Learning and Teaching
Ms Jodie Connell - Deputy Principal
Learning and Teaching
Ms Jodie Connell - Deputy Principal
I wish to acknowledge the enormous amount of work our staff have put in during Semester One. The professionalism and work ethic displayed has been amazing. It is not only the teachers who ensure all our students are successful learners, but the many educational support staff, and school administration staff who help in the background and go about completing their work with pride and generosity to ensure the students have the opportunities that they do.
End of Semester Reports
Reports for all students will be available at 4 pm on Friday 23rd June.
As always, if you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to contact your child’s Homeroom Teacher or Classroom Teacher via email.
Accessing Reports
Step 1 – Log in to PAM
Step 2 – Click on any student
Step 3 – Click on any of the available report to download and view the report.
PAM (Parental Access Module) can be accessed via the following:
https://pam.mmcrc.catholic.edu.au/
Parents can choose to either download a copy of the report and save it to the home computer or print a copy. If accessing these reports causes some difficulties then please contact the school to discuss options.
If you have misplaced or have forgotten your PAM Code please email the Office info@mmcrc.catholic.edu.au
Formative Assessment
Providing Formative Assessment is one of the best ways for us to help students learn. It is a process in which both teachers and students collect information from the assessment and use it collaboratively to plan for future academic success. It looks at what students have learned, haven’t learned, and gives us an idea of ‘where to from here’.
Researchers have found that good use of formative assessment strategies in class can add an extra 6 months of growth in learning during a year of teaching. Therefore, it is an exceptionally powerful tool in promoting student achievement. However, Formative Assessment is only successful if students understand the outcome they’re looking to achieve, the standard against which the work is assessed, and the ways in which they can improve (Jarvis, 2020).
Formative Assessment can happen both formally and informally (sometimes just via a classroom conversation!). This is why we refer to Formative Assessment as an assessment for learning. Comparatively, Summative Assessment (assessment of learning) is how we measure outcomes against a set of criteria at the end of a learning period. On the learning continuum, both Formative and Summative have their place as measures to understand the growth of each student.
As parents, there are a number of things you can do to help promote a Formative Assessment mindset at home.
Studiosity – online study help in 2023
Just a reminder to all students and parents, that students have access to Studiosity online. an after-hours study help service. Your child has 24/7 access to a huge network of expert teachers and subject specialists, online, on-demand. They can connect to an expert in minutes and ask a question one-to-one when they get stuck, or upload a draft essay or assignment for review anytime and get fast, helpful feedback on how to improve it.
Students can access Studiosity FREE all year, thanks to the school. Simply log in to the school’s Studiosity service via Simon, or find your school at studiosity.com/access for instructions.
I wish all students a restful and rejuvenating break over the winter holidays and hope that you can enjoy some quality family time together. Term 3 will begin on Tuesday, 11 July.