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BEYOND THE RIGHT ANSWER:

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Title: BEYOND THE RIGHT ANSWER:


1
BEYOND THE RIGHT ANSWER
  • NURTURING CREATIVE AND CRITICAL THINKERS
  • Teaching
    That Works Learning that Matters

  • May 8, 2008

  • Joan Green

2
BEYOND THE MARKS
  • Ensuring Accountability for Improved Student
    Achievement

3
  • The power of assessment
  • rests in the ability
  • to help people identify
  • where they are going,
  • how to improve the
  • journey and
  • whether they have arrived.

4
  • If we know where were going and how were
    expected to get there, we are able to make better
    decisions along the way.

5
  • Students can hit any target that they can see
    and that holds
  • still for them.
  • Stiggins

6
  • Students who have to perform
  • or exhibit their knowledge
  • and skills get learning in
  • their bones active learners
  • become life-long learners.
  • Rexford Brown

7
I recently had my problems on the run, but now
theyve re-grouped and are making another attack.
8
What is your best interpretation of the
statement
ALL KIDS CAN LEARN
9
  • to the level of their ability
  • to the extent they take advantage of the
    opportunities provided
  • its up to us to see they have the opportunities
    to grow and develop
  • we will establish high expectations and high
    standards that we expect all students to achieve

10
The Right Answer
  • All kids can learn
  • so we will establish high standards that we
    expect all students to achieve

11
  • Access
  • Providing support
  • Success
  • Expecting all to achieve at high levels

12
  • Teachers who gather accurate information about
    student achievement through the use of sound
    assessment for learning contribute to effective
    teaching and learning. On the other hand, those
    who fail to understand and apply the rules of
    evidence for sound assessment risk doing great
    harm to students.
  • Stiggins

13
  • Weighing a pig does not make it fatter
    assessing per se does not affect student learning.

14
  • Nobody ever got muscles from watching me lift
    weights
  • Arnold Schwartzenegger

15
EFFECTIVE ASSESSMENT
What does the information Im collecting tell
me?
16
Diagnostic Assessment
  • is conducted prior to and during teaching and
    learning to determine
  • What existing knowledge, skills, attitudes,
    interests and/or needs the students has
  • The range of individual differences
  • What program plans and/or modifications are
    required to meet the needs of individuals or
    groups of students

17
Formative Assessment
  • is conducted throughout teaching and learning
    to
  • Keep the teacher and students focused on the
    purpose of the lesson/activity/unit/program
  • Provide information to the teacher and students
    about the progress being made
  • Determine the effectiveness of instruction in
    helping students to achieve the purpose

18
Summative Assessment
  • is conducted at the end of teaching and learning.
    It is used in combination with data from
    formative assessment to
  • Describe what students know, can do and value
  • Evaluate student growth relative to the purpose
    of the lesson/activity/unit/program
  • Evaluate student growth relative to the System
    Learning Outcomes

19
Assessment
Evaluation
  • is the gathering, recording and analysis of data
    about a students progress and achievements, or
    about a programs implementation and
    effectiveness.
  • is the application of judgment to the data
    gathered, and its analysis, in order to place a
    value on progress or achievement or
    effectiveness.

20
  • Assessment For Learning
  • Assessment As Learning
  • (metacognition)
  • Assessment Of Learning

21
Assessment Of Learning
  • Assessment of learning is assessment for
    accountability purposes , to determine and report
    on a students level of performance on a specific
    task or at the conclusion of a unit of teaching
    and learning.

22
  • ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING gtgtgtgt
  • the aha moment , a breakthrough in
    understanding
  • the development of a skill as a result of the
    teachers persistent and well-informed guidance

23
FEEDBACK FOR LEARNINGFEEDFORWARD
  • Feedback is a natural and necessary component
    of learning and is what makes assessment an
    integral part of the learning processassessment
    for learning and not just of learning

24
Assessment For Learning
  • Effective ongoing classroom assessment can
    provide inspired and inspiring personal
    interaction between student and teacher as they
    collaborate to improve the students performance,
    one step at a time.

