Skip to Main Content
Students & Parents

Students & Parents

PAWS Press School-Wide Newsletter

Click on the drop down box below to see the 2023-2024 PAW Press Newsletters. 

ATTENTION:

The Terrebonne Parish School District is transitioning to digital progress reports and report cards this year.   Both documents will be accessible on the Student Progress Center at noon on the designated dates.    

The Student Progress Center is available for Parents/Guardians of all students attending Terrebonne Parish Schools to track in “real time”: grades, calendar, attendance, discipline, transcript, state test scores, communication, report cards.  As soon as data is entered on a student at school, it is available on the Student Progress Center.  Students in grades five through twelve have access to a student account.  

Progress reports and report cards will be available at noon on the designated dates on the Student Progress Center.   Select the ‘document’ tab at the top of the screen to access these reports.  

PROGRESS REPORTS       REPORT CARDS

September 8, 2022                            October 18, 2022

November 11, 2022                           January 9, 2023

February 6, 2023                               March 21, 2023

April 24, 2023                                    May 25, 2023

If you have any questions concerning the Student Progress Center that cannot be answered by the information here, please contact your student’s school. 

Click this link for instructions.

Click to enter Student Progress Center

Eureka Math Tips for Parents 

Click here for helpful curriculum resources.

Google Classroom:  Online Learning Center

Google Classroom is a free web-based learning platform developed by Google, where teachers can run a class online, create curriculums, and share assignments with students in a paperless way.

Click here for Schriever Elementary's Google Classroom Codes for 2023-24

How-To Videos

Click here for helpful how-to videos.

Academic Standards

Academic standards define the knowledge and skills that students are expected to learn in a subject in each grade. Academic standards are designed to provide a clear path for students to gain the proficiency that is required to learn increasingly complex material in the next grade. Students who learn the knowledge and skills defined by the academic standards, year after year, are on track to graduate from high school on time and ready to enter college or the workforce.

Academic standards define what students need to know but not how students learn or how teachers teach. Teachers use the academic standards to develop lesson plans, assignments and assessments that help their students master the knowledge and skills defined by the academic standards.

Louisiana defines academic standards in seven subjects, including English language arts (reading and writing), math, science, social studies, foreign languages, physical education and health.

LDOE's Student Standards.

This site provides information using PDF, visit this link to download the Adobe Acrobat Reader DC software.