Title: ICTM State Conference
1CONNECTING
TEACHING ASSESSMENT
TO
STUDENT LEARNING
- ICTM State Conference
- October 2008
- Jeff Bivin
- Lake Zurich High School
- Lake Zurich, IL 60047
- jeff.bivin_at_lz95.org
- www.lz95.org/lzhs/math/faculty/bivin
2Objectives
- The participant will be able to
1. Use targets in their teaching practices.
- Incorporate concepts of formative assessment in
their teaching practices.
To accomplish this
- We will look at my journey with these objectives.
- We will look at some classroom practices that
link teaching and assessment to student learning.
- We will look at what the literature tells us
about assessment and student learning.
3My Journey
4Assessment Principle
NCTM's
5When assessment is an integral part of
mathematics instruction, it contributes
significantly to all students' mathematics
learning. When assessment is discussed in
connection with standards, the focus is sometimes
on using tests to certify students' attainment,
but there are other important purposes of
assessment. Assessment should be more than merely
a test at the end of instruction to see how
students perform under special conditions
rather, it should be an integral part of
instruction that informs and guides teachers as
they make instructional decisions. Assessment
should not merely be done to students rather, it
should also be done for students, to guide and
enhance their learning.
NCTM
Assessment Principle
6When assessment is an integral part of
mathematics instruction, it contributes
significantly to all students' mathematics
learning. When assessment is discussed in
connection with standards, the focus is sometimes
on using tests to certify students' attainment,
but there are other important purposes of
assessment. Assessment should be more than merely
a test at the end of instruction to see how
students perform under special conditions
rather, it should be an integral part of
instruction that informs and guides teachers as
they make instructional decisions. Assessment
should not merely be done to students rather, it
should also be done for students, to guide and
enhance their learning.
NCTM
Assessment Principle
7When assessment is an integral part of
mathematics instruction, it contributes
significantly to all students' mathematics
learning. When assessment is discussed in
connection with standards, the focus is sometimes
on using tests to certify students' attainment,
but there are other important purposes of
assessment. Assessment should be more than merely
a test at the end of instruction to see how
students perform under special conditions
rather, it should be an integral part of
instruction that informs and guides teachers as
they make instructional decisions. Assessment
should not merely be done to students rather, it
should also be done for students, to guide and
enhance their learning.
NCTM
Assessment Principle
8When assessment is an integral part of
mathematics instruction, it contributes
significantly to all students' mathematics
learning. When assessment is discussed in
connection with standards, the focus is sometimes
on using tests to certify students' attainment,
but there are other important purposes of
assessment. Assessment should be more than merely
a test at the end of instruction to see how
students perform under special conditions
rather, it should be an integral part of
instruction that informs and guides teachers as
they make instructional decisions. Assessment
should not merely be done to students rather, it
should also be done for students, to guide and
enhance their learning.
NCTM
Assessment Principle
9Assessment should enhancestudents' learning.
NCTM
- Research indicates that making assessment an
integral part of classroom practice is associated
with improved student learning. - Black and Wiliam (1998) reviewed about 250
research studies and concluded that the learning
of students, including low achievers, is
generally enhanced in classrooms where teachers
include attention to formative assessment in
making judgments about teaching and learning.
Assessment Principle
10Good assessment Feedbackcan enhance students'
learning
NCTM
- The tasks used in an assessment can convey a
message to students about what kinds of
mathematical knowledge and performance are valued
and can influence the decisions students make
about their study efforts. - Feedback from assessment can also help students
understand the characteristics of a complete and
correct response.
Assessment Principle
11Assessment is a valuable tool for making
instructional decisions.
NCTM
- Assessment provides the information teachers need
to make appropriate instructional decisions. - Instructional decisions about reviewing
prerequisite material, revisiting a difficult
concept, or adapting tasks for students who are
struggling or for those who need enrichmentare
based on inferences about what students know and
what they need to learn.
Assessment Principle
12Assessment should reflect the mathematics that
all students need to know and be able to do
NCTM
- Assessment should focus on students'
understanding as well as their procedural skills.
- Teachers need to have a clear sense of what is to
be taught and learned, and assessments should be
aligned with their instructional goals.
Assessment Principle
13Assessment Usage
NCTM
- When done well assessments help teachers make
decisions about the content or form of
instruction (often called formative assessment)
can also be used to judge students' attainment
(summative assessment). - To maximize the instructional value of
assessment, teachers need to move beyond a
superficial "right or wrong" analysis of tasks to
a focus on how students are thinking about the
tasks.
