Title: Classroom Assessment FOR Student Learning
1Classroom Assessment FOR Student Learning
2Day 1 - Agenda
- Welcome and introductions
- What is formative assessment?
- Why should I use it?
- How can I use it effectively?
3Day 2 - Agenda
- What do urban students say about
- good teachers?
-
- High vs. low risk activities
- Teaching styles- whats yours?
- Partnership Principles Guiding our interactions
with students - Making the change
- Three case studies throughout the day
4Types of assessment
- Assessment OF Learning
- How much have students learned as of a
particular point in time? (Summative) - Assessment FOR Learning
- How can we use assessment information to help
students learn more? (Formative)
5Formative Assessment
- All those activities undertaken by teachers and
by their students that provide information to
be used as FEEDBACK to modify the teaching and
learning activities in which they are engaged. - -- Black Wiliam, 1998
6Overview
7Overview
8We should assess to
- Gather evidence to inform instructional decisions
- Encourage students to try to learn
9Expected benefits
- Profound achievement gains for ALL students
- Largest gains for low achievers gap reduction
- Increased motivation to learn
10Successful students
- Confidence
- Optimism an expectation of a positive result
- Strong desire to succeed
- High level of effort
- Risk taking
11Failing students
- Pessimism expect failure
- A sense of futility, hopelessness
- Waning effort
- Self-criticism in failure
- Fear of risk taking
- Frustration and anger
12Old days
- If a student gave up in hopelessness and stopped
trying, it was the students problem not the
teachers or the schools - Accountability provide an opportunity to learn
13Current practice
- Society says to its schools
- LEAVE NO CHILD BEHIND
- Accountability Assure student learning
14Think pair-share
- Think of a bad assessment experience from your
past. What made it bad? How did you feel?
15Think pair-share
- Now, think of a positive assessment experience
from your past. Why was it positive?
16Video Clip - Shirley Valentine
- As you watch, think about how Shirleys
assessment experiences at school affect her.
17QUICK WORDSMaxine K----------, you the
poet,warned our workshop that Julythat you were
tired and did not careto mask your words to
studentsthose three days.I did not know a
teachercould kill a confidence in wordsso
quickly, just with words.
18You found the pain within my poema cliché. It
was for you and so became for me. I learned
from youthat day to distrust the heartssmall
pouring in the nightbecause poetry is hard
work. You were right it has taken me nine
years since then to write four poems.This one
is just to sayThat the power my words did not
have thenYours did. Like mine, they came too
quickly.--Marilyn B. SmithWashington English
Journal, Spring 1990
19Big Ideas
- Assessments must be accurate
- Results must be used effectively
- These are key to make sure students react
productively to assessment results.
20Productive response to assessment results
- I understand the results
- I know what to do next
- Im OK
- I choose to keep trying
21Counterproductive response to assessment results
- I dont understand
- I dont know what to do now
- Im no good at this anyway
- I give up
22New Idea
- Formative assessment can and should be done by
students, as well as by teachers. - The key to improvement is how students and
teachers use assessment information.
23What can teachers do?
- Questioning
- Feedback in grading
- Peer- and self-assessment
- Formative use of summative tests
- Black and Wiliam, Working Inside the Black Box,
2004
24 25Questioning
- Researchers found
- Most questions check only for basic knowledge
and understanding. - The questions require repetition of memorized
facts. - Teachers wait less than a second after asking a
question.
26Questioning
- Suggestions
- Spend more time framing effective questions
(plan ahead!). - Use Blooms taxonomy as a guide.
- Increase wait time even if it feels
uncomfortable.
27Questioning
- Results
- Teachers learned more about students prior
knowledge and misunderstandings. - Students learned a more thoughtful answer was
required. - Students began to feel more comfortable
offering answers, even if they gave a wrong
answer.
