October 8, 2019


In-Class Focus and the Dunning-Kruger Effect


TL;DR

Often, you believe you are on-task and focused when you are not. You believe that you are using the resources of the space effectively, but you are not. This is the Dunning-Kruger effect applied to self-awareness and self-regulation.

In other words, you believe you are focused because you don’t know what focus feels like. You have to experience what it’s like to focus your entire self-selected group of friends on one task for a period to know what that feels like. You have to avoid social media for 30 minutes straight with the phone right next to you to know what that feels like.

You’ve had the phone taken away, or been told it has to be off. You’ve been silenced in class. But those are not choices. Your brain does not process them as choices; each one is filtered through your knowledge that it was not a choice that you made.

Practicing What It Feels Like, Then

Yesterday, you were given an assignment: to read the following post in class.

Well, Why Read?

Today, October 8, you’ve been given the class period to write a response. This helps you to

  1. work on the habit of reading these posts, which form the foundation of a flipped classroom; and
  2. work on your in-class focus and use of feedback, which are the foundations of your learning.

There is always more to do in here, which is why “a desire to do more than just what is required” is part of the criteria for a GAP score of 8. Case in point:

Overview: Discussion Hubs

These hubs address essential elements of your learning, not just your work in this makerspace. You can always ask questions and have discussions there. Today, for instance, you will be given a brief in-class lecture on this:

Ongoing Discussion: Dunning-Kruger Effects and Imposter Syndromes

Find time to read that post. Watch the video on the Dunning-Kruger effect. Look at the comments left by other students. We need to target your ability to self-assess. You have to get better at judging your own effort and output.

Here is that post’s first paragraph:

Discrepancies between a student’s self-assessment and their actual performance are common. It’s human nature to struggle with uncomfortable truths, and perhaps the most uncomfortable kind of truth is that we are not as skilled or knowledgeable as we thought. In fact, this phenomenon, known as the Dunning-Kruger effect, happens for almost all of us at some point in our lives.

This is why internalizing the difference between sufficient and insufficient work is critical. The same is true of in-class focus and your use of feedback. It is uncomfortable to realize that you really don’t have the level of self-control and focus you should. You can’t improve without real self-awareness and amenability, though.

In other words, your struggle might be that you don’t know you’re off-task. You believe you’re focused, or just focused enough, for it to count. When someone else — your teacher, most of the time — tells you that you’re off-task, that clashes with what you believe. It’s hard to be self-critical.

I think the reason why is that you haven’t had much experience being focused, truly focused, when the choice is yours to make. You don’t have experience choosing to ignore your phone, for instance; you’ve always been forced to put it away. You have to make that choice yourself for it to have lasting impact.

Because there is always more to do in here, formally and informally, you can always practice being focused in class. You must listen to that uncomfortable feedback, however, that identifies when you aren’t focused.


Summer Reading


The form you should fill out for summer reading is here:

This Google Form, which was posted yesterday to Google Classroom, uses language from the background lessons on reading to get into your summer work. One goal is to make that summer work — really, your choices about that summer work — meaningful beyond the first few weeks of school.

This first form offers a chance for meaningful writing for those who read. It’s about added value; if you are able to answer these prompts, then you will have more evidence of the skills and traits that matter. If you cannot answer these prompts, that will not lower your profile. Instead, you will have a chance next week to add value through a different assignment.

What you write on this form is also powerfully helpful for teachers. It offers insight into BHS’s summer reading, both as a matter of policy and as a part of our study of literature. Be honest. This year is about growth.

I should be able to get a post up about the complete “summer reading” assignment — this is just part of it — tomorrow, when you have a day off. In the meantime, ask questions about any of this in the space below.

Reading in Practice


What to Do


The post on the reading process is itself a practical guide, and even a philosophical question about reading leads to actionable answers. The fault response in a makerspace should always be: How can I use this?

The following list, however, covers all instructional posts on what we do with what we read.

How to Choose a Book

Holt’s Checkpoint, Choosing to Read, and After You Read

Good Reads and Goodreads

Writing Process: Reader’s Response


Additional Resources


These last posts deal more specifically with analysis, literary analysis, and traditional ELA assignments. There is also an older but still useful version of the post on choosing a work of literary merit.

