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Assessment and Instruction “You can’t have one without the other”

Assessment and Instruction “You can’t have one without the other”. Rhonda Lokey, Campbell Middle School Laura Golz, Daniell Middle School. Questions to Guide Teachers. What? Standards Determines what students are expected to know or do In what ways? Instruction

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Assessment and Instruction “You can’t have one without the other”

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  1. Assessment and Instruction “You can’t have one without the other” Rhonda Lokey, Campbell Middle School Laura Golz, Daniell Middle School

  2. Questions to Guide Teachers • What? Standards • Determines what students are expected to know or do • In what ways? Instruction • Specific differentiated learning experiences used for student mastery of the standards • How well? Assessment • Gauges the mastery of the standards by the students. A balanced approach to assessment includes a variety of strategies within a range of frequency and purpose. “Balanced Assessment System” Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction: Office of Educational Accountability, June 2009

  3. What kinds of assessment do you use in your classroom? TIME IS UP • Now determine if the assessments are • formative or summative. TIME IS UP Take a moment to write down the assessments you use in your classroom.

  4. Formative vs. Summative When the chef tastes the soup; that’s formative. When the customer tastes the soup, that’s summative. Going to the doctor is formative, the autopsy is summative. Practicing parallel parking with your Dad is formative, the driver’s test is summative.

  5. What does this have to do with Formative Assessment? Write all the possible ways your items can be used for assessing student learning.

  6. FORmative Assessment Strategies Assessment FOR Learning

  7. Students as Data Collectors Popsicle Sticks Sort Stick It! Chain Notes - Mystery Questions Moving Data Collectors Mix and Mingle Capsule Vocabulary (learning partners) 4 Corners Human Graph Exit Tickets Text or Twitter your response (no cell phone needed) Layman’s Translation Real World Application - How will this knowledge help you in the future or affect future world events? Self Expression - How does this topic relate to my experiences? Political Cartoons or Pictures Other Ideas Tic-Tac-Toe - 3X3 Mystery Question Board Framed Paragraph Memory Matrix Formative Strategies

  8. 2. 1.

  9. Mystery Question

  10. Memory Matrix - Which Side Do You Belong? The Cold War - People, Places and Ideas Warsaw Pact Democracy Communism The West Eastern Europe Iron Curtain NATO

  11. Summative Assessment Assessment OF learning

  12. Performance Assessments • “Performance assessments … offer a variety of ways for students to demonstrate what they know about content, as well as elucidate students’ additional skills sets within the classroom. These additional skills are related to attitude, creativity, ethics, perseverance, honesty, teamwork, sense of fair play, and many other behaviors and dispositions needed not only in the classroom, but also in the workforce.” (Oberg, Carol. Guiding Classroom Instruction Through Performance Assessment. Journal of Case Studies in Accreditation and Assessment,

  13. Performance Summative Assessment • Summing Up the Learning! • Assessment of Learning Let's Go Shopping!

  14. Shopping for Ideas! • Please visit each aisle in our idea store. • You have been given a “shopping cart” to place any ideas you would like to own. • You only have 10 minutes to complete your shopping spree.

  15. Portfolios Collage Picture Postcard PowerPoint KWL Charts Board Games Illustrating a Story Illustrated Metaphor Advanced Organizers Comic Strips Political Cartoons Biographical Sketches Illustrated Timelines Movie (moviemaker) Aisle 1 - Visual Products

  16. Presenting Campaign speech Debate Speech Panel discussions Tribute or eulogy Interview Mock trial Recite a student created poem or song Explaining or describing Poster Collage Art work Picture or murals Aisle 2 - Oral/Spoken Products

  17. Fishbone Writing Perspective Letters Journals Resume and cover letter Travel guides Historical Guides Short story Play/skits Obituaries Recipes Catalog Ads/Classified Ads Fairy / Folk Tales Articles Poetry Primary Source Analysis - Document Based Questions Website Brochure/Pamphlet Aisle 3 - Written Products

  18. Map Reading Modeling population density Acting out a play Performing Dance Song/Rap Reenact a historical event Creating a museum exhibit Convention / Exhibitions Simulations Role Play Creating Art work Sculptures/models Business Proposal Documentary Create and play a game Aisle 4 - Production / Performance

  19. Commentary as Assessment

  20. What do you know about teacher commentary? Teacher Commentary

  21. Teacher Commentary • Provides feedback • In language specific to the standards. . . • What the student did well • Direct quotes from the work • Use of language of the standard • Next steps • Questions to think about • Are you going to allow students to redo? • Is it for the final grade? • What assignments do you need to provide commentary?

  22. Student Commentary • This strategy helped me understand this assignment more by breaking down the information. What I mean by breaking down the information is that when you explain the assignment and you give more detail and explain more on the topic the student would understand what they are supposed to do better.

  23. Student Commentary • “The student commentary paper helps with the writing and it shows what you need to be able to pass. After he/she checks, you are able to make it better or longer than it is.” • “I felt student commentary helped me a lot. I like writing, but sometimes I get into it so much I make errors. When my partner and I swapped, I then realized I needed to make a lot of corrections. Finally, I went back through and edited it for a grade and I did good.”

  24. Student Commentary “I think this is effective because in order to do this you have to understand the words we are using for the assignment. Also, I liked it because before it got graded, I got feedback from my partner. So then I was able to add things to my paper, in addition some people do better during group work.”

  25. Student Commentary • You are in the 8th Grade! • Providing commentary to your peers

  26. Student Commentary • Evaluate individual work first then talk to a partner • Model, model, model! • Providing feedback - group student commentary • In the language of the standards • “I don’t see where you included…” • “Could you show me where you compared…” • “How does this answer the essential question?”

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