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Collaborative Knowledge of Student Work This collaborative analysis was going to be done after the unit 3 in geometry. This unit is looking at the relationships of lines, specifically parallel and perpendicular lines. The unit starts out with angle relationships that are created from parallel lines. Then the unit looks at triangle sum and exterior angle measurements because the proof of triangle sum is based on parallel lines. Then students relate algebra with parallel and perpendicular lines. Students also finish off the unit with proving parallel and perpendicular lines. A week before we gave the test during one of our meetings the geometry team sat down to decide how the test was going to be graded. This helped us when we were analyzing the tests we could use the same percentages to identify our high, medium, and low students. One teacher did not pass this information on to his student teacher, so she had different scores. This made it difficult to quickly identify high, medium, and low students. This was a little frustrating because if we are trying to do things collaboratively we all have to be on board. 1-5 6-9 10-11 12 13 14-15 16 17 18 19 20-21 22-23 24 Grading Criteria on Test (1 point given for identify each correctly) (1 point for identifying all pairs of each type of angles) (1 point for each variable found) (2 points, 1 for correct parallel lines, 1 for justification) (1 point for each correctly labeled variable) (2 points for correctly setting up equation and identify x and angle) (1 point for missing angle) (1 point for correctly graphing) (1 point for finding slope) (2 point for graphing correctly, slope & y-intercept) (3 points Finding slope, finding equation, graphing correctly) (2 points for identify correct slope and writing equation) (4 points for writing out the proof) After each teacher had graded his/her tests we came together to identify our groups and which concepts needed to be retaught and to determine what the students understood about the four standards. We noticed that in our low group there were other concepts that students also needed help with that were not an assessed math standard for this particular test. For our team, this was the first time we had ever collaborated on analyzing student work. At first, it was challenging to get a productive conversation started because it was intimidating to analyze our individual students tests. However, after we identified some successful standards and areas of growth for our high students, the process of analyzing the data became easier for the medium and low students. The three of us that went through the process are newer teachers, so it was a great experience. We were able to really see the breakdown of how our students performed. It was not just looking at what problem they were correct on and wrong on, but the actually skills they understand and don’t understand, yet. The below information helped us develop a plan to help our students understand and learn the concepts for future lessons that uses this same skill set. Students knowledge/ Need for Reteaching on Test (High Low) G.C.O.1: Know Precise definitions of…… parallel lines (Q; 1-5) Know Identify planes, parallel Identify parallel planes lines and planes, and skew and parallel lines (pg 11 lines. (pg 2) & 15) Need Order Correctly (pg 6) Order Correctly Lines parallel to planes and skew lines (pg 15) Label planes (pg 20 Order Correctly Label skew lines, parallel lines and planes. (pg 24) G. C.O.9: Prove theorems about lines and angles when a transversal crosses parallel lines (Q: 6-12, 24) Know Identify angle Identify angle Identify angle relationships relationships. (pg 11 & relationships, except (Corresponding, Alt. Int., 15) corresponding angles. Alt. Ext., & Same-side (pg 20 & 24) Apply angle relationships interior angles) (pg 2 & 6) for parallel lines to set-up Apply angle relationships equations. (pg 11) for parallel lines to set-up equations. (pg. 2 & 6) Need Prove parallel lines when Prove parallel lines when Apply angle given two congruent given two congruent relationships for angles. (pg 3 & 7) angles. (pg 12 & 16) parallel lines to set-up equations. (pg 20 & Prove perpendicular lines Prove perpendicular 24) given parallel lines lines given parallel lines Prove parallel lines perpendicular to a line. perpendicular to a line. (pg 5 & 9) (pg 15 & 18) when given two congruent angles. (pg 21 & 25 Prove perpendicular lines given parallel lines perpendicular to a line. (pg 23 & 27) G.C.O.13 Prove theorems about Triangle measures of interior angles sum 180° and exterior angle (Q:13-16) Know Solve and apply algebra to Solve and apply algebra Finding missing triangle sum and exterior to triangle sum (pg 14 & angles when given angle. (pg 3 & 7) 16) angle measurements in triangles. (pg 21 & Find exterior angles, no 25) algebra. (pg 14 & 16) Need Solve and apply exterior Setting up and solving angles. (pg 14 & 16) algebra equations for triangle sum and exterior angle. (pg 25) G.G.P.E.5 Prove the slope criteria for parallel and perpendicular lines (Q: 17-23) Know Finding Slope (pg 4 & 8) Finding Slope (pg 15) Finding Slope (just a Need Writing equations given two points. (pg 4 & 8) Graphing equations in point-slope and slopeintercept. (pg 4 & 8) Solving point-slope into slope-intercept. (pg 4 & 8) Identifying parallel and perpendicular slopes, then writing the equation.