-
- Thanks, Jennifer.
-
All right, so it is exactly four o'clock,
-
so I will go ahead
-
and get us started to make
sure we start on time.
-
Good afternoon, everyone.
-
Thank you so much for joining us today.
-
My name is Frances Barreto.
-
I am one of the district success managers
-
that support our amazing
partners in Arizona.
-
And you do have a dedicated
team here to support you
-
as you see on the screen.
-
That includes Chelsea Hatchard,
-
who's our district partnership manager,
-
Sheryl Dossola supports as
the rostering specialist.
-
We have Victoria Cheng,
-
who is another district success manager,
-
and then Jennifer
Cummings and India Quarles
-
are your professional
learning specialists.
-
We are especially excited
to have Sarah Robertson
-
from the Khan Academy Writing
Coach team with us today,
-
and she's gonna be sharing
-
how you can help your
students become more confident
-
and skilled writers using
Khanmigo's Writing Coach tool.
-
This is the first
-
out of several professional
learning opportunities
-
that you're going to be able
to participate in the spring,
-
so keep an eye out for an email
-
that should be coming your way March 11th
-
with the registration links
-
for our Arizona Spring Learning series.
-
And remember that if you register,
-
you'll automatically
receive the recording,
-
even if you can't attend live.
-
Please feel free to drop any questions
-
or thoughts in the chat
throughout the session.
-
Jennifer and I will be
actively in the chat
-
and we'll also be sending
the recording your way
-
after this session as well.
-
So without further ado,
-
I'm gonna go ahead and
pass it on to Sarah.
-
- Thank you, Frances.
- [Frances] You're welcome.
-
- I'm gonna share my presentation now.
-
All right, hopefully you can all see
-
where it says Meet Khanmigo Writing Coach.
-
Yes, okay, awesome.
-
I'm gonna try and have
the chat open as well
-
so I can keep an eye on
what you all are saying.
-
Welcome, everyone.
-
I'm really excited to be here.
-
A little bit about myself.
-
My name is Sarah Robertson.
-
I am a principal product
manager here at Khan Academy,
-
focusing on literacy experiences
-
and classroom tools to support ELA
-
and humanities teachers specifically.
-
And some background of
sort of where I came from.
-
I was a middle school
ELA teacher in Boston.
-
That's a picture of me when
I had a lot less gray hair
-
than I have now.
-
And when I was a teacher,
I taught seventh grade.
-
Many of my students were
significantly below grade level.
-
I taught a variety of humanities classes
-
during my time in the classroom,
-
but the hardest of all the classes
-
that I taught was writing.
-
I think as a writing teacher,
-
I assigned 25 different essays
-
throughout the course of
one single school year.
-
And like most middle and
high school teachers,
-
I had about 100 students,
-
maybe more than that,
-
so that's about 2,500
distinct essay drafts
-
for me to guide students
through producing,
-
provide timely, detailed,
personalized feedback on,
-
evaluate against a rubric.
-
I worked easily about 12 hours a day
-
and nearly every weekend,
-
and even still, it always
felt like I could never get
-
to all the students in the class
-
who were asking for my help.
-
I could never keep a close enough eye
-
on the students who I knew needed my help,
-
but weren't asking for it.
-
I could never deliver
personalized feedback
-
to students quickly enough,
-
even if I tried really hard.
-
I never really knew about
what my students needed
-
at any given moment
-
or how to better support them.
-
And the burnout from this year
-
of teaching writing
specifically was so real.
-
And keep in mind this was before COVID,
-
before learning loss,
-
and before generative AI,
-
so I have a lot of empathy for many of you
-
who are currently in the classroom.
-
So today I am excited to share with you
-
the solution that we built
-
in response to these very
real classroom challenges.
-
So we'll talk a bit about
why we built Writing Coach
-
and our intentions behind its design,
-
and then I'm gonna dig
into how to actually use it
-
and show you how to find it
and how to assign things.
-
I'll show you what the
student experience is like
-
and what the teacher
-
and administrator
reports are like as well.
-
And then I will send you
off and hopefully you can go
-
and use it and explore it yourselves.
-
And then I'll actually give you my email
-
so you can send me the
feedback that you have.
-
All right, so I had asked
if we could make this
-
a meeting-type webinar
-
so you all could be a
little bit more interactive.
-
So now we have the chat.
-
Thank you, Aviv, for setting that up.
-
I would love for you all
-
to answer this question in the chat.
-
I'm wondering if you could just name,
-
what are some things that
you know students need
-
in order to reach grade-level
proficiency in writing?
-
Take a minute and think
-
and put your thoughts into the chat.
-
Kim says, "Vocabulary, sentence fluency,
-
punctuation, practice
-
help with sentence structure,
grammar, punctuation."
-
Absolutely.
-
Format of the writing, yes.
-
Practice and timely feedback, yes.
-
I'm seeing a lot of practice,
feedback, direct instruction.
-
Out of curiosity, does anybody know
-
how much time the National
Commission on Writing recommends
-
that middle and high school
students should spend
-
on writing practice?
-
Let's say each day.
-
How many minutes per
day do they recommend?
-
Guess, put it in the chat.
-
30 minutes.
-
60 minutes.
-
30 minutes.
-
All right, you guys are well informed.
-
It's 60 minutes per day.
-
I taught writing,
-
so in my classroom,
-
kids were writing a lot of the time
-
when they weren't watching me model things
-
or teaching things,
-
but in many schools,
-
there isn't a separate writing class
-
and most students are not
actually getting the 60 minutes
-
of writing practice per day,
-
as I'm sure you all are well aware.
-
Other things that I saw
mentioned that students need,
-
they need the direct instruction
-
specifically in things like
the rhetorical situation,
-
audience, purpose, tone, rhetoric,
-
text structure, sentence
structure, grammar,
-
the writing process,
how we begin to write,
-
how we think about writing,
how to conduct research,
-
how to incorporate evidence,
how to cite evidence.
-
They also need things like
exposure to mentor texts,
-
they need modeling, they need
vocabulary-building practice,
-
they need feedback
-
and that feedback has to
be specific and actionable
-
and it also has to be
delivered not three weeks
-
from when they wrote the essay.
-
And then of course, reading
practice and comprehension
-
is part of that too.
-
And they also just need to feel motivated,
-
that's a really big piece.
-
Again, looking for you
all to go to the chat,
-
what are some of the things
-
that make teaching writing
especially challenging?
-
Go ahead and put your
thoughts in the chat.
-
Time, yes, for sure.
