This issue of Assessment Essentials can be downloaded here:
Category: Teaching and Learning
PLC Artifact Collection
Dear Principals,
We have enjoyed observing the progress you are making in your schools around PLCs. Many of you are establishing mission and vision statements, focusing on priority standards, or developing PLC leadership teams. We feel the conversations around the Learning by Doing readings have been productive and informative, and we have seen regular referrals to our district's tight PLC expectations.
As we are midway through the school year, our area director PLC would like to examine, calibrate, and discuss evidence of PLC implementation at all of our schools. Here is the assignment:
We've created a PLC Implementation folder embedded in your SIP folder (to reduce the number of folders). The link is below. Please upload the following artifacts to this folder:
- One artifact from a PLC that is high functioning (you determine what high functioning means).
- One artifact from a PLC that is on track at a basic but sufficient level (per our district's PLC phase timeline).
- One artifact from a PLC that is struggling with an explanation (comment on doc or even separate Word doc) of how you are supporting this group and/or holding them accountable.
Artifacts may include agendas, minutes, placemats, common formative assessments, etc.
Please upload all three documents to your PLC Implementation folder by 5pm on February 12, 2025. Thank you! We look forward to seeing samples of your teachers' work.
Please put PLC artifacts in the "PLC Implementation" folder:
Sensitive Topics Guidance for Social Studies Teachers
Summary: The following information was provided to social studies teachers on 1.14.2025 to help them navigate topics that are, in Utah, deemed as “sensitive.” Our goal is to help teachers be able to navigate these topics in
classrooms if they are raised by students or encountered in classroom discussions.
As social studies teachers, we know everything has a history. In learning social studies, part of our instructional practices call for teaching students to formulate and respond to compelling questions, conduct research, apply analytical thinking, and discern between valid and invalid sources as they seek to draw conclusions and formulate arguments about various current or historical topics. We know these are critical skills for an educated and civic ready citizenry, which is essential to sustaining our democracy.
We also recognize that today our students are savvy and care deeply about justice, and in response we provide students with valuable opportunities to explore topics compelling to them in an effort to help them better understand themselves and their communities. With
that said, as public school teachers, we are bound to follow Utah law. Our Board Policies are designed to capture the essence of the laws and inform what we must do to abide by Utah law.
This email is generated as a result of two laws: Utah Code Section 53G-10-402 and Utah Code Section 53G-10-403. I know you are not teaching health, sex ed, biology or the like, but since everything has a history, you may find that students choose to investigate a topic for a
history fair or civic action project that may be considered sensitive or unlawful according to Utah law.
What does this mean for you as social studies teachers? It means that if any instruction or information pertains to any of the sensitive topics listed in the law, I strongly encourage you to do the following:
- Review our Board Policy I-7 regarding Curriculum and Instructional Materials
and Board Policy I-12 Human Sexuality Education to empower you with appropriate information.
- Complete the USBE approved 2024 Sex Ed Law and Policy Training Canvas course. This is an asynchronous course with a helpful teacher guide and other resource. It will take you about 90 minutes to complete and you will be paid for 1.5 hours at the
$30/hour PD rate and receive 1 relicensure point for completing the course.
- Confer with your school administrator letting them know what you are doing and
what, if any, topics might be deemed sensitive. Together, determine the parameters of the project so it stays within the boundaries of the law.
- Keep parents informed and get appropriate parent permission prior to proceeding or allowing students to proceed with any topic deemed to be sensitive.
- Plan accordingly. If student projects include any materials deemed sensitive under Utah law/Board policy, students are not allowed to share their projects with any other students. Students are not allowed to receive peer feedback or present their projects in any school or district venue. In these cases, what are your plans for student alternatives?
- Please Note: Utah History Day (UHD) is aware of Utah Code and working to determine how that may affect student presentations during UHD contests.
Please be assured that this email is not meant to alarm you or stifle student learning or your instruction. It is merely meant to equip you with important information. If you have further questions, please refer to your administrator.
Keyboarding
Requirement:
“Aligning to Board Rule R277-700-4(6), a Local Education Agency (LEA) shall assess students for proficiency in keyboarding by grade 5 and report school-level results to the superintendent.
Each LEA will complete the Keyboarding Proficiency Report by June 1 each year.”
Action Items:
- Coordinate with grade 5 teachers to ensure there is a planned time to administer the assessment.
- Ensure grade 5 teachers have a plan to access keyboards for this assessment.
- Confirm all grade 5 teachers have had the keyboard assessment training and understand the scoring procedure and how to submit their information.
- Watch for an email from Sallie Warnecke by May 5 with the log-in information to submit your scores to the USBE.