28- 2. Feedback through grading
29Feedback is most effective when it points out
success and is designed to stimulate correction
of errors relevant to the task.-- Bloom
30Every time teachers give feedback to students,
they convey messages that affect students
opinion of themselves, their motivation, and
their achievement.- Dweck, 1999
31Grades as Feedback
- Grading every piece of work is misdirected. A
numerical grade does not show students how to
improve their work. Further, students ignore
comments when grades are given. - -- Butler, 1998
32(No Transcript)
33Feedback through grading
- Researchers found
- Grades have a negative impact on student
learning. - Students dont pay attention to comments when
scores are also given. - When teachers give comments only, students
focus more on improving their work. - Scores do not tell students how to improve.
34Effective Descriptive Feedback
- Suggestions
- Describe features of the work or performance
instead of giving a score or letter grade. - Relate it directly to learning targets and/or
standards of quality. - Point out strengths, areas for improvement and
give specific information about how to improve. - Give students a chance to respond to comments.
35Feedback
- Results
- Students engaged more productively in improving
their work - More time devoted to revising selected
assignments so that emphasis is on feedback for
improvement - Reduced competition among students
- New ways of recording grades/scores
36- A comprehensive review of research studies of
feedback found that feedback improved performance
in 60 of the studies. In the cases where
feedback was not helpful, the feedback turned out
to be merely a judgment or grade with no
indication of how to improve. - -- Black, Harrison, Lee, Marshall Wiliam, 2004
37Praise as feedback
- When we praise children for their intelligence,
we are telling them that this is the name of the
game Look smart dont risk making mistakes. On
the other hand, when we praise children for the
effort and hard work that leads to achievement,
they want to keep engaging in that process. They
are not diverted from the task of learning by a
concern with how smart they might -- or might not
-- look. - -- Dweck, 1999
38Activity Descriptive or Evaluative Feedback?
39Record Keeping
- How do you keep a grade book if you dont grade
everything? - Video Clip
40- 3. Peer and
- Self Assessment
41Peer and Self-Assessment
- Researchers found
- Students can achieve a learning goal only if
they understand the goal. - Students must know what they need to do to
reach the goal. - Students dont know how to think about their
own work.
42Peer and Self-Assessment
- Suggestions
- Develop clear learning targets in kid-friendly
language. - Show students examples of good and bad work.
- Use rubrics formally or traffic signal icon
informally.
43Clear learning targets
The more teachers can show the relevance of
what theyre doing to the life of the student,
the betterYou also have to make clear the goal
of every lesson. The student must know what he or
she is supposed to achieve at the end. --
Csikszentmihalyi
44Whats a target?
- A learning target is any achievement expectation
we hold for students. Its a statement of what we
want the students to learn. - (This is usually now directed by state
standards.)
45Clear Appropriate Targets
- Are the student learning targets stated?
- Are they clear?
- Is the match between the stated learning targets
and what is on your assessment clear? - Is there a clear connection between the learning
targets and state/district standards? (Hopefully,
yes on this one!)
46Kinds of Achievement Targets
- Master factual and procedural knowledge
- Use knowledge to reason and solve problems
- Demonstrate mastery of specific skills
- Create quality projects
- Acquire positive affect (disposition)
47Examples of Targets
- Knowledge
- understands the concepts of absolute and
relative errors in measurement. - Reason
- establishes relationships based on evidence and
logical argument - Skills
- uses effective transitions between paragraphs
48Examples of Targets
- Projects
- constructs a pictograph to represent information
- Disposition (Positive Affects)
- develops an appreciation for art
49Converting Learning Targets to student-friendly
language
- Identify an important learning target
- Identify word(s) needing clarification
- Define the words
- Rewrite the definition as an I can statement,
in terms students will understand - Try it out on students or a colleague and
refine as needed - Include students in this process
50The process in action
- Students should be able to make predictions in
text. - Word to be defined prediction
- Prediction A statement saying that something
will happen in the future. - Student-friendly language I can make
predictions. This means I can use information
from what I read to guess at what will happen
next.
