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Parent’s Guide to High School Enrollment for INCOMING FRESHMEN

Parent’s Guide to High School Enrollment for INCOMING FRESHMEN. Spring 2013. Journey’s Agenda. Nuts & Bolts of HS planning for one’s Future College/Career Planning Balancing Choices & Priorities Completing the Enrollment Card and the Rules to play by!.

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Parent’s Guide to High School Enrollment for INCOMING FRESHMEN

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  1. Parent’s Guide to High School Enrollment for INCOMING FRESHMEN Spring 2013

  2. Journey’s Agenda • Nuts & Bolts of HS planning for one’s Future • College/Career Planning • Balancing Choices & Priorities • Completing the Enrollment Card and the Rules to play by!

  3. Anticipation and “Journey Jitters” toward the FRESHMAN year: • Scary • Exciting • Full of new opportunities • A chance to start over or keep going in the same direction • An opportunity to develop more independence – self-advocacy, ask for and seek out help • Develop relationships with adults, peers • A chance to grow, succeed, fail, get up again • Prepare for the world in 2017

  4. Where? What? Who? How? When?

  5. Guides on the Journey • Teachers • Counselors • Michelle Murray-Cline (A-L alphabet) • Kim Hoetmer (M-Z alphabet) • Principals • Tracy Giddens (A-L alphabet) • Susan Perkins (M-Z alphabet) • Doug Bridwell – Building Principal • Ambassadors

  6. Calendar of Enrollment Events • 2/28 –Informational meeting with Ambassadors • 2/28-3/13 – Plan, talk to teachers, get needed signatures, meet individually with counselors, talk with family • 3/7 – Enrollment Card Workshop with Ambassadors • You can hand in early! • 3/14– Deadline to turn in 4-Year Plan to SCIENCE teacher • 3/25-3/27 -- Parent deadline • Blue tape – Don’t let it be you!

  7. General Requirements Side-by-Side • Revisit this each year as your plans may change. Also, this is just a few of the COMMON admission requirements our graduates face. Each program has its own set of requirements you will need to research. • Meet with your counselor if you have questions. • Don’t assume! Always ask. Also, unless you hear it from “the horses mouth” it may be incorrect information.

  8. Admission to *Kansas Board of Regents Universities Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University, Kansas State University, Pittsburg State University, Wichita State University (*KU is different) Class of 2016 and Beyond MUST have… • KBOR Curriculum with a 2.0 GPA average in those courses (see chart) AND • ACT Composite of 21 OR • Ranked in the top 1/3 of graduating class (7th or 8th semester)

  9. Admission to the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Class of 2016 & Beyond MUST have… • KBOR Curriculum with a 2.0 GPA average in those courses (see chart) AND 3.0 cumulative GPA AND ACT Composite of 24 OR 3.25 cumulative GPA AND ACT Composite of 21

  10. Where to Find Directions & Answers • Have I made sure I am meeting requirements for selective programs? • NCAA OR NAIA (see pages 8-9 and go to www.ncaa.org and/or www.playnaia.org) • CAREER PATHWAY CERTIFICATIONS (see pages 22-26) • KANSAS QUALIFIED ADMISSIONS (see pages 9 and back pages of enrollment book or go to www.kansasregents.org) • OUT-OF-STATE SCHOOLS (go to individual university websites) • SELECTIVE ADMISSIONS (go to individual university websites) • TECHNICAL PROGRAMS (for Kansas go to www.kansasregents.org and search technical programs) • MILITARY (ROTC, SERVICE ACADEMIES, ETC) (contact area recruiters and/or go to www.gomilitary.com) • APPRENTICESHIP PROGRAMS (for Kansas go to www.kansasapprenticeship.org)

  11. Finding the Road that Fits Your Pace

  12. Should EQUAL… Do What You Love… Love What You Do!

  13. College-Career Ready Means… an individual has theacademic preparation, cognitive preparation, technical skillsand employability skills to be successful in postsecondary education, in the attainment of an industry-recognized certification, or in the workforce withoutthe need for remediation. Kansas State Board of Education

  14. Readiness At A Glance All Goddard High School graduates should be proficient in basic areas.

  15. You Will Be Prepared for… • Technical Program • Certification • Licensure • Community College • Certification • Licensure • Associates Degree • Apprenticeship • Certification • Licensure • Significant on-the-job training • Military training • Transferable college credits • Certification • Four-Year College/University • Associates Degree • Bachelor’s Degree • Master’s Degree • Professional/Doctoral Degree

