Title: Formative Assessment: Not Just Another Test
1Formative AssessmentNot Just Another Test
- December 4, 2008
- SCDN Quarterly Meeting
- Nancy Gerzon and Adam Tanney
- New York Comprehensive Center
- Assessment Team
2Learning goals for todays session
- I will
- Learn about the CCSSO definition of formative
assessment and how it is being applied in NY
state - Develop awareness about the New York Formative
Assessment Project being implemented in Syracuse
City School District - Explore lessons learned from states implementing
formative assessment practices - Provide input to New York Comprehensive Center
staff on potential application of formative
assessment practices in New York State
3Who we are
- New York Comprehensive Center (NYCC) is a
federally funded technical assistance center with
the task to increase state capacity to meet the
goals of NCLB
Adam Tanney NYCC Assessment Team member (RMC).
Expertise in education policy, school improvement
models and group facilitation
The NYCC Assessment Team is tasked with building
capacity and knowledge at NYSED in the area of
comprehensive district assessment, with formative
assessment as one component.
Nancy Gerzon NYCC Assessment Team leader
(WestEd). Expertise in data use practices,
classroom assessment, and district reform
4New York Formative Assessment Project at Syracuse
City Schools
-
- A collaborative effort among
- the Assessment and Accountability Comprehensive
Center (AACC) - the New York Comprehensive Center (NYCC)
- the New York State Education Department (NYSED)
- Syracuse City School District (SCSD)
- The New York Formative Assessment Project is
focused on increasing formative assessment
practices in 10 SCSD pilot elementary schools in
grade 4 and 5 mathematics
Many thanks to partners who are here today -
Chris Vogelsang and Karen Markhoff from Syracuse,
Howard Goldsmith and Anne Schiano from NYSED
5CCSSO Definition of Formative Assessment
Formative assessment is a process used by
teachers and students during instruction that
provides feedback to adjust ongoing teaching and
learning to improve students achievement of
intended instructional outcomes.
6Handout CCSSO Definition
- 1. Individually reflect on the CCSSO formative
assessment definition (in your packet) (Think) - 2. Underline three key words in the definition
that you believe are most important (Think) - 3. In pairs, discuss your choices. Note
similarities and differences in your choices
(Pair/Share)
7CCSSO Definition of Formative Assessment
Formative assessment is a process used by
teachers and students during instruction that
provides feedback to adjust ongoing teaching and
learning to improve students achievement of
intended instructional outcomes.
8Show of hands
- Raise your hand if you know someone who has a
different definition of formative assessment than
the one that we have presented from CCSSO - How this frames a starting point in this work
9FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT IS
- An Ongoing Process To
- Elicit evidence about student learning
- Provide feedback to teachers and student about
learning - Use feedback to adjust instruction and learning
- tactics in real time
- Close the gap between the learners current state
and desired goals
10Syracuse Formative Assessment Project Four Goals
Increase effective data use practices (for short,
medium and long-cycle assessments)
Build assessment literacy and agree on
expectations for data use from all assessments
Scale up research-based classroom formative
(short-cycle) assessment practices in math
Identify, develop and implement medium-cycle
assessment tools
In order to build knowledge and capacity at NYSED
to support schools and districts in NY to
implement formative assessment
11This work was different because
- Capacity Building approach expectation is that
Syracuse does the hard work of teacher training
and implementation - Train the coaches model, math ISTs doing most
of the work - There was no clearly outlined path.
- Built trust, transparency, and a desire to get
comfortable with being uncomfortable (part of
Fullans sixth secret of change) - All teacher professional development and training
paid for through Syracuse budget and grants
(Chris will talk more about this)
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16 An example how the Formative Assessment Steering
Committee has worked to make sense of how
assessment cycles apply in Syracuse (its in
your packets, on left side)
17Attributes of Formative Assessment
- Learning Progressions
- Learning Goals
- Specific Feedback
- Collaboration
- Self and Peer Assessment
18Learning Progressions
Learning Goals
Self and Peer Assessment
Attributes of formative assessment
Specific Feedback
Collaboration
19Learning progressions should articulate the
sub-goals of the ultimate learning goalLearning
progressions describe how concepts and skills
build in a domain, and show the trajectory of
learning along which students are expected to
progress
Learning Progressions
20NY State Math Core Measurement Strand
- Students will determine what can be measured and
how, - using appropriate methods and formulas
- 5.M.1 Use a ruler to measure to the nearest inch,
1/2, 1/4, 1/8 inch - 5.M.2 Identify customary equivalent units of
length - 5.M.3 Measure to the nearest centimeter
- 5.M.4 Identify equivalent metric units of length
- 5.M.5 Convert measurement within a given system
- 5.M.6 Determine the tool and technique to measure
with an appropriate level of precision lengths
and angles
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22- Insert possible clip here of Melanie or Deb
talking about Learning Progressions
23Learning Progressions
Learning Goals
Self and Peer Assessment
Attributes of formative assessment
Specific Feedback
Collaboration
24Learning Goals and Criteria for Success
Learning goals and criteria for success should be
clearly identified and communicated to
students. Teachers must provide the criteria by
which learning will be assessed so that students
will know whether they are successfully
progressing toward the goal. This information
should be communicated using language readily
understood by students, and may be accompanied by
realistic examples of those that meet and do not
meet the criteria.
