Skip to main content

Grain Valley Schools

Every Student. Every Day.

Academic Services

Academic Services

Principals and other admin work together on a activity.

We support all those directly responsible for teaching our students, including teachers, instructional aides, and counselors.  Our department oversees the continuous improvement related to curriculum, instruction, assessment, and educational programming services. 

 

 

 

Assessment Program

The district will use high-quality academic assessments as one indication of the success and quality of the district’s education program. Further, the Board recognizes its obligation to provide for and administer assessments as required by law.

In cooperation with the administrative and instructional staff, the Board will regularly review student performance data and use this information to evaluate the effectiveness of the district’s instructional programs, making adjustments as necessary.

The district will comply with all assessment requirements for students with disabilities mandated by federal and state law, including the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).

  • In order to achieve the purposes of the student assessment program and comply with state and federal law, the district requires all enrolled students to participate in all applicable aspects of the district assessment program, including statewide assessments.

  • The district will annually assess the English reading, writing and oral language skills of district English Learner students in kindergarten through grade 12.

  • The district will implement the components of the Missouri Assessment Program (MAP) in order to monitor the progress of all students in meeting the challenging academic standards set forth by the Missouri State Board of Education. The assessments will be the same for all students in the district, including those students identified as migrant or homeless, students in foster care and students with a parent/guardian who is an active duty member of the armed forces or who serves on full-time National Guard duty.

    End-of-course (EOC) assessments will be administered in accordance with law and the rules of the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE). In courses where EOC assessments are given, the superintendent or designee will determine what percent of the course grade will be decided by performance on EOC assessments.

  • If chosen, the district will participate in the National Assessment of Educational Progress as required by law.

  • At the beginning of each school year, the district shall notify the parents/guardians of each student that the district will provide, upon request and in a timely manner, information regarding any state or district policy regarding student participation in any assessments. Such notice shall include information about state or local policies that would allow students to opt out of assessments. Missouri has no such policy, and the district expects all students to participate in all district or statewide assessments.

The Framework for Mastery-Based Learning

  • Grain Valley Schools is a mastery-based learning district, where student learning is driven by a clear focus on standards and demonstrated proficiency. By placing learning standards at the core of instructional design, teachers establish a coherent framework that guides all aspects of lessons and assessments. This intentional alignment ensures that instruction is purposefully connected to what students need to know and be able to do, which is instrumental in achieving substantial improvements in educational outcomes.

  • Mastery based planning ensures that every lesson directly addresses essential learning outcomes, giving students a clear understanding of what they're learning and its relevance. We simplify complex ideas into scaffolded steps, making learning more attainable and individualized. This method allows students to monitor their own advancement and become active participants in their educational development.

  • When our assessments are directly connected to learning standards, we can accurately measure your student's progress toward key learning objectives. This means grades truly represent what your student knows and can do. This consistent approach across all classes also gives students clear benchmarks and actionable feedback, empowering them to understand how to grow and refine their skills.

  • Back in 2012, a dedicated group of teachers and school leaders at Grain Valley Schools began a deep dive into our grading policies. We wanted to make sure we were using the most effective and evidenced-based methods to evaluate student learning. This collaborative review highlighted that to ensure our assessments were truly accurate, fair, and reliable, a change was necessary.

    With the school committee's approval, Grain Valley Schools moved away from the traditional 100-point grading system and adopted a mastery-based assessment system. This means we now assess students based on their demonstrated proficiency with clear learning targets for every course. These objectives were thoughtfully created by referencing the Missouri Learning Standards and other national standards, ensuring they are consistent and align with state expectations.

  • Grain Valley Schools’ purpose of grading is to assess student progress and mastery of learning standards, provide meaningful feedback to students and parents, and communicate necessary information to all stakeholders.

    1. Feedback is specific, transparent, and aligned with the skills and knowledge students need to master
    2. Academic achievement is reported separately from behaviors
    3. Achievement is organized and reported by standards on a proficiency scale
    4. Scores are based on a body of evidence
    5. Students have multiple opportunities to demonstrate proficiency

Commitment 1: Feedback is specific, transparent, and aligned with the skills and knowledge students need to master.