Assessment Principle
14WOW!
This is a powerful document!
I liked what this document had to say!
I agreed with what this document had to say!
NOTHING
And, I did ?
Forgotten
15ASSESSMENT
- OF Learning
- and
- FOR Learning
Summary of CEC Summer Institute with Rick
Stiggins Associates August 2006
16Our schools were designed to leave lots of
students behind they were designed to rank
sort students based on achievement by the end of
secondary school.
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
Winners Losers
17Successful Students(on winning streaks)
- Driven by growing confidence
- Optimism rules expect a positive result
- Strong desire to succeed
- High level of effort
- Ok to risk trying --- stretch, I can get this.
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
18Failing Students(on losing streaks)
- Driven by intense vulnerability
- Pessimism expect to fail
- Feeling a sense of futility hopelessness
- Waning effort self-criticism
- Denial cover up
- Defensiveness trying is just too risky
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
19Historically
After all student, I taught it, you just didnt
do your part!
- Assessment has been seen as the great
intimidator. - In order to maximize learning ? teachers should
maximize the anxiety so that students will try
harder. - If the teacher judges you to have failed (or
threatens to), it will cause the student to try
harder. - If a student gave up in hopelessness and stopped
trying, it was the students problem not the
teachers nor the schools .
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
20We must remember
- There is a profound relationship between
assessment and student motivation. - The learner is in control of the learning? If
kids dont feel able to learn, there will be no
learning. - ALL students must master basic standards learn
how to take responsibility for their own
learning. - Yes, we are accountable and must ensure that
students learn!
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
21Two uses of assessment
- Summative assessment of learning
- How much have students learned as a particular
point in time? - Formative assessment for learning
- How can we use assessment information to help
students learn more?
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
22Clear distinctionTwo critcal Questions
- Summative assessment of learning
- How much have students learned at a particular
point in time? - Formative assessment for learning
- How can we use assessment information to help
students learn more?
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
23Teachers Role in Assessment FOR Learning
- Know each standard
- Deconstruct each into enabling targets
- Transform into student-friendly version
- Transform to accurate classroom assessments
- Use those in collaboration with students to track
growthto promote winning streaks
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
24Sound ClassroomAssessment Practice
- Clear Purposes
- Assessment processes and results serve clear and
appropriate purposes assessment of or for
learning? - Clear Targets
- Assessments reflect clear and valued student
learning targets - Sound Design
- Learning targets are translated into assessments
that yield accurate results - Effective Communication
- Assessment results are managed well and
communicated effectively to the intended user
Descriptive feedback - Student Involvement
- Students are involved in their own assessment
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
25Formative Assessment
- Three Guiding Questions
- Where are you trying to go?
- Where are you now?
- How can you get there?
- Student version
- Where am I going?
- Where am I now?
- How can I close the gap?
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
26Lets look deeper
- Where am I going?
- Provide a clear and understandable vision of the
learning target. - Use examples and models of strong and weak work.
- Where am I now?
- Offer regular descriptive feedback.
- Teach students to self-assess and set goals.
- How can I close the gap?
- Design lessons to focus on one aspect of quality
at a time. - Teach students focused revision
- Engage students in self-reflection, and let them
keep track of and share their learning.
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
27Also important
- If everything is graded, then there is no chance
to recover. - Everything counts, not everything is graded.
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
28Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
29How Did I Respond?
- First response ? Information Overload
- I then began to focus on helping students know
where they were going - and to help students begin to track and/or
monitor their progress
Gleanings from Stiggins Conf.
30How can I (we) help students know where they are
going?
- Student Friendly Targets
- Provide students with clear and understandable
vision of the learning targets.
What does that look like?
31Chapter 1 Objectives
- 1. Add, subtract, multiply and divide real
numbers. - 2. Evaluate an algebraic expression.
- 3. Solve
- ? a linear equation
- ? a literal equation for one of its
variables - ? an absolute value equation
- 4. Solve and graph
- ? a linear inequality
- ? an absolute value inequality
- 5. Create algebraic models for real-life
situations. - Use problem-solving strategies to solve real-life
problems. - 7. Use tables and graphs to organize data.
32Student Targets
- 1. I can solve 1-variable, 1st degree
equations. - 2. I can solve literal equations.