-
Yep.
-
Never enough.
-
Differentiation.
-
Yes, Robert.
-
The feedback piece is,
yes, really challenging.
-
Motivation, yep, yep.
-
Definitely time for
providing that feedback,
-
especially if you have a lot of students.
-
Grade-level reading, yep.
-
Exactly, agree.
-
Texting all the time.
-
Yeah, productive struggle,
that's a big one.
-
And I think the motivation
piece plays into that too.
-
So I spend a lot of my time talking to
-
and learning from ELA teachers,
-
and writing is consistently
one of the hardest parts
-
of the job as I experienced firsthand.
-
These are some quotes from interviews
-
that we've done with ELA teachers
-
and I also happen to grab some screenshots
-
from a few of the recent comments
-
in various ELA teacher Facebook
groups that I'm still in.
-
So yeah, kids are not
writing on grade level
-
and it's really no wonder why.
-
A big piece of this, as you all mentioned,
-
is timely, specific, actional
feedback is so critical,
-
but with one teacher to 100-plus students,
-
it's nearly impossible and
teachers are really overwhelmed.
-
Also, since I've been in the classroom,
-
which is now, I think,
approaching 10 years ago,
-
it's gotten a lot harder.
-
My husband is a writing professor,
-
he teaches college freshmen,
-
so I hear from his perspective a lot
-
about how student AI use has
affected writing instruction
-
and practice in his classroom.
-
I also hear this from many of
the teachers that I speak to
-
through Khan Academy
-
and I expect that some
of you might have had
-
some personal experience
dealing with this too.
-
And there are various things out there.
-
Somebody here mentions,
-
"I've seen several AI
checkers online recently.
-
How accurate are those?"
-
They're not,
-
they're not accurate, unfortunately.
-
We all wish that there was
-
like one beautiful magical
solution to this problem,
-
but it has been really challenging
-
for teachers to be able to spot students
-
who are using this technology.
-
And it can be, as I'm sure you know,
-
very difficult to challenge a student
-
who you think has produced
something with ChatGPT,
-
but you don't have the evidence for that.
-
Okay, for this one,
-
I wanted to touch upon
another prescient question.
-
About a year ago I led a workshop
with high school students
-
on AI and writing
-
and one of the students said to me,
-
and this was like a very precocious,
-
I don't know, 14-year-old girl,
-
she said, "I just don't see the point
-
in learning to write anymore,
-
AI can do it for me.
-
Why do I need to learn to do this thing
-
that AI can just do for me?"
-
And I want you to take a minute
-
and you can answer in the chat,
-
or if you feel so inclined,
-
you can come off mute
and just say it out loud,
-
do you agree or disagree?
-
Do you think that it's still important?
-
I feel like this is
probably a biased group,
-
but do you think it's important
to still learn to write,
-
for students to still
learn to write, and why?
-
What would you say to that student?
-
So yes, I'm gonna pause here,
-
and if you have something to say,
-
feel free to come off mute and
just say or put it in chat.
-
- Hi Sarah, this is Johna Wallace.
-
I'm gonna say this out loud,
-
I think that students do
need to learn how to write.
-
My son works in finance
-
and he has to be able to
communicate to other people
-
what he has done with his clients,
-
and if he cannot write coherently,
-
that communication is not there.
-
Also with the writing,
-
it helps clarify students' thinking
-
and their ability to
communicate with one another,
-
so they need to know how to do that.
-
- 100%.
-
You said it so perfectly.
-
Everything you said.
-
Writing is thinking,
-
writing is communicating.
-
Without knowing how to write,
-
we can't actually sometimes process
-
what we even think about something.
-
We don't have that critical muscle,
-
we're not building that critical muscle
-
of processing information and
working through information
-
and communicating it in ways
-
that reflect our own personal experiences
-
and our own beliefs.
-
I came across this Joan
Didion quote a while ago
-
and it sort of gave me exactly
-
what I think I was trying to convey
-
when I was presented with
these kinds of opinions
-
from various people,
-
specifically students who were like,
-
why do I need to do this anymore?
-
And Joan Didion says,
-
"I write entirely to find
out what I'm thinking,
-
what I'm looking at,
-
what I see and what it means."
-
And I get chills when
I say that every time
-
because as somebody who,
-
I consider myself a writer
and a writing teacher
-
and somebody who supports
writing teachers now,
-
and writing is so much more
than the written content, right?
-
It's not,
-
the process of writing means something
-
and it's important
-
and it has real human value.
-
And I think as teachers,
-
it's our jobs not just to
teach students how to write,
-
but to teach them about
-
why they still should be
learning to write, right?
-
There's also a robust body
of evidence that shows
-
that there are real cognitive
-
and psychological benefits from writing.
-
It helps students,
again, process emotions,
-
process their thinking,
-
figure out what they feel,
-
figure out what they believe.
-
It's a really wonderful tool
-
that we all have in our
toolbox as human beings.
-
So I agree,
-
I don't think that large
language models or AI
-
is a reason that we should
not teach writing anymore.
-
I don't think anybody
would be surprised by that.
-
And if anything, I actually
think it's more important now
-
than it has ever been,
-
but it is still very critical
-
to educate students about
AI and large language models
-
and to use it ethically and
responsibly in the classroom.
-
And we could do an entire webinar
-
specifically on this topic of effective
-
and ethical AI use in classrooms alone,
-
but I sort of jotted down a
list of some of the things
-
to consider when we are
incorporating AI in the classroom.
-
The first thing is,
-
is the use of this AI actually
helping students learn
-
or are we using it as a shortcut?
-
Will students become reliant on the AI?
-
And if it's being used as
some sort of scaffolding,
-
how can we gradually remove
that scaffolding over time?
-
Do students understand
-
how the content from the AI
is actually being generated?
-
Where it comes from,
-
when to trust it, when
definitely not to trust it,
-
when to say something about the fact
-
that they might have used it in some way.
-
And are they using AI in ways
-
that allow them to focus
more of their efforts
-
on higher-order thinking skills
-
and also on the human
element of writing too?
-
There are many opinions on these topics,
-
but I do believe that there are many ways
-
in which even if we use AI
for things like brainstorming,
-
I think it depends on the situation,
-
but in some ways some might argue
-
that that's actually taking away
-
some of the really
important thinking skills
-
that students do when they brainstorm.
-
It doesn't hurt maybe to have somebody
-
to bounce ideas off of
or to jumpstart things,
-
but worlds in which AI
generates a first draft
-
or AI generates a list of ideas,
-
we should just be thinking
about what is the AI doing
-
that a student previously
could have been doing,
-
and are we taking something
away of value to that student?
