A10 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 7, 2021 Grading Continued from A1 These hyper-specific rubrics also remove any confusion about why a student earned a particular grade, or how the student can improve, said Steve Stancliff, principal at Pilot Butte Middle School. “It really clarifies for the family and the student where they’re at in regards to a partic- ular criteria,” he said. “There’s no guess work.” Pilot Butte, which also has instituted standards-based grading for about five years, uses a 0-8 grading scale to bet- ter match the schoolwide In- ternational Baccalaureate cur- riculum, Stancliff said. Standards-based grading doesn’t penalize students who start the semester or school year slowly, Stancliff and DuVal said. Arts Continued from A1 “He was commenting that over the last three months, he’s had something like three gigs or so,” Schuurman said. “And so it got me thinking, OK, is there anything that I might be able to do in my own way to help support them? I had been familiar with NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert series, and I thought that that might be an interest- ing model to see if that might work here.” Using equipment he pur- chased for a documentation project, Family Heritage Con- nects, he set up a socially dis- tanced studio in his home. The Bulletin got involved, and a donation drive effort in part- nership with arts collaborative Scalehouse, the Central Ore- gon Creative Artists Relief Ef- fort, followed soon after. The effort will raise dona- tions to help Central Oregon’s creative artists — musicians, visual artists, performers and creative workers — by offering grants and a platform to bring attention to the talent that needs help to continue thriving in this community throughout the pandemic and beyond. Students work on a project in a com- puter sci- ence class in January 2019 at Cascade Middle School in Bend. Bulletin file photo Projects and tests at the end of the year are weighted more heavily than those at the begin- ning, to reward students who finally understand a concept, they said. The system also distin- guishes between simple mis- takes and completely misun- derstanding a concept, said McKae, the math teacher at Cascade. “Not all errors, par- ticularly in math, are created equal,” he said. “So you can have a precision error on a problem versus a conceptual error, and if you grade them the same way, you’re not going With the assistance of local sponsors and help from The Tower Theatre and KPOV, CO CAREs will bring recog- nition to a different artist each week with a video on The Bul- letin’s website and a prominent feature story in GO! Magazine. Schuurman’s house concerts will feature acoustic, solo or duo musicians, while videos captured by The Bulletin at the Tower Theatre and other loca- tions will feature visual artists, bands and other performers. The videos will be similar to NPR’s Tiny Desk Concerts or GO! Magazine’s Anatomy of a Song series. People can give tax-deduct- ible donations to the charity Go- FundMe CO CAREs account or to the featured artists’ indepen- dent account. Links with oppor- tunities to donate or apply for a grant will be available at the top of the website beside the launch video describing the effort. The fundraising goal for a first round of grant-making is $40,000. “Our tagline is ‘Empowering our community,’” Wright said. “The performing and the cre- ative arts and the whole fabric of this community is very im- portant. If we’re going to be part of the community, whatever we can do to help, that is part of our responsibility. We’ve got an au- dience that I think is caring and perhaps can help support this effort. It just made sense.” Scalehouse, the fiscal sponsor of the project known for host- ing the Bend Design Confer- ence in the fall and for helping to launch the city’s Creative Laureate program, will handle the grant application process and distribution of funds. The collaborative launched its own Creative Relief Fund in Oc- tober funded by a grant from The Bend Foundation and will roll that into CO CAREs. Grant determinations will be made by an advisory board made up of artists, designers and performers from outside Central Oregon, including art- ists from Portland and Eugene. The application, which can be found on The Bulletin’s website, will ask for the artist’s creative discipline, proof of creative artistic practice and a three-sentence artist statement about their work. Applicants will also need to provide a dec- laration of need stating lost income due to COVID-19 and how the grant will help. René Mitchell of Scalehouse said the art collective was in- spired by Portland’s Regional Arts & Cultural Council initia- tive to provide resources for art- ists and creative workers greatly impacted this last year. “Our role is to identify and recognize the need, confirm that applicants are working artists and provide the awards,” she said. “We are not here to critique the work — we want to support those who entertain us, inspire us and cre- ate a sense of community.” This relief is desperately needed by many Central Or- egon artists. Bend Burlesque co-founder Mehama Kaupp, who features in the CO CAREs launch video, said the effort “feels like a really nice little jump-start with things open- ing back up a little bit too. Just get creative juices flowing and hopefully remind everybody we’re still out there.” “It’s been really super diffi- cult because we were perform- ing once to twice a month, and we’ve been completely shut down,” Kaupp said. “It’s af- fected the business completely. We don’t have an office