Resources:
- For the 2024-2025 school year, the district has purchased a premium license for all students in grades 2-6 from Typing.com. To access the premium license, students and teachers log in through Clever.
- A Proper Technique Checklist (https://slcsd-my.sharepoint.com/personal/sallie_warnecke_slcschools_org/_layouts/15/onedrive.aspx?id=%2Fpersonal%2Fsallie_warnecke_slcschools_org%2FDocuments%2FKeyboarding%2FKeyboarding%20Technique%20Poster%2Epdf&parent=%2Fpersonal%2Fsallie_warnecke_slcschools_org%2FDocuments%2FKeyboarding&ga=1 ) has been created to post in schools.
- Please note: There is only one required report per school, not teacher, to be submitted to the state on or before June 1, 2025. The window to submit opens on May 1, 2025.
- Sallie Warnecke will provide professional learning opportunities throughout the spring via Teams and, upon request, will be available to provide in-person learning opportunities.
- The first online PD will be held Monday, January 27 from 3:00-3:30 via Teams. Each fifth grade teacher will receive a Teams invitation to attend.
Questions? Sallie Warnecke, Digital Learning Supervisor Keywords: Keyboarding, grade 5, assessment
ESL Endorsement
Summary:
SLCSD educators are required to have an ESL Endorsement if they were hired after 2001-02. New employees must complete their endorsement by the end of their fourth year of employment. Registration for the next cohort opened on Monday, January 13 and closes on April 1. The registration is in KickUp, which is found in Clever. Click on the "Learning" tab and browse for "ESL Endorsement Cohort 8." The first class will begin on April 7.
Information about the ESL Endorsement and schedule is available on the ESL Endorsement Information page on the SLCSD website. Teachers have received this information through district email.
Endorsement Information
SLCSD offers an ESL Endorsement program to our educators. The courses are 3-unit graduate-level offered through SUU. Each term is 12 weeks long. Courses are facilitated in the SLCSD Canvas and are asynchronous. The district pays for the instructor and has built the materials into the course, so the only cost for the employee is the credit posting fee of $72. SLCSD has two different endorsement options: FULL and SLCSD Modified.
- The full endorsement is six (6) courses, 18 units. This endorsement is placed on the Utah Teaching License and will stay current as long as the license is current.
- The modified endorsement is only available to educators with specific teaching positions. This endorsement is only valid in SLCSD and does not attach to the state teaching license.
Who needs which endorsement?
- Full Utah ESL Endorsement: Elementary teachers, core content secondary teachers (science, mathematics, ELA, Social Studies), and academic coaches in core areas are required to have the full ESL Endorsement.
- SLCSD Modified Endorsement: Secondary elective teachers, administrators, and other educators can complete the entire endorsement or an SLCSD Modified Endorsement (1-3 classes, depending on position).
- All educators are welcome to complete the entire credential.
- Educators may also complete the endorsement by earning a passing score on the Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages Praxis Exam (5362). A passing score on this assessment will complete the endorsement. An ESL endorsement application must be submitted to USBE with the score report. If employees have already taken one of the courses listed in the endorsement within the last 10 years with a grade of C or better, they do not need to take that course again. If there is a question about whether or not a course can be used, USBE must make that determination as they are the granting agency. Questions? Contact Dr. Tiffany Hall (Tiffany.Hall@slcschools.org)
CTE Courses Approved for Fine Arts
Due to the change of USBE’s competency-based systems and at the direction of USBE leadership, the Career and Technical Education (CTE) and Fine Arts teams were tasked with identifying natural alignments between CTE arts-based courses and the Fine Arts courses, endorsements, and core standards.
A multi-month alignment review identified significant overlap between the CTE arts-based standards and the Fine Art state core standards. Based on these findings, the following CTE courses may now grant Fine Arts Credit on a case-by-case basis, depending on student needs:
- Commercial Art 1/2/3
- Commercial Photo 1/2/3
- Digital Illustration, Digital Media 1/2/Advanced
- Digital Media Capstone
- Graphic Print Design 1/2/3
CTE educator requirements: to grant this credit, CTE educators must have a secondary license and one of the following CTE endorsements:
CTE endorsements will be updated on July 1, 2025. CTE will offer different options to fulfill the requirements for the Associate Level of each endorsement. Fine arts teachers cannot be scheduled to teach these courses until they have the appropriate endorsements.
Resulting changes for students: this change provides our students with greater flexibility in fulfilling their
graduation requirements and allows them to explore their interests in both Fine Arts and Career and Technical Education – for these courses, credit can be granted depending on the student’s needs.
No other CTE courses are eligible for Fine Arts graduation credit.
Questions? Laura deShazo, CTE Director