  16. Competitive Job Market • A young adult is more flexible, often having worked 2-3 part time jobs or gigs along the way while acquiring different skill sets. http://www.shiftgig.com/articles/hiring-competitive-job-market • Nearly 8 of 10 future job openings in the next decade will require postsecondary education or training. • 84% of currently employed workers say they are ready (and willing) to look at a new career opportunity. • Approximately 40 applicants compete for every job opening. http://www.personalbrandingblog.com/2011-job-market-to-become-even-more-competitive/

  17. ENROLLMENT CARD – FRESHMEN 3/14 in science

  18. Required Courses for FRESHMEN • 0.5 Communications, debate or forensics (can be combined) • 1.0 English 9 • 1.0 Math • 1.0 Science • 1.0 PE • Can take health, social science elective, and/or fine arts • Total of SEVEN (7) credits

  19. First Leg of the Journey:Academic Preparation • Academic Preparation • Core classes (English, math, science, social science) • Elective Classes (additional background to qualify for admission, preparation, scholarship) • Career Preparation • Core classes (English, math, science, social science) • Elective Classes (additional preparation to gain experience and background knowledge) • Balance with life outside of high school • We all have the same 24 hours – that’s all we’ve got • As goals change from year to year preparation can change as well • Accountability to yearly goals

  20. English – 4.5 Required for Graduation • Communications (either) OR Debate (1st semester) or Forensics (2nd semester) – High school coaches will meet with 1st time participants in debate/forensics • Regular English 9, 10, 11, 12 – meets graduation, college admission, NCAA/NAIA requirements. • Honors 9, 10, 11, 12 – meets all of the above, requires summer reading, expected homework, senior college credit opportunity, teacher recommendation required. • Reading Lab (elective credit only) for students who score in the lower quartile of standardized testing and/or are recommended by current English teacher.

  21. Math – THREE Required for Graduation • All math courses count toward graduation except Math Lab and Math Works • 4 years recommended to prepare for post-secondary education • Algebra I, Geometry, & Algebra II are the minimum recommended for 4-year college preparation • May be required to take a 4th year if ACT Math score is below 22 (KBOR) • Opportunities for advanced math (pre-calculus, AP Calculus, AP Statistics) • Opportunities for math assistance! • MATH WORKS is for freshmen & sophomores who earned a D-, D or D+ in math and it is designed to support next year’s math course (Algebra I or Geometry). • Teacher recommendation required for ALL MATH COURSES.

  22. Science: THREE Required for Graduation • 4 years recommended to prepare for post-secondary education • Biology and Chemistry and/or Physics, plus additional college-prep science is recommended for 4-year college preparation • KBOR requires Biology & Chemistry • Opportunities for advanced science (honors, college credit) • Contract for 9th grade biology or honors biology • Teacher recommendation required for ALL SCIENCE COURSES.

  23. Social Science: THREE Required for Graduation • 3 years minimum for graduation • US History 10 – 0.5 credit • World History 10 – 0.5 credit • Junior US History – 1.0 credit • Government – 0.5 credit • Social Science Elective – choose from psychology, sociology, international affairs – 0.5 credit • or *honors government (counts as 0.5 government + 0.5 elective social science) • All count for NCAA/NAIA, college preparation • Opportunities for advanced courses (honors, college credit) 3.0 GPA recommended for 10th grade honors, 3.0 GPA required for 12th grade honors government if taken for WSU credit

  24. Other Required Courses • PE 1.0 credit -- (9th) • Advanced PE will require current PE teacher recommendation • Health 0.5 credit -- (anytime 9-12) • Fine Art 1.0 credit (anytime 9-12) • Vocal music (intro or select choirs) • Instrumental music (band, orchestra) • Visual arts (drawing, painting, ceramics, AP Studio) • Theatre arts (including stagecraft) • Additional classes to total 25

  25. Foreign Languages • Notrequired as a specific credit toward GHS graduation, however, will count as an ELECTIVE credit toward graduation. • IS required in order to meet the requirements to be classified a KANSAS HONOR SCHOLAR. • Be prepared for DAILY practice in order to be successful. Foreign language is a challenging subject matter. • GHS offers: Arabic, Chinese, German, Spanish • Successfully completing two years (2.0 credits) of a foreign language can lead to placement in an intermediate level of that language, knowledge needed to “test out” of beginning levels and/or retroactive credit for beginning levels. Please check with the college or university for specific advantages of high school foreign language credit.