25
Assessment For Learning
  • Engages and motivates students
  • Helps students take responsibility for their
    learning
  • Helps students make concerted efforts to improve
    work
  • Informs teacher decisions about instruction of
    individual and groups of students

26
Assessment For Learning
  • Guides teachers in encouraging and supporting
    students
  • Helps teachers analyze and communicate the
    characteristics and quality of student work so
    students understand strengths and weaknesses
  • Assists teachers explore the habits of mind and
    attitudes of students through focused conversation

27
Assessment For Learning and the At Risk Student
  • Students who have fallen behind have learning
    needs complicated by issues of motivation and
    self concept
  • Assessing for learning and student-teacher
    conversations about quality
  • emerging communicative competence student
    understanding of their work and where it needs
    improvement

28
Assessment For Learning
  • Assessment for learning acknowledges
  • that assessment should occur as a regular part
    of teaching and learning and that the information
    gained from assessment activities can be used to
    shape the teaching and learning process.

29
THE WELL STREET INDEXOF ASSESSMENT FOR LEARNING
  • Teachers use what they observe to make
    adjustments to their instructional strategies
  • Teachers analyze individual student work and make
    judgments about what would constitute improvement

30
  • Teachers provide feedback to/dialogue with
    students on the quality and characteristics of
    their work
  • Teachers make clear, specific, targeted
    suggestions re improvement based on
  • Info gathered through observation of skills and
    habits of mind
  • Ongoing conversations
  • Analysis of specific pieces of work

31
  • Teachers systematically follow up on student
    attention to suggestions and resulting progress
  • Teachers convey a belief in students capacity
    for improvement
  • Teachers persevere in their efforts to encourage
    and support improvement efforts

32
Benefits for Students of Formative Assessment For
Learning
  • Active involvement with teachers in job of
    improving their performance and sharing
    responsibility for their own progress
  • Student conviction that with appropriate effort
    on their part and support improvement can happen
  • Students understand and can describe quality
    work
  • Students improve their performance as a result of
    strategic and persistent effort and support

33
ASSESSMENT AS LEARNING
  • If you want to appear accountable, test your
    students. If you want to improve schools, teach
    teachers to assess their students. If you want to
    maximize learning, teach students to assess
    themselves.

34
  • We must constantly remind ourselves that the
    ultimate purpose of assessment is to have
    students become self-evaluating. If students
    graduate from our schools still depending upon
    others to tell them when they are adequate, good
    or excellent, then weve missed the whole point
    of what education is about.
  • Costa Kallick
  • If Mind Matters

35
THE MISSING PIECEASSESSMENT AS LEARNING
  • Self-Reflection
  • Self-Assessment
  • Self-Evaluation

36
  • Metacognition is like
  • standing outside
  • ones head and directing
  • how one is going about executing a thinking
    task.
  • Costa, Arthur L.

37
  • A completely different level of
  • assessment takes place in the
  • individual student, who is
  • constantly assessing her own work, deciding what
  • is right and wrong, what fits and what does not,
  • what is a good enough job. This self-appraisal
    is
  • the ultimate locus of all standards.
  • Berger

38
  • Accurate self-assessment, self-adjustment and
    self-monitoring are only possible when students
    know what is expected of them and what quality
    looks like.

39
The Assessor
  • The assessor tries to ferret out all of what the
    student knows and can do by various means.
  • The tester, on the other hand, demands of the
    student specific responses to fixed questions of
    the testers choosing. Assessment requires that
    we come to know the student in actionthe purpose
    of assessment is to assist and inform the
    learner.
  • Grant Wiggins

40
Etymology of the Word Assess
  • The etymology of the word assess alerts us to
    this clinical, that is, client-centred-act.
    Assess is a form of the Latin verb assidere,
    meaning to sit with. In an assessment, one
    sits with the learner. It is something we do
    with and for the student, not something we do to
    the student.

41
TWO FUNCTIONS OF ASSESSMENT
  • To provide a catalyst or lever for improvement.
  • 2. To inform parents, students, teachers about
    the performance of students.

42
Measuring Performance Against Progress
  • The learners performance can be improved only
    when it is measured against progress, not
    growth. And measuring progress means measuring
    backward from the destination- that is, the
    standards and criteria exemplified in models of
    excellent work.
  • Grant Wiggins

43
Assessing Knowledge and Skills
  • While a test in which the student responds to
    pre-fashioned answers tells us what the student
    knows, it does not tell us whether the student
    is on the road to using knowledge wisely or
    effectively. Narrow, one-dimensional probes into
    a students mines of stored information do not
    begin to get at how s/he learns or what s/he can
    do.
  • Grant Wiggins

44
  • It is through formative classroom assessment
    for learning that attitudes, skills, knowledge
    and thinking are fostered, nurtured and
    accelerated - or stifled.

