I have been working on incorporating Rich Performance Tasks (RPTs) into my English courses to provide students with varied and authentic opportunities to demonstrate their learning. RPTs are a great way to do this because they allow for student choice, involve multiple steps, and encourage application of skills to real life problems and situations.
As an English teacher at a new high school, one of the things I have been wanting to do is start a school newspaper or blog developed and run by the students themselves. This got me thinking that it would be a great RPT for an ENG4U class. The students would be responsible for the brainstorming and developing of a formal proposal and presentation to school leaders, and the publication of the first edition. In this task, there are two opportunities for summative evaluation - one in a group, and one individually. I have organized the tasks with approximate timelines, but this RPT could run anywhere from one week to three weeks, depending on how much class time you can afford to dedicate to it.
I have included the student assignment sheet, a teacher planning chart, and a rubric for the evaluation of the publication below. Let me know what you think! :)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiO_qBj3EABTvzN02Rvgk4fEFd_rq3x_yT8uBQ1CaauHNMPSWwH0U84OBrtyfzxNye01wZ5tgc4BQZfpY10I0oid2D74-MhiKQrUhZYYtIOe1vApmrnZJcOPIU1mucInsX71xlhJLT-Jn1e/s200/schoolnewspaper.gif)
ENG4U: Rich
Performance Task
Introduction
to the Task
In honour of Jean Vanier CSS’s fifth year as a new school,
our ENG4U class has been asked to plan, develop and execute a first-ever JV
Newspaper! This paper will be available in print and online to all students,
parents, and staff of your school community. There are several steps involved
in accomplishing this task that you will complete:
1.
Newspaper Proposal (group assessment)
A formal written proposal will be prepared and presented to
the Principal and English Department outlining the specific goals,
expectations, design and logistics of the newspaper. While ALL students will participate in each part of the proposal
process, you will select one of the following teams to contribute to and be
assessed on.
a. Writing – Drafting, revising
and editing the written proposal
b. Presentation –
Planning, developing and presenting the proposal to the Principal
c.
Layout/Design –
Researching and developing a layout and design for the Newspaper
2. Drafting
of Articles (individual assessment)
Once the details of the newspaper has been approved by the
committee, each student will be responsible for writing ONE 300-500 word
article on an approved topic of your choice.
3. Published
First Edition
Once the articles have been drafted, edited and approved
for print, the design team will compile the articles and the first edition of
the JV newspaper will be released!
RPT:
Teacher Planning Chart
Day 1: Brainstorming
& Research
|
||
Task
|
Accommodations/Modifications
|
Assessment
|
Students will first write
their own proposal ideas down, then share in class brainstorming session.
Teacher will guide discussion to ensure brainstorming includes consideration
of timelines, logistics.
|
-Use
of technology
-mind
maps/visual aids
-guiding
questions
|
Diagnostic
– determine prior learning/student interest and ideas
|
Day 2-3: Proposal
Planning
|
||
Task
|
Accommodations/Modifications
|
Assessment
|
Students
will select which team they want to join:
Proposal Writing
Proposal Presenting
Newspaper Design/Layout
Students
will work in groups to complete assigned tasks in preparation for the
proposal.
|
-suggest
group based on student strengths
-strategic
pairings
-scaffolding/guiding
questions
|
Formative
– provide feedback to groups as they work through tasks.
|
Day 4: Proposal Assessment
|
||
Task
|
Accommodations/Modifications
|
Assessment
|
Students
will submit their group work. Presenters will communicate proposal to the
staff mentors.
|
-if
necessary, assess student as individual rather than group mark
|
Summative Evaluation – Students will be assessed
as a group
|
Day 5-7: Drafting Articles
|
||
Task
|
Accommodations/Modifications
|
Assessment
|
Students
will write an original article for the newspaper based on an issue, event, or
opinion they are passionate about.
After
writing, students will revise and peer edit their work before submission.
|
- Provide
templates
- Extra
time
- Computer
technology
- Chunking
into steps
|
Formative
– provide feedback to students as they draft, revise and edit.
|
Day 8: First Edition
Publication
|
||
Task
|
Accommodations/Modifications
|
Assessment
|
Students will submit articles to the teacher
for evaluation. They will make any necessary revisions on their articles
based on teacher feedback.
