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Classroom Assessment Techniques

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'Learning can and often does take place without the benefit of teaching-and ... (CATs) in your classroom to adapt teaching to meet student learning needs ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Classroom Assessment Techniques


1
Classroom AssessmentTechniques
  • Baker College
  • Effective Teaching and Learning

2
Why Assess?
  • Teaching without learning is just talking
  • Learning can and often does take place without
    the benefit of teaching-and sometimes even in
    spite of it - but there is no such thing as
    effective teaching in the absence of learning..
  • - Angelo Cross, 1988, p. 3

3
Background Knowledge Check
  • Answer the questions on the handout provided by
    the facilitator (5 minutes)
  • Find a partner
  • Share your answers with one another
  • Be prepared to share with the group

4
Objectives
  • Identify the difference between formative
    assessment and summative assessment
  • Determine when to conduct a classroom assessment
  • Select valid classroom assessment techniques
    (CATs) for your course
  • Use outputs from classroom assessment techniques
    (CATs) in your classroom to adapt teaching to
    meet student learning needs

5
Assessment
  • Is a process
  • Works best when it is ongoing, not episodic
  • Focused on helping the learner improve their
    performance

6
Assessment is Vital
  • Students can survive bad lectures, but they may
    be damaged by bad assessment. Whatever else we
    do, we need to link assessment well to what
    students are intended to learn how they learn
    it, when they learn it and where they learn it
    are of much less importance.
  • -Race (2001) p. 106

7
Types of Assessment
  • Summative
  • Formative
  • Classroom Assessment Techniques (many forms)

8
Summative vs. Formative
  • Formative Assessment
  • Performed before, during, and after the learning
    process to facilitate the development of student
    learning
  • Aimed at improving what and how our students
    learn
  • Often anonymous and not graded by the instructor
  • Summative Assessment
  • Performed at the end of the learning process to
    assess the results of the entire learning
    process
  • Asks how the student measures up to the
    pre-determined standard
  • Sometimes called evaluation
  • Usually graded

9
Within Formative Assessments
  • Consider the following
  • Timing of assessment
  • Within class period
  • Within the learning event
  • Question you ask about the learning event
  • Question you ask about the teaching
  • Type of formative assessment or CAT you plan to
    use

10
Benefits of Formative Assessment
  • Instructors know what students know before
    evaluation process
  • Allows for corrective interventions
  • Students know what they know (or dont know)
    before evaluation
  • Facilitates self-monitoring of learning process
  • Enhances self-esteem and student self-efficacy
  • Increases student satisfaction and active
    learning
  • Promotes metacognition in students

11
Muddiest Point
  • Asks students to identify what is unclear to them
    in a class session, reading, or homework
    assignment
  • Can also be used as entry or exit ticket
  • Most often used at end of class session
  • Use the feedback to help you prepare where to
    begin the next class session
  • Sometimes confused with minute paper
  • Minute papers ask them to tell you what they know
  • Muddiest points ask what they dont know

12
Activity
  • Complete your Muddiest Point activity
  • Turn it in to the facilitator when completed

13
Classroom Assessment Process
  • Advise students that you intend to measure
    learning in your classroom
  • Make informal feedback more formal and systematic
  • CAT process itself is often informal
  • Provide records of student feedback at any given
    time throughout the course
  • Use it to help you make decisions about how and
    what to teach

14
What If We Do Not Perform CATs?
  • Often problems exist that arent known until the
    test
  • Usually several weeks away from the original
    learning event
  • Students dont know what they dont know
  • Unable to articulate where they are confused
  • Instructors arent able to accurately gauge the
    knowledge level of the classroom
  • Spend time on unnecessary items
  • Often on what confused them as students

15
What Should You Be Doing In Class?
  • Watch what students are doing in your classroom
    during
  • Lectures
  • Activities
  • Exams
  • Collect frequent feedback about what students
    think
  • Test new ideas/activities occasionally

16
When Should You Assess?
  • Before a learning event
  • To assess prior knowledge
  • During the learning event
  • To determine how well students understand
  • After the learning event
  • To learn where students went wrong
  • To attempt to fix the problem before it becomes
    too deeply entrenched in student minds

17
Classroom Assessment Is
  • Learner Centered
  • Formative
  • Context-specific
  • Teacher directed
  • Mutually beneficial
  • Ongoing
  • Generated from good teaching habits

18
Activity-Whats the Principle
  • Form groups of 3-4
  • Complete the handout provided by your instructor
  • Use the principles listed on the previous slide
    to help your group.
  • 5 minutes

19
Classroom Assessment Assumptions
  • Quality learning depends on quality teaching one
    way to improve learning is to focus on improving
    teaching.
  • To improve that teaching, instructors need to
    define their goals and objectives for themselves
    and their learners and then get specific feedback
    on how well they are achieving those goals.

20
Classroom Assessment Assumptions
  • To become better learners, students need to get
    regular and focused feedback and to learn how to
    assess their own learning.
  • The type of assessment most likely to improve
    teaching is assessment that is designed to answer
    questions that the faculty harbor about their
    teaching.

21
Classroom Assessment Assumptions
  • CATs help provide instructors with the needed
    intellectual stimulation required for continued
    growth and motivation.
  • Anyone can conduct CAs with a little practice and
    effort.
  • Collaboration between faculty members and
    students enhances satisfaction with both teaching
    and learning.

22
Activity-RSQC2
  • Form groups of 3-4
  • Respond to the questions on the sheet on the
    sheet provided by the facilitator
  • 8 minutes

23
What Do I Do With The Results?
  • Clarify missed points and misconceptions from
    previous
  • Assign additional readings or homework
  • Spend more time on subjects or information that
    isnt clear
  • Adjust course planning as necessary based on
    outcomes
  • Frequent use of CATs will result in frequent
    changes to course plans

24
Questions To Ask Yourself Before Conducting a CA
  • Is this likely to make a difference in what I am
    doing in the classroom?
  • Is this going to give me the kind of information
    I want from the class?
  • Are the students going to be able to respond in
    the allotted time frame?
  • Do I need to change the time allotted or the CAT
    itself?
  • Will I be able to analyze the results easily?

25
Minute papers
  • One of the most popular and easy to implement in
    your course
  • After a lecture or class activity, ask the class
    to respond, in writing, to a question you ask
  • What were the 3 most important concepts from the
    last class?
  • What were the two main points from the assigned
    readings?
  • Write two good questions for use in your class on
    the sheet provided by the facilitator

26
Final Reminders
  • If a particular technique doesnt appeal to you,
    pick something else.
  • Dont make CA into a chore or something you have
    to dostudents will sense it
  • Dont try out any CAT until youve tried it at
    least once yourself
  • Allow yourself more time than you think youll
    need
  • Be sure to share the data/results with the
    students

27
Closing Activity
  • One sentence summary -2 minutes
  • Sum up this session in one sentence
  • Use the general rule of answering the question
    Who does what to whom, when, where, how, and
    why?
  • Be prepared to share your answers with your
    neighbor

28
Questions
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