Title: Using assessment to improve learning: why, what and how?
1Using assessment to improve learningwhy, what
and how?
- Dylan Wiliam
- Institute of Education
- Cambridge Assessment Network seminar on
Assessment for Learning - Cambridge, UK September 2006
2Overview of presentation
- Why raising achievement is important
- Why investing in teachers is the answer
- Why assessment for learning should be the focus
- How we can put this into practice
3Raising achievement matters
- For individuals
- Increased lifetime salary
- Improved health
- For society
- Lower criminal justice costs
- Lower health-care costs
- Increased economic growth
4Wheres the solution?
- Structure
- Small schools
- Big schools
- Alignment
- Curriculum reform
- Textbook replacement
- Governance
- Specialist schools
- Vouchers
- Technology
5Its 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
6Teacher quality
- A labour 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?
7Learning 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)
8Why 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
9Motivation cause or effect?
high
arousal
Flow
anxiety
challenge
control
worry
relaxation
apathy
boredom
low
low
competence
high
(Csikszentmihalyi, 1990)
10Why pedagogies of contingency?
- Several major reviews of the research
- Natriello (1987)
- Crooks (1988)
- Kluger DeNisi (1996)
- Black Wiliam (1998)
- Nyquist (2003)
- All find consistent, substantial effects
11Cost/effect comparisons
Intervention Effect (sd) Cost/yr/classroom
Class-size reduction (by 30) 0.1 20k
Increase teacher content knowledge by 1 sd 0.1 ?
Formative assessment/ Assessment for learning 0.20.3 2k
12Five 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
13and one big idea
- Use evidence about learning to adapt instruction
to meet student needs
14Keeping Learning on Track (KLT)
- A pilot guides a plane or boat toward its
destination by planning a route, taking constant
readings and making careful adjustments in
response to wind, currents, weather, etc. - A KLT teacher does the same
- Plans a carefully chosen (possibly
differentiated) route ahead of time (in essence
building the track) - Takes readings along the way
- Changes course as conditions dictate
15Formative assessment Assessment for Learning
- Assessment for learning is any assessment for
which the first priority in its design and
practice is to serve the purpose of promoting
pupils learning. It thus differs from assessment
designed primarily to serve the purposes of
accountability, or of ranking, or of certifying
competence. An assessment activity can help
learning if it provides information to be used as
feedback, by teachers, and by their pupils, in
assessing themselves and each other, to modify
the teaching and learning activities in which
they are engaged. - Such assessment becomes formative assessment
when the evidence is actually used to adapt the
teaching work to meet learning needs. - Black et al., 2002
16Types of formative assessment
- Long-cycle
- Focus across units, terms
- Length four weeks to one year
- Medium-cycle
- Focus within and between teaching units
- Length one to four weeks
- Short-cycle
- Focus within and between lessons
- Length
- day-by-day 24 to 48 hours
- minute-by-minute 5 seconds to 2 hours
17Putting it into practice
18A model for teacher learning
- Content (what we want teachers to change)
- Evidence
- Ideas (strategies and techniques)
- Process (how to go about change)
- Choice
- Flexibility
- Small steps
- Accountability
- Support
19Content strategies and techniques
- Distinction between strategies and techniques
- Strategies define the territory of AfL (no
brainers) - Teachers are responsible for choice of techniques
- Allows for customization/ caters for local
context - Creates ownership
- Shares responsibility
- Key requirements of techniques
- embodiment of deep cognitive/affective principles
- relevance
- feasibility
- acceptability
20Design and intervention
Our design process
cognitive/affective insights
synergy/ comprehensiveness
set ofcomponents
Teachers implementation process
set of components
synergy/ comprehensiveness
cognitive/affective insights
21Techniques for embeddingthe strategies in
practice
22Questioning in Science
- What can we do to preserve the ozone layer?
- Reduce the amount of carbon dioxide produced by
cars and factories - Reduce the greenhouse effect
- Stop cutting down the rainforests
- Limit the numbers of cars that can be used when
the level of ozone is high - Properly dispose of air-conditioners and fridges
23Questioning in English
- Which of these is a good thesis statement?
- The typical TV show has 9 violent incidents
- There is a lot of violence on TV
- The amount of violence on TV should be reduced
- Some programs are more violent than others
- Violence is included in programs to boost ratings
- Violence on TV is interesting
- I dont like the violence on TV
- The essay I am going to write is about violence
on TV
24(No Transcript)
25Practical techniques
- Feedback
- Not giving complete solutions
- Three-fourths-of-the-way-through-a-unit test
- Sharing learning intentions
- Annotated examples of different standards to
flesh out assessment rubrics (e.g. lab reports) - Opportunities for students to design their own
tests - Students as owners of their own learning
- Red/green discs
- Students as instructional resources for one
another - Pre-flight checklist
26Putting it into practice
27Why research hasnt changed teaching
- The nature of expertise in teaching
- Aristotles main intellectual virtues
- Episteme knowledge of universal truths
- Techne ability to make things
- Phronesis practical wisdom
- What works is not the right question
- Everything works somewhere
- Nothing works everywhere
- Whats interesting is under what conditions
does this work? - Teaching is mainly a matter of phronesis, not
episteme
28Knowledge transfer
After Nonaka Tageuchi, 1995
29Supporting Teachers and Schools to Change through
Teacher Learning Communities
30Implementing AfL requires changing teacher habits
- Teachers know most of this already
- So the problem is not a lack of knowledge
- Its a lack of understanding what it means to do
AfL - Thats why telling teachers what to do doesnt
work - Experience alone is not enoughif it were, then
the most experienced teachers would be the best
teacherswe know thats not true (Hanushek, 2005)
- People need to reflect on their experiences in
systematic ways that build their accessible
knowledge base, learn from mistakes, etc.
(Bransford, Brown Cocking, 1999)
31Thats what TLCs are for
- TLCs contradict teacher isolation
- TLCs reprofessionalize teaching by valuing
teacher expertise - TLCs deprivatize teaching so that teachers
strengths and struggles become known - TLCs offer a steady source of support for
struggling teachers - They grow expertise by providing a regular space,
time, and structure for that kind of systematic
reflecting on practice - They facilitate sharing of untapped expertise
residing in individual teachers - They build the collective knowledge base in a
school
32The synergy
- Content assessment for learning
- Process teacher learning communities
- Components of a model
- Initial workshops
- Support for TLC leaders
- Monthly TLC meetings
- Peer observations
- Drip-feed resources
- Web-site
- Writings
- New ideas
33Summary
- Raising achievement is important
- Raising achievement requires improving teacher
quality - Improving teacher quality requires teacher
professional development - To be effective, teacher professional development
must address - What teachers do in the classroom
- How teachers change what they do in the classroom
- AfL TLCs
- A point of (uniquely?) high leverage
- A Trojan Horse into wider issues of pedagogy,
psychology, and curriculum
34Questions?Comments?