Principles & Practical Tools for Improving Classroom Assessment

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Principles & Practical Tools for Improving Classroom Assessment 1

We know it But how do we do it? 2

PRINCIPLES PRACTICAL TOOLS 3

4

Assessment: It s not just for teachers anymore! SHIFT: A teacher-directed process A process where students play an active role 5

This segment: Tools for engaging students in the assessment process at all stages of an instructional sequence. Beginning Middle End 6

Backwards Learning Beginning 7

Backwards Learning What is my TASK? What are my KNOWING goals? What are my DOING goals? Task 8

CLASSROOM EXAMPLE: A high school student s analysis of a culminating assessment task on renewable/non-renewable energy 9

A 1 ST GRADE EXAMPLE: Completed as a class vs. individually What is my task? Make a poster that could teach someone the difference between books that tell stories and books that give you information. It should show examples of both kinds of books. What do I need to know? I need to know what a story book is. I need to know what an information book is. What do I need to be able to do? Explain the difference between a story book and an information book. Find examples of both kinds of books. Make a poster. This tool, like others in the book, can be modified for use with younger students e.g., by having them work as a class. This tool, like others, can be used to target Common Core State Standards (in this example, RL.1.5). 10

Backwards Learning REFLECTION: How might students benefit from using this tool? Understand the goals more deeply Gives purpose and meaning to upcoming tasks Gets students in the habit of analyzing tasks and setting goals for achieving them 11

Beginning Backwards Learning promotes success by helping students identify learning goals/targets at the beginning of an instructional sequence 12

Beginning Another way to promote success is to help students understand what quality looks like before they start working on an assignment Two ways to do this: GIVE STUDENTS CRITERIA FOR HIGH-QUALITY WORK (E.G., A RUBRIC) Student-Generated Assessment Criteria 13

Student-Generated Assessment Criteria A tool that prepares students to produce high-quality work by showing them examples of what it looks like and helping them identify its essential attributes High-Performance Approach Three-Level Approach 14

High-Performance Approach Common Attributes? Independently, in groups, as a class The beginning of a strong narrative Is interesting and makes you want to read more Tells you what event or experience the writer is going to be writing about 15

Three-Level Approach Excellent Average Below Average 16

You just saw two tools for engaging students in the assessment process early in an instructional sequence. Backwards Learning Student-Generated Assessment Criteria Beginning What about engaging students in the middle of an instructional sequence as instruction is happening? Middle 17

Stop, Slow, Go! Invites students to give real-time feedback about the pace and effectiveness of instruction by holding up colored index cards 18

Pace Level of understanding Too fast? Too slow? Just right? 3 2 X 3-5 =? During a presentation or while working independently 19

Test Feedback End Engages students in the assessment process at the end of an instructional sequence by inviting them to reflect on and learn from their end-of-unit tests Test Feedback Form: 20

Assess Give Share feedback their effectiveness knowledge feelings about about instruction of of untested their performance leading studying material up to the test 21

You ve learned 4 tools for accomplishing this shift A teacher-directed process A process where students play an active role Backwards Learning: It s the students who establish the learning goals. Student-Generated Assessment Criteria: It s the students, with help from their teacher, who uncover the criteria for high-quality work. Stop, Slow, Go!: It invites students to give feedback to the teacher. It also trains students to be more proactive by teaching them to monitor their understanding and speak up when they re confused. Test Feedback: It invites students to assess their performance, study habits, and the degree to which instruction prepared them to succeed. 22

Assess for 21 st -century success. SHIFT: A focus on facts and memorization A focus on 21 st -century skills & understandings, particularly those highlighted in the Common Core 23

What would assessing for 21 st -century success look like in the context of vocabulary instruction? Can you MEMORIZE? Do you UNDERSTAND? Association Triangles 24

Association Triangles 25

Association Triangles Common Core Connections: Ideal for developing and testing students grasp of general and content-specific vocabulary terms (CC Language Anchor Std 6) Can be used with non-vocabulary standards as well 26

A MATH triangle Classifying shapes according to their attributes (CC 3.G.1, 4.G.2) A LITERATURE triangle Recounting the plot and determining the central message of a fable (CC RL.3.2) 27

Association Triangles When to use it? Beginning Middle End Assess prior knowledge Check for understanding End-of-unit test 28

Association Triangles: Vocabulary knowledge and skills 4-2-1 Summarize: Other Common Core Skills Summarizing, writing, collaboration, identifying main ideas 29

4-2-1 Summarize A tool that solidifies and tests students grasp of what they ve learned from readings, lectures, etc., by having them identify, discuss, and summarize the key points with their classmates Summarizing skills: Emphasized in the Common Core Positive impact on student achievement 30

4-2-1 Summarize What are the basic steps? Record the 4 most important ideas. Share, compare, agree on the 2 most important. Share, compare, identify the 1 most important. Write a summary paragraph focused on the main idea. 31