-
Okay.
-
So with all of that in mind,
-
let's learn about how and
why we made Writing Coach
-
and then I'm going to
show you how to use it.
-
Khan Academy is a well-known company.
-
It is not necessarily as
well-known for writing and reading
-
and ELA or humanities as it is for STEM,
-
but our mission has always been
-
to provide a free world-class education
-
to anyone and anywhere,
-
and we've always wanted to provide
-
that same level of
support in the humanities.
-
So when large language models
became broadly available
-
in late 2022,
-
we immediately began exploring ways
-
that we could leverage the technology
-
to achieve that mission.
-
And it's probably no
surprise that we found LLMs
-
to be especially helpful in
the writing space specifically.
-
So like all great products,
-
Writing Coach was also designed
-
as a solution to some very real problems.
-
So what we know about writing
-
is that, of course, students are expected
-
to meet grade-level standards.
-
They need to be writing
60 minutes per day.
-
They need support,
-
not just at the end of the writing process
-
when they've produced a
draft and they need feedback,
-
but they actually need
help getting started,
-
they need help outlining,
they need help drafting,
-
and they need to learn
-
how to do those different
parts of the process.
-
And then, of course, as we all mentioned,
-
they need specific, actionable,
-
personalized, timely
feedback in order to improve.
-
But in reality, only about a
quarter of secondary students
-
meet grade-level writing standards.
-
The vast majority of students
are not clocking even close
-
to their recommended
hour of practice a day.
-
Most teachers have way more students
-
than they can give personalized
writing process support to.
-
And I mention this math set all the time.
-
If the average teacher has 100 students
-
and limits herself to 10
minutes of feedback per essay,
-
which is something I would do,
-
I would set my timer 10 minutes per essay,
-
that's 17 hours for one
draft of one assignment
-
for me to give feedback to every kid,
-
17 hours for one assignment.
-
And if kids are writing an hour a day,
-
I just don't,
-
the math isn't mathing,
-
as the kids say these days,
-
it's just not really possible.
-
So in 2023, we started
working on a solution
-
and then last fall we
launched Writing Coach
-
to our school and district partners.
-
And when I talk about Writing Coach,
-
I think oftentimes
people hear AI, writing,
-
and they sort of have
a picture in their head
-
of what this is.
-
So I like to kind of explain what it is
-
against what it's not
-
and how it's different from
some of the other things
-
that people might be familiar with.
-
So you might be familiar with tools,
-
for example, like Grammarly.
-
I use Grammarly,
-
Grammarly is great.
-
Grammarly gives AI-generated
feedback to students,
-
but it typically provides more sentence
-
or phrase-level suggestions
-
and allows them to click a
button and accept the suggestion
-
without really having to figure out
-
how to change it themselves.
-
You might be familiar with other tools
-
who can kind of generate feedback quickly
-
for the teacher using AI
or even for the students.
-
Some of these things
are paid, some are free,
-
but usually the feedback
is rather limited,
-
there's not that much feedback,
-
or the teacher gets the feedback,
-
but then has to figure out
how to get it to the student.
-
And to this day, I haven't
really found anybody else
-
who guides students through
the actual writing process
-
stage by stage in the way that we do.
-
And if you're familiar with ChatGPT,
-
which I'm assuming all of you are,
-
it's obviously always more than happy
-
to just rewrite a student's essay for them
-
or produce it from scratch.
-
And there's positive use cases
-
for all of these different kinds of tools,
-
but the primary purpose behind them
-
is usually either to save time
or to produce better writing,
-
not to produce better writers.
-
And that is really how
Writing Coach is different.
-
The intention behind Writing
Coach is to help teachers
-
create better writers and
not just better writing.
-
So it is an instructional tool
-
with the primary purpose
of student learning
-
and teacher transparency.
-
It's a tool designed to guide students
-
through the full essay-writing process
-
while preventing cheating.
-
It's a way for teachers to give students
-
more writing practice
and real-time support.
-
And we have data dashboards for teachers
-
that have at-a-glance
and in-depth insights
-
into their students' writing processes.
-
So it's not just a digital
essay-writing platform,
-
it's not something that grades
or evaluate student writing,
-
it gives feedback, it doesn't score,
-
and that's really on purpose
-
because I could talk about
this for a long time,
-
but I think if we're telling students
-
that their voices matter,
-
we should have a human
reading what they have to say
-
at some point.
-
It's not a student productivity tool,
-
it's not a feedback generator,
-
and it's not a tool that provides
-
easy-to-accept suggestions
-
for improving things like
grammar and mechanics.
-
So just really quick,
-
we launched Writing Coach now
about six months ago or so
-
and the feedback that we've gotten
-
has been very, very positive
-
from the teachers and the
students who have used it so far.
-
We had one teacher talk
about how the feedback
-
that Khanmigo generated
was very, very close
-
to what they would have written themselves
-
on student writing.
-
In some cases it was more
detailed or more specific.
-
Another teacher said that they used this
-
for an IB essay prep course
-
and they had seen this
make the biggest difference
-
in helping students with that essay
-
than any any tool they've ever used.
-
We had one teacher in a district
who used this consistently
-
and her class had every
single student pass
-
that state writing assessment.
-
And so we were really
excited about what this is
-
and how it works.
-
So let's just dive into
what it looks like.
-
Okay, so the first step
in using Writing Coach
-
is to create a Writing Coach assignment,
-
and a Writing Coach assignment
is an essay assignment.
-
To begin, you should start by
logging in to Khan Academy.
-
So you can access Writing Coach
-
directly through Khan Academy.
-
As you can see here in the top
of every Khan Academy screen,
-
you see a Khanmigo drop-down
-
and you can click on Writing
Coach and get there that way.
-
And if you're logged in
to a Khan Academy account,
-
you'll be logged in to
a Writing Coach account,
-
Writing Coach is part of Khan Academy,
-
but you can also just go
to khanmigo.ai/writingcoach
-
and that will also take you
directly to Writing Coach.
-
Once you are in Writing
Coach as a teacher,
-
you will see three tabs on the left,
-
one says Assignments,
-
one says My Essays,
-
and one says About Writing Coach.
-
Assignments, self-explanatory,
-
that is where you create
assignments for students.
-
The My Essays space is kind
of like a playground for you
-
to play around with sample
essays that we've created.
