1 / 33

IPC Assessment for Learning at Panaga School 18 th November 2009

IPC Assessment for Learning at Panaga School 18 th November 2009. Our Learning Targets. To know about IPC Assessment for Learning To be able to share your child’s IPC learning. Knowledge, Skills and Understanding. Tell a partner something you KNOW , something you ARE ABLE TO DO

joelle
Télécharger la présentation

IPC Assessment for Learning at Panaga School 18 th November 2009

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IPC Assessment for Learningat Panaga School18th November 2009

  2. Our Learning Targets To know about IPC Assessment for Learning To be able to share your child’s IPC learning

  3. Knowledge, Skills and Understanding Tell a partner something you KNOW, something you ARE ABLE TO DO and something you UNDERSTAND

  4. IPC Learning Goals Knowledge To know… Skills To be able to… Understanding To understand ..

  5. Knowledge… Data, information Relatively simple Knowing ‘that’, knowing ‘about’ Continually expanding Knowledge explosion!

  6. Skills… Practical, knowing ‘how to’ Take time to develop through practise and experience Essence of many subjects: What scientists do...what historians do… At the heart of every subject Fewer key skills than ‘facts’ Cross-cultural Transferable

  7. Understanding Complex relationship between knowledge and skills, developed over time Do we ever truly understand something or do our knowledge and skills over time help us to develop an understanding? How often to we ask if or say that we understand something? Should we be really ask ‘Do you/I know…?

  8. Teaching K, S and U Knowledge can be researched or taught by presentation Skills must be taught practically and in context. Time intensive and need to be revisited Understanding is facilitated rather than taught. Time is crucial.

  9. Assessing Knowledge, Skills and Understanding Knowledge is easily assessable by tests, check ups and quizzes. Skills is difficult to assess out of context, no right/wrong. Skills need to be assessed more than once, as they are developmental. Understanding is more complex. It is longer, multidimensional process. Can we ever truly assess understanding?

  10. Assessment in the Primary School SUMMATIVE A one off event/test May be feedback but no feed forward Grades not necessarily with actions Don’t need to know the learner Aimed at reporting FORMATIVE Continuous Related to learning targets Looks forward: target setting Feeds forward Personalised Learning Learning to Learn Leads to improvement Encourages engagement and self assessment Self Motivation

  11. Primary SchoolAssessment for Learning Assessment for Learning is…. ¨…the process of seeking and interpreting evidence for use by learners and their teachers to decide where the learners are in their learning, where they need to go and how best to get there.¨ Assessment Reform Group (2002)

  12. It’s good to tell her how high she has jumped. (Assessment of Learning - Summative) It’s much better to recognise the height and help her to jump higher. (Assessment for Learning – Formative)

  13. The skill of Juggling

  14. Watch the jugglers in action. Are they working at ‘Beginning’, ‘Developing’ or ‘Mastering’ level? How do you know?

  15. A rubric for juggling

  16. Giving learning advice Using the rubric to decide what advice you can give each other to help you move from ‘Beginning’ to ‘Developing’ or from ‘Developing’ to ‘Mastering’.

  17. IPC Assessment for Learning Skills based, over a milepost Identifies key skills Rubrics for teachers and children Learning advice, to help children to improve their skills

  18. For all of these subjects …

  19. For each identified key skill in each subject… The scenarios are examples of the skills in action, in the different subjects in the IPC units It is an integral part of the IPC learning, NOT extra activities.

  20. Geography Key Skill1.10 Be able to make maps and plans of real and imaginary places, using pictures and symbols (Milepost 1: age 5-7 years, Primary 2 and 3)

  21. Where you will find the key skill being practised In Transport Geography Task 5, the children work together to make a class map to show all the routes the children take to school and to other places. The children decide on a colour scheme and any symbols they will use to produce their class map.

  22. Teachers’ Rubric Details what the key skill will ‘look like’ in action and exactly how a child performs within each learning stage. Beginning Developing Mastering

  23. Children’s Rubrics Corresponds to and reflects the teachers’ rubric, written in ‘child-speak’. I’m getting used to it I’m getting better I’m really getting it

  24. Using the Children’s Rubric Used to explain the key skill, success criteria and expectations in children’s language Used to involve children in their learning and assessment process, including target setting Used before, during and after a learning task

  25. Learning Advice Learning advice given for each key skill How to progress from Beginning to Developing How to progress from Developing to Mastering For individual children/groups/class For children at ‘Mastering’ level – used to consolidate learning and to move to the next learning stage

  26. Colours Hoops Photos Annotated children’s rubrics

  27. What evidence will you see of IPC Assessment for Learning? Your children will be talking about their learning, not only what they are doing. They will be able to talk about learning skills, some new and some consolidated. Rubrics and other methods will be seen in their IPC books, with evidence of their IPC Assessment for Learning. The IPC section of your child’s end of year report will include the letters B, D or M and a comments about their skill and knowledge learning.

  28. Any questions or further clarification? www.internationalprimarycurriculum.com

More Related