On your own With a partner In groups of four 32

4-2-1 Summarize Common Core Connections: Develops students ability to identify & summarize key ideas from a text (CC Reading Anchor Std 2) Builds explanatory writing skills (CC Writing Anchor Std 2) Teaches students to develop and strengthen their writing via planning (CC Writing Anchor Std 5) Engages students in peer-to-peer conversations about grade-appropriate texts & topics (CC Speaking & Listening Anchor Std 1) 33

The only real similarity between aiding & grading is that they rhyme. SHIFT: Assessment as a means of evaluating learning A means of advancing teaching and learning 34

There are a lot of different ways to aid Backwards Learning BEGINNING: Clarify goals and expectations Teach students what quality looks like Checklists MIDDLE: Stop, Slow, Go! Assess learning and respond accordingly Give students feedback that helps them improve Glow & Grow END: Test Assessment Let students learn from end-of-unit assessments Promote productive reflection Test Feedback 35

Checklists Beginning A tool that improves students performance on assigned tasks by spelling out what students need to do or include in order to complete those tasks successfully. 36

Checklists Beginning When I am giving an oral presentation I make a conscious effort to speak slowly, loudly, and clearly. I use visual displays like charts/graphs to try and clarify my points. I support my statements and positions with specific evidence/examples. I stop at various times to address people s comments/questions. 37

Checklists Beginning Student Self-Assessment Teacher Feedback PRINCIPLE 3: Aiding vs. grading PRINCIPLE 1: Students as active players PRINCIPLE 2: Common Core skills (Speaking & Listening Stds) 38

Glow & Grow Middle A tool that boosts achievement by focusing more on aiding than grading Two kinds of feedback: GLOW GROW 39

Glow & Grow Middle 40

Glow & Grow A high school history example: Document-based essay feedback Which is more likely to raise achievement? The often-untapped power of the Glow vs. 41

Test Assessment End Problem! 42

Test Assessment End A tool that aids students by encouraging them to analyze their performance, not just look at their grades Which learning targets did I miss? What can I do to hit them? 43

Test Assessment End Learning Targets/Goals Follow-up test or task 44

One size doesn t fit all! SHIFT: One-size-fits-all assessment and instruction Differentiated assessment and instruction 45

What does differentiation mean in the context of assessment? Beginning Middle End Assessing & addressing differences Designing differentiated assessments From Topics to Top Picks Task Rotation 46

To teach a student well, a teacher must know that student well. Tomlinson and Imbeau (2010) 47

From Topics to Top Picks Beginning Assessing interest is important! Doesn t have to be complicated! Bonus: Previews the learning to come *Inspired by Tomlinson s (2001) Interest Questionnaire 48

How did this teacher ASSESS students interests? How did this teacher ENGAGE student interest? 49

But it s important for students to learn all the material not just the stuff they re interested in! The idea isn t to skip. USE students interests. BROADEN students interests. 50

What does differentiation mean in the context of assessment? Assess & Address Design differentiated assessments that let all students shine Task Rotation 51

Task Rotation End SINGLE ASSESSMENT TASK A task for you FOUR ASSESSMENT TASKS A task for you And you And you And you Something for everyone 52

MASTERY TASKS assess students ability to demonstrate factual knowledge and procedures. Remembering UNDERSTANDING TASKS assess students ability to reason, analyze, explain, and justify. Reasoning INTERPERSONAL TASKS assess students ability to relate personally to the content and to others. Relating SELF-EXPRESSIVE TASKS Assess students ability to create, speculate, and think originally. Creating 53

A kindergarten example: Task Rotation End 54

Remembering task 55

Reasoning task 56

Creating task (creating a hypothesis) 57

Relating task 58

A mathematics example: 59

What advantages does the four-style approach offer? Remembering TASK ROTATION Relating Retelling Reasoning Personalizing Creating Comfort for all students Challenge for all students Analyzing data Thinking divergently Practice developing different kinds of thinking & learning skills Practice answering different kinds of questions A more comprehensive picture of what our students know 60

How critical is this kind of differentiated approach? Sternberg and Grigorenko (2004) note that students who fail to fulfill their academic potential often fail because we have failed to teach and assess them in ways that are consistent with their individual talents and styles of thinking. 61

You can t build quality in at the end of the line. SHIFT: Assessment as something that happens at the end of the line Something that happens throughout the instructional process 62

Tools for all stages Beginning Middle End From Topics to Top Picks Backwards Learning Checklists Stop, Slow, Go! Association Triangles 4-2-1 Summarize Task Rotation Test Assessment Test Feedback Student-Generated Assessment Criteria Glow & Grow 63

www.thoughtfulclassroom.com/tools 64

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Thank you for attending! We ll now take questions Website: www.thoughtfulclassroom.com/tools Email: questions@thoughtfulclassroom.com Phone: 1.800.962.4432 66