-
You can test out or demo essays
-
that you might have
assigned to your students
-
so that you can model
-
how to use it for the
first time with them.
-
But to access your assignments
and create assignments,
-
you would do that from
your Assignments tab.
-
And you just should be looking
-
for this Create Assignment button
-
in the top right of the screen.
-
So a Writing Coach essay
assignment starts with a prompt
-
and it should be a prompt
that you are providing.
-
The essay instructions, I
can't emphasize this enough,
-
are the most important part.
-
The more details you include,
-
the more of a stickler
Khanmigo will be when, they,
-
Khanmigo is guiding students
through the writing process.
-
So if you say things like,
-
make sure in your instructions,
-
make sure you include three
pieces of textual evidence,
-
Khanmigo will take that information
-
and check that the student
has that amount of evidence
-
whenever it's giving feedback.
-
If you say you need to
use MLA in-text citations
-
or APA in-text citations,
-
Khanmigo will check to make
sure that students did that.
-
If you say that they need to have
-
a concession/rebuttal paragraph
-
in their argumentative essay,
-
again, Khanmigo will have that context
-
and then make sure students
are meeting those requirements.
-
Also, if you are doing an essay
-
that is in order to prep
students for the ACT
-
or another test, an AP test or something,
-
you can say in the
instruction specifically,
-
this is an AP practice test
-
or this is an ACT practice essay,
-
and that also helps Khanmigo understand,
-
okay, now I have all of the
information in the world
-
about what makes a great ACT essay
-
and I know what an exemplary
ACT essay looks like
-
and I know what the rubric looks like.
-
Just telling Khanmigo
this is an ACT essay,
-
Khanmigo will take that context
-
and tailor its interactions accordingly.
-
One thing I do wanna point out,
-
'cause this is a common
source of confusion,
-
the grade level drop-down here,
-
you can select any grade level you want.
-
Right now we have fifth/sixth,
-
which is kind of like a beta level
-
because it will still be
a little bit advanced.
-
And then we have the seventh
all the way through 12th.
-
We use this to get Khanmigo
-
to tailor the language that it's using
-
when it's chatting with students,
-
but also to tailor the
feedback that it gives.
-
So if you select fifth/sixth,
-
it might give less feedback
or less harsh feedback
-
than if you select 12th
grade for the same essay.
-
And that's, again, in order to make sure
-
that Khanmigo is leveling
itself appropriately.
-
Students will not see the
grade level that you select.
-
So if you teach 11th graders
-
and it's the beginning of the year
-
and you're kind of building things up,
-
you can select seventh
grade as their level
-
if you really want the feedback
-
to be a little bit more just broken down
-
or to kind of build them up
-
to the higher grade levels of
feedback throughout the year.
-
So that's a scaffolding
tool that I like to mention
-
because it's not always clear.
-
Students won't see the grade level,
-
so they're not gonna feel demoralized
-
if you choose a level that's below
-
the level they're actually in.
-
Another thing I like to tell people.
-
So when you are designing
your essay instructions,
-
again, for the assignment,
-
things that you can use are
details from the actual rubrics
-
that you will be using
or that are relevant.
-
So for example, if
you're preparing students
-
for the Arizona six through
eight argumentative essay,
-
you're assigning something,
-
you can use former released
essay prompts, for example.
-
One thing you can do in your
essay instructions is to say,
-
this is a writing practice test
-
for the ASA seventh grade essay.
-
Students will be evaluated on purpose,
-
focus and organization,
-
evidence and elaboration, conventions.
-
And you can even say things
from that score four,
-
so you can literally copy and paste.
-
The response should have a
strongly maintained claim
-
with little or no,
-
wait, yeah,
-
loosely related material.
-
So you're pulling the exact information
-
from that score four.
-
So that means that when
Khanmigo is helping the student
-
through the essay writing,
-
drafting and revising and all of that,
-
it will have that in mind that
those are the expectations
-
that will make this a great essay.
-
So if you wanna get more
information in there,
-
that's usually always very helpful
-
to make sure that Khanmigo
is preparing students
-
for the essay.
-
No, you cannot upload the rubric yet,
-
that is something that
we are hoping to do,
-
but instead you can copy and paste details
-
from this part of the rubric.
-
Again, you really only need to tell it
-
this is what you would
need to do to get a four.
-
You don't need to provide the rest of it
-
because, again, this
isn't an evaluative tool,
-
it's not gonna score students,
-
so it's really about giving them feedback
-
that will help them get
the highest score possible.
-
And then for ACT, I think I remember,
-
am I remembering correctly
-
that high schools in Arizona use the ACT?
-
Okay.
-
You don't have to do that level of detail,
-
you can just say this
is an ACT practice essay
-
because Khanmigo knows ACT practice essay
-
and knows what a great ACT
practice essay looks like,
-
it knows what will get
you the highest score,
-
and it will make sure that
it's giving you feedback
-
and tailoring directions
-
according to those expectations for ACT.
-
So once you have created your assignment,
-
I think the only other details
we ask for are due date
-
and then you can create a
class if you haven't yet
-
or assign it to a class you
already have on Khan Academy.
-
Your students can access it
-
from their Khan Academy main dashboard
-
or they can go directly to
Writing Coach themselves.
-
You'll also, when you
create your assignment,
-
you'll see a link that
you can share with them,
-
you can put it in Google
Classroom or Canvas
-
or whatever you use,
-
and they can go straight
to the assignment.
-
Students can also go to
khanmigo.ai/writingcoach
-
and log in to their Khan
Academy account from there.
-
But they should be able
to access their assignment
-
directly in Writing Coach
or from Khan Academy
-
or from the link that you share.
-
So let's walk through what
this looks like for students.
-
On the left here,
-
students will see the assignment details
-
that you provided in the
essay instructions field
-
when you were creating the assignment.
-
And so they'll see the title of the essay,
-
they will see the type of
essay that you selected,
-
and right now we support
argumentative, persuasive,
-
expository, explanatory,
and literary analysis.
-
And then we also will be adding soon
-
AP Language and Composition and SAT.
-
We don't have an ACT one yet,
-
but again, you can just choose
persuasive, argumentative,
-
or anything relevant,
-
and then you can specifically
say it's an ACT essay
-
in the instructions.
-
And then students see the essay prompt
-
and instructions that you provided
-
and then they have Khanmigo on the side.
-
So for understanding,
-
it's really just about
breaking down the prompt,
-
making sure the student
understands the requirements,
-
making sure they can ask questions
-
about anything that they don't
get that you put in there.
