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Assessment for Learning

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Assessment for Learning INSET Jan 09 From Inside the Black Box by P Black & D William Assessment becomes formative assessment when the evidence is actually ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Assessment for Learning


1
Assessment for Learning
  • INSET Jan 09

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From Inside the Black Box by P Black D William
  • Assessment becomes formative assessment when the
    evidence is actually used to adapt the teaching
    and learning work to meet the pupils needs.

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Reasons
  • Grades
  • Motivation
  • Focus on improvement gt greater satisfaction
  • Active pupil involvement gt engagement gt
    independent learning

8
Four main strands
  1. Questioning
  2. Feedback
  3. Sharing success criteria
  4. Self and peer assessment

9
Questioning
  • Questions are the laser of human consciousness

10
1. Questioning
  • Types of question
  • Who answers questions and how?
  • Wait time (2 Wait times)
  • No hands up
  • Think, pair, share
  • Mini whiteboards
  • Other strategies to involve more/all pupils

11
2. Feedback
  • Marking is usually conscientious but often fails
    to offer guidance on how work can be improved.
    In a significant minority of cases, marking
    reinforces under-achievement and
    under-expectation by being too generous or
    unfocused. Information about pupil performance
    received by the teacher is insufficiently used to
    inform subsequent work.
  • General report on secondary schools OFSTED 1996

12
2. Feedback
  • Oral or written
  • Praise current achievement
  • Next steps
  • Should cause thinking to take place
  • Procedures to close the gap
  • Types of comments which lead to improved
    learning? Questions, prompts, a limited number?

13
Effects of different forms of assessment
(comments, grades and both)
Overall improvement after 2 lots of feedback
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4
3
2
Comments and grades
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Change in marks
Grades
0
Comments
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
Butler, 1988
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What they recalled
Comment and grade group
Comments group
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If you are going to grade or mark a piece of
work, you are wasting your time writing careful
diagnostic comments.
Wiliam, 1999
16
Summary of formative feedback
  • specific to the learning objectives
  • show evidence of where pupils are now, what they
    have done well
  • awareness of the desired goal
  • some understanding of how to close the gap and
    how this will be demonstrated

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3. Sharing success criteria
  • Making learning transparent
  • Provide an overview the big picture
  • Links between new and prior learning
  • Shift from what to how
  • Sharing learning objectives
  • Make EXPLICIT what is usually IMPLICIT
  • Share success criteria for tasks topics
  • Exemplars
  • Learning STRATEGIES gt greater independence

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4. Self and peer assessment
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4. Self and peer assessment
  • Current thinking about learning acknowledges
    that learners must ultimately be responsible for
    their learning since no-one else can do it for
    them. Thus assessment for learning must involve
    students, so as to provide them with information
    about how well they are doing and guide their
    subsequent efforts.
  • Assessment Reform Group 2000

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4. Self assessment
  • In order for pupils to assess their own learning
    they need
  • information about what they need to learn and how
    they will know they have been successful
  • a sound understanding of what constitutes high
    quality work
  • the skills and techniques to assess what they
    have achieved      

21
Peer assessment
  • We remember 90 of what we teach

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Strategies for self and peer assessment
  • Can-do lists for each topic
  • Target setting/pupil progress sheets
  • Make pupils aware of criteria in advance
  • Pupils develop the marking criteria (thus taking
    the secrecy out of marking)
  • Immediate feedback all pupils involved and
    thinking
  • Pupils set questions

23
Strategies for self and peer assessment
  • Two stars and a wish?
  • Traffic lighting
  • Asking who marked work better than their own?
  • Pupil as reporter

24
What might we do now?
  • Model good practice (with a buddy?)
  • Collaborate
  • Questioning techniques as focus for our
    observations
  • Plan appropriate assessment into schemes of work
  • Incremental approach

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Final pause for thought
  • Individual teachers can not right the wrongs of
    overbearing external assessment nor can they
    always help to form whole-school policy on
    assessment. However, they are able to change
    some practice slowly and effectively in their own
    classrooms so that, at least, they are causing no
    harm through their class assessment methods and
    possibly doing a great deal of good in the
    learning process.
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