View at Medium.com

As You Read: Works of Literary Merit

Literary Analysis Guide

 

Choosing to Read [2018]

October 3, 2019


Here Today, Gone Tomorrow


Work-in-progress grade abatement profiles scores were posted exactly 24 hours ago:

October 2, 2019

These scores, which were explained in even greater detail elsewhere, will be deleted from the online gradebook tomorrow morning. They’ve served their purpose: You’ve seen what your hard work or lack of work will lead to, and you know what to do between now and October 22, when a permanent GAP score will be determined.

Deleting these scores does not delete evidence. Keeping them, however, would require constant updates to the profile, since you would constantly produce new evidence. You might make better choices. You might make worse ones. To constantly update the score would replace one vector for toxicity with another. Consider that idea — of vectors in grading — here:

Clarifying Grade Abatement

Read that carefully. Then consider this: If we are constantly gathering data on you, your GAP score is not summative — it is, instead, about communicating progress to other stakeholders, holding you accountable for your choices, and offering a soft reboot of the evidence-gathering process. Those goals separate the formal GAP scores it from the Skinner-box shock of a WIP GAP score.

There are plenty of places on this website that delve into this stuff (here’s one on using spreadsheet data), but you really just need Alfie Kohn’s logic:

It’s not enough to disseminate grades more efficiently — for example, by posting them on-line. There is a growing technology, as the late Gerald Bracey once remarked, “that permits us to do in nanoseconds things that we shouldn’t be doing at all” (quoted in Mathews, 2006). In fact, posting grades on-line is a significant step backward because it enhances the salience of those grades and therefore their destructive effects on learning.

That’s from “The Case Against Grades,” which you should read in full. Those WIP GAP scores will be removed to put us back on the triptych model of assessment, with a focus on profiles and evidence-gathering. The lesson of those scores, however, ought to stay with you.

Ask questions about this below.

October 2, 2019

Note: Use the comment section at the end of this post to ask questions.


Progress Reports


Your first grades were posted before school on Wednesday, October 2. We will take the class period that day to unpack those scores, process your reaction to them, etc., starting with your Q1B work-in-progress grade abatement profiles:

WIP GAP Explained

Those scores will change, one way or another, between now and October 22, when your Q1B scores are finalized. The extent and direction of that change is up to you.

Here, copied directly from the front page of this instructional site, are the links you need to unpack your scores into actionable stuff1:

For All Stakeholders: A Quick Guide to Stakeholder Involvement
Google Site: Proof of Process: Testimonials, Tours, and Student Work

ESSENTIALS PACK: ASSESSMENT (2019-2020)

*Includes updated, direct links to each period’s GAP report

Start with the “Guide to Stakeholder Involvement.” You haven’t seen that yet, and it will be sent home to parents and guardians today as part of Open House.

The rest of these resources have been distributed and reviewed already. It is your responsibility to use them appropriately to help you be successful in here. Remember that success now corresponds to success next year, when the Skinner-box logic of high school is a memory. That’s why those testimonials are included.


Current Units


Once you understand what these GAP scores are telling you, move on to our two current units of study. From the front page of this site:

CURRENT UNITS OF STUDY (SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER)

① The Age of the Essay | Study of how and why we write. Includes close reading of a central text, guided analysis, and a universal writing process.
② What Is Literature For? | Study of how and why we read. Includes close reading of different texts (video, nonfiction), guided analysis, and reader-response writingIncludes summer reading work. 

These are both about the how and why of writing and reading. They frame everything else we’ll do this year. The more work you put in now, the better. Remember the lessons of this post.

The first unit just ended, and you have a writing assignment due on Thursday, October 10. The second unit starts formally on Thursday, October 3, with a closer look at the reading process. If you have kept up with all requirements so far, that’s your focus today:

The Reading Process

You will have an assignment based on the first video in that post, so pay careful attention to it.

Remember to ask questions below.


  1. “Stuff” is used here because it’s imprecise. Some of you will need a one-on-one conference; some need a written plan; others, just a nudge in the right direction. 

WIP GAP Explained

© Metro Trains Melbourne, Dumb Ways to Die


TL;DR — WIP GAP

WIP GAP stands for work-in-progress grade abatement profile. It refers to a provisional score entered into the online gradebook. Click on provisional in that sentence, and you’ll see why we’d use that adjective: This score should be changed later by the student’s further choices.

The use of a WIP GAP score, as opposed to the scheduled GAP score, is often because students have failed to meet the basic requirements of the course. For example, students may have failed to read assigned texts, to complete assigned analysis, or to use class time effectively.

