of mouth like a shmoop has
- 27:52
his career tech thing that's pretty good and you know
- 27:56
it has i don't know what you three hundred years
- 27:58
or so i mean it has a lot of careers
- 28:01
and that's something we have used i know our students
- 28:04
also did the as fabric practice as the exams of
- 28:10
exam we test about one hundred fifty of my sight
- 28:13
so the kids that were signed up for the as
- 28:16
fab we're told they think it did they take the
- 28:18
practice test on the as fab um about you know
- 28:22
when they signed up with the career center so i
- 28:24
mean some of that stuff was used to my campus
- 28:25
is well we're really interested especially next here as we
- 28:30
expand our wonder one programs and things like that and
- 28:33
paul and else and we've already had some elementary conversations
- 28:37
about this but we're currently using edge uf aya's our
- 28:40
cyber bullying and digital literacy curriculum but were not thrilled
- 28:44
with that And again i'm trying to go back Teo
- 28:47
one stop shop approach I like the single log in
- 28:50
i like the fact that so as i see those
- 28:54
things added here it's really exciting because i think if
- 28:59
we can find a way to bring that and it's
- 29:01
really something that we're digging into right now andi i'm
- 29:04
hoping that we can make work with our middle school
- 29:06
and high school kids bringing them in and doing the
- 29:09
cyberbullying which we absolutely mandate And i don't know any
- 29:13
disciplinarian in the middle school or high school who doesn't
- 29:16
mandate something like that right now because you're dealing with
- 29:19
a cell a text or ah you know an e
- 29:21
mail or something that fight on facebook or something almost
- 29:24
every single day so uh we wantto say we've trained
- 29:29
kids well in those areas and they know what our
- 29:32
expectations are and that's part of that infrastructure that i
- 29:35
was talking about before I mean i'm hoping that shmoop
- 29:38
could be a major player and helping us frame that
- 29:41
infrastructure for our kids and that one the one program
- 29:44
on dh then with a b eighty six that two
- 29:46
hundred fifty six million dollars pathway trust thing with careers
- 29:50
in california Um we have twenty different career pathways on
- 29:55
dh One of the things that i'm touting here and
- 29:58
and hoping that will be a major player in getting
- 30:01
us a portion of that money is that they do
- 30:03
have the career angle and that we do have access
- 30:06
for all of our kids to do that type of
- 30:08
ah career exploration with this on dh hopefully get them
- 30:11
into those right pathways so that they can move on
- 30:14
to a community college or for a year in the
- 30:15
appropriate area So that's all exciting And i'm glad it's
- 30:19
a one stop shop like you said Okay one last
- 30:24
question okay I have kind of to the other one
- 30:28
one of them really easy but the first one is
- 30:31
can you talk a little bit about how did you
- 30:36
how are you able to train your teachers How do
- 30:40
they get to invest in this And the second question
- 30:44
is is there any way we can get emails of
- 30:47
you guys so we can send some stakeholders to you
- 30:50
for some information Because we may be convinced here but
- 30:54
there may be others back home That art that's Great
- 30:57
Would you like to give your email address before i
- 30:59
speak for You know what My email address is ridiculous
- 31:04
So wait Right But you guys are okay Yeah well
- 31:07
make sure everybody gets that for sure But grant if
- 31:11
you can talk about the training that you do it
- 31:13
just because i think you have a fantastic program that
- 31:15
you built there Yeah Like i said i'll keep going
- 31:17
back to the infrastructure piece It's what We saw that
- 31:20
major broke Any digital thing You have to think it
- 31:23
out before you put it in And the bigger the
- 31:26
scale is for your district the more you have to
- 31:29
think about it You and it's so stereotypical and it's
- 31:33
Not true In all cases i have to do my
- 31:35
my preemptive strike on this But the older your population
- 31:38
of teachers is the more difficult and more walls you
- 31:41
might have to break down But we we did thirteen
- 31:47
digital learning coaches like i talked about a little bit
- 31:50
earlier where their full time job is to provide professional
- 31:54
development Find resource is mentor people in technology on dh
- 31:59
try to hook people up with this when i know
- 32:01
you you have a problem in this area up I
- 32:03
got a solution for you When did you get your
- 32:05
log ins Are all of your kids on on And
- 32:08
then we send himto one person in the district One
- 32:11
person garrett kerr is the name of the guy in
- 32:13
our area So for twenty four thousand kids if you
- 32:16
have a question about shmoop or you don't know how
- 32:18
to get on you go to one guy That way
- 32:20
the messaging is controlled the loggins or easy he has
- 32:25
access to everything and if not he has their cell
- 32:27
phone numbers so on dh that's been the best part
- 32:31
on di didn't get an opportunity to answer that question
- 32:34
today and got him a a good salesman I need
- 32:36
a bonus but the enough for the the best part
- 32:41
that that i've liked about using shmoop and i don't
- 32:43
know if i'm sure you guys can can echo this
- 32:46
but but i do have allison's cell phone i do
- 32:49
have paul cellphone and if something goes wrong i mean
- 32:52
it hasn't yet but if something went wrong i know