- 3. I can solve absolute value equations.
- 4. I can solve and graph linear inequalities.
- 5. I can solve and graph compound linear
inequalities. - I can solve and graph absolute value
inequalities. - I can solve and graph absolute compound
inequalities. - 8. I can solve higher degree (in factored
form) inequalities. - 9. I can apply the above algebraic concepts to
a variety of problem solving situations.
33Targets with examples
- 1. I can solve 1-variable, 1st degree equations.
- ex. 1 4(7x 3) 2(4 3x) 8(3 x) (x
5) - ex. 2
- 2. I can solve literal equations
- ex. 1 Solve for x in 3xy 4x 5y 7x 4y
11 - ex. 2 Solve for y in 5xy 7xyz 9
- 3. I can solve absolute value equations
- ex. 1 3x 4 7
- ex. 2 34x 8 3x 5
- ex. 3 2 3x 7x 5
- 4. I can solve and graph linear inequalities
- ex. 1 5x 9 lt 15
- ex. 2 8x 19 gt 9(2x 5)
34Two types of Design
- Backward design
- Look at the assessment and define the targets
- Forward design
- Look at the objectives ? define the targets and
then write the assessments
35A look at my Targets
36How can we use the Targets?
- Daily notes
- Review
- Class warm-ups
- Student self evaluation and accountability
- Assessment development
- Teacher accountability
The targets must become a part of daily classroom
practice/usage!
IMPORTANT
We must make a connection of the targets to our
assessments!
37What are your thoughts?
How can you help students understand where they
are going?
How can you help students monitor their progress?
38NOT --- NOT --- NOT --- NOT ---NOT --- NOT ---
NOT --- NOT ---NOT --- NOT --- NOT --- NOT ---
Using Student Targets/Objectives Concept is A
NEW IDEA
NOT --- NOT --- NOT --- NOT
Mike HendricksBlue Ridge High SchoolFarmer
City, IL
Used objectives with students in the early 80s.
39A 2nd grade example
Mrs. SeverinoThree Oaks ElementaryCary, IL
40- Improving Student Learning with Standards,
Assessments, and Grading
Summary of Workshop with Thomas Guskey Fall 2006
41Important Concepts(Assessments)
- Assessments must be Sources of Information for
Students and Teachers - Assessments must be followed by High Quality
Corrective Instruction - Students must be given a Second Chance to Show
Improvement - Begin with Clearly Defined Achievement Targets
Gleanings from Tom Guskey
42Important Concepts(Grading)
- Grading and reporting are NOT essential to the
instructional process - No one method of grading and reporting services
ALL purposes well - Grading and reporting will always involve some
degree of subjectivity - Mathematical precision does not yield fairer or
more objective grading - Grades have some value as rewards but NO value as
punishments - Grading and reporting should always be done in
reference to learning criteria never on the
curve - High percentages are NOT the same as high
standards
Gleanings from Tom Guskey
43Another Theme of Dr. Guskey
Report cards Report cards Report cards
- Grades must be standards based
- Performance grades must not be mixed with
behavior influences
44What Hit Me
- We must use grading and reporting practices to
enhance teaching and learning. - A students grade should reflect the level of
student learning not their behavior. - Students must be given a second chance to show
improvement. - Our job is to develop success
- reward it not sort it.
Gleanings from Tom Guskey
45(No Transcript)
46Students must be given a Second Chance to Show
Improvement How can I do it?
This is my approach
Quizzes are viewed as a learning tool. Their
purpose is to give you feedback and direction for
review and/or re-learning of concepts. If you
have completed ALL homework for a given chapter
and your performance on a chapter test is better
than your quiz average for that chapter, then
your quiz average will be adjusted to reflect the
improved performance on your chapter test. There
may be a few (not many) quizzes that this will
not apply, but you will be foretold of any of
these. This is shared with my students on
opening day.
47Example 1
75
If all HW completed
85
.85(60) 51
- 45
6
48Example 2
86.7
85
No adjustment
49(No Transcript)
50Formative AssessmentMore than second chances
- James Popham defines formative assessment as a
planned process in which assessment-elicited
evidence of students status is used by teachers
to adjust their ongoing instructional procedures
or by students to adjust their current learning
tactics.
Popham, W. James (2008). Transformative
Assessment Alexandria, VirginiaAssociation for
Supervision and Curriculum Development
51What are your thoughts?