-
So they can do things like ask Khanmigo
-
to define specific terms
or break things down,
-
or even if you provided
a lot of information,
-
it can kind of help
them search through that
-
to kind of find specific
answers to their questions.
-
And they can come back
to this at any point.
-
So if at any point they're like,
-
what were those directions again,
-
they can come back to
this and ask questions,
-
but they can also access
these instructions
-
throughout the whole rest
of the writing process.
-
Okay.
-
When students are ready to get started,
-
and some additional information
-
that I don't think I mentioned earlier
-
is that if in cases
where the essay requires
-
that students do readings
-
or they have like the source packet
-
or they have a text
-
that they are supposed to
be gathering evidence from,
-
that is something that
they can either do that
-
before they start their
Writing Coach assignment
-
or they can do it between
understanding and outlining.
-
Outlining works best,
-
I mean, it can actually help them
-
with making sure they're
selecting relevant evidence,
-
but it works best if they've
already read the text
-
or they've already looked at the text
-
and they're familiar with the topic.
-
And during the understanding phase,
-
Khanmigo will kind of
nudge them to figure out,
-
have you read the text yet?
-
Do you need to go back?
-
And it will kind of give them
advice for what to do next
-
before they start outlining.
-
But when students are
ready to get started,
-
this is the basic outline template,
-
probably looks relatively familiar.
-
It starts out as a basic
kind of five-paragraph essay,
-
but we made it flexible
-
so that students can remove paragraphs,
-
they can add additional paragraphs,
-
they can do things like
add additional evidence
-
or reasoning,
-
they can add or remove the source fields,
-
they can add,
-
I think we have, yeah,
reasoning explanation,
-
I might have mentioned that,
-
and move paragraphs around.
-
So we tried to design it
so that it would support
-
many different kinds of academic essays.
-
Even if you have a one-paragraph essay,
-
an extended open response,
-
it will work that way as well
-
as long as you're clear
in the essay instructions
-
about the format of what
you want students to do.
-
For each of the outline templates,
-
we also provide some pretty
simple exemplar sentences
-
for each of the fields.
-
So if you chose persuasive
or argumentative,
-
we will have an example thesis
-
related to from like a
persuasive or argumentative essay
-
of a completely different topic.
-
They're all Khan Academy-related,
-
so I don't think we have any
risk of picking the same topic
-
as you would choose for your students.
-
But then Khanmigo, again, is on the side
-
and Khanmigo can help
students get started.
-
If the student gets started and is stuck,
-
it's there to help them with that,
-
Khanmigo can see their outline,
-
it can check the outline
-
against the assignment instructions,
-
again, that the teacher has provided.
-
So if the student doesn't
know what to do next,
-
Khanmigo will offer some suggestions,
-
but Khanmigo will never ever provide
-
something for the student
-
to actually put into their outline.
-
So Khanmigo is not gonna
give them evidence,
-
it's not going to write a
thesis statement for them,
-
it's not going to provide
examples or main points
-
or any of that,
-
it will look at what the student has
-
and it will give the
student advice and tips
-
and guidance for how
they can make progress
-
and what they're supposed to be doing.
-
It can also,
-
oh yes,
-
when the student is finished outlining,
-
one of the other kind of
interesting things about this
-
is you might have some students
-
who just don't really
wanna talk to Khanmigo
-
or they don't really feel like chatting
-
or they don't really know how to chat.
-
Even if you never talk to Khanmigo,
-
when the student moves
from outlining to drafting,
-
we check it anyway.
-
So we have Khanmigo,
again, look at the outline
-
and look at the assignment instructions,
-
and at this step,
-
we're really just checking
for pretty high-level basic,
-
not like, is this a well crafted essay?
-
It's like, does it have
a thesis statement?
-
And is the thesis
statement actually related
-
to what the essay prompt is asking?
-
Does the student have enough evidence
-
according to what the teacher asked for?
-
Does it have main points
that actually support
-
or could reasonably support the thesis?
-
I sometimes had seventh graders
-
who would start with a thesis
on one side of an argument,
-
and then halfway through,
they'd switch sides
-
and wouldn't even realize
that they did that.
-
So that's one of the
things that we check for.
-
And again, if you ask for
something like a counterargument
-
in your instructions,
-
we'll check for that here.
-
And if the student has not met
-
those very basic requirements,
-
there will be kind of a
stopping point where we say,
-
it looks like your teacher asked for this
-
and you didn't quite do this part,
-
so it will let them go back
-
and they can fix what
they didn't do correctly
-
and then they will move on
to drafting at that point.
-
During the drafting phase,
-
we try to keep it pretty simple,
-
we don't want it to be
too much distraction.
-
So again, the student can access
the assignment instructions
-
whenever they need to.
-
They can also access the
outline that they just wrote
-
from the previous step,
-
and from that outline,
-
they can copy and paste
the different contents
-
of their essay that they worked on.
-
They can take a piece of
evidence and put that in
-
or their thesis statement, et cetera.
-
They can also just hide this completely
-
and just have a nice blank
drafting area if they want.
-
But they can chat with
Khanmigo if they want to.
-
And again, Khanmigo in the drafting phase
-
is going to focus on helping
the student get their words
-
on the paper,
-
looking at their outline
at the appropriate points,
-
and pulling the information
-
that the student has already
written out in their outline
-
and helping them kind of
begin to craft their arguments
-
and their points and their prose.
-
It's not necessarily going to
be giving a lot of feedback
-
at this point because, again,
-
the drafting phase is really about
-
get your words on the paper,
-
get your thoughts on the paper,
-
get your ideas on the paper,
-
and then the revising
stage will come next.
-
So Khanmigo at this point
is just helping students
-
get a first draft together
-
and not too much focusing
on the perfection,
-
trying to make sure every word is perfect.
-
And again, Khanmigo won't write for them.
-
You can see here the
student might ask them to,
-
they might ask them to nicely,
-
and Khanmigo will gently, politely decline
-
and help them kind of work
-
through whatever it is
they're struggling with.
-
So when the student has their first draft,
-
they will at that point move
on to the revising stage.
-
And in revising, the
first thing that happens
-
is Khanmigo will generate
feedback in five categories,
-
which you can see up here.
-
Introduction and claim is the first one,
-
then we have evidence and reasoning,
-
and then there's structure
and organization,
-
conclusion, and style and tone.
-
Note that in Writing Coach,
-
Khanmigo will give students feedback
-
in all of the same areas
-
as the AASA and ACT writing rubrics,
-
but it might be categorized
slightly differently.