Continue reading

Guided Analysis: “The Age of the Essay”

Using the Makerspace

Be sure you’ve read Paul Graham’s “The Age of the Essay” and the interstitial lecture below:

The Age of the Essay, Updated

Then you will be asked to complete a unique copy of this form:

That is a copy accessible to all. You will be given one through Google Classroom specific to your class. Do not complete the above form for assessment.

This assignment will guide you through some of the later paragraphs of the essay, instructing you to analyze, unpack, and respond to specific quotations and ideas.

You can use the following general feedback to help you:

That general feedback is not a set of correct responses that can be copied; it is a guide to understanding that requires you to put in additional work. It is one tool among many.

Note that one of the questions you must answer directs you to read an interstitial post that is posted alongside your syllabus and introduction to the course:

This, too, is one tool among many. Proceed slowly and deliberately — assiduously, in other words — and ask questions as you go.

Focus and Feedback

Note: Intended for the beginning of a school year (the tagged “opening salvo”). Each subheading links to an Atmosphere song, which is unrelated to anything but how good Atmosphere is.

Shrapnel


The focuses of this instructional post are in-class focus and feedback. The impetus is that it is never too early to warn you against straying from the path. We shouldn’t wait until the spring to discuss poor decisions; we should talk about it now, at the beginning of things, before any bad habits metastasize. The worst habits, like wasting class time and ignoring instruction, will slowly end you.

There’s something in that warning that should scare you, and I’ll tell you what it is. First, here’s what it is not.

It’s not what happens when you ignore instruction. That decision is insubordinate and disrespectful and breaking pretty specific rules of the whole school, and our classroom can only tolerate that for so long. Then you face some kind of punishment. Parents are called, Guidance meetings are arranged, infantilizing behavioral plans maybe get drawn up, etc. But that should embarrass you, not scare you.

It’s not your grade. As many posts explain, GAP scores suffer most when there isn’t evidence of in-class focus and feedback. The margin for error is less as you get older, too, but that’s obvious. That shouldn’t scare you, except to the extent that you are scared of the traditional Skinner-box shocks to your system.

It’s not even what bad decisions truly do to you. You are, right now, becoming a permanent version of yourself, and that self, for some of you, is going to be uninteresting, unskilled, and undisciplined. Believing otherwise is the “grain through the body of a bird” error explained many years ago in the first guide to this stuff, which puts it this way:

The ugly parts of us don’t operate on a switch. Apathy, disrespect, entitlement—these aren’t sweaters or jackets you can shrug off and cast aside when you’re tired of wearing them. That stuff will stick to you, stay with you, for a long time. When you choose not to work, you are breeding future selves, developing right now the habits that will poison or empower you in every aspect of your life. Your daily life is inculcation in its purest form: the linking together of a chain of decisions that will protect you or drag you down.

But that is more depressing than it is scary.

What you ought to fear is missing out1. Everyone who invests in this course and its philosophy, who works hard and pays careful attention, unlocks something special, and that is no longer a wild claim:

In essence, there are two courses taught in a Humanities makerspace. The first one exists to improve how you do your work, pay attention, and develop basic skills and traits. It attempts to make you a half-decent citizen of the world. It’ll cover ELA staples, get you ready for exams and graduation, and help you feel less stressed about grades.

The second course exists to transform you. Its students are smarter, more interesting, and more engaged. On their worst days, they have a space that understands and supports them. On their best days, they find real freedom and true inspiration.

Yes, you should be afraid of low grades, making disrespect a habit, upsetting the teacher enough that he decapitates you in the middle of class2. But much more existentially terrifying should be the risk of wasting such an opportunity.

To be in a room with people who have unlocked that deeper level is a constant reminder that you could have done it, too. You have the freedom to become a better person, to study many of the things you want, to do many of the things you want — and instead you’ve wasted it all to scroll through Instagram or play a video game3.

The Keys to Life vs. 15 Minutes of Fame


The purpose of a GAP score is to tell the story of your learning. The number unpacks to a profile, which unpacks to the work you’ve done in the course over (in our case) three weeks or so. To figure out that GAP score, you might want the complete guide next to you; you can get away, however, with just the following:

Every 15 days or so, you will be given a Google Form through which you indicate which GAP score you believe fits you. The data we gather through that form help us assess your struggles with the Dunning-Kruger effect and/or the imposter syndrome. Two of the self-assessments ask you to consider your in-class focus and use of feedback. That’s because those really are perhaps the two most important contributors to your success, even before you get to the logic of the profiles themselves.