space; we can’t pay bills; we have no income coming in. I am on the verge of, do I shut this down or do I keep fighting? It’s not been easy.” to get a sense of where the mis- understanding is.” Bend-La Pine isn’t going to immediately force this grad- ing style onto the 10 middle and high schools that don’t use it, Legace said. Still, district leadership is hoping to reform secondary grading techniques to create a system that empha- sizes knowledge acquisition, rather than solely memorizing answers and being well-be- haved. “It’s important to fall of us, as educators, to reflect on, what is the purpose of grading?” Leg- ace said. “I think it’s important that a letter grade represents what a student learned at the end of the term.” Sarah Barclay, president of the Bend Education Associa- tion teachers’ union, said in an email that teachers in the few schools with standards-based grading support it. However, if Bend-La Pine wants to institute something similar district-wide, Barclay said that change must happen carefully and with plenty of teacher input. An immediate mandate — like the district’s decision on Dec. 1 to not allow teachers to give grades lower than 50% — isn’t the best idea, she wrote. “Our educators are profes- sionals with years of experi- ence, training, and education that must be harnessed to make a systematic change like this successful and meaning- ful,” Barclay wrote. “Educators are asking for a genuine seat at the table for this conversation and (teachers’ union) members are not experiencing that at this time.” e e Reporter: 541-617-7854, jhogan@bendbulletin.com taught at least 100 lessons, prob- ably more. It’s still really hard to make a living even with that much work, especially now that I’m supporting a family.” CO CAREs may be coming a year into the pandemic, but it will not be pandemic-specific. The effort will continue be- yond COVID-19. “Performing artists and cre- ative artists are going to need ongoing support for the next 6 months to a year,” Wright said. “... We’re going to see how we do with the first push over the next six weeks, get funds dis- tributed and go from there.” Eric Leadbetter, one of the first artists to record a video and House Concert with Schuur- man, became a father during the pandemic. At the same time, most of his work as a full-time musician and music educator was wiped out. “When you dedicate your life to something you love — in my case, it’s music — (you’re) not obviously doing it to make a for- tune,” Leadbetter said. “Obviously it would be nice to sell some re- cords and whatnot, but the art itself is part of the gratification of doing it and also helps you get out of bed in the morning. Before the pandemic, in 2019 I played 256 shows that year and e e Reporter: 541-617-7814, bmcelhiney@bendbulletin.com Reverse Mortgages Life in reverse…financial longevity and peace of mind. Debbie Tallman Reverse Mortgage Advisor NMLS-248704 (541) 390-0934 debbie.tallman@financeofamerica.com ©2020 Finance of America Mortgage LLC is licensed nationwide | Equal Housing Opportunity | NMLS ID #1071 (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org) | 300 Welsh Road, Building 5, Horsham, PA 19044 |(800) 355-5626. For licensing information go to: www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org. This is not a commitment to lend. Prices, guidelines and minimum requirements are subject to change without notice. Some products may not be available in all states. Subject to review of credit and/or collateral; not all applicants will qualify for financing. It is important to make an informed decision whenselecting and using a loan product; make sure to compare loan types when making a financing decision. This document is provided by Finance of America Mortgage. Any materials were notprovided by HUD or FHA. It has not been approved by FHA or any Government Agency.When the loan is due and payable, some or all of the equity in the property that is the subject of the reversemortgage no longer belongs to borrowers, who may need to sell the home or otherwise repay the loan with interest from other proceeds. The lender may charge an origination fee, mortgageinsurance premium, closing costs and servicing fees (added to the balance of the loan). The balance of the loan grows over time and the lender charges interest on the balance. Borrowers areresponsible for paying property taxes, homeowner’s insurance, maintenance, and related taxes (which may be substantial). We do not establish an escrow account for disbursements of thesepayments. A set-aside account can be set up to pay taxes and insurance and may be required in some cases. Borrowers must occupy home as their primary residence and pay for ongoingmaintenance; otherwise the loan becomes due and payable. The loan also becomes due and payable (and the property may be subject to a tax lien, other encumbrance, or foreclosure) when thelast borrower, or eligible non-borrowing surviving spouse, dies, sells the home, permanently moves out, defaults on taxes, insurance payments, or maintenance, or does not otherwise comply withthe loan terms. Interest is not tax-deductible until the loan is partially or fully repaid. SAVINGS Mattresses Recliners Sofas Sectionals Bedroom Sets Lift Chairs Chofa Just From $549 $699 Dining Sets Accessories Swivel Glider Recliner Just $549 FREE Foundation or FREE Pillows with Purchase FREE DELIVERY & SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE* *Subject to credit approval. See store for details 2071 S. Hwy 97, Redmond 541-548-2066 • www.wilsonsofredmond.net • 63485 N. Hwy 97, Bend 541-330-5084