At the beginning of the year we started the year with a #YouMatter Board so that students could have the opportunities to record who they are as a person and why they thought they were amazing.
I got this idea from Angela Maiers and I thought it would help students see themselves first as people and not just a cog in the wheel. Additionally, the board was used to share goals and ideas that they wanted to work on this term.
How does this fit with being "Gradeless", you may wonder? By allowing students to feel more comfortable with reflection.
Before I did this, feedback was primarily teacher-centered. Students read it and we continued to talk but when I shifted the classroom to show the students that they mattered, the advice they received all of a sudden had more meaning.
Not only was it validating to their needs but they started to see how it met their personal goals. School wasn't just a place to show up to and be a part of, but it was a place of valued learning; a place they saw themselves in and wanted to be a part of.
Going "gradeless" has been a revolutionary. The power is more in the students' hands and has shown them that they have the capacity to change and affect their school lives. In part 2, I hope to showcase more from my second year of going "gradeless." So stay tuned.
I kept my monthly reports but now they are written by students and me. They also have turned into term reports as they have taken some time to write (our formal ministry reports go home three times a year and fit nicely in between the students own words). At the beginning of the year, this report looked like a blank page with the expectation that students would tell or write me what they are doing? How they think they are doing and can they show me a picture. Well this was not the most successful approach for obvious reasons the biggest is that students need to be taught how to reflect. Halfway through the year, I decided to change up the graphic organizer to look like this:
What this allowed my students to do is look at curriculum but in a organized manner. The students looked at curriculum, write in the boxes and plan what they wanted to say. I have found this the easiest way to get them talking about reflection in relationship to what the curriculum says they have to do.
Once they finish their letter they show their parents and write a small reflection together about their progress so far.
Here are some sample of student letters:
First term: Sample 1, Sample 2
Second Term: Sample 1, Sample 2
Now I know many reading this will say to me what about your Ministry Reports? Well, I still have to do those. However, this year, I have also started mini conferences with my students. Right before our reports come up my students use google forms to tell me how they think they are doing and then I spend 5 to 10 minutes with each student conferencing about what they wrote. It is a long process but so worth it in the end. I have rich and meaningful data for my students, and my students have no surprises about their progress which I think is the most meaningful aspect.
Here are some of my favourite responses:
What have I learned:
The last point of my learning has been the greatest impact this year. Going “Gradeless” hasn’t really meant that I have no grades but that I am rethinking what it means to learn in school. Our kids are ready for change and need that change. The more we have them apart of the learning the better. I would encourage you to try and give it a shot. I would also love to hear about your own journey and how you are trying this in your classroom.