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MAP Home Page | Setting
Classroom Goals | Instructional
Tools
Student Goal Setting |
Increasing Student Motivation |Reading
Resources | PowerPoints

New Understanding Teacher and Class Reports
Handout and ?'s
Ed
Sandstrom and Kristie Szentesi's Graphic Organizers for Independent
Reading; Linked to Reading Goals
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For those of you who teach 6th through 9th grade, you can
now print a copy of most of the pages in the
MAPs
Notebook Toolkit directly from this link.
In TIM you will find that the
Learning ladder has added features that allow you to see
individual student needs or to recognize whole class needs.
If you need a TIM account, email
Stacey Campo.
If you have forgotten your
password, you can email
timreset@powayusd.com to reset it. Put:
"TIM password needed in the subject line of your email.
(You
can view the ladder without student names here: Learning
Ladder for MAPs )
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Using Reports from NWEA
Celebrate
strengths and then determine the lowest goal
area (the lowest mean score for a goal area) for reading,
language usage, and math. Post these as classroom goals and
discuss them with your students. Look up the range for these
goals on the
MAPs
Learning Continuum Ladder and reference it as you
plan instruction.
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Login
to
TIM and click on the
Learning Ladder. Here you can
see all scores for your class, CST correlations, and
instructional
information for differentiating. If you need a TIM account, email
Stacey Campo.
If you have forgotten your
password, you can email
timreset@powayusd.com to reset it. Put:
"TIM password needed in the subject line of your email.
For a sample 9th grade honors English report, (without the
continuum) click on the
image to the right.
When
viewing your class on the Learning Ladder in TIM, you can
click on a student's name to generate an Individual Student
Report. You'll see current MAPs scores for each goal
strand, color-coded to predict the student's success on the
spring CST. For a sample of an Individual Student
Report, click on the image to the left.
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When
administering the MAPs assessment, record your students'
overall scores as well as their goal area scores as they
appear onscreen at the end of the test.
Students will reflect on the results and write plans to
improve in their lowest goal area in each subject.
Improving in their lowest goal area will produce academic
growth in that subject overall.
To determine the typical
median scores for students by grade level, examine the
following chart:
MAPs RIT score correlation with the CST
  
- NWEA developed these
sheets to provide students with opportunities for
self-assessment after the fall and spring assessments.
Students reflect on their personal study habits,
effort, and participation
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Kristie
Szentesi and Ed Sandstrom worked with the LosPen Academy
teachers to create graphic organizers that emphasize skills
students need to learn when they are working on goals in
Interpretive Comprehension, Literary Response, and
Vocabulary and Word Analysis.
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Word Analysis and Vocabulary |

Interpretive Comprehension |

Literary Response
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Jeannine
Ugalde has created the following middle school versions!
Thanks, Jeannine:
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Word Analysis and Vocabulary |

Interpretive Comprehension |

Literary Response
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Lexile Scavenger Hunt
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Visit:
http://www.lexile.com

The
MAP Reading assessment report will include each
student's Lexile score. (Students also receive Lexile scores on
their California Standards
Tests.) This score may be used as a guide when
choosing books at an appropriate reading level for
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Great
Resources on the Lexile Website
- Use the
Lexile
Booksearch Tool to find the best materials or
to check the Lexile level of books students have
chosen.
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Power Vocabulary For every book listed
in this section you can print a list of
vocabulary words and activities to help students
learn the words and their meanings. (Click on S
for student masters or T for teacher masters
with the answer keys
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Pathfinders provides lists of books and
their corresponding Lexile level categorized by
interest, author, or series.
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Using MAPs
for goal setting can help students:
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Have hope
again
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Build the
bridge between work, effort and accomplishment
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Experience rewards for effort
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Feel like
you're on the same team working for success.
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Bring an
enthusiasm for achieving. (Video game mentality to reach
new levels is on our side this time!)
For an
additional
resource that provides insight and tools to understand how
to motivate students who are unmotivated, Allen N. Mendler
has written an excellent book titled:
Motivating Students Who
Don't Care, Successful Techniques for Educators.
(To purchase this book from the publisher, click on the
title to go to the National Educational Service website.)
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Parent Orientation
PowerPoint (Click the "pages" tab on the left side to view
full pages or right click and "save target as" to
open and play as a slide show)
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-
NEW:
Goal Setting PowerPoint
(coming soon)
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Edited
on:
09/02/2008
by Linda Foote
Instructional Curriculum Specialist
Poway Unified School District
lfoote@powayusd.com
ŠJune 2002
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