-
So for this grade six
through eight AASA essays
-
for example,
-
feedback related to purpose,
focus, and organization
-
that would fall under either
introduction or structure.
-
Evidence and elaboration feedback
-
would fall under evidence and reasoning.
-
Conventions would fall under
style and tone, et cetera.
-
And then same for SAT.
-
Feedback related to
development and support
-
would be under evidence and reasoning,
-
organization would be
under structure, et cetera.
-
So that the labels are different,
-
but the feedback is the same.
-
But I think one of the most
important things to know
-
about the revising stage of Writing Coach
-
is that it's not just about the feedback.
-
So of course, in this example,
-
the student has 20 suggestions
-
under each of these five categories total
-
and we let them kind of
focus on one area at a time,
-
but we don't just give them the feedback
-
and then say, good luck, hope you do well,
-
we built in revising tools.
-
So we give, at some point,
praise or positive feedback,
-
but for the critical
feedback and the suggestions,
-
there are actual actionable
steps that students can take
-
to make the changes on the
draft right there on the page
-
or ask Khanmigo for follow-up
guidance or support.
-
So some of the things that
students can do are ask Khanmigo
-
to give them an example,
-
and this is, I think, one
of the most popular things
-
a student would choose to do.
-
So if Khanmigo says
-
your introduction doesn't
have enough context
-
for the reader,
-
that's, I think, for a very
common piece of feedback
-
for introduction,
-
the student can say, give me an example,
-
and Khanmigo will take an essay
-
on a completely different topic
-
and then give them an example
-
of what it looks like not to have context
-
and then it would look
like to have that context,
-
and that we have seen has
been really, really valuable
-
for students who get a piece of feedback
-
and they're just like, I don't get it.
-
So that's very, very helpful.
-
Then we have explain suggestion,
-
and that's really helpful.
-
If Khanmigo is being a little bit wordy,
-
they can ask it to explain it
-
and that'll usually result
in Khanmigo breaking it down.
-
If students are struggling readers,
-
you can also have them say
-
after they've explained it,
-
you say, make it simpler, say it simpler,
-
just keep kind of pushing
Khanmigo if they need to.
-
Students can just ask a
general question as well.
-
But then if they go in
-
and they change their essay
based on the feedback,
-
they can then immediately
just say, check my revision,
-
and Khanmigo will look
at that piece of feedback
-
and at the change the student just made
-
and let them know if they've fixed it,
-
let them know if they've
addressed it or not,
-
and then Khanmigo will say,
-
you made a little bit of an improvement,
-
but you could still make it clear
-
or you can still kind of provide
-
a little bit more information here
-
or give them whatever
follow-up guidance is necessary
-
until the student has what they need.
-
And what else?
-
They also have access
to their outline again
-
during revising.
-
And as they are working
through their feedback,
-
they can mark them as resolved
-
and keep track of where they're
at in their revision stage.
-
As their teacher,
-
and you'll see this in a minute,
-
you can see how much feedback they got
-
and how much they've resolved,
-
so you can keep track
of how close they are
-
to being done with this second draft.
-
And when they are finished,
-
the student can click mark as complete
-
and that's to let you
know that they're done
-
and happy with their draft.
-
And they get the option of exporting it,
-
so they can export it
to Microsoft Word or PDF
-
or even save it as a Google doc.
-
One other thing to note is
that we don't currently support
-
a work cited page.
-
Usually for test prep,
that's not a concern,
-
but for longer research
essays or whatever,
-
if you want students
to include work cited,
-
I would have them do that after
they've exported it to a doc
-
or a Google doc,
-
they can add the work cited there
-
because this isn't built
to kind of support feedback
-
on that end page.
-
You can have students
provide in-text citations
-
and it will give them feedback
on the in-text citations,
-
just not the work cited
page or the bibliography.
-
All right, let's look
at the teacher report.
-
So this is the class
report for an assignment.
-
So if you created a
persuasive essay assignment
-
for a given class,
-
from your Assignments page in
your Writing Coach dashboard,
-
you can click on that and
you can see this report.
-
We designed this report to be
a way for you, as a teacher,
-
to get an at-a-glance
view of where students are
-
and where you might want to dig in
-
to pay a little bit more close attention
-
to what happened with a
specific student's essay.
-
So the information that we show you here
-
is the step of the process
that the student is in.
-
So it'll tell you if a
student hasn't started yet,
-
if they are in the understanding
phase or outlining,
-
if they're drafting or revising
or if they're completed.
-
We also have little flags
-
that will tell you the
student is completed,
-
but they edited their essay
after the due date came,
-
so you might wanna just see
-
how much they actually did by the due date
-
if you have some procrastinators,
-
or if students have past
due date assignments,
-
you can see that as well.
-
You can see the last
time that they updated it
-
or how much time they spent overall,
-
and this is actively spent.
-
So if they have the tab open
-
and then go to sleep and
come back the next day,
-
it's not gonna count those
hours that they were sleeping.
-
This is time actively spent on the page,
-
chatting with amigo or typing or drafting.
-
Word count is the current word count
-
for their current latest draft.
-
Then this is where you would see
-
of the 21 pieces of
feedback Khanmigo gave them,
-
they've resolved this many of them.
-
And then these are the originality flags.
-
Originality flags are designed
to help you figure out,
-
again, where to drill down.
-
So if you see a critical
flag and you hover over it,
-
then you'll see what exactly
happened and where it happened
-
and then you can click into that
-
and see exactly what went down.
-
And I'll show you a live
view of that in a moment.
-
This is also a great place to figure out
-
if I have a student who
didn't get much feedback
-
or got a lot of feedback and
didn't resolve much of it
-
or didn't spend very much time writing,
-
but has a really high word count,
-
those are the kinds of things too
-
that you might wanna be like,
-
let me just see exactly
what happened here.
-
So it's really designed
to be a way to document
-
at a high level parts
of the writing process
-
and let you figure out where
to drill down into that.
-
So when you do drill
down into one student,
-
this is an example
-
of where I would've clicked
on an originality flag,
-
a critical flag.
-
So it'll take me straight to
the moment where this happened.
-
In this case, it was a student
-
who, during the drafting phase,
-
pasted 58 words from somewhere
that was not their outline.
-
And I can see the words that they pasted,
-
those words are highlighted.
-
I can also see their chat
-
at the time that they were drafting.
-
So I can see here some clues
-
that maybe the student wasn't following
-
academic integrity rules.