25Standard Units Can Have Fractional Relationships
26Learning Progressions
Learning Goals
Self and Peer Assessment
Attributes of formative assessment
Specific Feedback
Collaboration
27- Descriptive feedback to students
- Is linked to the learning goal and success
criteria - Enhances learning without assigning grades,
scores or comparing students - Identifies gap between current learning and
desired goals that provide students a recipe for
action - Where am I now?
- Where am I going?
- How do I get there?
28Descriptive Feedback
- Feedback loops include a teacher who knows which
skills are to be learned, who can recognize and
describe good performance, demonstrate good
performance, and indicate how poor performance
can be improved. - (Sadler 1989, p.120)
29Voices from Syracuse
- Erin is a 4th grade inclusion class teacher
- Talks about the impact formative assessment has
had on her teaching and her students learning. - Describes the particular role of descriptive
feedback in the changes she and her students have
made
30Learning Progressions
Learning Goals
Self and Peer Assessment
Attributes of formative assessment
Specific Feedback
Collaboration
31Collaboration
- A classroom culture of trust in which teachers
and students are partners in learning. - Ongoing interactions between teachers and
students. - Students are active agents in learning.
32Learning Progressions
Learning Goals
Self and Peer Assessment
Attributes of formative assessment
Specific Feedback
Collaboration
33Self and Peer-Assessment
- Self assessment students monitor their own
learning using established criteria to indicate
what success looks like, and they adapt their
learning to achieve success. - Peer assessment students analyze each others
performance using established criteria and
provide descriptive feedback to each other for
continued improvement.
34PD Focus non-negotiable formative assessment
strategies (Heritage)
1. Clarify and share intentions and criteria 2.
Engineer effective classroom discussions and
questions
3. Provide feedback that moves learners
forward 4. Activate students as owners of their
own learning 5. Activate students as
instructional resources for one another
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36Voices from Syracuse continued
- Melanie middle school math coach
- Describes how formative assessment work has
imparted a new how-do-we-use-this-to-inform-our-n
ext-move approach to her teachers. - Describes the intentionality and planning that
formative assessment requires and lays that as an
area for continued focus.
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38Closing
- Move into role alike groups
- Discuss and write 2 things youd like additional
support from NYCC on. - Consider (or dont) the menu of possibilities on
chart paper. - Consider the challenges possibilities raised
from Syracuse videos. - Commit to one thing youll collectively do
without us to advance your knowledge and skill. - Share out.
39More about the Syracuse project
- Lessons learned http//www.aacompcenter.org/cs/aac
c/print/htdocs/aacc/ny_lessons.htm. - Bibliography of articles NYCC has used with
Syracuse http//nycomprehensivecenter.org/initiati
ves/inits_assess/resources
40Formative Assessment Yes or No
- District-developed monthly exams are to
- be administered to all students at the end of
- each month.
- The exams are based on state authorized
- curricular goals for the grade and subjects
- involved.
Formative Assessment in Practice 2008 CCSSO
41Formative Assessment Yes or No
- A high-school biology teacher frequently reads
aloud - a prepared Biology related statement, then asks
- students to vote by showing a thumbs up for
true - or thumbs down for false. Depending on the
- number of students who respond incorrectly the
- teacher may have students present arguments
- for both sides, he may pair student and ask them
to - discuss the concept further.
Formative Assessment in Practice 2008 CCSSO
42Visual representation of assessment cycles
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44And yet, you might still ask, so what?
- Black and Wiliam, in a meta-analysis of
quantitative formative assessment research
(Inside the Black Box, 1998), asked - Is there evidence that improving formative
assessment raises student achievement? - Is there evidence that there is room for
improvement? - Is there evidence about how to improve formative
assessment?
45The answer to all three questions is yes, yes and
yes
Typical effect sizes of the formative assessment
experiments were between 0.4 and 0.7. The are
larger than most found for educational
interventions. An effect size of 0.4 would mean
that the average pupil involved in an innovation
would record the same achievement as a pupil in
the top 35 of those not so involved. An effect
size gain of 0.7 in the recent international
comparative studies in mathematics would have
raised the score of a nation in the middle of the
pack of 41 countries (e.g., the U.S.) to one of
the top five.