Regents Prep: Pass/Fail


Assessment Shift: Q2 ff.


Your Q1 grades are online. These grades were developed from the assessment model outlined in your syllabus, which means that they reflect a GAP score earned every three weeks.

The decision has now been made to treat this course as Pass/Fail. This changes nothing about my expectations, your goals, our work, etc., but it does change how you are assessed. For Q1, any GAP score average below 65 is failing; anything 65 or above is passing.

For Q2, we will use this:

That is an edit of the grade abatement profiles given in your syllabus. Now, instead of receiving a score, you will either pass or fail, based on your entire body of work throughout the quarter. It is no longer a mathematical average. Do not use the original corresponding scores.

This is a significant shift, but you will still receive the same level of feedback. You will still use the calendar uploaded here:

Every three weeks, we will talk about your progress. You may receive written feedback through Infinite Campus. You won’t receive a score, however, and it is your responsibility to monitor your progress, ask for help, meet your goals, and so on.

You will receive a copy of the new handout the next time you meet with me this week. We will review it then.

One additional note: Everything you do must now run through me. I’ll keep your folders until you request them, and I’ll collect them at the end of each period. You will be in assigned seats and groups. I’ll request a plan each day from you, and we’ll use that daily goal-setting to drive our work.

Tilting at Windmills

Picasso’s take on Don Quixote.


Q2 GAP Feedback


TL;DR | The three most important elements of this course right now are these:

  1. Consistent, effective, respectful use of every class period
  2. Consistent, careful, annotated interaction with all interstitial instruction/feedback/etc
  3. Consistent, collaborative, goal-oriented feedback looping with the teacher or proxies

Assignment #1 | Pull out every adjective from that list. You should have an immediate and intuitive sense of what each adjective means, but you’ll want a more articulated definition, too. What, for instance, does effective use of every class period look like? What does respectful have to do with your use of class time?

Assignment #2 | The following document uses data from Q2 to illustrate these elements and give you direction as you move into Q3. You have a Google Classroom assignment built around this document (and the interstitial directions you are currently reading) to force you to start doing what’s required of you. Complete that Google Classroom assignment.

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Maker Spaces


Where you sit in a makerspace is critical. Your use of space is critical, hence the term makerspace. Small shifts in our physical setup open up new perspectives — which is exactly what happened when I moved the de facto teacher desk to the middle of the room. Two days of observing you was enlightening1.

From today onward, all junior classes will be allowed to sit where they like, but they must recognize the need to improve their in-class focus, interstitial reading, and use of resources. There are six desktop PC stations in Room 210, for instance, any of which would work well as study corrals. Our round tables should be for discussion, most likely without Chromebooks, or with a shared Google Document as the focus. The U-shaped conference tables should be for a different sort of discussion, probably led by a student with some proxy or atelier feedback to share. The high tables should be regularly moving into new configurations that reflect each group’s goals.

If you are in one of the juniors classes in Room 210, your assignment is to make better use of the space. I will be observing your efforts and giving you feedback on your choices. You probably want to keep the criteria for a Tier 4 GAP score in mind, too, since this is a formal assignment, and you know that those aren’t just given through Google Classroom2.

Sophomores will have assigned seats, with some self-selected groups allowed to stay together. That class simply isn’t focused enough when given free reign over the classroom space. We will need to shift into more teacher-monitored group work, and individuals will need to sit where they can be held accountable for pretty much every choice.

I’m sharing these decision with everyone at once, by the way, because juniors can absolutely lose the ability to choose where to sit and what to do. There is a limit to this course’s patience, and after that limit, you must be forced to work. You’ll either develop these habits on your own or be forced to develop them. You probably know that the former is almost always more powerful and long-lasting than the latter.


  1. Terrifying? Depressing? I’m not sure what the word is there. 

  2. They aren’t always marked in metaphorical neon lights, either. The point of this interstitial reading, remember, is to force you to read slowly and carefully.