Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Personalization at Farmington High School Part 3 - Self-Paced






The flipped delivery model is a great way for teachers to look at using their time differently in the classroom.  Being able to support students when they need it most is one of the most important jobs of any teacher.  The idea of watching the direct instruction outside of class and using classroom time to meet with groups/individuals is a powerful one.  But the truth is that if the class continues at the same pace for all students, the daily video has very little meaning to most of the students watching it.  Some may beyond that topic and others may not be ready for it.  As our teachers reflected on our flipped delivery they kept asking the same questions:

  • Why do all students have to watch the same video on the same day?
  • Why do students have to watch the video at home?
  • Do students have to be in the classroom to learn?
  • Does direct instruction still have a place in the classroom?
These questions ultimately lead us to changing our thinking around time and learning.  The current model in schools is that time is the constant (teachers follow a prescribed pace for any given class) and learning is the variable (at any given time student may or may not have learned the given topic, regardless the class is moving on).  We decided to flip (pun intended) this thinking to learning should be the constant (don't move on until proficient) and time should be the variable (each student may need a different amount of time to reach proficiency).  

We now have self-paced classes in Intermediate Algebra, Chemistry, Earth Science, and US History.  Students are given a general course calendar to give them an idea of about where they should be, but ultimately students decide what they will do when.  Our classes start by giving student freedom, but we do become more directive in what they do when if they begin to fall farther behind.

The two questions we get the most are:  What happens if they don't finish before the end of the trimester and what happens if they finish early?  Well if a student does not finish then the teacher and the student make a plan to complete the missing learning targets.  This may include time before or after school or work during our 25 minute advisory period.  These students have not failed the class, they are just not done . . . yet.  Night school or summer school takes on a different look for these students - instead of retaking the entire class they finish the learning targets they need to complete.

What about the students who finish early?  Well, we talk to these students and see how they would like to use their time.  Maybe they do more math or science (depending on spark), maybe they spend the time preparing for another class, maybe they spend the time working on a different area of interest - whatever it is the student has voice in how they will use their time.

Teachers who have moved from flipped to self-paced have reported an increase in student engagement and persistence.  Students have choice in how they use their time and know that one way or another they will need to be proficient in all the learning targets to complete the class.  Homework is no more - it is just work that needs to be completed.  They can do their work early or late - it just needs to be completed!!  

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