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Assessment For Learning: Elementary

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Title: It s More than Just Numbers! Author: Damian Cooper Last modified by: Brionna Lalis - NESA Created Date: 9/17/2001 3:36:33 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Assessment For Learning: Elementary


1
Assessment For Learning Elementary
NESA Spring Educators Conference April 2, 2011
Damian Cooper (905) 823-6298 dcooper3_at_rogers.com
2
Session Outcomes
  • Review the research base behind current
    assessment directions
  • Examine the importance of metacognition,
    feedback, and self and peer assessment.
  • Understand the critical role played by
    assessment for learning in providing students
    with the information they need to improve
  • Learn about research-based assessment for
    learning strategies that are proving to be
    effective in improving student learning
  • Share with colleagues how these strategies may be
    appropriate to my own classroom

3
Time to Talk About Assessment
  • Identify for yourself your 1 issue or concern
    about classroom assessment at your school.
  • Share your concerns at your table.
  • Which of these are shared by the majority at your
    table?

4
Mission to sift and sort students
Mean
5
Mission excellence from ALL
Range of Competent Achievement
6
If the new goal of education is success for all,
then we have no choice but toDifferentiate
Instruction Assessment
  • 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

7
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
8
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.

9
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
10
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.
11
Differing Assessment Purposes
  • Assessment for Learning
  • Tryouts
  • Practices
  • Assessment of Learning
  • Games
  • Playoffs

12
But we must begin with the question, What
constitutes essential learning for students in
the 21st. century?
13
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
14
Stage 1 Identify targeted understandings
15
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.
16
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
17
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
18
Stage 2 Determine appropriate assessment of
those understandings
19
Stage 1 Identify targeted understandings
20
Stage 2 Determine appropriate assessment of
those understandings
21
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
22
Diagnostic Assessment
  • Engage students with a hook If you won the
    lottery
  • Activate prior knowledge
  • Assess current skills and understanding in 3
    ways
  • -through written work
  • -through performance assessment and
    observation
  • -through oral assessment questioning,
    conferencing, discussion, etc.

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Grade 1.
26
Time to Talk About Assessment
  • Discuss this 3-way model for diagnostic
    assessment
  • -how closely does it align with your current
    practice?
  • -how does it differ?
  • -what elements of this model could be adapted to
    your own class?
  • -what challenges do you anticipate?
  • -how might these be solved?

27
Using Assessment Data to Differentiate Instruction
  • Examine the data from diagnostic assessments to
    group students according to their strengths and
    needs
  • Use mini-lessons followed by practice to address
    these needs
  • Identify individual students who are most at
    risk
  • Use a combination of groupings to increase
    understanding

28
Purposeful Grouping of Students
  • Heterogeneous groups to provide support and to
    consolidate new learning
  • Homogeneous groups to deepen learning and to
    provide specific instruction to struggling
    learners
  • Flexible grouping to ensure all students work in
    their zpd

29
Using Assessment Data to Differentiate Instruction
  • Schedule time to conference with individuals or
    small groups of students who need the most
    support
  • Plan this time strategically as a routine part of
    your instruction

30
Differentiating Instruction
  • Teachers need to fully understand accommodation,
    modification, and substitution
  • To develop skills, simplify the content e.g.
    Simpler texts, less depth/breadth, etc.
  • To master content, present using a different mode
    suited to students strengths e.g. Graphics,
    audio, video, manipulatives, etc.

31
Differentiating Assessment
  • Content standards learning outcomes
  • Performance standards rubrics/checklists
  • Student products performances
  • Assessment conditions
  • Must be within students ZPD
  • Keep consistent for all students
  • May be adapted to be within students ZPD

32
Tiered Assessments
  • Design task _at_ grade level, to demonstrate
    proficiency, independently
  • Adapt or modify task to increase challenge less
    structure, more choice, greater sophistication,
    etc.
  • Adapt or modify task to reduce challenge more
    structure, less choice, less sophistication, etc.

33
Tiered Assessments
Tiered Assignment Grade 5 Science
Strand Life Science Human Body Enduring
Understandings students will understand how the
different body systems are interconnected Essentia
l Skills research, organization,
communication Overview of Task Students will
select a specific disease of the human body to
research. They will present their findings using
one of several presentation media. The research
and presentation task has been tiered to suit
different strengths and needs of
students Assessment Criteria a common rubric is
provided for all versions of the task. Research
posing questions, locating and using resources to
answer questions, organizing materials to answer
questions Communication selection of appropriate
medium, clarity of material, quality of product
presented, ability to respond to
questions Content accuracy, depth, vocabulary,
level of understanding
34
Tiered Assessments
Tier One Task (designed to provide evidence of
proficient achievement at grade level) The
teacher provides a list of possible diseases to
be researched. (alternatively, students may
select their own disease to research). The
teacher provides a list of presentation methods,
including written report, oral report, Powerpoint
presentation, etc. Students are provided with
templates that guide them through the research
process, as well as templates relating to each of
the presentation methods. Students work in
pairs, assigned by the teacher, to support each
other as they conduct research, organize their
findings, and prepare their presentations.
35
Tiered Assessments
Tier Two Task (designed to provide an additional
level of challenge) Students work as a group to
brainstorm the following range of diseases they
will research all possible sources of
information range of media they will use to
communicate their findings. They will serve as
resources for each other throughout the project,
collaborating as necessary to accomplish the task.
36
Tiered Assessments
Tier Three Task (scaffolded task designed to
provide struggling students with an appropriate
level of challenge) Students work under the
direct supervision of the teacher. Using one
disease, she works closely with students to model
each step in the research process. Following each
modeled step, she has students complete the same
step independently, using a second disease that
she has selected. She repeats the same
modeling/independent work process for each step
in the preparation of students presentations.
The presentation medium is tailored to each
students profile.
37
Reporting to Parents
  • Grade level at which student is working
  • Achievement level at which student is performing
  • Degree of support provided
  • Learning outcomes
  • (incl. IEP ref. if applicable)
  • Rubric levels
  • Anecdotal comments

