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Talk About Assessment: Eight Big Ideas to Improve Learning for All Students

Talk About Assessment: Eight Big Ideas to Improve Learning for All Students. NESA Winter Training Institute New Delhi, January 30-31, 2010. Damian Cooper (905) 823-6298 dcooper3@rogers.com. Why, in 2010, are we re-examining our assessment beliefs and practices?. Changing Goals. Mean.

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Talk About Assessment: Eight Big Ideas to Improve Learning for All Students

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  1. Talk About Assessment: Eight Big Ideas to Improve Learning for All Students NESA Winter Training Institute New Delhi, January 30-31, 2010 Damian Cooper (905) 823-6298 dcooper3@rogers.com

  2. Why, in 2010, are we re-examining our assessment beliefs and practices?

  3. Changing Goals Mean

  4. Changing Goals Range of Competent Achievement

  5. Instruction Students bring different knowledge & experience to school Students learn at different rates Students learn in different ways Assessment Not all students are able to demonstrate their learning in the same way Not all students respond the same way to test pressure Some students need more scaffolding than others If the new goal of education is success for all, then we have no choice but toDifferentiate Instruction & Assessment

  6. Research on Effective Assessment • The provision of effective feedback to students • The active involvement of students in their own learning • Adjusting teaching to take account of the results of assessment • Recognition of the profound influence assessment has on motivation and self-esteem • The need for students to be able to assess themselves and understand how to improve Crooks, 1988; Black & Wiliam, 1998

  7. The Big Ideas of Classroom Assessment • Assessment serves different purposes at different times: it may be used to find out what students already know and can do; it may be used to help students improve their learning; or it may be used to let students, and their parents, know how much they have learned within a prescribed period of time. • Assessment must be planned and purposeful. • Assessment must be balanced, including oral and performance as well as written tasks, and be flexible in order to improve learning for all students.

  8. The Big Ideas of Classroom Assessment 4. Assessment and instruction are inseparable because effective assessment informs learning. 5. For assessment to be helpful to students, it must inform them in words, not numerical scores or letter grades, what they have done well, what they have done poorly, and what they need to do next in order to improve. 6. Assessment is a collaborative process that is most effective when it involves self, peer, and teacher assessment.

  9. The Big Ideas of Classroom Assessment • 7. Performance standards are an essential component of effective assessment. • 8. Grading and reporting student achievement is a caring, sensitive process that requires teachers’ professional judgement.

  10. Time to Talk About Assessment • Review these Big Ideas with your colleagues. • Which one of the Big Ideas is currently LEAST evident in your classroom or school? • Which one of the Big Ideas is currently MOST evident in your classroom or school? • Let’s examine the data!

  11. Four Conditions for Sustainable Improvement • Focus • Pressure and support • Collaboration • Stay the course

  12. The Big Ideas of Classroom Assessment • Assessment serves different purposes at different times: it may be used to find out what students already know and can do; it may be used to help students improve their learning; or it may be used to let students, and their parents, know how much they have learned within a prescribed period of time.

  13. Assessment for Learning “Assessment for learning is any assessment for which the first priority in its design and practice is to serve the purpose of promoting students’ learning. It thus differs from assessment designed primarily to serve the purposes of accountability, or of ranking, or of certifying competence.” Black, Wiliam et al. 2004

  14. Assessment of Learning “Assessment of learning includes those tasks that are designed to determine how much learning has occurred after a significant period of instruction. The data from such assessments is often used to determine report card grades.

  15. When the classroom culture focuses on rewards, gold stars, grades, or class ranking, then (students) look for ways to obtain the best marks rather than to improve their learning. One reported consequence is that, when they have any choice, (students) avoid difficult tasks. They also spend time and energy looking for clues to the “right answer”. “Inside the Black Box”, Black & Wiliam, 1998

  16. “…assessment which is explicitly designed to promote learning is the single most powerful tool we have for both raising standards and empowering lifelong learners.” Assessment for Learning: Beyond the Black Box, 1999, University of Cambridge School of Education

  17. Time to Talk About Assessment • Discuss the distinction between assessment for learning” and “assessment of learning” as it relates to your current practice

  18. The Big Ideas of Classroom Assessment • 2. Assessment must be planned and purposeful.

  19. “Backward Design” Program Planning Stage 1: Identify targeted understandings Stage 2: Determine appropriate assessment of those understandings Stage 3: Plan learning experiences and instruction that make such understanding possible Wiggins and McTighe, Understanding by Design

