Welcome Back To School!

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Transcript Welcome Back To School!

Introduction/Expectations Seating Charts Rules, Policies, and Procedures Set up portfolios and writing folders Assign Textbooks Collect Summer Reading

Expectations

My goal is to prepare you for your next stage of life (career, college, etc).

This will NOT be your easiest year of English class; leave that misconception at the door.

You can all excel, but I cannot want you to succeed more than you want yourself to succeed.

Expectations

School is not just meant to prepare you for life academically; I will help reinforce the social skills that you will need to succeed. I want you to want to better yourselves. Do not settle for the minimum. Do not feel satisfied with “just getting by” or you will be “just getting by” over the duration of your entire life. Don’t settle for the minimum—raise the bar!

Statistics

The Bureau of Labor Statistics Current Population Survey reports on education level and salary for workers age 25 and over. The average annual salary based on education is as follows: Individuals who did not complete high school: $24,492 High School Diploma: $33,904 Some college: $37,804 Associates Degree: $40,820

Statistics

Four Year Degree: $55,420 Masters Degree: $67,600 Doctoral Degree: $84,448 Chance of becoming a professional basketball player: Men: 0.3% Women: 0.2% Professional Football Player: 0.8% Professional Baseball Player: 0.4%

About Me

I have taught Senior English, English 10 Honors, Journalism, HSPA, Alternative School and Freshman English.

You are in good hands. Just as you work for me, I work for you.

When the bell rings, I do not run for the door. If you need help after school, I will be here.

About Me

Think of me as a manager. Every job has a manager. This is your practice run at life. I will treat you all fairly; I will be as pleasant as possible. However, I have a job to do. You are seniors and I will treat you as such; I will enforce school policies under the assumption that you know what is expected of you by now.

Procedures

I do not start the class. The bell does not start the class. YOU start the class.

There is a routine you are to follow. Immediately go to your seat, get out your materials for work, and complete your warm-up. I do not accept “make-up” warm-ups. FACT: Students who do not complete quality warm-ups on a daily basis typically earn at least letter grade lower than those students that do. a

Rules

We are all here for YOU—for you to succeed and to enjoy this class. Because I care about each of you, I am here to help you. Therefore, I will not allow you to do anything that will interfere with your success in this class.

We need to have a class where you can come without fear of being ridiculed or threatened. Because I care about ALL of you, I will not allow you to anything that will interfere with someone else who is trying to learn.

Rules

So that YOU can learn, so that WE can all learn, so that I can teach, I have a set of rules to ensure that we will have a safe and orderly classroom.

Rules

1. Use common sense; Be respectful to people and property; Take turns; Ask relevant questions; Participate.

2. Come to class on time. I follow the school tardy policy very carefully. I am instructed to keep the door closed, and locked after the bell. I will not admit late students without a pass. Once the bell rings, the door closes.

3. Bring your materials and supplies to class (notebook, textbook, writing utensils, assignments, agenda book, your brain).

Rules

4. No eating or drinking in class. No water bottles, no chips. 5. You have to be here to learn. Take care of your personal needs before or after class (limited bathroom passes, no guidance passes, circus passes, etc.) -- if there is an EMERGENCY, fill out a pass in your agenda book and present it for approval at an APPROPRIATE time.

Rules

6. No cell phones. Not even on your desk. If you have your cell phone out, you are in violation of a school policy. A warning is a courtesy, not mandatory on my part. You know the rules, you know the consequences. 7. No swearing/vulgar language. My job is to prepare you for a business/professional environment. Act like professionals.

Common Sense Disclaimer

Do not talk about the use of drugs or alcohol in class; teachers are obligated to report such discussion.

Late Assignments

Late/missing assignments require a missing assignment form to be filled out. If the form is not filled out, you may not turn in the assignment late.

Typical assignments receive half credit if submitted a day late.

Heavily weighted projects will receive a deduction of 10-20% off per day late at my discretion. If your printer is out of ink, email me the assignment. Plagiarism: If you copy, I will catch you which will result in a write-up and a 0% for the assignment.

Dress Code

Whether you like it or not, I enforce the dress code strictly. If you are in violation of the dress code, I will write up a referral. I do not need to say anything to you—you know the rule. I do not care which period you are in or who did not write you up prior to your entry into my class. I care about what is going on inside of my classroom.

Consequences

Successful people accept that life is a series of of consequences.

Consequences can be POSITIVE or NEGATIVE Whether you like it or not, I am in constant contact with parents/guardians regarding both positive and negative behavior. Contacting parents is a part of my job that I am expected to do and to keep a record of. I believe in rewarding good behavior with homework passes, positive calls home, gift cards, and extra credit points.

Consequences

Violation of class/school policies results in negative consequences.

I do not discuss write-ups during class time.

I will not stop my lesson to discuss negative consequences. I have a class to run. Discuss an issue with me after class or by appointment.

Blue Devil Pride

We want to have pride in ourselves, our school, and what we accomplish.

This is your last stop before you enter your adult lives. Treat your time here as such. You are role models—live up to your expectations.

Sources

http://www.thesportdigest.com/archive/article/w hat-are-odds-becoming-professional-athlete http://jobsearch.about.com/od/careereducation/ a/average-salary-degree.htm