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If anyone is in a similar situation, how do you set up assignments and enter grades to Sync/Passback?
My district hasn't officially moved to standards-based yet. We have a list of "best practices" but right now teachers are still making their own policies, grading scales, systems, rubics, etc.
I'm working with other Language Arts teachers adapt rubrics and projects and set up grading scales, but we collectively have more questions than answers.
Does anyone have insights about grading projects vs. individual standards? If so, how is that going? And how are you setting up rubrics?
Also, I'm curious about how to balance assessing grammar/mechanics (especially if the main focus of a writing project is another skill e.g. figurative language or integrating appropriate details/text evidence).
I haven't done anything with Mastery Paths, but our IC settings are still set up as a traditional gradebook and have no idea if there's any way to sync grades that way.
Sounds like you're embarking on quite the journey. I'd highly suggest consideration of the Outcomes feature. It is a logical next step which provides access to the Learning Mastery Gradebook which provides some powerful perspective of learning.
This is a major shift, but here's what I would recommend:
As far as turning that into grades, most gradebooks (we use Powerschool) don't recognize the Learning Mastery Gradebook. So, we do a little hand waving to convert LMG scores into assignment scores, but at the end of the day, our gradebooks are weighted:
The weights are just set up so that standards far outweigh the paperwork portion of the course. Doing the paperwork is immensely important as it is the demonstration of learning, but if all they're doing is playing the points game and turning stuff in, they will struggle to do well in the class. What we found is that the coursework became more relevant and students see the value in what we're asking them to do. They also start asking questions like, "Can you help me with [Outcome]?" instead of, "What do I need to do to pass?"
In the end, the PLC work at the start - identifying standards, getting assessments aligned, etc - is much more important that what you end up doing in Canvas. Once you have that done, Outcomes are definitely the way to go.
So we are doing something similar with assignments by adding the rubric to attach the outcomes and then scoring it like we are using the rubric. My question centers around those teachers who want to use quizzes and how you can accurately report that towards the proficiency scale? So in our district we section off our quizzes so we may have section one that goes to level two of a proficiency scale and then section 2, which goes to level three on the proficiency scale. And then the section 3, which goes to level four on the proficiency scale. But when you score the entire quiz, it will just calculate an average score to the learning mastery gradebook based on that percentage the student earned on that quiz, I assume. Any ideas for work around here
We pretty much have the same questions, and the advice here is good.
I am hoping there is some way to develop a way to pass outcome/learning mastery grades back to the SIS.
Regardless of the work around we create, we are left having to do duplicate data entry between Canvas and our SIS.
Without a grade passback solution for this, we are finding ourselves questioning why we are using canvas for the gradebook, when it just creates more work for teachers.
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