38
Time to Talk About Assessment
  • To what extent are the preceding descriptions of
    instruction, assessment and reporting for diverse
    learners consistent with current practice in your
    school or classroom?

39
Time to Talk About Assessment
  • What is your assessment of Kims instructional
    assessment practices?
  • ?
  • -?
  • Interesting?

40
Components of Assessment for Learning (Black
Wiliam, 2003)
  • Oral questioning
  • Marking as feedback
  • Peer and self-assessment
  • Formative use of summative tests

41
Components of Assessment for Learning (Wiliam,
2007)
  • Clarifying learning intentions and sharing
    criteria for success
  • Engineering effective classroom discussions,
    questions, and learning tasks that elicit
    evidence of learning
  • Providing feedback that moves learners forward
  • Activating students as owners of their own
    learning
  • Activating students as instructional sources for
    one another

42
Components of Assessment for Learning (Cooper,
2007)
  • 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?
  • 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?

43
Time to Talk About Assessment
  • To what extent are these 6 Look Fors evident
    in your classroom or school?

44
Assessment for Learning am I already doing it?
  • Do I routinely share learning goals with my
    students so they know where we are heading?

45
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 days lesson on the board.

46
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?

47
  • Most students can hit the target if they can see
    it clearly and it stays still for them.
  • Rick Stiggins

48
Clear Targets
  • Clarity of curriculum standards
  • High quality assessment tasks
  • Rubrics to describe what quality looks like
  • Checklists to enable students to monitor their
    own progress
  • Anchors to show students what quality looks like

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Using Rubrics in the Classroom
  • Use a rubric analytically to provide feedback to
    students when conducting diagnostic or formative
    assessment
  • I.e. focus on the indicators and dont worry
    about the overall level
  • Use a rubric holistically for summative
    evaluation purposes
  • I.e. Ask, What set of indicators best describes
    the students overall performance at this time?

55
Assessment for Learning
56
Assessment of Learning
57
Time to Talk About Assessment
  • As you view Jackies class, consider
  • -what are some of the potential pitfalls in
    assessing this task?
  • -how is Jackies use of a rubric similar to or
    different from your own practice?

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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?

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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.

62
Music Class
  • Students had been practising in groups of 3,
    playing a 3-part jazz composition. At the end of
    the lesson, each group performed and the teacher
    required peers to assess what they heard. Here
    is some of the conversation
  • Rachel Holly went too fast.
  • Sam You all need to listen more to each other.
  • Teacher Now, who hasnt given any feedback yet?
    Tam, tell Emmas group how they did, and
    remember to be specific.
  • Tam Emmas fill was really good. Everyone was
    in good time.
  • Teacher Are you sure about that, Tam? (Tam
    hesitates.)
  • Michael, what did you think about Emmas group?
  • Michael They all started out together, then
    Freddy seemed to get lost, but then they finished
    together.
  • Teacher Good feedback, Michael. Emmas group, do
    you agree with what Michael said?

63
Self and Peer Assessment
  • Assessment for learning ONLY
  • Requires training
  • and modelling
  • Focus assessment
  • on what was taught
  • Begin with short sessions
  • Needs to be part of your routine

64
Time to Talk About Assessment
  • With your colleagues, discuss current use of self
    and/or peer assessment in terms of purpose,
    frequency and design in your classroom or school.

65
Assessment for Learningam 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?

66
Provide tons of feedback
  • Oral written feedback tell students how to
    improve marks DONT
  • Establish classroom routines that create
    opportunities for teacher peer feedback
  • Provide feedback ALONE on formative assessments
    do NOT include marks

67
Provide tons of feedback
  • Needs to cause thinking dont provide the
    answer
  • Must not be evaluative
  • Must direct students towards improvement
  • Must make reference to specific quality
    indicators (a rubric or checklist)
  • Must include an expectation that it will be
    implemented
  • Must include strategies for checking that it has
    been implemented

68
Commitment to Action
  • Spend a few moments reflecting on today .
  • What was your most significant learning?
  • What specific actions do you plan to take
    immediately and/or between now and June 2011?
  • Who will be involved?
  • What results would you like to see from these
    actions?
  • How will you assess the effectiveness of these
    actions?

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