37
OACAC WEBINAR WEDNESDAY What does IB stand for?! February 3 2016

Webinar Wednesday Understanding IB

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

OACAC WEBINAR WEDNESDAYWhat does IB stand for?!

February 3 2016

Page 2: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

7AM Rachelle Bernadel (IBO, USA) - [email protected] Hanna (York School, Canada) – [email protected] Daniel Pentello (Graded School, Brazil) - [email protected] Marksteiner (Int’l School of Zug and Luzern, Switzerland) - [email protected]

7PMMarie Vivas (IBO, USA) – [email protected] Hanna (York School, Canada) – [email protected] Daniel Pentello (Graded School, Brazil) - [email protected] Joos (Washington International School, USA) – [email protected]

Webinar Panelists

Page 3: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 4: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

Value of IB qualifi

Value of IB

Page 5: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

Additional Core Components

Page 6: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

•At least three Higher Level (HL) and three Standard Level (SL) courses•HL: 240 recommended teaching hours

•SL: 150 recommended teaching hours

•Both are rigorous, but HL offers options to study subjects in further depth and explore additional topics

•Six subjects from traditional academic disciplines

•Complete core requirements:•Extended Essay; Creativity, Activity, Service; Theory of Knowledge

•Earn a minimum total point score of 24

•each subject is graded on a 1—7 scale + a maximum of 3 points for the core

Page 7: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 8: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

Math Studies curriculum

Emphasis on applications of mathematics

Largest section is on statistics

Does have exposure to derivatives and their use in finding tangent lines (Calculus topic)

Page 9: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

SL Math StudiesAssessment

Page 10: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

SL Math curriculum

More abstract thinking

Emphasis on applying content in novel problem-solving situations

Covers derivatives (standard, special cases, chain rule, product rule, quotient rule) and integrations with applications from calculus

Page 11: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

HL Math curriculum

Page 12: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

HL & SL Math assessments

Page 13: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

Math performance

Page 14: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

Example: IB + US + Brazilian diplomas

Page 15: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 16: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 17: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 18: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 19: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 20: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 21: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

sample IB English Literature

Page 22: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

sample offerings Roots School in

Pakistan

Page 23: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

NCAA-IB Grade Conversion

Page 24: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 25: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

IB Level IB General Grade Descriptors

7

Produces high-quality, frequently innovative work. Communicates comprehensive, nuanced understanding of concepts and contexts. Consistently demonstrates sophisticated critical and creative thinking. Frequently transfers knowledge and skills with independence and expertise in a variety of complex classroom and real-world situations.

6

Produces high-quality, occasionally innovative work. Communicates extensive understanding of concepts and concepts. Demonstrates critical and creative thinking, frequently with sophistication. Uses knowledge and skills in familiar and unfamiliar classroom and real-world situations, often with independence.

5

Produces generally high-quality work. Communicates secure understanding of concepts and contexts. Demonstrates critical and creative thinking, sometimes with sophistication. Uses knowledge and skills in familiar classroom and real-world situations and, with support, some unfamiliar real-world situations.

4

Produces good-quality work. Communicates basic understanding of most concepts and contexts with few misunderstandings and minor gaps. Often demonstrates basic critical and creative thinking. Uses knowledge and skills with some flexibility in familiar classroom situations, but requires support in unfamiliar situations.

Page 26: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 27: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 28: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 29: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 30: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 31: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 32: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 33: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

Don’t worry about what anticipated IB diploma scores tell us about final IB diploma grades.

Evaluate IB Diploma applicants based upon what anticipated IB diploma scores tell us about firstyear performance at UBC

http://www.ibo.org/contentassets/60d1e68eafc7437faf033f8d9f5c6d6d/sunday-ib-students-and-first-year-university-performance-andrew-arida.pdf

Page 34: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 35: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB

• Any IB diploma holder performs (at a minimum) at the same level as a B-average secondary school student • An IB Diploma student with an anticipated score of 29/30 is expected to perform at the same level as an A student • An IB Diploma student with a final score of 27/28 is expected to perform at the same level as an A student • Revised equivalency scale was validated with 2009 performance data

Conclusions

Page 36: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB
Page 37: Webinar Wednesday   Understanding IB