aleks the positives and negatives of proficiency based
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ALEKS: The Positives and Negatives of ProficiencyBased Online Math - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

ALEKS: The Positives and Negatives of ProficiencyBased Online Math 1:30 to 2:30 October 31, 2019 Peter Martin Principal Zion Lutheran School Lake Stevens, WA 206-351-5975 p.martin@zionls.org Agenda 1. Introduction--who I am, my


  1. ALEKS: The Positives and Negatives of Proficiency–Based Online Math 1:30 to 2:30 October 31, 2019 Peter Martin Principal Zion Lutheran School Lake Stevens, WA 206-351-5975 p.martin@zionls.org

  2. Agenda 1. Introduction--who I am, my experience in 6th grade math, Algebra, and IM3; Mango Languages (Note to self: traditional math classes vs. ALEKS) 2. Various perspectives and anecdotes about our experience 3. I have 5 Chromebooks so that you can try ALEKS in small groups. 4. Recommendations--(Warning--may be frustrating).

  3. Mango Languages

  4. ALEKS--Principal Perspective $45 per student for a 12 month license $35 per student for a 40-week license After purchasing the licenses, I: • Typed in 30 Student First Names, Last Names and Passwords. (although, I'm sure there's a way to upload the roster) • Typed in 3 Teacher Names • Selected Class Levels for each Teacher • Moved students to the appropriate teachers and classes This process took about 90 minutes for me, and was straight-forward. From here, students take an initial knowledge check and they are the teacher's responsibility. Easy set-up; runs smoothly, no technical di ffi culties, reports including comparisons to state standards are easy to generate and easy to read

  5. ALEKS--Teacher Perspective 1 of 2 "It helps me to stay engaged and interested in being helpful to students and a problem-solver. It also allows kids to have immediate feedback on your work. It takes seven time longer to unlearn something than to learn it." ALEKS reached all my students at exactly the right place in their learning. Each lesson is "next" in their educational life--students are challenged daily

  6. ALEKS--Teacher Perspective 2 of 2 We struggled with • Motivation • "Clicking through" • Lack of social atmosphere--we're all learning this together. I used the following plan: • Students work at their own pace; complete as many objectives as they can, but are not held to any minimum completion. • Every class period, they complete five problems, they write down one explanation, and they write notes on one video they watched during class. • These all go into a composition book which they bring to every class. • Parents can see what they've been working on, and everyone can see the progress that the child is making.

  7. ALEKS--Student Perspective-- Quotes from 8th Graders "ALEKS has greatly increased my math ability, because I can travel through my course at my own pace." "ALEKS has ruined my math experience" "ALEKS is distracting on the computer and it's harder to get your work done." "It doesn't stick in our brains. It lets you see what you're losing."

  8. ALEKS--Student Perspective-- Quotes from 7th Graders T: "How are you liking your classes this year?" S: "Not so good". T: "Even math?" S: "Oh yeah, except math." "Shoulder shrug. I would rather have it in a book with a teacher, where the teacher teaches a lesson." "What if your own pace is not working?" "I didn't like it." "It's good." "I like that I can go at my own pace."

  9. ALEKS--Student Perspective-- Quotes from 6th Graders "(ALEKS) is so much better because you don't have to write all of this and if you don't have to write on paper, you can just type a few letters, and it also tells if your answer is wrong right away." "I don't really like it because I go really slow on it and I don't feel like I can focus. I don't concentrate very well on computers." "I feel like we should be able to listen to some music or do some other stu ff to help us focus on the math. Yeah, like music on an ipod." "Once I was way (ahead) at something and I just got shot back like three subjects.

  10. ALEKS--Parent Perspective Parent feedback has been mixed, slightly leaning toward the positive. The top concerns were that both manipulatives and paper and pencil are essential for middle school math. We answered this by saying that teachers are responsive as soon as hands are raised and are encouraged to find real-world examples, use manipulatives, and require paper-and-pencil work. Parents generally like the concept of proficiency-based learning; particularly parents of students not in the mainstream.

  11. Logins Find ALEKS.com and use the username and password attached to your group's Chromebook. Start with "Continue my path" Feel free to explore Ask me or Joel for help.

  12. The Positives 1. The nature of proficiency based learning; Objective based learning 2. Particularly beneficial for high and low learners 3. Low-risk entrance into proficiency based learning 4. See exactly how students are spend their time 5. Easy teacher buy-in

  13. The Negatives 1. Student buy-in 2. Hard to communicate results to parents 3. Requires support, teacher resilience, creativity, teacher supplement 4. Not successful (as nothing is) if you intend to drop students in front of screen and let them at it 5. Cost, while reasonable, is a consideration. It's significantly cheaper to squeeze another year out of your math textbooks.

  14. Recommendations I think ALEKS Math is a good introduction into proficiency-based education. I love the idea of kids working on exactly the math lesson that is "next" in their education. The biggest drawback we've had is not teacher pushback, nor parent pushback, but students who claim either boredom or frustration. ALEKS as a stand-alone math course requires all of the following: 1. Teachers who are familiar with the entire math curriculum 2. Teachers who are active in answering questions 3. Work is recorded with paper and pencil 4. Work is communicated to parents in an understandable format 5. Supplemental support to stimulate engagement ALEKS is also a good resource in any of the following situations: 1. Students with learning di ff erences (high and low) 2. For use as a supplement or challenge for students who need more work. 3. For use with a teacher who struggles with variety of instructional strategies.

  15. www.aleks.com Peter Martin p.martin@zionls.org

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