 

When teachers use learning targets to guide their feedback, it helps students in several important ways:

  • Precise Understanding: students will get specific feedback that points out exactly what they're doing well and where they need to improve. This means they'll understand why they received a certain grade or comment.
  • Fairness Across Classrooms: learning targets give all teachers a common way to talk about and evaluate learning. This ensures that the feedback students receives is consistent and fair, no matter which teacher they have.
  • Empowering Students' Growth: because feedback is tied directly to clear learning targets, students can easily see their own progress. This helps them understand where they stand, set their own learning goals, and take an active role in their education. This approach builds their confidence and encourages them to take ownership of their learning journey.

Ultimately, mastery-based feedback provides a clear roadmap for student success, making the learning process more transparent and empowering.
 

Commitment 2: Academic Achievement is Reported Separately from Behaviors

 

At Grain Valley Schools, our commitment is to provide you with the clearest possible picture of students' learning. To achieve this, we believe it's important to report academic achievement and behaviors separately in order to give:

  • Accurate Reflection of Learning: students' academic grades will now solely reflect their understanding and mastery of the course material. When factors like effort, participation, or work habits influence a grade, it can make it harder to truly see what students knows and can do academically. By separating these, grades become a precise measure of their learning.
  • Focus on Core Knowledge: We want to ensure that grades truly represent student proficiency in the subject matter. This helps us, and you, clearly identify their strengths in areas like math, reading, or science, without other factors clouding the picture.
  • Comprehensive Feedback: While academic knowledge is crucial, we also recognize that important skills like work habits, collaboration, and responsibility are vital for students' overall success. We will continue to provide feedback on these behaviors, but by reporting them separately from academic grades, families get a more complete and honest view of both students' learning progress and their development of essential life skills.

K-5 Habits for Success 


At Grain Valley elementary schools, we believe that academic achievement is only one part of a student’s success. Equally important are the behaviors and habits that support effective learning and positive relationships. These Habits for Success are reported separately from academic achievement to give families a clear picture of how students are developing essential life skills.

 

K-5 Habits for Success

  • Works Cooperatively with Others: Demonstrates foundational collaboration skills such as active listening, participation, and the ability to work respectfully with diverse peers and groups.
  • Works Well Independently: Completes tasks with minimal supervision, uses time effectively, and stays focused on learning activities.
  • Actively Engaged: Shows curiosity, attentiveness, and a willingness to participate in lessons and classroom discussions.
  • Follows Directions: Understands and accurately follows verbal and written instructions.
  • Socializes Appropriately: Engages respectfully with peers and adults using appropriate behavior and language in social situations.
  • Accepts Responsibility for Their Actions: Recognizes and learns from mistakes, takes accountability, and works to make amends when needed.
  • Demonstrates Self-Control: Manages emotions, impulses, and behavior effectively across various classroom and school settings.

6-8 Habits for Success

In Grain Valley middle schools, we support the development of behaviors that prepare students for the increasing independence and collaboration required in secondary learning environments. Middle schoolers are encouraged to build strong academic habits that promote responsibility, growth, and effective communication.

 

6-8 Habits for Success

  • Collaboration & Communication: Works productively with others, listens actively, shares ideas respectfully, and communicates clearly in a variety of settings.
  • Responsibility & Initiative: Completes assignments on time, takes ownership of learning, and actively seeks help or clarification when needed.
  • Growth & Reflection: Demonstrates a willingness to receive feedback, reflect on progress, and make adjustments to improve understanding and performance.

These habits are essential for academic success and support students in becoming responsible, reflective learners as they transition toward high school expectations.


9-12 Habits for Success


At the high school level, Habits for Success are grounded in our belief that students should grow as self-directed learners and individuals of character. Those habits help prepare students not only for graduation but for life beyond high school.

 

9-12 Habits for Success

  • Self-Directed Learner - Academic Excellence: The student takes initiative in their learning by setting goals, asking relevant questions, engaging fully in instruction, and reflecting on their progress to achieve high standards of academic performance.
  • Demonstrates the Valley Way - Integrity: The student models ethical behavior, makes responsible decisions, and acts with honesty and integrity in academic and personal situations.

By cultivating these habits, high school students strengthen their ability to lead themselves, contribute to their communities, and succeed in future academic and career pursuits.

 

Commitment 3: Achievement is Organized and Reported by Standards on a Proficiency Scale

 

At Grain Valley Schools, student achievement is measured by specific standards rather than by averaging scores across tasks. This standards-based approach helps students focus on mastering content and skills through clear learning targets, consistent feedback, and evidence of understanding. 