Here is a document that explains further:

Starting at the top of that handout, you see again these two most basic requirements of this course, which are also the two keys that unlock upper-tier success:

  1. You must make the most of the class period.
  2. You must invest in feedback.

Feedback is also the focus of this instructional post, which links to an updated Medium essay on feedback here. These counter a lot of long-standing rumors while reiterating the importance of our time together during the school day — see this essay or this one for more on working face-to-face and during the period. Here is another post on the concept, too.

Back to focus and feedback: Part 1 of the handout (“The Keys”) asks you to self-assess your in-class focus and the level of feedback you’ve generated. Again, it’s an iteration of what you see in the Google Form you complete every three weeks or so. It is a color-coded, subjective self-assessment.

What may help to clarify how a self-assessment is useful is a look at what the old version of this handout looked like. Instead of circles, there was a line of emojis:

When viewed through some browsers, the faces looked like this:

This will seem unimportant, but there was a reason to use faces instead of numbers, at least originally. It is all about relative self-assessment.

In our case, there are two perspectives. The first is the imagined perspective of an objective observer. What would someone notice about your in-class focus and feedback over the course of several weeks? That observer doesn’t care about why you were playing video games or mindlessly reloading Snapchat; he just makes a note that you were.

The second perspective is relative, and it’s inspired a bit by the Wong-Baker pain scale:

There is a lot of subjectivity in this sort of self-assessment. What you consider to be a 10 — the worst pain you’ve ever experienced — might be only a 4 or 6 for a much less fortunate person. It’s still a 10 for you, though, because you can only base it on your experience. That’s the second perspective in our classroom: To a small extent, your best version of focusing might be different from that of others, and we might adjust — to a small extent — the standards to which you are held. You might be capable only of a certain level of feedback. That’s okay, if it’s true.

Again, the first perspective on your body of work is ultimately more important:

What would an objective observer write down, if he was asked to describe your habits and behavioral patterns?

We aren’t always after the reasons you were compelled to play on your phone for 35 minutes while your required reading gathered dust in front of you. We can’t always take into consideration why you were playing video games instead of workshopping an essay. And, in fact, advocacy is such an integral part of the course that if you did need to space out for 35 minutes, you could probably ask for that, reflect on it later, and end up learning quite a bit about yourself4.

Part 2 of the handout (“The Engine”) clarifies these two perspectives through some close reading. The selections you see come from grade abatement profiles of 2, 4, 6, and 8, which give us final scores of 60, 70, 85, and 95, respectively. By any heuristic, these are the profiles that serve as benchmarks for failure and success. These small excerpts should help you arrive at a more accurate and helpful GAP score.

GAP 2 | A 2 {may indicate} [a deliberate and systemic disengagement]…

This is a question of repeated, conscious choice. How many times does a student need to disengage, miss work, lose focus, etc, before it is “deliberate and systemic”? How many mistakes are permissible? No one expects perfection, even at the level of a 9, but we have to start the discussion with some sort of threshold. You have agency and self-control, and very few students goof off out of malice. You do it without thinking. At a certain point, however, a lack of adjustment or a lack of thinking is a choice.

GAP 4 | These students {do not meet} [the basic requirements of the course]…

The GAP 2 has modal language, which is language suggesting possibility. The student “may” meet those criteria, but there are other ways to slip to that tier. For a GAP 4 and its surrounding scores, the language is direct: If you do not meet the basic requirements of the course, you really shouldn’t be scored any higher than a 4 (70).

The question, then, is what the course defines as its basic requirements. Right now, as always, the course values in-class focus and student-driven feedback more than anything else. This new handout also lists the obvious stuff, like getting work in on time and being amenable to redirection, as basic requirements. As the handout says, it’s about doing the job on the days you would rather be watching Netflix, instead of, you know, actually watching Netflix in class5.

So the question is, again, how lenient we ought to be. Where is the line between human error and apathy or indulgence? It isn’t a hypothetical question. To illustrate what I mean, here are data from a normal classroom at 9:00 AM on 5/17/17:

Those are self-reported GAP scores from about a dozen students for a three-week assessment period. See how high the scores are? Maybe you can spot the issue when you read the original directions from the Google Classroom assignment:

That clearly states that completing the form before May 19 would lower a student’s profile score. So about a dozen students, some of them otherwise excellent, didn’t read the directions before jumping in. They also didn’t read the calendar, and they seem to have forgotten what we discussed in class. Yet they self-reported scores in Tier 4. Should those students have received lower GAP scores? Should we have shrugged away their mistake, even though it was mid-May? Where do we draw the line?