51Your Turn
- Select a key learning target from your content
standards that would need to be rewritten in
student-friendly language. Follow the process to
convert it to student-friendly language. - Word(s) to be defined
- Definition
- Student friendly language I can _________. This
means I can ___________________.
52Analyze your own assessments for clear targets
- 1. Analyze your test item by item
- Identify and write down what learning each item
assesses. - 2. Organize your learning targets into a test
plan - Write down the target, the number of questions
assessing it on the test and the number of points
available for each target.
53- 3. Question your test plan Is this a
representative sample of what you taught and what
you expected students to learn? - - Does the number of points for each learning
target represent its relative importance within
the whole? Are some learning targets
over-represented or under-represented? - - Does the number of points for each target
represent the amount of time you spent on it
relative to the whole? - - Are some of the targets you taught left out?
54- 4. Adjust your test plan
- - As needed, adjust the numbers in the of
points column to reflect the amount of time you
spent teaching each learning target and its
importance in the content as a whole. - - As needed, add or delete learning targets to
reflect what you taught and what you deemed most
important. - 5. Draw conclusions about your assessment
- - What does this tell you about the matches among
whats written in your curriculum, what you
taught and what you assessed?
55Student self-assessment
- Students look at examples of strong and weak work
- Students discover where they fit on the rubric
56- Engaging in peer assessment and self-assessment
is much more than just checking for errors or
weaknesses. It involves making explicit what is
normally implicit, and thus it requires students
to be active in their learning. - -- Black Wiliam
57Informal self-assessment Traffic Icon
- Green I get it everythings clear its
completed. - Yellow Im not sure Im having some problems
its partly completed. - Red I have no clue Im having lots of problems
I havent even started.
58Using Rubrics
- Start slow they dont have to be difficult
- Create key rubrics with colleagues (ex. writing
math problem-solving, etc.) - Dont be afraid to include students in the
development process
59Rubrics - Getting Started
- 1. Gather anonymous samples of strong and weak
student work. Number the samples. - 2. Sort the work into piles strong, middle and
weak. This can eventually lead to a three or
five-point rubric.
60Rubrics continued
- 3. Transfer all descriptions for strong samples
and look for commonalities that refer to similar
characteristics. (clusters) - 4. Decide on a holistic vs. analytical rubric
-
61Rubrics continued
- If holistic, write short descriptive statements
for each cluster and group them under the heading
strong - If analytical, work with each cluster of skills
separately to form the basis for each trait.
Write short descriptive phrases to represent each
main idea in each cluster
62Rubrics continued
- 5. Use the same clusters as identified in the
strong chart to group characteristics in the
weak phrases. Weaknesses should be parallel to
the strengths. - 6. Follow the same procedure for creating the
middle point. - 7. Assign 2 and 4 to the examples of student work
that fall between the descriptors.
63Emilys Example 1
- Computers are a thing of the future. They help
us in thousands of ways. Computers are a help to
our lives. They make things easier. They help us
to keep track of information. - Computers are simple to use. Anyone can learn
how. You do not have to be a computer expert to
operate a computer. You just need to know a few
basic things. - Computers can be robots that will change our
lives. Robots are really computers! Robots do a
lot of the work that humans used to do. This
makes our lives much easier. Robots build cars
and do many other tasks that humans used to do.
When robots learn to do more, they will take over
most of our work. This will free humans to do
other kinds of things. You can also communicate
on computers. It is much faster than mail! You
can look up information, too. You can find
information on anything at all on a computer. - Computers are changing the work and changing
the way we work and communicate. In many ways,
computers are changing our lives and making our
lives better and easier.