  •  Focused on Mastery, Not Averages: Each standard is scored based on the most recent and consistent evidence of student understanding—practice work is used for feedback only and does not impact the final score.
  • Clarity Through Proficiency Scales: Students receive clear, actionable feedback using distinct proficiency levels, which guide them in identifying their strengths and areas for improvement.
  • Organized by Learning Targets: Grades are grouped by content and skills, not assignment types, helping students track their growth and set meaningful learning goals.

 

Elementary Proficiency Scale

Grade

Performance Level

Performance Descriptor

EX Exceeding Standard Advanced understanding and exceeds grade leve expectrations
MT
(ON TARGET)
Meeting Standard Proficient understanding and is meeting or is on target to meet the end-of-year expectations.
AP Approaching Standard Basic understanding and is partially proficient at meeting grade level expectrations.
BG Beginning to Reach Standard Minimal understanding and does not meet end-of-year grad level expectations.
LND Level Not Determined Proficiency cannot be determined due to insufficient evidence at te time to  this report.
NA Not Assessed The standard has not been assessed at the time of the report.

Our Purpose of Grading

Grain Valley Schools’ purpose of grading is to assess student progress and mastery of learning standards, provide meaningful feedback to students and parents, and communicate necessary information to all stakeholders.

Commitment 4: Scores are Based on a Body of Evidence


At Grain Valley Schools, our commitment is to ensure that grades represents a complete and accurate picture of student learning. Rather than relying on single assignments or test scores, we evaluate a body of evidence- a collection of work that shows student understanding of growth over time. This approach supports a more meaningful representation of student achievement. 

  • Comprehensive Picture of Learning: A body of evidence includes multiple pieces of student work- class assignments, project, assessments, and more- that align with specific learning targets. These targets are tied to state and national standards and help teachers evaluate a student's progress in a focused, accurate way.
  • Progress Over Time: Scores reflect a progression of learning, not a one-time performance. Teachers use descriptors on proficiency scales to evaluate how well a student meets learning targets, and students are encouraged to track their own growth throughout the learning process.
  • Transparent and Accessible Reporting: In elementary schools, student progress is reported quarterly via report cards. In middle and high schools, scores are entered in real-time and can be accessed by families through an online portal, PowerSchool.

    
By using a body of evidence, we ensure that reported grades reflect an accurate view of your student's academic development-one that honors both the journey and the destination in learning. 

Commitment 5: Students have multiple opportunities to demonstrate proficiency.

At Grain Valley Schools, we believe the core purpose of education is learning—and learning happens at different rates and in different ways for every student. That’s why we are committed to providing multiple opportunities for students to demonstrate what they know and can do. This approach supports a growth mindset and emphasizes learning over compliance or one-time performance.

  • Learning Looks Different for Every Student: We recognize that students may need different types of support and flexible timeframes to reach proficiency. Our goal is to honor the learning process by allowing students to show mastery in a variety of ways over time.
  • Ongoing Learning and Integration: Teachers design instruction to build on prior knowledge and incorporate past learning into new content. This approach naturally creates repeated chances for students to demonstrate their skills and understanding as they progress through the curriculum.
  • Teaching for Growth, Not Just Grades: Instruction is guided by clear learning targets and proficiency scales. Teachers provide ungraded practice, offer meaningful feedback throughout the learning process, and focus on where students are going—not just where they’ve been. This feedback loop helps students take ownership of their learning and work toward mastery

In mastery-based classrooms, the focus shifts from “How many points did I earn?” to “What have I learned, and what do I still need to work on?” This mindset supports deeper understanding, meaningful growth, and long-term academic success.

Frequently Asked Questions & Answers 


Q: How does a proficiency-based scale work?

A: The philosophy behind mastery-based grading focuses on the collection of multiple pieces of “evidence” of student learning in relation to a specific learning target. With multiple pieces of evidence, teachers can get a clearer picture of a student’s progression of learning and intervene before a big test or project is completed. Rather than “averaging” individual scores together, students’ scores will be analyzed to determine growth and improvement towards mastery of a specific skill or content.


Therefore, if a student’s score is lower at the beginning of a topic, it does not adversely affect their final grade for the unit. What will determine the final grade for each unit is the progress made and the knowledge gained by the end of the unit.


