View Student Progress

 

Transcript:

This video will show you how to access and read student progress data. To access the data, sign on to the 9 Dots Platform. You can do this by navigating to app.9dots.org and clicking the pink sign in button either at the top right or here. Sign in using Clever, Google, or Classlink. At the bottom of your Dashboard, you'll see "Students to check in with". This section shows a high-level overview of a few students in your class. You can hover over the question mark next to each tag to learn more. "Missed a Lesson" means a student did not start the previous lesson. "Low Interest" means a student has reported not liking coding sometime over the past two lessons. "Low Progress" means a student's progress is low compared to the progress of the rest of the class that started the last two lessons. 

You can click on the Lessons tab for a more detailed look at data. Here, you can see how many students out of the total number of students have completed an activity. Hovering over the number in the column "Active Students" shows you the name of students currently working on that activity. You can also click on this graph to see a detailed breakdown of students who have completed that activity, their work, and the time it took them to complete it. Clicking "View Work" opens their work on the challenge in a new tab. The column on the far right shows what percentage of non-bonus challenges each student has completed. Students who have completed all non-bonus challenges will display a check mark. Finally, the Progress tab displays overall student progress. Each lesson's average progress will be across the top row with individual student percentages underneath. The percentage in the column "All Lessons" displays the students' holistic progress across all lessons. These percentages represent what percentage of non-bonus challenges each student has completed. If a student has not started a playlist, the cell under a lesson will display "NS". This will not count against their overall progress, nor the average progress per lesson.