64Emilys Example 2
- So there I was, my face aglow with the
reflection on my computer screen, trying to come
up with the next line for my essay. Writing it
was akin to Chinese water torture, as I could
never seem to end it. It dragged on and on, a
never-ending babble of stuff. - Suddenly, unexpectedly - I felt an ending
coming on. I could wrap this thing up in four or
five sentences, and this dreadful assignment
would be over. Id be free. - I had not saved yet, and decided I would do so
now. I clasped the slick, white mouse in my hand,
slid it over the mouse pad, and watched as the
black arrow progressed toward the file menu. By
accident, I clicked the mouse button just to the
left of paragraph 66. I saw a flash and the next
thing I knew, I was back to square one. I stared
at the blank screen for a moment in disbelief.
Where was my essay? My ten-billion-page
masterpiece? Gone?! No - that couldnt be! Not
after all the work I had done! Would a computer
be that unforgiving? That unfeeling? Didnt it
care about me at all?
65- I decided not to give up hope just yet. The
secret was to remain calm. After all, my file had
to be somewhere - right? Thats what all the
manuals say - Its in there somewhere. I went
back to the file menu, much more carefully this
time. First, I tried a friendly sounding category
called Find File. No luck there I hadnt give
the file a name. - Ah, then I had a brainstorm. I could simply go
up to Undo. Yes, that would be my savior! A
simple click of a button and my problem would be
solved! I went to Undo, but it looked a bit
fuzzy. Not a good sign. That means there is
nothing to undo. Dont panic dont panic - I decided to try to exit the program, not
really knowing what I would accomplish by this
but feeling more than a little desperate. Next, I
clicked on the icon that would allow me back in
to work processing. A small sign appeared,
telling me that my program was being used by
another user. Another user? Whats it talking
about? Im the only user, you idiot! Or at least
Im trying to be a user! Give me my paper back!
Right now!
66- I clicked on the icon again and again - to no
avail. ClickclickclickclickclickCLICKCLICKCLICK!
!! Without warning, a thick cloud of smoke began
to rise from the back of the computer. I didnt
know whether to laugh or cry. Sighing, I opened
my desk drawer, and pulled out a tablet and pen.
It was going to be a long day.
67Emilys story
68- 4. Formative Use of Summative Tests
69Formative use of Summative Tests
- Researchers found
- Students tend to use passive reviewing
techniques. - Students are not always sure what they need to
study. - Summative grades do not help students improve.
70Formative Use of Summative Tests
- Suggestions
- Make sure assessments are accurate.
- Have students reflect on their tests in order
to see strengths and weaknesses. - Have students prepare for tests by generating
and answering their own questions.
71Possible Assessment Methods
- Selected Response/Short Answer
- (Multiple-choice, true/false, matching, fill in
the blank, label a diagram) - Extended Written Response
- (Writing in response to a question)
- Performance Assessments
- (Demonstrating skills, developing products)
- Personal Communication
- (oral exams, oral questions/answers, conferences,
interviews)
72Target-Method Match
- When selecting an assessment method, choose the
one that will provide the most accurate
information with the highest degree of
efficiency.
73Self-reflection and goal setting
- Students use test plans as a basis for evaluation
of strengths and areas of study. - Students complete self-evaluation and
goal-setting form on the basis of test or quiz
results. - (See handouts)
74Formative Use of Summative Tests
- Results
- Assessments are more accurate and efficient.
- Summative tests become part of the learning
process. - Students are better prepared for tests.
75Students must know
- Where am I going?
- Where am I now?
- How can I close the gap?
76Where am I going?
- Students must know the learning targets
- Teachers must communicate them to students in
kid-friendly language - Students must know assessment expectations (ex
rubrics)
77Where am I now?
- Teachers must provide accurate classroom
assessments that match the learning targets - Students must learn to self-assess
78How can I close the gap?
- Teachers need to provide descriptive feedback to
students - Formative use of summative tests
- Design lessons that focus on one aspect of
quality at a time - Engage students in self-reflection and let them
keep track of and share their learning
(portfolios, etc.)