  26. Foreign Language Continued….. • Is not currently required for entrance to a Kansas college or university, however, may be required for certain 4-year degree programs. • If you are planning to participate in Division I or II athletics, foreign languages DO count toward the 16 NCAA core requirements. • May be required for many out-of-state colleges or universities. May be required for certain degrees regardless of where the college or university is located. • May be required for certain degrees regardless of where the college or university is located

  27. Additional Opportunities to Enhance Academic Preparation • Honors (9-12) • Advanced Placement (AP) (10-12) • AP Statistics, AP Calculus, AP US History, AP Studio Art • Concurrent Enrollment (Wichita State University & Newman University) (10-12) • English 101/102, Public Speaking, Polisci 121, Chem 211/212, Math 111/112, Biol 1014 • Early Release (seniors only)

  28. Second Leg of the Journey: Career Preparation • Academic Preparation • Core classes (English, math, science, social science) • Elective Classes (additional background to qualify for admission, preparation, scholarship) Career Preparation • Core classes (English, math, science, social science) • Elective Classes (additional preparation to gain experience and background knowledge) • Balance with life outside of high school • We all have the same 24 hours – that’s all we’ve got • As goals change from year to year preparation can change as well • Accountability to yearly goals

  29. Survey Says! Page 4

  30. Career Preparation/Exploration • Kansas Career Pipeline • 8th grade interest inventory • 10th grade interest inventory • 11th grade skills inventory and research project • 12th grade values inventory and research/profile update • Do What You Are • 9th grade • Personality-based inventory (Myers & Briggs Typology) • ASVAB • 11th grade combination skills & interest with interpretation • Practice ACT and ACT • 9th grade PLAN • 10th grade PLAN • 11th -12th grade ACT

  31. Career Pathways Kansas Career Pipeline 16 Career Clusters

  32. Career Pathways at GHS • There are agreements with area community colleges for you to earn credit. • See your instructor for more information.

  33. Arts, Audio/Visual & Communications: A/V Communications People who work in this group of occupations deal with the equipment that is used to produce audio and video. Their work is done in a variety of places and to deliver many different kinds of presentations. They may design or make the equipment, or they may sell it, install it, service it, and maintain it. Real World Career Examples: • Audio and Video Systems & Service Technicians • Video Graphics, Special Effects, and Animation • Audio-Video Designers and Engineers • Technical Computer Support Technicians, Film, Video, & DVD • Graphics & Printing Equipment Operators • Computer Typography & Composition • Desktop Publishing Specialists; • Web Page Designers • Photographers, Digital, Still, Video, Film • CAD Technicians & Fashion Illustrators • Curators and Gallery Managers • Production Mgrs., Digital, Video, Stage • Cinematographers, Film/Video Editors • Writers, Screen Editors, Script Writers • Directors, Coaches, • Performers, Actors, Musicians • Stagecraft Designers, • Lighters, Sets, Sound Effects, Acoustics, Painters • Audio/Video Operations, Control Room Technician • Station Mangers and Radio & TV Announcers • Publishers, Editors, Journalists & Reporters, • Print, Broadcast, • Broadcast Technicians • Fashion Designers • Graphic Designers

  34. NEW Pathways 3700Introduction to Law, Public Safety, Security (LPSS) 7802/7803 Intro to Engineering Design

  35. Taking the Road Less Traveled….. • Through a combination of coursework and extracurricular activities, how can I GROW in terms of leadership, communication, teamwork and work ethic skills while in high school? • What do I need to do to transition from high school to the “next level?” • What would Iregret doing? Not doing? • What does the world expect from me?

  36. College Credit at GHS: Junior & Senior Year Planning • Advanced Placement (AP) • AP Statistics (3) – if you have completed Algebra II (w/ teacher recommendation) • AP Calculus (5) • AP US History (3) • AP Studio Art (3) • Dual Enrollment (Wichita State University & Newman University) • Honors English 12 = Engl 101(3)/Engl 102 (3) • Public Speaking = Comm 1013 (3) • Honors Government = Polisci 121 (3) • Chemistry II = Chem 211 (5) Chem 212 (5) • Pre-Calculus = Math 111 (3) or Math 112 (5) • Honors Biology II = Biol 1014 (4) • Music Appreciation = MU 100 (3) GPA/ACT requirements. See page 8.

  37. Off-Campus Experiences: Open to JUNIORS & SENIORS • Can be combined with courses at GHS. • To apply what you have learned. • To extend what you have learned. • When you have exhausted GHS experiences. • Make sure it is right for you – these courses/grades impact GPA and graduation. • Examples (see page 32) • Internship • College Release • Employment Release • Wichita Area Technical College

  38. Third Leg of the Journey: Balancing Your Time • Academic Preparation • Core classes (English, math, science, social science) • Elective Classes (additional background to qualify for admission, preparation, scholarship) • Career Preparation • Core classes (English, math, science, social science) • Elective Classes (additional preparation to gain experience and background knowledge) Balance with life outside of high school • We all have the same 24 hours – that’s all we’ve got • As goals change from year to year preparation can change as well • Accountability to yearly goals

  39. School is your Job until it Bridges you to the Next • Expect assignments in class and assignments to be completed at home • Payment – your reward – is knowledge, fellowship, dignity, skills, and discipline. • Your Contribution adds positive energy, shared ideas, and experience to the community.

