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Integrating assessment with instruction to keep learning on track

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Title: Integrating assessment with instruction to keep learning on track


1
Integrating assessment with instruction to keep
learning on track
  • Plenary address to NSTA Convention on
  • Science assessment research and practical
    approaches for classroom teachers, school
    administrators and school districts
  • Anaheim, CA 6 April 2006
  • Dylan Wiliam, Educational Testing Service

2
Overview of presentation
  • Why raising achievement is important
  • Why investing in teachers is the answer
  • Why assessment for learning should be the focus
  • Why teacher learning communities should be the
    mechanism

3
Successful education
The test of successful education is not the
amount of knowledge that a pupil takes away from
school, but his sic appetite to know and his
capacity to learn. If the school sends out
children with the desire for knowledge and some
idea how to acquire it, it will have done its
work. Too many leave school with the appetite
killed and the mind loaded with undigested lumps
of information. The good schoolmaster sic is
known by the number of valuable subjects which he
declines to teach. (Sir Richard Livingstone,
President of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, 1941)
4
What do we need students to learn?
...the model that says learn while you are at
school the skills that you will apply during your
lifetime is no longer tenable. These skills will
be obsolete by the time you get into the
workplace and need them, except for one skill
the skill of being able to learn. It is the skill
of being able, not to give the right answer to
questions about what you were taught in school,
but to make the right response to situations that
are outside the scope of what you were taught in
school. We need to produce people who know how to
act when they are faced with situations for which
they were not specifically prepared. (Papert,
1998)
5
Preparation for future learning (PFL)
  • Cannot be taught in isolation from other learning
  • Students still need the basic skills of literacy,
    numeracy, concepts and facts
  • Learning power is developed primarily through
    pedagogy, not curriculum
  • We have to change the way teachers teach, not
    what they teach

6
Raising achievement matters
  • For individuals
  • Increased lifetime salary
  • Improved health
  • For society
  • Lower criminal justice costs
  • Lower health-care costs
  • Increased economic growth

7
Wheres the solution?
  • Structure
  • Small high schools
  • K-8 schools
  • Alignment
  • Curriculum reform
  • Textbook replacement
  • Governance
  • Charter schools
  • Vouchers
  • Technology

8
Its the classroom
  • Variability at the classroom level is up to 4
    times greater than at school level
  • Its not class size
  • Its not the between-class grouping strategy
  • Its not the within-class grouping strategy
  • Its the teacher

9
Teacher quality
  • A labor force issue with 2 solutions
  • Replace existing teachers with better ones?
  • No evidence that more pay brings in better
    teachers
  • No evidence that there are better teachers out
    there deterred by certification requirements
  • Improve the effectiveness of existing teachers
  • The love the one youre with strategy
  • It can be done
  • We know how to do it, but at scale? Quickly?
    Sustainably?

10
Learning power environments
  • Key concept
  • Teachers do not create learning
  • Learners create learning
  • Teaching as engineering learning environments
  • Key features
  • Create student engagement (pedagogies of
    engagement)
  • Well-regulated (pedagogies of contingency)

11
Why pedagogies of engagement?
  • Intelligence is partly inherited
  • So what?
  • Intelligence is partly environmental
  • Environment creates intelligence
  • Intelligence creates environment
  • Learning environments
  • High cognitive demand
  • Inclusive
  • Obligatory

12
Motivation cause or effect?
high
arousal
Flow
anxiety
challenge
control
worry
relaxation
apathy
boredom
low
low
competence
high
(Csikszentmihalyi, 1990)
13
Why pedagogies of contingency?
  • For evaluating institutions
  • For describing individuals
  • For supporting learning
  • Monitoring learning
  • Whether learning is taking place
  • Diagnosing (informing) learning
  • What is not being learnt
  • Forming learning
  • What to do about it

14
Effects of formative assessment
  • Several major reviews of the research
  • Natriello (1987)
  • Crooks (1988)
  • Kluger DeNisi (1996)
  • Black Wiliam (1998)
  • Nyquist (2003)
  • All find consistent, substantial effects