79CALIFORNIA I went down to my Grandmas
house in California and I got to ride hourses, I
swimmed, went to a party, I went shopping, saw
old friends, I went to the new Merine World, and
I had a lot of fun. I drove down there in a
car with my uncle and drove back with him. He
went down to visit his mom and dad so it worked
out pretty good. I use to live in California
till a year ago. it was a 30 min. drive away
from San Francico I live in Walnut Creek. I went
to school at Walnut Acresfor 4 years, sense 2
grade. Then moved to Oregon and we bought a gas
station. When I got to go I was glad and happy
my mom let me. I HAD FUN!Grade 6
80A LITTLE MOUSE STATUE Every time I walk in my
room, or pass my dresser, I see something thats
very special to me. It is a little statue of a
mouse. His tiny hands are expanded as far apart
as they allow themselves to be. And, at the
bottom of the statue, it reads, I love you this
much.I believe I was four years old when my
grandma took me over to her bedroom closet one
day and got my statue off the very top shelf.
Then with extreme care, she unwrapped a small
object and handed it to me. It was the mouse
statue. Ever since then, even now, I have him
placed on my dresser to admire. Every time I
pass my dresser, or stand next to my dresser
dressing or putting on earrings, I think of my
grandma.
81I think of the way my grandma always expanded her
arms and said, I LOVE YOU THIS MUCH just like
the little mouse statue does. And Id do the
same. Then wed hug each other followed by
enormous kisses. Her gentle and kind smile, the
glitter in her eyes and the way she allways stuck
up for me if I was in a fight with my mom are all
things I remember about her. Today, she still
takes me special places, and shes always their
if I need someone to talk to or get advice
from. I will always treat my statue with the
most of respect, just like my grandma asked me
to. And, I will always treasure its unique way
of making me feel close to my grandma, even when
shes not around, every time I glance at him.
And who knows, maybe one day Ill be giving him
to my granddaughter!!!Grade 6
82I have become a better writer this year. I have
learned to put more focus in my writing and stick
with one topic. I think about my topic before I
write, and I share my writing in a writing group.
That is something I did not like to do at first,
but now I do.I think my writing has a lot more
voice now. Voice is the part of your writing
that shows how you feel about your topic because
the thoughts and feelings come from your heart.
This year we read Charlottes Web, and that is a
book that I think has a lot of voice. I try to
find just the right word to say what I mean and
not just the first word that comes into my mind.
The way I have grown the most is that I like to
write a lot more than I used to, especially
poems. I think I could be a poet if I wanted to,
and I think my writing shows that.
83For students to improve, they must
- Know what high quality work looks like
- Be able to objectively compare their work to the
standard - Have a store of strategies to make work better
based on their observations - --Royce Sadler, 1989
84Classroom Assessment FOR Student Learning
85Day 2 - Agenda
- Recap Day 1/Answer questions
- What do urban students say about good teachers?
- Case study 1
-
- High vs. low risk activities
- Teaching styles- whats yours?
- Partnership Principles Guiding our interactions
with students - Case Study 2
- The change process
- Case Study 3
- Wrap up
86Using formative assessment
- Improve questioning
- Feedback through grading
- Peer and self-assessment
- Formative use of summative assessments
87Students must know
- Where am I going?
- - learning targets
- - assessment criteria (rubrics)
- Where am I now?
- - accurate assessments
- - peer and self-assessment
- How do I close the gap?
- - descriptive feedback
- - formative use of summative tests
- - self-reflection
88What do urban students say about good teaching?