  20. Plan Backward from What’s Essential… Worth being familiar with Important to know and do Enduring understandings Wiggins and McTighe, Understanding by Design

  21. Plan Backward from What’s Essential… Worth being familiar with Assessment Types Traditional quizzes & tests -paper/pencil Performance Tasks & Projects -open-ended -complex -authentic Oral Assessments -conferences -interviews -oral questionning Important to know and do Enduring understandings Adapted from Wiggins and McTighe, Understanding by Design

  22. The Big Ideas of Classroom Assessment • 3. Assessment must be balanced, including oral and performance as well as written tasks, and be flexible in order to improve learning for all students.

  23. Grade 1.

  24. Ensuring a Balance of “Write”, “Do”, and “Say”

  25. Triangulation of Data: Classroom Assessment Performance task Valid & Reliable Picture of Student Achievement Oral defense/ conference Written test data

  26. You Need to Ensure a Balance of Assessment Types • Students: write, do or say • Teachers: mark, observe or listen • Authenticity is key – change a book report into a book review!

  27. The Big Ideas of Classroom Assessment • Assessment and instruction are inseparable because effective assessment informs learning.

  28. The “zone of proximal development”Lev Vygotsky • What do students currently know and what can students currently do? • Where do I want them to get to? • How big is the gap? • How do I ensure the gap is just right to challenge students in a way that maximizes learning?

  29. The Big Ideas of Classroom Assessment 5. For assessment to be helpful to students, it must inform them in words, not numerical scores or letter grades, what they have done well, what they have done poorly, and what they need to do next in order to improve.

  30. Assessment for Learning: am I already doing it? • Do I routinely share learning goals with my students so they know where we are heading? • Do I routinely communicate to students the standards they are aiming for before they begin work on a task? • Do I routinely have students self and peer assess their work in ways that improve their learning?

  31. Math Class • Learning Goal: You will demonstrate that you understand the relationship between the numerator and the denominator in a fraction. • At the end of the lesson, Linda points to the poster on the classroom wall and asks her students: What did you learn in this lesson today? • Their exit slip is to answer on a “leaf” and post it on the “knowledge tree” Linda told me that the most effective AFL strategy for her has been to write the learning goal for each day’s lesson on the board.

  32. Assessment for Learning:am I already doing it? • Does my questioning technique include all students and promote increased understanding? • Do I routinely provide individual feedback to students that informs them how to improve? • Do I routinely provide opportunities for students to make use of this feedback to improve specific pieces of work?

  33. The Big Ideas of Classroom Assessment • Assessment is a collaborative process that is most effective when it involves self, peer, and teacher assessment.

  34. Math Class Pete has his students use “Traffic Light” signs at the start of a lesson on equivalent fractions, decimals and percentages to assess prior knowledge. Teacher: Do you know what the word “equivalent” means? Students show either the red or green side of the “traffic light” in response. He orally checks a sample of the “green” responses to see if they do, in fact, understand the term.

  35. Why Involve Students in the Assessment Process? Students: • Develop understanding of what quality work looks like • Become independent monitors of their own work • Develop skills of metacognition • Develop critical thinking skills • Develop communication and interpersonal skills

  36. The Big Ideas of Classroom Assessment • 7. Performance standards are an essential component of effective assessment.

  37. Using Rubrics in the Classroom • Use a rubric analytically to provide feedback to students when conducting assessment for learning: i.e. focus on the indicators and don’t worry about the overall level • Use a rubric holistically when conducting assessment of learning: i.e. Ask, “What set of indicators best describes this student’s overall performance at this time?”

  38. Assessment for Learning

  39. Assessment of Learning

  40. The Big Ideas of Classroom Assessment • Grading and reporting student achievement is a caring, sensitive process that requires teachers’ professional judgement.

  41. Grading involves summarizing a large amount of assessment of learning data into a single letter or numerical score….it has little to do with teaching and learning!

  42. From Rubrics to Grades

  43. How much evidence is “enough” for reporting? In other words… How do teachers ensure that the body of evidence selected for evaluation and reporting in a given subject or course is a valid sample?

  44. No diagnostic evidence Includes a variety of modes to allow for differences in learning style (write, do, say) Includes multiple (3+)pieces of evidence for each learning cluster Provides evidence of the essential learning in the subject Tasks represent polished work: Not practices or early tries Feedback has occurred previously and been implemented What are the requirements of a “valid sample”?

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