Title: Supporting LASS High Schools Session
1Supporting LASS High Schools Session
- Indiana College Acceleration Network ( ICAN )
- Lakeshore Alliance for Student Success, Inc
- Edward Schoenfelt, Executive Director
- 220 S. 13th Street, Chesterton, IN 46304-2104
- Wednesday, February 16, 2011 900 a.m. Noon CST
2Network of Indiana High Schools
- These schools work to engage freshman, use 21st
Century - Learning strategies, and ready ALL high school
students for - college and careers.
- Pass out Crown Point high School brochures
3Freshmen Academies (transitions)
- Bridge them into the high school . . .
- Place on teams as they begin the school year. . .
- Know where each student is . . .
- Provide strong connections to the faculty members
. . . - Provide orientation programs . . .
- Requirement participation and involvement . . .
- Junior and Senior mentoring programs . . .
- Power skills development . . .
- Corner Stone Project for each student, parent,
and teacher . . . - Career exploration (ACT Explore in 8th grade) . .
. - ACT Plan and Work Keys . . .
421st century skills learned through the
curriculum, which is interdisciplinary,
integrated, project-based, and more, include and
are learned within a project-based curriculum by
utilizing the seven survival skills advocated by
Tony Wagner in his book, The Global Achievement
Gap
- 1 Critical Thinking and Problem Solving
- 2 Collaboration across Networks and Leading by
Influence - 3 Agility and Adaptability
- 4 Initiative and Entrepreneurialism
- 5 Effective Oral and Written Communication
- 6 Accessing and Analyzing Information
- Curiosity and Imagination
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vNS2PqTTxFFc
5College and Career Programming
- Students
- Walk away for the school with industry
certifications - and leave school with some college credits, IB,
AP, - honors courses, with a connection to community
- college, tech schools. college or universities.
- Capstone Projects to fulfill their senor year of
school - Service Learning, Community service, with a
report to a - community board, council, or group
6ACT is a national college admissions exam that
consists of subject area tests in English
Mathematics Reading Science
- ACT Plus Writing includes 4 subject area tests
a 30-min Writing Test - ACT results are accepted by all 4-year colleges
and universities in U.S. - ACT includes 215 multiple-choice questions and
takes approximately - 3 hours and 30 minutes to complete, including a
short break (or just over - 4 hrs if you are taking the ACT Plus Writing).
Actual testing time is 2 hours - and 55 minutes ( 30 min if you are taking the
ACT Plus Writing). - ACT is administered on 6 test dates within the 50
United States D. C. - in Sept, Oct, Dec, Feb, April, and June. In
other locations, the ACT is - Administered on five test datesall of the above
dates except Sept. - The basic registration fee includes score reports
for up to four college - choices, if you list valid codes when you
register.
7ACT The EXPLORE Test
- EXPLORE includes four multiple-choice tests
- Subject Number of Questions How Long It Takes
- English 40 questions 30 minutes
- Math 30 questions 30 minutes
- Reading 30 questions 30 minutes
- Science28 questions 30 minutes
- Your skills in these subjects will make a big
differencein school and, eventually, - in your future career. Once you know what each
test covers, your EXPLORE test - results can show you where you're strong or weak.
When you take EXPLORE, you - answered questions about your educational and
career plans. This information can - help you learn more about careers, clarify your
goals, and begin to plan your - future including your high school courses and,
perhaps, a college education.
8ACT The Plan test
- PLAN includes four multiple-choice tests
- English, Mathematics, Reading, and Science.
- Subject Number of Questions Time Allowed
- English 30 minutes
- Usage/Mechanics 30
- Rhetorical Skills 20
- Math 40 minutes
- Pre Algebra/Algebra 22
- Geometry 18
- Reading 25 20 minutes
- Science 30 25 minutes
- Your skills in these subjects will make a big
differencein school and, - eventually, in your career. Once you know what
each test covers, your - PLAN test results can show you where you're
strong or weak.
9ACT Work Keys required skill levels
10ACT Work Keys assessment scores
11ACT Work Keys skill gaps
12Stay On Message
13Measure your Students
-
- College and Work Readiness Assessment (CWRA)
- http//www.cae.org/content/pro_collegework.htm
- Measures - critical thinking, analytic reasoning,
problem solving, and written - communication (40 per student with minimum of
100 tested) - National Student Clearinghouse
- http//www.studentclearinghouse.org/ 450 per
report, start with last five - Connect your graduates to postsecondary
accomplishments, not based on - students surveys.
14References
- 21st Century Skills Rethinking how students
learn, James Bellanca and Ron Brandt editors - Standards for Educational and Psychological
Testing, American Educational Research
Association, American Psychological Association,
National Council on Measurement in Education
(1999). - Code of Professional Responsibilities in
Educational Measurement, National Council on
Measurement in Education (1995). - Code of Fair Testing Practices in Education,
Joint Committee on Testing Practices (2004). - Alliance for Excellent Education. (2006). Paying
Double Inadequate High Schools and Community
College Remediation. Washington, DC Author. - ACT. (2009). ACT National Curriculum Survey
2009. Iowa City, IA Author. - Tony Wagner, (2010) The Global Achievement Gap,
CELL Conference 2010. - Dr. Eric Ban, Principal - Crown Point High
School, 1500 South Main St., Crown Point, IN.
219-633.4885 - Mr. Edward Schoenfelt, Executive Director, LASS,
Inc. Lake, Porter, and LaPorte Counties of North
Indiana www.mvsc.k12.in.us/lass
schoenfelteddeb_at_yahoo.com