45
  • Feedback is information that provides the
    performer with direct, usable insights into
    current performance, based on tangible
    differences between current performance and
    hoped-for performance.
  • Wiggins, Grant

46
  • Everything that occurs in a classroom is
    potential evidence of learning.
  • Evidence consists of
  • observations of students at work,
  • the products they create, and
  • what they communicate in the conversations about
    their learning.

47
Marlup
  • A marlup was poving his kump. Parmily a narg
    horped some whev in his kump. Why did vump hopr
    whev in
  • my frinkle kump?, the marlup jufd the narg.
    Erm
  • muvvily trungy, the narg grupped.
  • Er heshed vump norpled whev in your kump. Do
    vump pove your kump frinkle?

48
Marlup
  • What did the narg horp in the marlups kump?
  • What did the marlup juf the narg?

3. Was the narg trungy? 4. How does the marlup
prove his kump?
49
TYPES OF ASSESSMENT
  • Paper and Pencil
  • Standardized tests
  • Examinations
  • Classroom tests
  • Selected response e.g., true/false
  • Constucted response e.g., fill in the blank
  • Short response to specific questions or problems

50
TYPES OF ASSESSMENT
Performance Assessments
  • Projects
  • Simulations
  • Essays
  • Presentations
  • Exhibitions and recitals
  • Oral artifacts
  • Music, dance or dramatic performance
  • Visual arts product
  • Science experiment
  • Skills demonstration (e.g., life-saving
  • Debate
  • Role-playing

51
TYPES OF ASSESSMENT
  • Personal Communication Between Teacher and
    Student
  • Instructional questions and answers
  • Interview
  • Conference (independent study project)
  • Classroom discussion

52
TYPES OF ASSESSMENT
  • Cumulative Assessments
  • Portfolios
  • Journals/logs
  • Rubrics as Tools

53
  • the distinction between instruction and
    assessment begins to blur-as well it should. In
    promoting learning, evaluation should be used not
    only as a judgment of students progress but also
    as a springboard for instruction. One follows the
    other in logical progression.
  • Badger, E.

54
ITS A FACT
Research and Its Implications for
Instruction/Assessment
55
Research saysKnowledge is constructed.
Learning is a process of creating personal
meaning from new information and prior knowledge.
  • Implications for Instruction/Assessment
  • Encourage discussion of new ideas
  • Encourage divergent thinking, multiple links and
    solutions, not just one right answer
  • Emphasize critical thinking skills analyze,
    compare, generalize, predict, hypothesize
  • Relate new information to personal experience,
    prior knowledge
  • Apply information to a new situation

56
Research says There is great variety in
learning styles, attention spans, memory,
developmental paces and intelligences.
  • Implications for Instruction/Assessment
  • Provide choices in tasks
  • Provide choices in how to show mastery/competence
  • Provide time to think about and do assignments
  • Provide opportunities for reflection
  • Recognize and respect multiple ways of doing
    things

57
Research saysPeople perform better when they
know the expectation, see models, know how their
performance compares to the standard.
  • Implications for Instruction/Assessment
  • Provide a range of samples of student work
    discuss characteristics
  • Provide students with opportunities for
    self-evaluation and peer review
  • Discuss criteria for judging performance
  • Direct students to be improvement-focused
  • Allow students to clearly define the standard

58
Research saysMotivation, effort and
self-esteem affect learning and performance.
Success breeds success.
  • Implications for Instruction/Assessment
  • Motivate students with real-life tasks and
    connections to personal experiences
  • Encourage students to see connections between
    effort and results
  • Encourage students to monitor their own growth
    and learning

59
  • The goal of assessment is to help students and
    teachers constantly improve.