Q: How are grades determined using a proficiency scale?

A: In mastery-based grading, students have the opportunity to prove their proficiency in relation to a specific learning target. Learning targets are clearly defined, as is the level of mastery to achieve a specific grade. The focus is upon growth in the learning process through multiple attempts and practice before a final grade is recorded. 


Ultimately, students will still receive a letter grade ranging from an A to an F.


Q: Will the use proficiency scales impact a student’s GPA adversely?

A: No. Students will have ample opportunities to achieve an appropriate level of proficiency in their courses. The GPA calculation for high school students remains the same, based on the final letter grade in the course.


Q: Does the use of proficiency scales change the way class ranks, scholarship selections, etc. are figured?

A: No. High school students will still be ranked for the purpose of scholarship selections, college applications, etc. However, our focus is on all students meeting an expected standard as opposed to categorizing students based on one tenth or one hundredth decimal point difference in GPA.


Q: Is it true that it is virtually impossible for a student to earn a “4:Advanced”?

A: No. Teachers plan for instruction and assessment with opportunities for students to achieve at all levels of the scale. It may seem more difficult in the mastery-based environment because the grade truly has a laser-like focus on the standard. In traditional 100-point grading, factors such as extra credit, attendance, participation, behavior, etc. could skew the communication of true achievement of learning.


Q: How is the final course grade figured?

A: Most courses will have 15 – 20 learning targets for which students are assessed. Each topic is assessed looking at a trend in growth and improvement. Upon completion of a course, it is then appropriate (and only then) to average scores across topics to arrive at a final course grade.


Q: Are grades based only on “big tests” in mastery-based grading?

A: No. Grades are based on the “evidence” collected from the teacher over the course of a grading period. Students are given multiple avenues as well as opportunities to show evidence of their learning.


Q: Is homework a part of mastery-based grading?

A: Homework or practice work is an important part of the learning process. Homework is not usually assigned a “grade” in mastery-based grading, however. Homework is considered as practice to strengthen or reinforce a skill in preparation for the “big game” or test. Much like in sports, some students need more practice than others to master a skill or knowledge. Students need help and support at home to reinforce the idea that practice makes permanent!


Q: How does mastery-based grading affect acceptance into college or post-secondary training?

A: Most colleges and universities look at multiple factors for acceptance. Often times, the GPA recorded on a student’s transcript is re-figured by college admissions officers based on the number of rigorous courses taken (ie Advanced Placement, advanced courses). They do this because there is such drastic inconsistency among high schools and teachers on how traditional grades are figured and assigned. Mastery-based grading is a philosophy and practice that brings more consistency to reporting student learning.


In mastery-based grading students have a much clearer idea of their learning and their individual learning styles, which in turn makes them better prepared to take on the challenges of higher education.

Based on the works of educational researchers, including Thomas Guskey, Robert Marzano, Ken O'Connor, Doug Reeves, Rick Stiggins, and Rick Wormeli.

Professional Learning for Teachers

Professional Development Committee


 

The purpose of the Grain Valley Schools Professional Development Committee (PDC) is to support and encourage the professional growth of all certified staff through high-quality, job-embedded professional development. As a result, all students will have an opportunity to achieve a high level of success.

 

PDC Membership List

 

Support for New Teachers


 

The Grain Valley School District uses a two-year induction program (FLIGHT) that starts with first-year teachers. The purpose is threefold:

  • Support (Mentors): To reduce the anxiety of transitioning into teaching.
  • Retention: To expand the retention of highly qualified teachers.
  • Training: To instruct teachers in techniques that ensure student success.

While we have an Induction Program, Induction is actually an organized process that entails training and ongoing support for new teachers. The induction teams consist of administrators, mentors, staff developers, and effective, experienced classroom teachers.

 

Department Staff

(816) 847-5006 x1

Email Dr. Amanda Allen

(816) 847-5006

Email Dr. Brandi Gump

(816) 847-5006

Email Jill Richardson

Instructional Team

(816) 847-5006

Email Audrey Harrision

(816) 847-5020

Email Kendra Carpenter

(816) 847-5070

Email Emily Twiehaus

(816) 847-4870

Email Jane Wallace

(816) 847-7800

Email Penny Watson