-
I can just have a little
bit more information
-
about why it was flagged
-
and then give me the opportunity
-
to follow up with that student.
-
But there's no originality flags,
-
I might not even need to
drill down into this report,
-
but I can if I want to
-
because it has the whole record
-
of the student's writing process.
-
So I could click on Understanding
-
and I can see the chat the
student had with Khanmigo.
-
I can click into Outlining
-
and see their whole outlining history.
-
I can see their whole drafting history
-
and all of their chats.
-
I can see for feedback
-
all the feedback Khanmigo gave.
-
I can see the revision student made.
-
I can see the chats
students had with Khanmigo
-
about their revisions,
-
what their essay looked
like at the time it was due,
-
what it looked like when
they marked it as complete
-
and all of that kind
of record information.
-
So again, obviously we
don't expect teachers
-
to review all of this information
for every single student,
-
we're not trying to make more
work for writing teachers,
-
but it is here for the cases
when you do want to drill down
-
or you do need to drill down
-
and you wanna kind of get a
sense of what's happening.
-
And we are also mid process
of exploring other ways
-
that we can help surface
more high-level insights
-
for teachers at the assignment level
-
so that they know about other information
-
around when they might wanna drill down
-
or instructional insights
and things like that.
-
And then quickly,
-
if you are an administrator
for a Khan Academy District,
-
you also have administrator reporting
-
and this includes data such
as Writing Coach usage.
-
So that includes the time spent
-
using Writing Coach among your district,
-
so how much time students
have spent or teachers,
-
and then also the percent and
the total number of students
-
who have used Writing Coach
during a given timeframe.
-
So I'm going to now show you,
-
'cause we have a few minutes,
-
a live view.
-
Let me change.
-
Oh, can you see?
-
Wait, no.
-
One moment.
-
- Yeah, we're still
seeing the report, Sarah.
-
- Okay.
-
Oh, do you see assignment review?
-
- Yes, assignment review.
- Okay, okay, that did work.
-
So this is an actual assignment report
-
with fake student data, of course.
-
In this case I assigned
-
a school start time persuasive essay.
-
I can view the essay instructions
-
that I provided to Khanmigo
and the students here.
-
And this is what it looks like
to view the student progress.
-
So again, I can see who is at which stage,
-
how far they've gotten.
-
And then for the originality flags,
-
if I hover over this,
-
I get kind of a high-level understanding
-
of what was flagged.
-
Critical flags are shown
-
in cases where students
are pasting a lot of text
-
from outside of their outline
-
or they're specifically doing
this in drafting or revising.
-
Questionable flags are they
might have pasted a phrase
-
or they might have put
things into their outline
-
that isn't evidence or a source
-
that you might wanna look at.
-
And you can kind of get a sense
-
of what the different levels are here
-
and how those things are triggered.
-
And right now it is just paste events.
-
So what we are looking at are
students using the content
-
that they outlined with Khanmigo.
-
So if they are creating
an outline with Khanmigo
-
and then they're drafting
-
and they are pasting an information
-
that's not from the outline,
-
that will trigger a flag,
-
but if they're pasting from their outline
-
or if it's coming from their outline,
-
that's fine.
-
We know that Khanmigo
worked with them on it,
-
we know that this was
something that they did
-
in our record of the experience,
-
and that will not be flagged.
-
Let me click into another
one of these students.
-
So if I click on this student again,
-
you can see first the final draft.
-
So if I'm just here
-
and I wanna look at the student's
final draft and grade that
-
or just see what it looked
like at the very end,
-
I can jump straight to that.
-
But I can also click to understanding
-
and I can see how much time they spent,
-
what they talked to Khanmigo
about during this stage,
-
the whole conversation if I want to.
-
I can also see, again,
their record of outlining.
-
So I can see where they
provided a thesis statement,
-
here they have some evidence,
-
they started filling in some more details.
-
And then I can see their whole chat
-
during the whole evidence,
-
or sorry, during the
whole outlining stage.
-
And then for drafting,
-
you can see that the students started
-
by asking Khanmigo to
help them get started.
-
It prompted them to start
with their introduction
-
and then the student asked
Khanmigo for feedback
-
and Khanmigo recommended
they provide more context.
-
And also giving it too specific
feedback about the thesis,
-
but again,
-
this stage is not really
about the specific feedback,
-
it's just about get the words on the page.
-
So I can see, again, any
revisions that they made
-
while they were drafting
-
and then their final draft.
-
And then for revising, same thing,
-
I can see all the feedback
they got from Khanmigo.
-
I can see what they
chatted with Khanmigo about
-
when it came to the
feedback that they got.
-
Here I can see that the
student asked Khanmigo
-
to check that they did their
MLA in-text citation correctly.
-
And then I can see where
they've done revisions.
-
The student got a questionable flag here,
-
so I can look at that.
-
But I can see that the flag
-
was related to a new piece of evidence
-
that the student pasted.
-
So I know that that's a non-issue.
-
You're pasting evidence from somewhere,
-
I know you didn't write
it 'cause it's evidence,
-
so that's completely fine.
-
And all the way down to
where their final draft was.
-
So that is the teacher report
-
and the individual student report.
-
Let me go back to my deck.
-
All right, so we have a few minutes left.
-
These are the instructions for you
-
to get started on this now
-
if you're interested in trying this out.
-
Again, if you already have
a Khan Academy account,
-
then you already have a
Writing Coach account.
-
So you can go to Khan Academy
-
or you can go to khanmigo.ai/writingcoach
-
and you can get to
Writing Coach from there.
-
And log in to your Khan Academy account,
-
and again, that will take
you right into Writing Coach.
-
Some things if you're just getting started
-
that you could do.
-
You can start by exploring
the student experience.
-
So if you are in a teacher account,
-
let me go back to this.
-
I mentioned these three tabs here.
-
If you click on My Essays,
-
this will let you experience
some of the student experience.
-
Note, however,
-
if you are not a district
partner with Khanmigo,
-
then your students won't be able
-
to just write their own
essay whenever they want,
-
that's only available
to district partners,
-
but all students will be able
-
to access assignments from here.
-
And a thing that you have as a teacher
-
that your students don't
have are these sample essays.
-
So if you are just trying to get a sense
-
of the student experience,
-
these are pretty helpful
-
because you can click into them
-
and it'll start you off at understanding
-
and you can chat with Khanmigo
-
as if it were like a fresh assignment.
-
You can go through outlining
-
and we have pre-filled in content
-
so you don't have to write an
entire outline for yourself,
-
you can fill it in
-
and then kind of see
the drafting experience.