15
Effects of feedback
  • Kluger DeNisi (1996)
  • Review of 3000 research reports
  • Excluding those
  • without adequate controls
  • with poor design
  • with fewer than 10 participants
  • where performance was not measured
  • without details of effect sizes
  • left 131 reports, 607 effect sizes, involving
    12652 individuals
  • Average effect size 0.4, but
  • Effect sizes very variable
  • 40 of effect sizes were negative

16
Kinds of feedback (Nyquist, 2003)
  • Weaker feedback only
  • Knowledge of results (KoR)
  • Feedback only
  • KoR clear goals or knowledge of correct results
    (KCR)
  • Weak formative assessment
  • KCR explanation (KCRe)
  • Moderate formative assessment
  • (KCRe) specific actions for gap reduction
  • Strong formative assessment
  • (KCRe) activity

17
Effect of formative assessment (HE)
18
Five key strategies
  • Clarifying and understanding learning intentions
    and criteria for success
  • Engineering effective classroom discussions that
    elicit evidence of learning
  • Providing feedback that moves learners forward
  • Activating students as instructional resources
    for each other
  • Activating students as the owners of their own
    learning

19
and one big idea
  • Use evidence about learning to adapt instruction
    to meet student needs

20
Keeping Learning on Track (KLT)
  • A pilot guides a plane or boat toward its
    destination by taking constant readings and
    making careful adjustments in response to wind,
    currents, weather, etc.
  • A KLT teacher does the same
  • Plans a carefully chosen route ahead of time (in
    essence building the track)
  • Takes readings along the way
  • Changes course as conditions dictate

21
Types of formative assessment
  • Long-cycle
  • Focus between units
  • Length four weeks to one year
  • Medium-cycle
  • Focus within units
  • Length one day to two weeks
  • Short-cycle
  • Focus within lessons
  • Length five seconds to one hour

22
Practical techniques Questioning
  • Improving teacher questioning
  • Generating questions with colleagues
  • Closed v open
  • Low-order v high-order
  • Appropriate wait-time
  • Getting away from I-R-E
  • Basketball rather than serial table-tennis
  • No hands up (except to ask a question)
  • Class polls to review current attitudes towards
    an issue
  • Hot Seat questioning
  • All-student response systems
  • ABCD cards
  • Mini white-boards
  • Exit passes

23
Practical techniques feedback
  • Comment-only grading
  • Focused grading
  • Explicit reference to rubrics
  • Suggestions on how to improve
  • Strategy cards ideas for improvement
  • Not giving complete solutions
  • Re-timing assessment
  • (eg two-thirds-of-the-way-through-a-unit test)

24
Practical techniques sharing learning
expectations
  • Explaining learning objectives at start of
    lesson/unit
  • Criteria in students language
  • Posters of key words to talk about learning
  • eg describe, explain, evaluate
  • Planning/writing frames
  • Annotated examples of different standards to
    flesh out assessment rubrics (e.g. lab reports)
  • Opportunities for students to design their own
    tests

25
Practical techniquespeer and self-assessment
  • Students assessing their own/peers work
  • with scoring guides, rubrics or exemplars
  • two stars and a wish
  • Training students to pose questions
  • Identifying group weaknesses
  • Self-assessment of understanding
  • Traffic lights
  • Red/green discs
  • Smiley faces
  • Post-it notes
  • End-of-lesson students review

26
Professional development must be
  • Consistent with what we know about adult
    learning, incorporating
  • choice
  • respect for prior experience
  • recognition of varied learning styles and
    motivation
  • Sustained
  • Contextualized
  • Consistent with research on expertise

27
A model for teacher learning
  • Ideas
  • Evidence
  • Small steps
  • Flexibility
  • Choice
  • Accountability
  • Support

28
Why Teacher Learning Communities?
  • Teacher as local expert
  • Sustained over time
  • Supportive forum for learning
  • Embedded in day-to-day reality
  • Domain-specific

29
A four-part model
  • Initial workshops
  • TLC meetings
  • Peer observations
  • Training for leaders

30
Three questions
  • What formative assessment strategies do you use
    already?
  • What new ideas do you want to add to your
    practice?
  • What will you do less of to make time?
  • During lessons
  • Outside of lessons

31
What can you do?
  • Write a memo to yourself
  • To be opened in the Fall
  • Commit to making 2 or 3 changes
  • Hold yourself accountable
  • Set up a study group
  • Set up peer observations
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