And that’s an innocuous example. The point might be that these are complicated problems, and we need to talk early and often about them.

GAP 6 | Students earning a 6 {are consistent and reliable} [in performance]…

My theory is that you consider “performance” to be only a particular set of things you do in school. Tests are performances. Essays are performances. Exams are definitely performances. The formative steps aren’t performative in the same way, so you cut corners and cheat the system if/when you need to. That’s not a finger-wagging accusation: Over the years, hundreds of students have admitted to copying homework, using Schmoop before a class discussion, zoning out during lectures, etc.

This course rests on the opposite principle: The process is what matters, and the products should never be the primary focus of our learning. That means that “consistent and reliable” work happens every day. I encourage you to read about that philosophy in this article about preschool crafts, and then to skim this:

View at Medium.com

GAP 8 | An 8 {reflects} [a systemic investment in the course]…

In many of the notes on earning a GAP 8, you’ll see “galvanize” identified as the key verb. That’s true, but another important verb is “reflects,” in no small part because of what it does for us metaphorically.

Most of your self-assessment looks at quantifiable stuff. You could, for instance, count the number of minutes you’re off-task when determining that a GAP 4 is your fate. If you believe you’ve been “consistent and reliable,” you can add up the assignments you’ve handed in, collate the formative and process-based work you did, and stack up your feedback-driven metacognition. It’s sortable, stackable, quantifiable data.

When you invest in the entire system, however, your evidence moves beyond the quantifiable and into something more reflective. Which is not to get too existential6. Think about how else we can use “reflect” in a classroom: It’s the other part of the self-monitoring you do, alongside metacognitive writing and discussion. You reflect your investment through self-monitoring. Once you observe the true purpose of the work, you can set the course accordingly. You’re in control of the learning, because you are involved in all parts of the system — not just the daily class periods and formal writing assignments, but everything.

Which is why Part 3 of this new handout, “The Vehicle,” is a list of the universal skills and traits we value. They are streamlined and edited a bit, but they aren’t changed fundamentally from the other guides to grade abatement, collaboration, and so on. Every iteration helps a bit. When you are invested enough, in fact, and when your focus becomes honing these skills, you will see them reflected in everything you do.

That’s why it matters less which books we read, which essays you write, and which discussions we have. It’s more important for you to memorize our list of skills and traits, and then for us to work together to determine what you need to do to hone your strengths and eliminate your weaknesses. This becomes the blueprint for your growth:

Reflections


At this point, your brain should be churning as it begins to process this. You may need to write down your understanding for me to read and comment on. You may want to write about your previous experiences with grades. You may need to ask questions in the comment section below7. Regardless, you absolutely must write something in response to all this feedback — not just because that is a formal assignment, but because it’s the whole point.

First, I want to add that I still believe that it is nearly impossible to fake in-class focus and feedback. You can fake a certain level of curiosity and empathy, but it’s nearly impossible to reframe a period spent off-task as anything but what it was. You can rush through a few pages of perfunctory reflection, but it’s nearly impossible to turn a real lack of feedback and investment into something else.

Since “nearly” impossible is not the same as “totally” impossible, I usually try to pitch faking it in here as a good idea, theoretically speaking. That was the theory as early on as the tenth section of this essay:

If you force yourself through the motions in here, those motions will inculcate the skills and traits we want. A misanthrope who forces himself to take collegial and galvanizing actions will incrementally learn empathy. A narcissist who forces herself to reflect and metacogitate every week will incrementally find new self-awareness and insight. An apathetic student who grinds through assignments just to get them done will incrementally gain a real appreciation for the value of the work.

That’s idealistic, but it seems to be true for most students: If you fake it, at least you’re doing some good. Learning doesn’t have to be a zero-sum game.

I think there’s something else to add, though: If you decided that this “nearly impossible” claim was a challenge, you might figure out how to fake it. You might fool me. Or you might just slip through the cracks, earning credit when credit is definitely not due. Then the hard-working students become frustrated, seeing a kind of injustice. No one wants to feel cheated, to have a peer succeed dishonestly, or to see a good system subverted.