How can you use formative assessment concepts in
your classroom?
52Ahead of the CurveThe Power of Assessment to
Transform Teaching and LearningDouglas Reeves,
Editor (2007)
53Ahead of the CurveThe Power of Assessment to
Transform Teaching and LearningDouglas Reeves,
Editor (2007)
- Thomas Guskey writes
- Teachers need to see their assessments as an
integral part of the instructional procss and as
an essential element in their efforts to help
students learn. (p 16). - Teachers must
- 1) use assessments as sources of information for
both students and teachers - 2) follow assessments with high-quality
corrective instruction - 3) give students second chances to demonstrate
success (p 16). - effectiveness in teaching is not defined on the
basis of what they do as teachers. Rather, it is
defined by what their students are able to do.
(p 20). - Assessments must be followed by high-guality
corrective instruction designed to help students
remedy whatever learning errors identified with
the assessment (p 21).
54Ahead of the CurveThe Power of Assessment to
Transform Teaching and LearningDouglas Reeves,
Editor (2007)
- Anne Cavies writes
- When evaluative feedback is decreased, and
specific, descriptive feedback is increased,
students learn more. (p 33). - When teachers inform students of the focus of
learning (the standards they must achieve),
students have a chance to engage, bring their
prior knowledge to the learning, feel a sense of
ownership, and become more effective partners in
the learning-assessment process. (p 37). - Merely explaining to students what they will be
learning and what this learning might look like
is not enough. (p 38).
55Ahead of the CurveThe Power of Assessment to
Transform Teaching and LearningDouglas Reeves,
Editor (2007)
- Rick Stiggins writes
- Both student and teacher must know where the
learner is now, how that compares to ultimate
learning success, and how to close the gap
between the two. (p 62). - For communication to be effective in the context
of formative assessment, it needs to inform the
learner about how to do better the next time
that is, it must be descriptive rather than
judgmental. (p 68). - we use assessment as a road map to ultimate
success, with signposts along the way for both
students and their teachers. (p 72).
56Ahead of the CurveThe Power of Assessment to
Transform Teaching and LearningDouglas Reeves,
Editor (2007)
- Larry Ainsworth writes
- The true value of assessment is its ability to
help educators make accurate and timely
inferences about student progress so that they
can modify instruction accordingly. (p 80). - numerous short assessments given over time
provide a better indication of a students
learning than one or two large assessment given
in the middle and at the end of the grading
period (p 80). - Formative assessments allow teachers to receive
regular and timely feedback regarding student
attainment of the most critical standards. (p
95).
57Ahead of the CurveThe Power of Assessment to
Transform Teaching and LearningDouglas Reeves,
Editor (2007)
- Robert Marzano writes
- telling students they were correct or incorrect
in their answers had a negative effect on their
learning, whereas explaining the correct answer
and/or asking students to continue to refine
their answers was associated with a gain in
achievement of 20 percentile points. (p 104). - Feedback should provide students with
information about how to improve their progress
on learning goals and encourage students to
improve. (p 112). - the heart of formative assessment examining the
gradual increase in knowledge for specific
learning goals throughout a unit. (p 118).
58Ahead of the CurveThe Power of Assessment to
Transform Teaching and LearningDouglas Reeves,
Editor (2007)
- Ken OConnor writes
- Grading as it has been done traditionally
promotes a culture of point accumulation, not
learning. . . . It makes all assessment summative
(assessment of learning) because everything
students do gets a score, and every score ends up
in the grade book. (p 127). - Teachers should provide feedback on formative
assessments (those assessments for leaning ),
but determine grades only from the evidence from
varied summative assessments (p 138). - students should be given opportunities for
second-chance or make-up assessments it is a
waste of everyones time for students to have a
second opportunity if they have not done anything
to increase their likelihood of success. (p 139) - Teachers must be accountable, not just
accountants! (p 144).
59Ahead of the CurveThe Power of Assessment to
Transform Teaching and LearningDouglas Reeves,
Editor (2007)
- Dylan Wiliam writes
- effective formative assessment consists of five
key strategies - Clarifying leaning intentions and sharing
criteria for success - Engineering effective classroom discussions,
questions, and learning tasks that elicit
evidence of learning - Providing feedback that move learners forward
- Activating students as the owners of their own
learning - Activating students as instructional resources
for one another (p 192).