60
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61

The job of the school is to
RAISE THE BAR
AND CLOSE THE GAP
62
To achieve excellence one must want to become
good enough bad enough. - Princeton University
Football Coach
63
Schools need to adopt the spirit of kaizen, a
Japanese word that connotes an ongoing spirit of
concern with incremental but relentless
improvement, however small.
64
NOT JUST GETTING BETTER INFORMATON
BUT RATHER TURNING
INFORMATION INTO INFORMATION THAT

CANNOT BE IGNORED
65
By doing just a little every day, I can gradually
let the task completely overwhelm me.
66
Real school reformers think for themselves. This
requires community---other people to push back as
you reason your way to a better truth
67
A JAZZ BAND NOT A SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
68
Reflection on experience and focused data
contributes to the refined action and to the
building of a repertoire of professional craft
knowledge or skillfulness and a culture of
learning
69
Every school has a culture. Some are hospitable
to learning and some are toxic. They can work
for or against making things better for learning.
70
A dozen healthy cultural norms
  • Celebration and humour
  • Decision-making involvement
  • Important over the urgent
  • Traditions and ritual
  • Open, honest communication
  • Collegiality
  • Experimentation
  • High expectations
  • Trust and confidence
  • Tangible support
  • Use of knowledge bases and data
  • Recognition

- Saphier and King
71
Figuring out what promotes human learning
OR Keeping the main thing
the main thing!
72
Invitations to Learn
5 Needs Teachers Must Address to Make Learning
Irresistible
Carol Ann Tomlinson Educational Leadership,
ASCD 2002
73
Affirmation
  • I am accepted and acceptable here just as I am.
  • I am safe here physically, emotionally, and
    intellectually
  • People here care about me
  • People here listen to me
  • People know how Im doing, and it matters to them
    that I do well
  • People acknowledge my interests and perspectives
    and act upon them

74
Contribution
  • I make a difference in this place
  • I bring unique and valuable perspectives and
    abilities to this place
  • I help other students and the entire class to
    succeed
  • I am connected to others through mutual work o
    common goals

75
Purpose
  • I understand what we do here
  • I see significance in what we do
  • What we do reflects me and my world
  • The work we do makes a difference in the world
  • The work absorbs me

76
Power
  • What I learn is useful to me now
  • I make choices that contribute to my success
  • I know what quality looks like and how to create
    quality work here
  • Dependable support for my journey exists in this
    classroom

77
Challenge
  • The work here complements my ability
  • The work stretches me
  • I work hard in this classroom
  • When I work hard, I generally succeed
  • I am accountable for my own growth, and I
    contribute to the growth of others
  • I accomplish things here that I didnt believe
    were possible

78
Nine Key Instructional/Assessment Strategies for
Improving Literacy
  • Direct, Explicit Comprehension Instruction
  • Improving students reading comprehension through
    summarizing, identifying text structure and
    visual cues, calling on prior knowledge, and
    using graphic organizers
  • Instruction in strategies how they work and when
    to use them
  • Comprehension instruction gives students practice
    using strategies
  • Teachers withdraw support as students become more
    successful at using strategies independently
  • Reciprocal teaching aids students with
    questioning, clarifying, predicting, and
    summarizing. Students apply these to a text in a
    small group and then independently

79
Nine Key Instructional/Assessment Strategies for
Improving Literacy
  • Effective Instructional Principles
  • Embedded in Content
  • Good instruction in middle and high school
    integrates comprehension instruction and content
  • Use informational and content-area texts when
    teaching strategies (eg. Outlining)
  • Provide reading and writing instruction in
    classes (eg. SIM work identification, visual
    imagery, self-questioning, and paraphrasing)

80
Nine Key Instructional/Assessment Strategies for
Improving Literacy
  • Motivation and Self-Directed Learning
  • Image of self as reader/writer strongly predicts
    reading and reading comprehension
  • Sense of competence declines with progression
    through school
  • Engagement and Self-Directed learning improves
    motivation, sense of competence, reading
    comprehension and strategy use
  • Give students choices in reading and writing
    topics
  • Students set goals independently for literacy and
    learning with teachers goals
  • Self-directed learning coupled with teacher
    feedback on goals is very effective

81
Nine Key Instructional/Assessment Strategies for
Improving Literacy
  • Text-Based Collaborative Learning
  • Improve literacy by using partner or small groups
    for work in literature, math, science, history
  • Co-operative learning provides learners with peer
    models and helpers
  • Students learn to voice their opinions to peers
    with alternative ideas

82
Nine Key Instructional/Assessment Strategies for
Improving Literacy
  • Strategic Tutoring
  • Tutors are effective in grade 4 up
  • Tutors give strategies to read, write and learn
    independently, and gives support to complete
    tasks
  • Not necessarily long-term

