Description
The Weekly Check-In is a comprehensive form used to check in on how students are doing. The questions ask about how they are handling their workload and how they are doing in and out of class (providing a baseline for SEL), and have the students perform a self-assessment to help them chart their current performance and chart their individual path forward.
Careful consideration has gone into determining which questions are required versus which are optional to encourage maximum participation. It is designed and organized to encourage honest participation to be able to get accurate data on how your kiddos are doing both individually and as a whole.
In addition, as a Google Form, it allows you to automatically import the responses to a Google Sheets document (their version of Excel) for easy viewing and analysis.
Finally, it is customizable, allowing you to modify, add, or subtract questions to fit your own teaching situation.
This form has been vetted in my own classroom, and has been an invaluable resource for the data we often struggle to get from our kiddos.
Highlights
Description
The Weekly Check-In is a comprehensive form used to check in on how students are doing. The questions ask about how they are handling their workload and how they are doing in and out of class (providing a baseline for SEL), and have the students perform a self-assessment to help them chart their current performance and chart their individual path forward.
Careful consideration has gone into determining which questions are required versus which are optional to encourage maximum participation. It is designed and organized to encourage honest participation to be able to get accurate data on how your kiddos are doing both individually and as a whole.
In addition, as a Google Form, it allows you to automatically import the responses to a Google Sheets document (their version of Excel) for easy viewing and analysis.
Finally, it is customizable, allowing you to modify, add, or subtract questions to fit your own teaching situation.
This form has been vetted in my own classroom, and has been an invaluable resource for the data we often struggle to get from our kiddos.