  40. Balancing Sports • Fall -- football, volleyball, cross country, women’s tennis, men’s soccer, women’s golf • Winter – basketball, wrestling, bowling • Spring – track, baseball, softball, women’s soccer, men’s tennis, men’s golf • Clubs • Organizations • Performance groups • Church involvement • Volunteer work • Paid work • Other time commitments • Family obligations • Sleep • Your Health • Studies

  41. Self Advocacy • IF you begin to struggle academically, your best source of help is your instructor. Make plans to work before or after school on a regular basis with him or her. • Additional tutorial help is available during Night Library Hours (Tues-Thurs) 6 p.m.-8 p.m. • If continuing to struggle,schedule a meeting with your parent(s) and instructor to see if your placement should be reconsidered.

  42. Last Leg of the Journey: Personal Accountability Do NOT say…”I didn’t know!”

  43. Yes…YOU Are Accountable • If you COMMIT to the course (by enrolling and parents signing off) and you are CAPABLE (teacher gives consent), then you are expected to COMPLETE the course. • Please make sure you take the time to read the requirements for the courses. If you find you are struggling in a class – get help from the teacher, take advantage of FREE help at GHS, and communicate with parents, teachers and counselors. Ultimately you are responsible for your choices as you have been given many tools with which to succeed.

  44. ENROLLMENT CARD – FRESHMEN 3/14 in science

  45. Completing Your Four-Year Plan • You must have a FOUR-YEAR PLAN to enroll and it MUST be signed by a PARENT. • RECOMMENDATION means you must have the initials on your FOUR-YEAR PLAN from your CURRENT INSTRUCTOR. • CONSENT means you must have the initials on your FOUR-YEAR PLAN from the instructor WHO WILL TEACH THE COURSE. • A VAST MAJORITY of courses require a teacher to initial. Check the prerequisites on ALL COURSES to make sure. You will not be allowed to enroll in a course that is missing the teacher initial on your FOUR-YEAR PLAN. • Students who turn FOUR-YEAR PLAN sheets in on time will receive priority for electives (this overrides grade level priority). • You will need to have eight semesters of alternative courses that you would be willing to take if a primary elective is not available. • You must enroll in the required courses PLUS any courses you did not pass the year before. • YOU must make sure you have the prerequisite before attempting to enroll in a class.

  46. Things to Keep in Mind • Courses listed in the enrollment booklet may not appear on the final SCHEDULE. • For mixed grade-level courses (open to 9-12) seniors are scheduled first, then juniors, then sophomores, then freshmen and late enrollees last. • Alternate courses CAN BE CONSIDERED in place of a primary request. CHOOSE alternates courses you would be willing to take. • Schedule change rules and directions for completing your FOUR-YEAR PLAN apply to BOTH primary and alternate courses. • Honors, AP, and college credit courses that require SUMMER WORK will not be dropped because the summer work was not completed. Students are responsible for fulfilling the requirements for the course in which they enroll. • Unless designated, no course successfully completed is repeatable. • Grades for aides will be ‘CR’ or ‘NC” and do not calculate into the GPA. Students may only aide for one hour per semester and cannot aide if in a release program.

  47. Changing Once Requests Are In • A. You are not enrolled in a required class. • B. You have already earned credit for the class. • C. You have not met the course prerequisites. • D. Your schedule is incomplete. • E.  Instructor recommendation: • You should advance to a higher level course or • Your placement should change due to insufficient skills.

  48. Required Courses for FRESHMEN • 0.5 Communications, debate or forensics (can be combined) • 1.0 English 9 • 1.0 Math • 1.0 Science • 1.0 PE • Can take health, social science elective, and/or fine arts • Total of SEVEN (7) credits

  49. Elective Classes for Freshmen to Consider • Introduction to Law, Public Safety & Security • Introduction to Engineering Design • Theatre Arts I • Drawing I, Ceramics I, *Painting I, *Ceramics II, *Essentials of Interior & Textile Design, *Principles of Illustration • Instrumental Music (band/orchestra) • Vocal Music (men’s/women’s choir) *check prerequisite • Foreign Languages • Business Essentials • Consumer & Personal Finance • Career & Life Planning • Entrepreneurship • 21st Century Journalism/AV Production Fundamentals • Business Law • Computer Applications I (if not taken in middle school) • Textiles in Today’s Society • Culinary Essentials

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