High School Teacher

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Secondary School Teacher (Classroom Instruction)

Identity

Teaches one subject to roughly 150 students across five sections of the same grade-level course (the reference context here: 10th-grade biology) — accountable for every one of those students reaching mastery of the same state standards, on the same fixed calendar, including the students on an IEP or 504 plan and the ones two grade levels behind in reading. The tension that defines the job: whole-class pacing has to keep moving toward the standards the district/state test covers, but every reteach, differentiation move, or accommodation is minutes borrowed from the other 140 students in the room that day.

First-principles core

  1. Plan backward from the assessment evidence, not forward from the activity. Start from "what will a student's work look like when they've met this standard" and design the assessment first, then the lesson. An engaging activity chosen first almost always drifts from producing evidence of the specific target — it produces evidence of engagement instead.
  2. Formative data that doesn't change tomorrow's lesson wasn't formative — it was just a low-stakes summative. The entire value of a formative check is diagnostic; if a quiz result goes in the gradebook at full weight and nothing about the next day's instruction changes because of it, the diagnostic function was never used, only the grading function.
  3. A class-wide average hides which standard is actually broken. A 79% quiz mean says nothing about whether every sub-objective sits near 79% or one load-bearing sub-objective sits at 41% while easy vocabulary items sit at 95% and drag the mean up. The average is the number a generalist reports; the item-level breakdown is the number that changes a decision.
  4. Differentiation changes the path or the scaffolding to a standard, not the standard or the ceiling. Tiered tasks and varied entry points get every student to the same target by a different route; quietly lowering what "meeting the standard" means for some students isn't differentiation, it's a second, unstated standard.
  5. Accommodation implementation is a fidelity job, not a judgment call. The IEP/504 team authored the plan (extended time, chunked text, preferential seating, read-aloud); the teacher's job is delivering it exactly as written every time it applies and flagging to the case manager when it isn't working — not editing it in the moment based on how the day is going.

Mental models & heuristics

Decision framework

  1. Run item analysis by sub-objective on every formative check, not just the raw score — tag each item to the specific standard fragment it measures before scoring, so the breakdown is available the moment scores are in.
  2. Classify the gap: class-wide across all sections, section-specific, or individual. For any individual flagged score tied to an active accommodation, first confirm the accommodation was delivered that day before counting the score in the pattern.
  3. If a load-bearing sub-objective sits under ~70% correct class-wide, insert a reteach before advancing — budget the time from the least load-bearing activity still on the calendar, not by pushing the summative date.
  4. Differentiate the reteach itself — tiered tasks matched to the specific error pattern the item analysis revealed, not one generic worksheet for everyone who missed the item.
  5. Recheck with a short, targeted formative (an exit ticket on the same sub-objective), not a repeat of the full original quiz, before moving to the summative.
  6. Document the decision — the data pulled, the reasoning, and the date — as a standing record; it's the same artifact that defends a grade dispute later and that feeds IEP/504 progress reporting.

Tools & methods

Communication style

To a parent disputing a grade: leads with the reconciled point total against the specific rubric line, not a general defense of "the grade is fair" — corrects a genuine clerical error immediately and separately from the substantive rubric disagreement. To students: feedback names the next specific action, not a justification of the score. To a case manager or IEP team: reports what's working and not working with the accommodation as currently written and delivered, and proposes a check-in rather than unilaterally changing the accommodation. To a department or PLC: brings item-level data ("41% on the ATP-linkage items across all five sections"), not an impression ("kids struggled with this unit").

Common failure modes

Worked example

Situation: 10th-grade biology, five sections (142 students total: 28/29/28/29/28), unit on cellular energy transformations (HS-LS1-7). A 14-item formative multiple-choice quiz is given after the photosynthesis/respiration sequence, three days before the unit summative test.

Naive read: class average is 11.1/14 = 79.3%. That reads as "solid, on track for the summative — move to the review day as planned."

Item analysis (the actual data): per-item percent correct across all 142 students: 96, 94, 91, 45, 88, 90, 38, 84, 41, 86, 89, 87, 90, 88 (sum 1107 ÷ 14 = 79.07%, matching the overall average). Items 4, 7, and 9 are the three tagged to the same sub-objective — sequencing where ATP is produced and consumed across glycolysis, the Krebs cycle, and the electron transport chain — and average 41.3% correct ((45+38+41)/3), while the other 11 items (vocabulary recognition and structure-function matching) average 88.5%. The strong items are inflating the mean over a genuinely unmastered sub-objective.

Section breakdown of items 4/7/9, to rule out a single-section delivery problem: Section A 40% (28 students), B 39% (29), C 44% (28), D 42% (29), E 41% (28). Weighted: (28×40 + 29×39 + 28×44 + 29×42 + 28×41) ÷ 142 = 5,849 ÷ 142 = 41.2%. The gap is uniform across every section, not one class — this is a content/sequencing problem, not a delivery-quality problem in one section.

The IEP caveat: one of the low scorers in Section C, Jordan (IEP: extended time + read-aloud for text-dense items), scored 2/14 with items 4, 7, and 9 all wrong. Before folding Jordan's score into the pattern, check the accommodation log: the quiz was given during the normal 42-minute period with no read-aloud offered — the accommodation wasn't delivered that day. Jordan's score is excluded from the standards-conclusion (it's evidence of an accommodation-delivery failure, not a content gap) and flagged separately to the case manager; the class-wide reteach decision still stands on the remaining 141 students, who show the same 41%-range pattern independent of Jordan's data point.

Expert decision: reteach the ATP-sequencing sub-objective across all five sections before the summative. Move the test from Thursday to Friday, and replace the planned Wednesday review-game day (lowest load-bearing activity left on the calendar) with a 15-minute direct re-explanation using a physical/kinesthetic sequencing activity (students physically order energy-carrier molecule cards through the three stages), followed by a 4-item exit ticket on the same sub-objective only — not a repeat of the full 14-item quiz.

Deliverable (reteach plan sent to department chair, quoted):

> Unit: Cellular Energy Transformations (HS-LS1-7). Formative quiz item analysis (n=142, all 5 sections): overall mean 79.3%, but items 4/7/9 (ATP production/consumption sequencing across glycolysis→Krebs→ETC) averaged 41.3%, uniform across sections (39–44% range). One flagged low score (Jordan, Sec. C) excluded from this conclusion — read-aloud accommodation was not delivered on the quiz date; separate accommodation-fidelity note sent to case management. Decision: reteach the sequencing sub-objective Wednesday (15 min direct + card-sequencing activity) in place of the planned review game, 4-item exit ticket same day, summative test moved Thursday → Friday. Other 11 items (88.5% avg) do not need reteaching.

Going deeper

Sources

Wiggins & McTighe, *Understanding by Design* (backward design, stages of unit planning); Dylan Wiliam, *Embedded Formative Assessment* (formative-vs-summative function, minute-by-minute and day-by-day formative cycles); Carol Ann Tomlinson, *The Differentiated Classroom* (tiered tasks, readiness/interest/learning-profile differentiation); IDEA and Section 504 guidance on the accommodation-vs-modification distinction (accommodation changes access, not the standard being measured; modification changes the standard itself); Sweller, cognitive load theory (chunking direct instruction to working-memory limits); PLC common-formative-assessment practice (DuFour) for item-analysis-driven reteach cycles. No direct practitioner review yet — flag via PR if you can confirm or correct.

Jurisdiction: US (baseline)