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Maryville Junior High School

Maryville Junior High School. Academic Expectations and Data Results –Lisa McGinley General Information –Lisa McGinley Registration Process and Timeline –Kim Taylor Athletics and Eligibility –MJHS/MHS Summer School –Nate Lee Questions –Freshmen Faculty. Tonight’s Agenda.

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Maryville Junior High School

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  1. Maryville Junior High School

  2. Academic Expectations and Data Results –Lisa McGinley • General Information –Lisa McGinley • Registration Process and Timeline –Kim Taylor • Athletics and Eligibility –MJHS/MHS • Summer School –Nate Lee • Questions –Freshmen Faculty Tonight’s Agenda

  3. Expectations and Data ResultsLisa McGinley, Principal

  4. Academic Performance Attainment Achievement Status Where are they? Progress Growth Gains How’d they get there?

  5. The academic intensity of the student’s high school curriculum still counts more than anything else in relation to completing a bachelor’s degree. Clifford Adelman U.S. Department of Education

  6. What do I want my child to get out of high school?

  7. College and Career Readyvs.College and Career Eligible

  8. MHS Class of 2013 36% graduated with at least 3 hours college credit 60-70% 16% graduated with 12 or more hours of college credit 20-25% 77% enrolled in postsecondary institution after graduation

  9. THE 8TH GRADE EXPLORE TEST

  10. THE BIGGER PICTUREThe Explore Test is one part of the Educational Planning and Assessment System (EPAS) from ACT • Explore (8th Grade) • Plan (10th Grade) • ACT (11th Grade)

  11. Format of EPAS • Four Subtests • English • Mathematics • Reading • Science Reasoning • Common content and skills • Scales Relationship

  12. 40 36 32 35 30 25 25 20 15 10 5 0 EXPLORE PLAN ACT EPAS Scales Relationship

  13. EXPLORE Score Report

  14. What do Your Scores Mean? Composite Score 15

  15. 2013 Explore – Mean Scores

  16. Your Estimated PLANComposite Score Range

  17. Your Plans for HighSchool and Beyond

  18. 2013-14 8th Graders - HS Plans College (Apprentice, Career Technical, 2-yr and 4-yr Colleges and Graduate School)

  19. The Benchmarks are scores on the ACT subject-area tests that represent the level of achievement required for students to have a 50% chance of obtaining a B or higher or about a 75% chance of obtaining a C or higher in corresponding credit-bearing first-year college courses. ACT College Readiness Benchmarks

  20. College Readiness Benchmarks College Course ACT PLAN EXPLORE English Composition 18 15 13 College Algebra 22 19 17 College Social Sciences 2218 16 College Biology 2320 18

  21. Am I “on track” to being ready for college courses?

  22. MJHS Explore vs National – Percent Meeting College Readiness Standards

  23. Your Career Possibilities

  24. High School Assessments

  25. High School Assessments • TCAP End of Course Tests • Count as 25% of course grade • 9th - English 1, Biology 1, Algebra 1 • 10th - English 2, Chemistry • 11th - English 3, Algebra 2, U.S. History • ACT • 10th – PLAN • 11th – ACT • TCAP Writing (11th)

  26. PARCC (2014-15)

  27. Freshmen Specifics Lisa McGinley, Principal

  28. “Building a bridge to success for every student through unified efforts” Mission Statement

  29. Trust Us • Parental Support • Number 1 Priority Academic Study • Open Communication (Student/Teacher/Parent) • Increased Student Ownership of Academic Performance • Development of Student Self-Advocacy Skills We Need Your Help

  30. MINIMUM GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

  31. Fine Arts • Humanities • Math and Science • Advanced Placement • Dual Enrollment • Exercise/Safety • Engineering • Marketing • Business Management • Architecture Construction • Finance • Health Science • Information Technology • Media/Communications • Human Services • Law Enforcement Elective Focus Areas

  32. Opportunity to earn 8 credits • Classes worth 1 credit • Twenty-eight (28) credits required for graduation • Courses failed = no credit, must be retaken if required for graduation • Must meet both academic and attendance requirements to earn a course credit 9th Grade Credits

  33. Credit for each course taught at MJHS/MHS is based on the Carnegie Unit. • One unit is earned for the successful completion of one term of study in one course. • One-half unit is earned for the successful completion of one semester of study in one course. • A term at MJHS is one academic year (2 semesters) and is eighteen weeks in length at MHS. • A semester at MJHS is eighteen weeks (2 quarters) and a semester is nine weeks in length at MHS. • Exceptions include classes on an A/B schedule. UNIT OF CREDIT

  34. MJHS uses letter grades (A, B, C, D, F, P) to report student progress. Plus/minus may be added to the letter grade as an incentive/warning. The plus/minus will appear on the student’s record, but will have no quality point value when computing the GPA. • Grades reflect the level of mastery on course specific curriculum standards. To calculate the Grade Point Average (GPA) add up all of the quality points for the courses taken and divide by the total number of credits that have been earned. Q1(37.5%) + Q2(37.5) + Sem. Ex (25%) = S1 S1(50%)+S2(50%)=Final Grade Q3(37.5%) + Q4(37.5%) + TCAP or Course Exam (25%) = S2 Grades