(pg 5) Graph horizontal and vertical lines. (pg. 7) Graphing equations in point-slope and slopeintercept. (pg15 & 17) Solving point-slope into slope-intercept. (pg 15) Identifying parallel (pg 17 Graph horizontal and vertical lines. (pg 13 & 16) Writing equations given two points. (pg 17) Identifying perpendicular slopes (p15 & 17) few mixing the rise and run) (pg 22 &26) Graph horizontal and vertical lines. (pg 21) Writing equations given two points. (pg 26) Graphing equations in point-slope and slopeintercept. (pg 22 & 26) Solving point-slope into slope-intercept. (pg 26) Identifying parallel and perpendicular slopes, then writing the equation. (pg 23 & 27) Extra Items that are needed: Reading with Clarity (pg 24) Solving Algebraic equations Attempting all the problems (pg 21, 23 & 27) PDF File: High, Medium, Low students The reason I chose these students tests is because it showed each component of the above knowledge and need for relearning. You will notice that some standards are shown in both tests, but others are only shown in one and not the other. If I only had one test for each standard I was not able to show that some students in a group may get it, but the majority does not. Therefore, the standard would appear in the needs to learn category since over half does not understand the concept. Plan for re-assessment and differentiated instruction: During the discussion with my team we came up with a re-assessment of the test by standard. Now for students that failed more than one section they would be encouraged to retake the whole test. When we were discussing this concept it stemmed from the fact that the low students seemed to miss a standard or two, not random items throughout the whole test making them have a low score. The re-assessment would be broken up into the standards above and students would retest all the questions from that standard, not just the ones they missed. Due to the timing of our test, starting a new unit, and winter break the other teachers were not thrilled about any differentiated instruction for reteaching. Now, I agree with this statement, but these concepts need to be learned for future use in geometry and advanced algebra. These teaching sessions would just need to occur after school. So for students that want to retake their test they will have the opportunity to come in after school for a study session and each day will be a different standard offered for two weeks. They will also need to make corrections to their whole test before they can retake one section of the test they did not meet standard in or the whole test. Lastly students will be asked to reflect on two items: the first is their learning process from beginning of the unit, taking the test, to reteaching and the second is are they able to teach someone else the material and if not what do they still need to know. Katie DeFazio posted the idea of students thinking about whether or not they are ready to teach someone else in her week 3-discussion post. I want students to feel confident enough in their abilities that before they take an assessment they are able to teach others around them. For the study sessions, I will be using stations for the students to move through. The stations idea comes from the 75-minute math workshop article, “Teacher-initiated Differentiation: two classrooms become models for their large, urban district”. The teacher has the students group by ability level when she is teaching them, but in different levels when at the stations around the room. She is then able to give direct instruction to students that are of the same learning level and then rotates them out to go work at another station while another groups come into the lesson. I would use this idea by having different stations around the room while rotating students in to relearn the identified above standards for that level. As the class moves forward I will be taking these skills and identifying where they are going to reappear. During those lessons I will have the low learners spotted so that I can be monitoring their progress during that instruction and reteaching if needed for those students. One standard that will come up through out the year is solving algebraic equations. So during winter break students will have the opportunity to get some extra credit through working through some algebraic equations both written and in application problems. This will hopefully help these students with this pre-geometry standard. At the beginning of this process I was a little weary as to how it was supposed to all come together in the end. Now, there are still pieces that need to be changed for next time as a first time it went pretty well. The next time I do this I would like to of had some prior documented formative assessments that I could have used to give more data comparison for the end of unit exam. It could have also saved a lot of the confusion that was happening during the test. When working with my team next time I think I need to layout the process more clearly for all to understand each component. I believe they understood the main ideas of the process, but missed things like the differentiated instruction piece, the importance of grading consistency, and building more discussion around really how to help students learn these pieces even though we have to move on to the next unit. I would really like for our department to begin to use this process on different formative and summative assessments. The trick will getting them to see that value in the process so that their time is not being wasted. References: Ensign, Jacque. Teacher-initiated differentiation: two classrooms become models for their large, urban district.(2012). Teaching Children Mathematics, 19 (3), 158-163. www.nctm.org DeFazio, Katie. Week 3 discussion post.