-
Again, we pre-fill in an essay for you
-
so you can try that out
-
and then you can get
Khanmigo to generate feedback
-
and do the revising stage.
-
The sample essay tool is also very helpful
-
if you are demoing Writing
Coach with your students
-
for the first time
-
because it helps them see
-
what they will see when they're
working on their assignment,
-
and you can walk them through the stages
-
and how to use Khanmigo
-
and how to access all of the
different tabs at the bottom
-
when they're on various stages.
-
So I'd recommend checking out
the student experience first,
-
and then when you're ready,
-
you can create your first
Writing Coach essay.
-
Again, you go straight
to your Assignments tab
-
and you click Create Assignment
-
and you fill in the
information from there.
-
And I am very eager to
hear any and all feedback
-
that anyone has about this.
-
So if you use it yourself,
-
if you share it with another
teacher and they use it,
-
I have no problem
sharing my email address,
-
please reach out to me,
-
it's sarahrobertson@khanacademy.org.
-
Let me know what your experience was like,
-
send me your ideas,
-
send me your critical feedback,
-
send me anything that you have
that could help us continue
-
to make Writing Coach a
really valuable experience
-
for you and your students.
-
And yeah, that is it for me.
-
I will pass it back, I
think, to Frances or Aviv.
-
I don't know if we have
room or time for questions.
-
- Yeah, we had a couple of questions.
-
One is around,
-
I know you talked about right now
-
we don't have the ability
to upload rubrics.
-
The question was asked
around uploading sources,
-
because, how will Khanmigo
know if the student-
-
- [Sarah] Great question.
-
- making up evidence or
the evidence is accurate?
-
- Yeah, that's a great question.
-
So we don't have a way right now
-
to just kind of attach a PDF
or upload a reference text,
-
however, if the reference
text is a well-known text
-
and you include the name of that text
-
in the actual essay instructions,
-
Khanmigo will know about the text,
-
it will be able to kind of provide,
-
spot any issues with the text
that are wildly inaccurate
-
or just very off base.
-
It is not really designed to do things
-
like check that the
evidence is legit evidence,
-
that's not really something that it does.
-
What it can do is make sure the evidence
-
that the students provided is aligned
-
to the points that they're trying to make,
-
to the argument that they're making,
-
make sure that if they
choose a piece of evidence,
-
that they are explaining how
it helps them prove the point
-
that they're trying to make.
-
It can help them do things
-
like fix their introductions to evidence,
-
I remember that was one
of the biggest things
-
that I had to deal with
with my middle schoolers,
-
and then their citations as well.
-
But it won't be able to be like,
-
hey, that's not a real quote,
-
'cause it wasn't designed to do that.
-
But in the future when we do have things
-
like the ability for you
to attach a reference text,
-
that is something reasonable
-
that we would be able to support.
-
- Thank you, Sarah.
-
- [Sarah] Yeah.
-
- There was another question around,
-
can you assign an essay to
a class that you created
-
separate from your roster?
-
For example, if you had a
combined group for tutoring.
-
- Yes.
-
- [Frances] Yes.
- You can, yep.
-
It just has to be a Khan Academy class,
-
which you can actually do.
-
So when you are,
-
I'll show you actually,
-
when you are in your teacher experience
-
and you are creating your assignment,
-
you will be able to assign it
-
to an existing class that you have.
-
Or oh, this might just be because,
-
oh, I think I'm in a different,
-
you should be able to see any
other classes that you have
-
that maybe are not even
Khanmigo-rostered classes.
-
So if you have another
class on Khan Academy
-
that isn't a district-rostered class,
-
like a tutoring group,
-
you can assign an essay to that class.
-
In some cases you can do
it straight from here.
-
There's an option sometimes
that is create a new class,
-
I'm not sure why that's
not showing up here.
-
But if you are on Khan Academy
-
and you're creating a class
there, like a manual class,
-
you will see that in the list here
-
'cause this will show you
-
any of your Khan Academy
classes that you have.
-
- That's right.
-
- [Sarah] Mm-hmm.
-
- All right.
-
Is the feedback able to be differentiated
-
by student ability,
-
but just still at same grade level?
-
For example, some feedback simpler,
-
but still at grade level?
-
- Yes and no.
-
We do have some features
that are student-specific
-
where a student can change, for example,
-
their Khanmigo reading level.
-
It's not super expansive,
-
there's like basic,
-
which is actually the
default for all students,
-
and then there's maybe two
other levels that are higher.
-
So if you have really advanced students,
-
you can have them increase
their Khanmigo level,
-
but most students will start
out at the basic level.
-
If you have students who
are English learners,
-
you also can have them,
-
if you want, this isn't required,
-
but you can have them change
their Khanmigo chat language
-
to their native language,
-
and then they can talk to
Khanmigo in their native language,
-
but they're still looking
at an English essay
-
that they're writing
-
and Khanmigo will still be able
-
to kind of communicate with them
-
and look at their essay in
English and help them with that.
-
Other than that,
-
the scaffolding is really at
that point up to the student.
-
So if the student needs help,
-
Khanmigo will be there to help them.
-
And there is that checkpoint
between outlining and drafting
-
where it's checking to see,
did they meet the requirements?
-
So if you have students
who are way behind,
-
then that is a point where they
might spend a lot more time
-
outlining with Khanmigo,
-
and it will do that automatically
-
in that if they really are off topic
-
or they're missing a lot of pieces,
-
Khanmigo will repeatedly kind
of help them through that
-
until they have a good outline,
-
whereas other students
-
would just speed straight
through to drafting
-
'cause they wouldn't have those
checkpoints to worry about.
-
But yeah, we hear this a lot,
-
there's a lot of concerns,
-
especially from the past few years
-
where it just sounds
-
like students need a lot more scaffolding
-
than they have in previous years.
-
And so one of our biggest priorities
-
is figuring out better
ways to support kiddos
-
and especially find ways to differentiate
-
to the students who need it the most.
-
So if you have more ideas,
-
please send them to me.
-
- Awesome, thank you.
-
Thank you, Sarah, so much.
-
Thank you, everybody that joined us.
-
I've also dropped in my email in the chat.
-
In case you guys think
of any other questions,
-
please feel free to email Sarah,
-
email me.
-
We are here to help
-
and support in any way that you guys need
-
and we truly value your feedback,
-
your ideas and your feedback.
-
So thank you, thank you.
-
- Thank you all so much.