32
Assessments ! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Assessments!New Teacher MeetingNovember 2, 2011

Page 2: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Learning Targets: Teachers will be able to distinguish

between summative assessments and formative assessments.

Teachers will have a better understanding of the importance of formative assessments.

Page 3: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Think, Pair, Share With a partner, compare and contrast

what you already know about summative and formative assessments.

Page 4: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Formative Assessments:Assessments FOR Learning

Formal and Informal processes teachers and students use to gather evidence for the purpose of improving learning.

Used to help student learn more WHILE the learning is occurring and informs instruction Takes four different forms

Selected response and short answer (M/C, T/F, matching) Extended written response (essay, report, paper) Performance assessment (oral report, performance) Personal communication (verbal cues, conferencing)

Page 5: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Summative Assessments:Assessments OF Learning

Assessments that provide evidence of student achievement for the purpose of making a judgment about student competence or program effectiveness.

Results of the assessment record the END RESULTS of all learning opportunities Benchmark testing, ACT, MAP, AP

Page 6: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Used with skill, formative assessments can:

Motivate the unmotivatedRestore students’ desire to learnEncourage students to keep learning Create—not simply measure—increased

achievement

--Stiggins, Arter, Chappuis, & Chappuis, 2004

Page 7: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Who Uses Assessment Information, and How?

Beginning with the person whose birthday is closest to today and moving clockwise, assign the following roles:StudentParentTeacherPrincipalAthletic coachGuidance counselor

Page 8: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Write your role in the blank on the handout.

Answer #1 individually (3 – 5 minutes), then beginning with the “student,” share your list.

When all roles have shared, notice what conclusions you are drawing about classroom assessment.

Note and discuss your responses to question #2.

Page 9: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Some Conclusions

Data must be sound because major decisions that affect students’ well-being are made on its basis.

Assessment data is used for many purposes beyond grading.

Students are crucial decision-makers, whose information needs must be met.

Page 10: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Think of a time you were assessed and it was a negative experience. What made it negative?

Page 11: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Now think of a time you were assessed and it was a positive experience. What made it positive?

Page 12: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Emily’s Story:Assessment for Learning

Read Emily’s story and the two papers she wrote.

Then read Emily’s interview with Rick Stiggins after the school board meeting.

Page 13: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

What did Emily’s teacher do that helped Emily succeed?

Page 14: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Krissy’s Experience

Read the story of Krissy’s assessment experience. What did this teacher do that made it difficult for Krissy

to achieve the learning goals?

Page 15: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

What are the essential differences between Emily’s and Krissy’s experiences?

How did ASSESSMENT AFFECT MOTIVATION in these two students’ experiences?

Page 16: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

What actions can you take to improve your assessment

environment?

Page 17: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Seven Strategies of Assessment FOR Learning

Where am I going?1. Clear Learning Targets2. Model examples

Where am I now?3. Descriptive feedback4. Self assess and set goals

How can I close the gap?5. Focus on ONE learning target6. Teach students focused revision7. Self reflection, students share their learning

Page 18: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Homework Please read Chapter 2, pages 17-42.

Next Meeting: November 30, 2011

We will not meet in December!!!

Page 19: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Circle, Square, Triangle Reading Reflection Please take a few minutes and reflect

over your reading, pages 17-42. Circle: What question is still circling in your

mind? Square: What are two things that square

with your beliefs about Strategy 1? Triangle: What are three points you learned

from your reading?

Please post your geometric shape on the corresponding anchor chart.

Page 20: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Learning vs. Performance Goals Learning Goal:

Goal is to improve work and get better

Performance Goal: Goal is to get the work done, to get the

points or grade, be seen as smart

Page 21: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Learning or Performance

1. Students will successfully complete the exercises in the back of chapter 3.

2. Students will create a metaphor representing the food pyramid.

3. Students will be able to determine subject/verb agreement in a variety of simple, compound, and complete sentences.

4. Students will understand the defining characteristics of fables, fairy tales, and tall tales.

5. Students will investigate the relationship between speed of air flow and lift provided by an airplane wing.

Page 22: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Robert J. MarzanoDesigning and Teaching Learning Goals and Objectives

1, 2, and 5 are performance goals, activities or assignments, things students will be asked to DO…how the learning goals are to be accomplished.

3 and 4 are learning goals, a statement of what students will know or be able to do.

Page 23: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Strategy 1: Making targets clear to students

Share the learning target with studentsUse language students understandPrerequisite: a suitable rubricCreating a student-friendly rubricHow to introduce a student-friendly

rubric to studentsWhen to share the learning targetChecking for understanding of the

intended learning

Page 24: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Is this an example of clear targets?

Science Subject

Electricity Topic

P. 152 Resource

Changing the amount of energy

Activity/Performance Goal

Page 25: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Strategy 1 OptionsShare the target as is (knowledge, some reasoning targets)

Convert target to student-friendly terms (reasoning targets)

Page 26: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Creating a student-friendly definition Identify word(s) needing clarification. Define the term(s) Convert the definition(s) into language your

students will understand. Turn the student-friendly definition into an “I

or a “We” statement Try the definition out with students Let students have a go at this procedure

occasionally, using learning targets you think they could successfully define and paraphrase.

Page 27: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Learning Target- Science2.A.7.l: Classify materials as

conductors or insulators of electricity when placed within a circuit.

Activity: Converting Learning Targets to Student-friendly Language

Page 28: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Think about it...

Based on your student-friendly definition, how many lessons do you now have to teach?

While you were doing this process, what were some things that stood out to you?

Page 29: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011
Page 30: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Targets, Performance Goals, and Learning Goals

Clear Targets--Curriculum objectives

Learning Goals--small pieces of learning that get the student to the target

Performance Goals--what students are asked to do as they learn along the way.

Page 31: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

“Clear targets means they are not just listed on the wall, but they are in the child’s head.”

-Jan Chappuis

Page 32: Assessments! New Teacher Meeting November 2, 2011

Next Steps…Please read pages 42-51, Strategy 2.

Reflect and Respond (Before Christmas)Please post a reflection on your

reading under New Teacher Discussion.

Then respond to at least one colleagues post.

Next Meeting, Wednesday, January 25th