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Your students are using IXL, but are they using its powerful data analysis features to personalize their skill development?
If that sounds like a tall order, don't worry. Here are 6 tips you can try today to put students in the driver's seat:
- Instruct Students to Do the Diagnostic
- Teach Students to Analyze their Diagnostic Data
- Demonstrate Use of the Recommendations Wall
- Teach Students to Filter their Trouble Spots
- Talk to Students About Scores vs. Progress
- Help Students Set Goals
1. Instruct Students to Do the Diagnostic
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And don't forget: Students can click the pyramid or book symbols to filter the diagnostic so they ONLY see either ELA or Math questions!
2. Teach Students to Analyze their Diagnostic Data
Students should know:
- Every "100" represents a grade level according to state standards; for example, anything in the 800-899 range means the students is at an 8th grade level.
- Wider bands mean more data is needed - work on the Diagnostic! When the band becomes a single dot, IXL has pinpointed that students' level with accuracy.
- They can click recommended skills to jump straight to the practice they need most!
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4. Teach them to Filter their Trouble Spots
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5. Talk to Them About Scores vs. Progress
Scores are great snapshots of their overall mastery level, while Progress is focused more on growth. These two lenses each have their own merit, so help students understand how to value where they are, but also their growth - and to know which lens to use when prioritizing what to work on in IXL.
6. Help Them Set Goals
SmartScores are useful if you know how to use them:
- 100 is Mastery, but not easily attainable for all skills.
- 90+ is when students hit the "Challenge Zone" - harder questions above their current level - hence the difficulty reaching 100.
- 80 is Proficiency, and a good baseline goal to set for the class.
- Each student is different, each skill is different. Help students set reasonable goals for their needs. A goal of 100, 90, or 80 doesn't make sense for all students, all skills. Teach them to value progress and growth over simply achieving a static number goal.
You can teach students all 6 in less than one class period. Letting go of control is difficult, but students taking ownership of their own skill development is...
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