This year, my district began using the iReady program across all grade levels. It has been an interesting journey so far and I thought I would share a bit about the incentives we have in place in my class that are helping the students to progress through the lessons. Here are a few things you need to know before we proceed:
1) iReady is mandated for 45 minutes in BOTH Reading and Math per week by the district.
2) We are only using the diagnostic and the adaptive MyPath lessons.
3) I do not have admin access on my end, so the features I have available to me are limited.
So now that you have a little clearer picture of the iReady expectation in my district, we can move on :) When I started the program at the beginning of the year, my students simply weren't doing iReady. They had no intrinsic incentive to do it, so I needed an extrinsic one. So I searched the internet and tweaked some ideas I found to suit the needs of my class.
First and foremost, this year we have begun to keep track of our own progress daily. I have given the students these iReady Trackers for their planners. Every day after working on iReady, the students track the minutes they completed. At the end of the week, they track how many lessons were completed in both reading and math. They start the month with a goal, and at the end of the month, they see if the goal was achieved. I also have a class chart that tracks the class average minutes as a whole. so we can see if the entire class reached 45 minutes per subject.
Incentive 1: Punch Cards
I started by using these punchcards in MATH. (I only did math because iReady as much more easily integrated into my existing math routine.) When students passed a lesson in math, they would walk the card and computer up to me and I would mark the lesson down as completed. I have these in groups of 10 because the iReady dashboard shows me how many lessons they have passed in numerical order. If they have passed 15 lessons, I know that this is their second card (the first one was used for lessons 1-10) and they are getting the 5 marked. Every 10 lessons passed they get a new card. Makes accounting super easy for me.
You can get the cards I created here. Again, they are ONLY for MATH.
Incentive 2: Lessons Passed Reward
After a while, I found that the cards were really only being used by about half of the class regularly. The other half weren't as motivated by them. So, using an idea from two teachers at my school, I started keeping track of lessons passed. As a class, we set a goal of 3 lessons in math and 3 lessons in reading. If they reached the goal by the end of the week, they would earn a reward. Again, my class decided that they wanted extra PE time if they reached their goal. So each week, the kids work on passing 3 lessons in each domain. That takes roughly the 45 minutes per subject per week that my district wants, so it works out nicely. If they make it by the end of the week, they get the reward. If they don't, they work on iReady while the others get the reward.
I use numbered magnets (affiliate link here) to keep track of it all. I also check the date of the lessons passed either on the student's computer when they tell me they have passed or on my teacher dashboard. I am the only one who can move the magnets, but I do a final check of the computer before the reward is given. If you would like the little cards I have on the board to organize it, here it is!
So far, this incentive is working very, very well. Most of the kids are motivated to work instead of just stare into space or push buttons and fail.
Incentive 3: 100% Whole Class Reward
I also wanted to reward the class as a whole. If the kids get a 100% on any test, Math or Reading, they can walk up to the chart and color in one section. When it is fully colored, the whole class gets the specified reward. The chart can be found here.
This is largely on the honor system. I am not really checking every single 100% the kids say they get. So far, they are pretty good about being honest. If I notice one kid constantly going up there quickly, I will check, but for the most part they have been good about being truthful.
Incentive 4: 100 Goal Name List
Some kids need personal and public recognition. Because of that, I have 4 signs on my wall. If they get 25 lessons passed in reading or math, they can write their name on the sign. Same at 50, 75, and 100. The goal is for them to get their name up their twice (once for reading and once for math.) Some kids LOVE seeing their name up there and have been very motivated by this.
Now I understand that this is a lot of rewarding and incentivizing this program. Frankly, right now my class needs it. Maybe in the future they won't, but right now they do. So we will keep going with these incentives until they either don't need them or they don't work. We are just taking it one week at a time.
Thank you for this idea and for your resources. I am going to use them starting next week!
ReplyDeleteI love your incentives and different reward options! Our district implemented this last year with the same requirements, and I am looking for ideas to push my kiddos. Absolutely have to adapt as you go and see what works, and what doesn't - Thank you for sharing!
ReplyDeleteTHANKS!
ReplyDeleteThank you for all of these great ideas!
ReplyDeleteWow! This is amazing. Thank you for all the resources.
ReplyDeleteI love the iReady tracker for individual and class! We only do math, do you have a version that you only have math or could possibly make one that only shows math ? This is amazing work! Thanks!
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