Interviewees described mean good teachers and
mean bad teachers funny good teachers and
funny bad teachers and boring good teachers
and boring bad teachers. If a teacher had the
six qualities that students identified as those
of a good teacher, then demeanor, sense of humor,
and charisma -- as well as any other personal
characteristic -- were unimportant. -- Corbett
Wilson, 2002
89Good teachers
- Make sure that students do their work
- Control the classroom
- Are willing to help students whenever and however
the students want help - Explain assignments and content clearly
- Vary the classroom routine
- Take the time to get to know the students and
their circumstances
90Case Study 1
91- Students have to change from behaving as passive
recipients of the knowledge offered by the
teacher to becoming active learners who can take
responsibility for and manage their own learning. - -- Black, Harrison, Lee, Marshall Wiliam, 2004
92High Risk vs. Low Risk
- Teaching methods can be classified according to
the amount of risk they entail and how much they
facilitate active learning. Risk involves such
things as the potential for particular methods to
fail, generate controversy, take up too much
class time, become unpopular with student and
colleagues, or to not accomplish the goals for
which they were designed. - -- Bonwell and Eison, 1991
93High vs. Low Risk methods
- High Risk
- Longer to complete
- Less structured/ unknown variables
- Abstract
- New to students (and/or colleagues)
- Low Risk
- Shorter
- Well-structured
- Concrete
- Familiar to students (and colleagues)
94Low Active methods
- Low Risk
- Show a film or video for the period
- Lecture the entire class
- Use a computer slide show to present a topic
- Read important passages from the text to class
- Give a lecture to summarize important points
covered in the unit
- High Risk
- Invite a guest lecturer of unknown quality
- Have students ask questions at the beginning of
class to use to organize a lecture for the
session - Show a film or video you have not previewed
- -- Grasha, 2002
95High Active methods
- High Risk
- Role playing
- Skits that illustrate content designed by
students - Simulations
- Presentations by students
- Students interview guest speaker
- Unstructured small group discussion
- Students design and run session
- Low Risk
- Structured group activity
- Pairs of students discuss ideas
- Demonstrations
- Student debates on issues that are prepared in
advance - In-class writing assignments
- Structured small group discussion
- Field trips
96- For the teachers, courage is necessarymany
teachers described the new approach as scary
because they felt they were going to lose control
of their classes. Toward the end of the project,
they spoke not of losing control but of sharing
responsibility for the students learning with
the class. - -- Black, Harrison, Lee, Marshall Wiliam, 2004
97- Impact of student-involved assessment
- from teachers and students
- Video clip
98Teaching Styles
- What is your
- personality style?
- How does it impact
- your teaching?
99Equality
- Partnership involves relationships between
equals. Each person's thoughts and beliefs are
held to be valuable, although each individual is
different. All participants in a learning session
are recognized as equal partners, and
consequently no one's view is more important or
valuable than any one else's.
100Choice
- Because partners are equal, they make individual
choices and make decisions collaboratively.
Student choice is implicit in every communication
of content and, to the greatest extent possible,
the process used to learn the content.
101Voice
- Partnership is multi-vocal rather than univocal,
and all individuals in a partnership require
opportunities to express their point of view.
Indeed, a primary benefit of a partnership is
that each individual has access to a multiplicity
of perspectives rather than the singular
perspective of the teacher.
102Reflection
- Offering students the freedom to consider ideas
before adopting them is central to the principle
of reflection. Indeed, reflective thinkers by
definition have to be free to choose or reject
ideas, or they simply are not thinkers at all.
Reflection holds the potential of providing an
opportunity for students to think about and to
ask profound questions about what, how, why and
who.
103Dialogue
- In a partnership, one individual does not impose,
dominate, or control. Partners engage in
conversation, learning together as they explore
ideas. It means that teachers embrace dialogue
rather than lecture. Teachers avoid manipulation,
engage students in conversation about content,
and think and learn with students as everyone
moves through content being discussed.
104Praxis
- The purpose of partnership is to enable
individuals to have more meaningful experiences.
In partnership relationships, meaning arises when
people reflect on ideas and then put those
actions into practice. It means that teachers
should offer numerous opportunities for
participants to reflect on the practical
implications of new content being learned.
105Reciprocity
- In a partnership, both individuals learn from one
another. Partners bring new ideas and ways at
looking at situations, learning together as they
explore each others ideas. It means that
teachers also learn from students.
106The Change Process
- Why is change so difficult?