83
Nine Key Instructional/Assessment Strategies for
Improving Literacy
  • Diverse Texts
  • Students who have read more kinds of texts have
    demonstrated higher reading achievement
  • School and classroom libraries that represent a
    wide range of student interest help encourage
    wide and frequent reading
  • Increasing the amount and range of books improves
    achievement when combined with effective
    instruction
  • Provide access to texts that are age appropriate
    but give a range of difficulty levels for higher
    achievement

84
Nine Key Instructional/Assessment Strategies for
Improving Literacy
  • Intensive Writing
  • Reading, with writing, fosters more critical
    thinking and helps them with comprehension
    strategies
  • Students should read multiple texts and
    synthesize them
  • Higher quality writing is achieved with clear
    objectives and expectations and activities with
    high-level peer interactions
  • More challenging writing assignments inspire
    better work regardless of student ability
  • Adolescents should have 10 hours of literacy
    instruction each week with ¼ of those hours on
    writing

85
Nine Key Instructional/Assessment Strategies for
Improving Literacy
  • A Technology Component
  • Technological applications can improve
    adolescents work reading and comprehension
  • Effective applications use sound design
    principles and give students individualized
    instruction, skill practice, and reading texts
  • Mixing audio, animation and text make greater
    demands on readers attention and comprehension
    processing

86
Nine Key Instructional/Assessment Strategies for
Improving Literacy
  • Ongoing Formative Assessment of Students
  • Continuous assessment of instruction
  • Assessment can be informal and occur frequently
  • Assessments linked to clear criteria improve
    student learning
  • Formative assessments provide detailed
    information about students strengths and
    weaknesses, enabling teachers to plan and adapt
    instruction

87
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88
If we keep doing what were doing, were going
to keep getting what were getting. Stephen Covey
Good news and bad news. The good news is, Ive
finally perfected the stone age axe. The bad
news is, its the iron age.
89
Evidence Based Leadership
  • Aligning Culture, Structures, Strategies and
    Skills

90
Our decisions are often based on tradition,
opinions and personal preference.
  • Our decisions should be based
  • on evidence.

91
Building a Culture of Discovery
  • evidence is superior to opinion and we have
    nothing to fear from the data
  • commitment to evidence and hypothesis testing
  • practising Thats an interesting hypothesis.
    Lets test it with evidence.

92
Prevailing Hypotheses
  • there is too much to do - I dont have time for
    anything new
  • the only way to succeed on tests is low-level
    drill
  • test scores reflect socioeconomic conditions, not
    teaching

93
Hypotheses to Challenge
  • poor kids cant succeed
  • teaching credentials dont matter
  • factors outside of school overwhelm factors
    inside of school

94
Facing the Facts
  • economic and demographic factors are relevant,
    but not determinative
  • mountain of evidence on consistent success by
    poor kids learning in challenging environments
  • focus on variables you do influence - mainly
    leadership and teaching

95
Ridding Our Schools of
  • given the homes they come from, you cant expect
    much
  • shes doing the best she can - dont put her
    under too much pressure
  • of course he cant meet the standard, but hes
    doing OK all things considered

96
Leadership and Learning Matrix
high
Achievement
Losing low results, low understanding of
antecedents
low
high
Understanding of antecedents of excellence
Douglas Reeves
97
THE PROMISE .
  • HIGH ACHIEVEMENT FOR ALL
  • NO MATTER WHAT

DID I DO WHAT I SAID I WOULD?
98
School Systems Highly Reliable Organizations
  • DO NOT HAVE
  • Large numbers of students who drop out of school
  • Large numbers of students who do not learn skills
    for higher learning and/or workplace success
  • Schools which blame students and families for
    students failures

99
School Systems Highly Reliable Organizations
  • DO HAVE
  • The overwhelming majority of students succeeding
    in school.
  • Schools which are accountable for the successes
    and failures of virtually all their students.

100
It doesnt matter if youre on the right track,
if youre standing still.
Will Rogers
101
Be visionary, not hallucinatory
102
Complex times require conspicuous optimism
103
New learning destroys old truths
104
Moral energy is a renewable resource
105
Supporters sustain us resistors make us wise
106
A person who has ceased to learn ought not to be
allowed to wander around loose in these
dangerous days.
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