So here’s the thing: Did that person succeed? Did he really? When a student “cheats” in here, all he’s done is get worse at everything that the world actually values. That vehicle for learning — the list of universal skills and traits — might as well be a car rusting on cinder blocks in the front yard. The student, having gotten away with wasting class time and ignoring feedback, has made himself more distracted and more disrespectful. He knows less now and can do less with the little he knows than his peers. He’s grown dishonest and cynical and selfish.

That’s… not really a victory. How do you imagine you would celebrate that? “Boy, I tricked him! I’m a terrible student! My life is going to be much harder now!”

I mean, yes, I’m upset about that, but not in a mustache-twirling kind of way8. I would like the world to be filled with respectful, creative people who take advantage of extraordinary opportunities to learn about themselves and the world around them. I hope you will make that world a better place through your intelligence and compassion. I believe in your potential, and I hate to see it wasted.

That’s all.


  1. Not in the FOMO sense, although that’s a concept worth studying, especially as a gateway to learning about the five-factor model of personality. There is a test you can take, the IPIP-NEO, that will generate a really rich set of data to unpack and analyze. It’s a way of getting to know yourself more completely, and that’s almost always a helpful thing. 

  2. “Metaphorically!” he shouted quickly, glancing at administration and laughing nervously. “Metaphorically decapitates you in the middle of class.” 

  3. Both of which you could legitimately do, if it was part of a unit of study you’d designed. You could write about these things, study them, read excellent ETA essays on them. You’d get more out of it. Why not do that? Why not take the extra five minutes to advocate thoughtfully for the very thing you are doing thoughtlessly? 

  4. The best kind of metacognition is uncomfortable, so this would be perfect: Why do you need to waste class time? Is it really that you’re wasting it, or is something more significant going on? What is your brain up to? 

  5. Again, you could probably write and read about this, if you were invested enough in the course to see how it connects to our work. Binge-watching culture is fascinating, and I’d want to help you unpack the reasons why that show had so transfixed you that it couldn’t wait another few hours. 

  6. Says the Camus-inspired website that has pitched Regents Exam prep in the past with a Kafka reference

  7. Try that out. Scroll down and ask a question. It’s never too late to engage with the interstitial elements of the course, and it is the easiest and fastest way to get feedback. 

  8. Although I wonder… In that scenario, who is Dudley Do-Right? 

The Start of Class: Daily Calibration

Book art by Guy Laramée.

Note: This post isolates and updates the daily calibration form introduced here: Objects in Space. Here is the “start of class” handout shared with students and posted on the walls, on the tables, and online:

Direct link: https://tinyurl.com/makerspace-start


Daily Calibration for Students


The daily calibration form is the key to your in-class focus, at least to some extent. Links for each class period can be found on Google Classroom, at the top of the “Classwork” tab. Put that link somewhere you can access quickly — the home screen of your phone, the bookmarks bar of your browser, etc.

Here is a pre-filled copy to consider:

(The joke, such as it is, comes from this writing by Albert Camus, which inspired the name of this site, the philosophy of this course, and a few other existentially important elements of what we do.)

This form requires you to set a goal for the 24 hours that fall after the class period. What will you accomplish during that time? What do you hope to learn, to create, to explore, etc? Think of this as another inflection point: a moment when the trajectory of your day changes.

You are also invited to reflect on your physical and mental state, with an optional space for any other thoughts you want to share. This part is highly encouraged; self-awareness and self-efficacy begin with that kind of mindfulness.

All told, it takes only a few moments at the start of each class period. Those moments build powerful habits and generate a stronger connection between you and the work of a course like this. A larger picture of you also emerges over time. Consider this screenshot of student feedback:

The first two columns’ data come from what we’d call the mindfulness section of the form, which is drawn from the excellent educator resources at Stop, Breathe & Think. That section looks like this:

While these sections are optional, they can center you physically and mentally, giving you a greater chance of shifting cognitively from whatever came before — an exhilarating gym class, a relaxed lunch period — into the work of a Humanities makerspace.

The next columns of data are goals and miscellaneous feedback or updates. (The exact order has been changed since this screenshot.) This is incredibly powerful information to have at the start of the class period, and not just for teachers. For you students, this is a way to orient yourselves in the middle of a day that pulls you in a dozen different directions.

Completing this form is, therefore, incredibly important. This is a habit that will help you navigate academics, relationships, and the equally Sisyphean grind of many jobs. You can and often should pause momentarily to take stock of your physical and mental wellbeing. You can and often should set an immediate, achievable goal.

Ask questions about this below.