A Parental Review of Assessment and LEarning in Knowledge Spaces or ALEKS
71Recommended Reading
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Pros:
* The use of a pie chart graph to show progress toward the required work on a
subject like fractions, subtraction or division is easy for children at any
level to understand. My first grade son understands that there are several
areas he has to work in and how far toward the goal has been done.
* The built in help is easy for the children to access. Help is often useful
for the children by themselves but frequently requires adult explanation.
* Reporting is a breeze. This many done, this many right, where your child's
strengths lay, where they are weak.
* The system can log time spent working. ALEKS reports this to teachers and
parents can access the information as well. This allows the teacher to require
15 minutes spent on addition drills or multiplication review, without relying
upon written logs. If the child logs in and then wanders off the play, the
teacher will see that they logged in but only a few minutes of work was done.
This improves accountability as well as identifying children who take a long
time to complete questions, an indication of struggling with the subject
matter.
* Your subscription to ALEKS is good for 12 months. Parents who have paid for
the school year can have children practice what they learned over the summer
using ALEKS, at no additional charge.
* As a website, ALEKS avoids the need to install specialized software.
* ALEKS is available at both school and home. If a child misses part of their
math or reading lesson due to illness, doctor's appointments or any other
reason, your child (assuming they're well enough to do this) can run through
the ALEKS lessons at home or in the evening. Make up work for a missed day no
longer requires carting paper back and forth, simply sign on and have the child
do the work.
* As a website, ALEKS can be run on any computer if your child has their login
credentials. If you're away from home, your child can log in and do their math
drills or vocabulary practice on your iPad.
* ALEKS tests for both mastery of the currently worked material and mastery of
prior subjects. If your child is working on a multiplication, they'll be tested
on addition math facts to ensure they remember that information.
* Children can work at their own pace to a certain degree. Average, accelerated
and challenged students all practice at their level and progress at their own
speed.
* Using ALEKS at home in conjunction with a private school or home school
curriculum allows older students to qualify for honors and Advanced Placement
(AP) credit.
* The low cost (at least the rate offered through schools) is cheaper than a
few hours of tutoring. If your child's school doesn't use ALEKS, the tuition is
an excellent value to get an independent assessment of your child's weak areas
and targeted and disciplined drills to work on that subject area.
Cons:
* The ALEKS website is highly Java dependant. The website will permit the
student to enter a problem section and input an answer. However, if the Java
version conflicts or is behind what ALEKS needs, the forward and back buttons
don't load on the next page. The only solution is to close the browser, upgrade
Java, reboot the computer and re-enter the website.
* Parents do not automatically get their child's password. You must either ask
your child or the teacher.
* Trying to select the area to enter fractions is an act of precision mouse
clicking. Younger children need help or direction with this.
* ALEKS runs best on Microsoft Internet Explorer. Mozilla is more prone to
requiring reloading of the web page periodically.
* ALEKS purports to teach advanced math courses like algebra, pre-calculus and
geometry. These subjects require detailed explanations and, in my opinion,
detailed analysis of a student's confusion and identification of where they are
struggling. Unlike social studies and science that frequently rely upon
memorization, advanced math requires understanding advanced principals and
problem solving skills. ALEKS' method is adequate for a skill assessment but
not teaching those unfamiliar with these high level math courses.
* Supervision is still required. While the graphical screens demonstrate the
concepts of fractions and geometry well, it doesn’t keep a six year old
entranced and engaged. Stay nearby to keep your student working on ALEKS.
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