Design Team will compile articles for
publication.
|
- Use
modified rubric if necessary
- Extra
time
- Use
of technology
|
Summative
Evaluation – students will be graded on their articles (see rubric).
|
RPT Rubric: Article Publication
Below Level 1
|
Level 1
|
Level 2
|
Level 3
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Level 4
|
|
Knowledge
1.3 locate
and select information to fully and effectively support ideas for writing
/10
|
Publication
does not demonstrate adequate understanding of the topic explored.
|
Publication
demonstrates limited understanding of topic explored. Many key details missing.
|
Publication
demonstrates some understanding of topic explored. Some key details missing.
|
Publication
demonstrates understanding of topic,
all relevant facts and information are presented.
|
Publication
demonstrates thorough understanding of topic, all relevant facts and
information are presented flawlessly.
|
Communication
2.1 write
for different purposes and audiences using a variety of literary, informational,
and graphic forms
/10
|
Written
in incorrect POV.
Writing
changes between past and present tense
Inappropriate
voice for publication format
Multiple
errors in spelling, grammar and punctuation limit communication of article
|
Mostly
written in incorrect POV based on format of publication.
Written
in correct tense with multiple errors that distract from meaning.
Unclear
voice
Errors
in spelling, grammar and punctuation distract from communication of article
|
Written
in correct POV based on format of publication, with several errors
Written
in correct tense with some errors
Appropriate
voice with some errors
Several
errors in spelling, grammar and punctuation
|
Written
in correct POV based on format of publication, with minimal errors
Written
in correct tense with minimal errors
Clear
voice, appropriate for publication format
Correct
use of spelling, grammar and punctuation with minimal errors
|
Written
in correct POV based on format of publication, with no errors
Written
in correct tense with no errors
Strong
voice and professional tone
Grammar,
spelling and punctuation demonstrate excellent communication
|
Application
3.7 produce
pieces of published work to meet criteria identified by the teacher, based on
the curriculum expectations
/10
|
Byline,
Placeline and dateline are not included
Introduction
of publication not included
Article
is disorganized/ one long paragraph
Picture
and caption not included
|
Byline,
Placeline or dateline are missing/inaccurate
Introduction
of publication is ineffective
Article
is poorly organized, inconsistent paragraph format. Too short or too long.
Lacks
creativity
|
Byline,
Placeline and dateline are included, with errors
Introduction
of publication is appropriate, lacks intrigue
Article
is mostly organized, some paragraphs are too lengthy
Shows
effort to be creative (picture, headline)
|
Byline,
Placeline and dateline are accurate
Introduction
of publication effectively hooks reader
Article
is organized into short paragraphs, is appropriate length
Includes
creative details (picture, headline)
|
Byline,
Placeline and dateline are accurate and correctly formatted
Introduction
of publication is creative and intriguing
Article
is effectively organized into short paragraphs, appropriate length
Includes
several creative details (picture, headline)
|
Thinking
1.2 generate,
expand, explore, and focus ideas for potential writing tasks, using a variety
of strategies and print, electronic, and other resources, as appropriate
/10
|
Quotations
are missing/incomplete
Closing
is incomplete/not included
|
Multiple
errors/lack of Indirect and direct quotations
Closing
is ineffective
|
Indirect
and direct quotations are included, with errors
Closing
is included, with errors in approach
|
Indirect
and direct quotations are integrated into article
Closing
is appropriate and effective
|
Indirect
and direct quotations are thoughtfully integrated into article
Closing
is sophisticated and effective
|
I must say that I like this task a lot and I think it has some really valuable lessons in life skills like space and content management and working with group members to form a unified product. I ran an assignment much like this two years ago in an enriched English class.
ReplyDeleteAs I was running it though, I also asked myself, and every year we do the news report, or I talk about "letters to the editor" only to be met with blank stares of "what's that?", I ask myself if it is becoming an outdated medium. I wonder how I might adapt the project to create an online news site or website possibly? I know this might involve web site creation, which is not my strong suit, but I think it could be part of a bigger conversation of where we get news "nowadays" and how we find credible sources and what people put on websites visually and why etc.