  35. First (1st) Semester Exams will compose 25% of first semester average • As per the State of Tennessee, state issued End-of-Course (EOC) exams will compose 25% of second semester average in the subject areas of English 1, Algebra 1, and Biology. • Courses without State Mandated assessments will issue course generated EOC exams that will compose 25% of the second semester average. • Course specific benchmark assessments will be given to assess student academic growth over the course of the school year. REQUIRED ASSESSMENTS

  36. According to School Board Policy –to receive credit for passing any grade or course students must attend 90% of class time • Decreased flexibility regarding Prior Approvals • MJHS attendance policy requires students with excessive absences to complete time-for-time School Attendance

  37. There is no perfect formula for determining the proper amount of academic study for each student. It is not unreasonable to expect a student to routinely have academic study each night and some weekends. • When completing projects, papers, and/or preparing for examinations; the amount of academic study may become significant for brief periods. • The time required for completion of academic study will vary with student ability, class schedule, and proper budgeting of time. • Students can expect to spend two hours each night of the five (5) day school week and on some weekends completing academic study. • Students enrolled in advanced classes may experience an increased academic study workload. • Due dates for academic work and deadlines and the issuance of partial credit for late work will be determined by the individual teacher, department, or instructional team Academic Study Time

  38. 74 –minutes every other day or everyday • Required for students performing below grade level in reading and/or math • Read Intervention • Math Intervention • Study/Organization • Flexible Scheduling • Response to Intervention and Standardized Progress Monitoring • Replaces 1 or 2 Electives Academic Success Suite

  39. Comprehensive Development Class (CDC) • Organized Behavior Support Class • Full Inclusion with Support • ESL Courses • Bridge Courses • Tutoring • Organizational Skills Support • School Nurse • School Counselors • Maryville Academy • Academic Success Class Special Services

  40. Registration Process and TimelineKim Taylor, School Counselor

  41. Registration/Placement Information Send Home Feb. 14th • Registration/Placement Information Returned Feb. 24th • Registration Data Entry Begins March • Development of Master Schedule April • Schedules Generated and Attempts to Resolve Conflicts May • Schedules Mailed Home Prior to 1st Day of School Registration Timeline

  42. 2012 -2013 ACT Projections (State Percentile) • EXPLORE (ACT) Assessment • Current Academic Performance • Teacher Recommendation • Change of Placement Request Initial Placement Criteria

  43. Recommendations Electives French 1 & 2 Latin 1 & 2 Spanish 1 & 2 Art 1 Drama 1 & 2 Band, Orchestra, Chorus Introduction To Engineering Design Yearbook Family and Consumer Science Leadership and Marketing Construction Core Physical Education • English -91 H, 92 CP, 93 CP, ESL • Algebra 1 -92 CP, 93 CP, 1A • Geometry -91 H, 92 CP • Biology -91 H, 92 CP • Environmental Sc. -93 CP • World History -91 H, 92 CP, ESL • AP Human Geography • Computer Apps –embedded • Wellness • Academic Success Freshmen Course Offerings

  44. The master schedule is made on the basis of student course requests received during the spring registration. • Normally, scheduling all student course requests is possible. Should unavoidable conflicts arise, students will be given an alternative requests. • Schedules will be adjusted within the first five (10) days of the fall semester for students who are misplaced in a course. A schedule change request form will be available in the school counseling office. • Changes in level can only take place prior to the end of the first quarter (1st 9 weeks) of the term through a collaborative process to include the student, parent and teacher. • After that time, level changes will only take place through a collaborative process with administrative approval following a student/parent/teacher/school counselor conference with or without administrative presence at a minimum. Change of Schedule

  45. 1st Period (English) • 2nd Period (Math) • 3rd Period (Wellness//Social Studies) • 3rd Period Lunch (30 minutes) • 4th Period (Science) • 5th Period (Elective/Elective) or (Elective/Academic Success) or (Academic Success/Academic Success) Sample Freshmen Schedule

  46. Athletics and Eligibility

  47. Football • Basketball • Volleyball • Track and Field • Baseball • Softball • Soccer • Cross-country • Swimming • Golf • Wrestling • Tennis • Cheerleading Freshmen Athletics TSSAA

  48. Announced via Daily Announcements • Announced in Wellness Classes • Announced via Athletic Coaches • Announced via MJHS/MHS Websites Spring Try-Outs

  49. Energy Bowl Teams • Math Bowl Teams • Science Fair • Science Olympiad • Geography Bee • Patriots Pen Essay Contest • Spelling Bee • NCTE Writing and Poetry Contests • Health and Safety Poster Contests • Robotics (STEM) Competitions Academic Competitions

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