60How to Give Effective Feedback to Your
StudentsAssociation for Supervision and
Curriculum DevelopmentAlexandria, VASusan M.
Brookhart, (2008)
- Feedback isnt feedback unless it can truly
feed something. Information delivered too late to
be used isnt helpful. Make sure when you give
feedback that there is time built in to actually
use the information. Otherwise students will
quickly learn to ignore feedback. pg. 57.
61The Best Value in Formative AssessmentEducational
LeadershipDecember 2007/January 2008Stephen
Chappuis Jan Chappuis
- Feedback in an assessment for learning context
occurs while there is still time to take action.
It functions as a global positioning system,
offering descriptive information about the work,
product, or performance relative to the intended
learning goals. ... Effective descriptive
feedback focuses on the intended learning,
identifies specific strengths, points to areas
needing improvement, suggests a route of action
students can take to close the gap between where
they are now and where they need to be.
62Classroom Assessment Minute by Minute, Day by
DayEducational LeadershipNovember 2005Siobhan
Leahy, Christine Lyon, Marnie Thompson, and Dylan
Wiliam
- Five Assessment-for-Learning Strategies
- Clarify and Share Intentions and Criteria
- Engineer Effective Classroom Discussion
- Provide Feedback That Moves Learners Forward
- Activate Students as Owners of Their Learning
- Activate Students as Instructional Resources for
One Another
63Seven Practices for Effective LearningEducational
LeadershipNovember 2005Jay McTighe and Ken
OConnor
Practice 7 Allow new evidence of achievement to
replace old evidence.
Classroom assessments and grading should focus
on how wellnot on whenthe student mastered the
designated knowledge and skill.
64Did you see any of these when you drove across
the state to get to Peoria?
Lets take a look back
65Guidelines for success
- Think BIG but Start SMALL
- Dont attempt too much to soon
- Ensure that Assessments become an Integral Part
of the Instruction Process - Quizzes and Tests should be Learning Tools, not
simply evaluation devices that mark the end of
learning - Link New Assessments with Existing Classroom
Assessment Practices - Blend Traditional approaches with Alternative
assessments
Gleanings from Tom Guskey
66Did I accomplish the Objectives?
- The participant will be able to
1. Use targets in their teaching practices.
Can you?
- Incorporate concepts of formative assessment in
their teaching practices.
Can you?
Now, will you?
1. I can use targets in my teaching practices.
- I can incorporate concepts of formative
assessment in my teaching practices.
67Reference List
- Reeves, Douglas (2007). Ahead of the Curve,
Bloomington, Indiana, Solution Tree. - Stiggins, Arter, Chappuis Chappuis (2006).
Classroom Assessment for Student Learning Doing
it RightUsing it Well, Princeton, New Jersey,
Educational Testing Service. - Popham, W. James (2008).Transformative
Assessment, Alexandria, Va Association for
Supervision and Curriculum Development. - Schmoker, Mike (2006). Results NOW, Alexandria,
Va Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development. - Guskey Bailey (2001). Developing Grading and
Reporting Systems for Student Learning, Thousand
Oaks, CA, Corwin Press, Inc. - Brookhart, Susan M. (2008). How to Give
Effective Feedback to Your Students,
Alexandria, Va Association for Supervision and
Curriculum Development. - Principles and Standards for School
Mathematics, National Council of Teachers of
Mathematics. (2000) Reston, Virginia.
68Reference List
- Stiggins, Rick (2005). From Formative Assessment
to Assessment FOR Learning A Path to Success in
Standards-Based Schools, Phi Delta Kappan, 87(04)
324-328. - Guskey, Thomas R (2003). How Classroom
Assessments Improve Learning, Educational
Leadership, 60(5), 7-11. - Black Wiliam (1998). Inside the Black Box
Raising Standards Through Classroom Assessment
Phi Delta Kappan, 80(2). - Available at http//www.pdkintl.org/kappan/kbla98
10.htm. - Reeves, Douglas B. (2008). Effective Grading,
Educational Leadership, 64(5) 85-87, February
2008. - Balanced Assessment The Key to Accountability
and Improved Student Learning, National
Education Association, (2003).
69Reference List
- Several articles in
- Educational LeadershipDecember 2007/January
2008Vol. 65, No. 4. - Several articles in
- Educational LeadershipNovember 2005Vol. 63, No.
3.