- 32:56
i could get a hold of them and we're working
- 32:58
on a lot of really exciting future things that aren't
- 33:01
out there yet building a lot of the courses and
- 33:04
and especially in the middle school level and they've been
- 33:07
so receptive if like i said we have a conservative
- 33:11
community and we had a video that had an intro
- 33:15
to it that wasn't inappropriate but for an ultra conservative
- 33:20
clientele the kid thought it was funny showed dad and
- 33:23
dad didn't like a glove snap on on ah video
- 33:27
that was on there for pre calculus for his eleventh
- 33:30
grader i thought that was interesting but but he didn't
- 33:34
like the intro to it but thought that the math
- 33:37
was incredibly sounded that the video is showing so we
- 33:41
wanted the meats but we didn't we wanted it without
- 33:43
the set up because it was really hard tio assign
- 33:47
something where some parents felt that it was inappropriate and
- 33:52
gosh i'm talking about out of three hundred videos are
- 33:55
three thousand videos one that we've had any concern over
- 34:01
and but the responsiveness was like right now i mean
- 34:04
i emailed and within a minute i had an e
- 34:07
mail back and on dh that's something where you think
- 34:11
houghton mifflin's going to e mail you back in a
- 34:13
minute it's not gonna happen I give them a lot
- 34:16
more money and they don't get them when they won't
- 34:18
get back to you ever they don't care Maybe i
- 34:21
should ask for a raise Exactly I was going to
- 34:25
add one of the things that i have my sight
- 34:28
my librarian no shmoop so much better than anyone else
- 34:32
on our campus and i'm really said he got promoted
- 34:38
to the district office so he's going to be gone
- 34:40
next week so i think i'm gonna have to answer
- 34:42
all these questions but having support staff no shmoop and
- 34:47
how like the log and i mean doing the magic
- 34:49
word and all that stuff to get your account set
- 34:51
up it's so important to have a one or two
- 34:53
people in your sight then take a walk class through
- 34:57
walk a teacher through our walk students through um and
- 35:01
i know like the same thing i know sam would
- 35:03
call up to shmoop all the times i hate this
- 35:04
isn't working or this kid's counts locked or whatever and
- 35:07
like same thing they'd be back that emails back within
- 35:10
the day saying hey okay his countess opener with this
- 35:13
is the problem when we fixed it or something that
- 35:15
so having your support staff noam know the ins and
- 35:19
outs will help you a lot especially like a librarian
- 35:21
or something that we're having lots of computers i find
- 35:24
that having access to alison is really great if i
- 35:29
ever have a question she's certainly there but also knowing
- 35:32
how to use our students is resource is the more
- 35:35
the students use shmoop maur teachers will be motivated to
- 35:39
use it and the more they will learn about it
- 35:42
We have ah few early adopters in our school who
- 35:44
will grab anything that you put in front of them
- 35:47
and run with it but what i find most successful
- 35:52
are easiest with implementation of anything new shmoop being one
- 35:55
of those things is that as soon as students see
- 35:58
the value in a program or something then the adults
- 36:03
run with it so there's so much that comes top
- 36:06
down within our within our district and it's not adopted
- 36:11
to the extent as it is when it comes from
- 36:13
students and teachers so that student ownership you put it
- 36:16
in front of them and they'll love it And i
- 36:19
was talking earlier today about our five computer science students
- 36:23
who i thought would never be into shmoop because it
- 36:27
was just too witty and and they've really just like
- 36:30
the content and they sit and do do math problems
- 36:33
for fun and there on it all the time and
- 36:36
then we have students who who i thought well they're
- 36:39
really not so into this and they're also on it
- 36:42
so it really reaches the masses on different levels and
- 36:46
and i find just that students really enjoy using it
- 36:49
and that's when the adults take hold Of it and
- 36:52
in my district i'm i'm the person so i call
- 36:55
allison a lot for help but i have done you
- 36:59
know meetings I've offered meetings at all of my high
- 37:02
school's before school after school during their conferences i've told
- 37:05
teachers they can call me and it's so easy shmoop
- 37:08
isn't such a great job of making it so easy
- 37:11
to learn that i can say ok get on your
- 37:13
computer log on and here's what you're going to see
- 37:16
and i've done this as i'm driving to a meeting
- 37:19
so i'm like okay And i just pull down that
- 37:20
pull down menu and go to passes and you're going
- 37:22
to get to where you need to go but i'm
- 37:25
very excited as i talked earlier that five hundred students
- 37:28
have logged on in just this month I know those
- 37:31
five hundred students could have potentially increased my my phone
- 37:37
number for teachers because they're going to be calling me
- 37:39
saying okay i've forgotten how to get on shmoop but
- 37:41
my kids were talking about it but that's great i
- 37:44
don't care i've just made it where i will go
- 37:47
to them at any time if they want to see
- 37:49
it Know about it or hear about it Well thank
- 37:54
you very much That was a lovely conclusion to this 00:37:58.379 --> [endTime] panel discussion
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