The Signal

A glimpse into life

School’s showcase introduces students to profession­al world

- By Christina Cox Signal Staff Writer

Dressed in business attire, eighth grade students at Arroyo Seco Junior High School shared their prized work from seventh and eighth grade with community panelists in personal, one-on-one interviews Thursday.

The school’s annual Showcase Presentati­ons aim to link the students with Santa Clarita’s profession­al community while teaching them soft skills like communicat­ion and collaborat­ion.

“Our purpose is to give students an opportunit­y to reflect, assess and present evidence of their seventh and eighth grade achievemen­ts while they gain interview and presentati­on skills,” Principal Rhondi Durand said.

For nearly two decades the school invites 80 or more members of the community—including teachers, administra­tors, business profession­als and parents—to listen to students’ presentati­ons, provide feedback and complete a student evaluation form.

“It [the showcase] is everything a state test is not,” said Mark Dannerth,

a seventh grade science teacher and organizer of the Showcase Presentati­ons. “Unfortunat­ely no one is pushing this. Doing this in the class pays off so much more.”

This year, 595 eighth grade students shared the best of their academic work and the evidence of their learning with community members during the all-day showcase.

“Every year it seems to be better and better, the kids continue to grow,” said Sue Dielenthei­s, a school counselor and organizer of the event. “Our panel members give us feedback every year that they’re amazed at what these kids can accomplish and how well they present themselves.”

During their presentati­ons, students are assessed based on their appearance, portfolio and profession­alism with emphasis on their dress, hand shake, eye contact, enthusiasm, motivation and portfolio completene­ss.

“We do really emphasize

the soft skills with the interviewi­ng, the eye contact, the hand shaking, the ability to speak and present themselves,” Dielenthei­s said. “The fact that they’re ‘interviewi­ng’ really is a phenomenal experience for them.”

Elements of their portfolios include a cover page, dedication, table of contests, career exploratio­n, resume, school-wide accomplish­ment, project of choice, seventh grade pieces and three assignment­s from English, history, math, science and elective classes.

This year, more students started incorporat­ing computers into their presentati­ons. Some had their presentati­ons completely digital while others used a mix of papers and online assignment­s and others created binders of their work.

“There’s more electronic­s this year,” Dannerth said. “The use of the computers is starting to become big and the teachers are learning how to do it and incorporat­ing that.”

Students began preparing for the showcase in the beginning of their seventh grade year as they compiled

work, learned how to dress profession­ally and presented to their parents.

“During all of eighth grade they do reflection sheets on their assignment­s and then hit it fullforce (in) the fourth quarter,” Dielenthei­s said.

Dannerth said the early preparatio­n allows the students to get more comfortabl­e with public speaking and profession­al conduct.

“In the seventh grade they get over the nerves of talking to someone and are then able to get moving,” he said.

As students prepare throughout the year, they continue to grow as communicat­ors and work harder in the classroom as they develop high-quality work for the final showcase project.

“The next time they get a big project they say ‘this is going in my portfolio, this is coming back to me,’” Dannerth said. “The teachers put in their time, but it pays off.”

 ?? Photo courtesy of Megan Roggentien and Sophia Bergman ?? Eighth grade students Alex Cox and Zane Cragun-Rehders show their work in the Showcase Presenatio­ns at Arroyo Seco Junior High School on Thursday.
Photo courtesy of Megan Roggentien and Sophia Bergman Eighth grade students Alex Cox and Zane Cragun-Rehders show their work in the Showcase Presenatio­ns at Arroyo Seco Junior High School on Thursday.

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