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Designing Meaningful Assessments:Shifts in Classroom Practice
Secondary Powerful Conversations NetworkNovember 1, 2012
Networking: Connection Challenge—
Take the Warm-Up Activity featuring the map of Alabama and pen.
Move around the room introducing yourself to colleagues from other schools. Jot down their names in the margin with line drawn to the county where their school is located.
Connect with individuals from as many different counties in our state as possible. Celebrate the opportunity to be a part of a truly statewide learning community!
Toward Standards-Based Learning
“If we are teaching to the standards and we’re making sure that teaching and instruction are equipping students to know, understand, and do something with that knowledge, whatever the assessment is is secondary. We have focused for years on the test being the primary target rather than the standards.”—Dr. Tommy Bice, State Superintendent of Education
Learning Targets
1. To deepen our understanding of the implications of CCRS for teaching and learning
2. To revisit summative and formative assessments and the relationships between the two
3. To explore issues related to different aspects of assessment and broaden our understanding of comprehensive school- and classroom-based assessment
Learning Targets, cont’d
4. To reflect on the state of the art of assessment in our own school and to plan together to improve assessment practices
5. To continue work on a curriculum unit design team with colleagues from other schools
6. To co-create a community of practice with colleagues across the state
Guidelines for Group Interactions
Be open to and respect all points of view.
Listen with an open mind and expect to learn from one another.
Accept responsibility for active and equitable participation.
Allow think time – before and after someone speaks.
Check for understanding. Before you counter an idea, be sure you fully understand what has
been said.
Welcome questions.
Activity 1: Critical Friend Analysis
WHAT? Reading and critical friend analysis of a think piece on formative assessment
WHY? To share our thinking about formative assessment and secure your feedback
HOW? Individually read and think about the description of formative assessment. With your school team, provide feedback on the reading using criteria that are provided. (p.3 - Yellow Packet)
Formative Assessment—A Process, Not an
Instrument
Essential Question: What makes an assessment formative?
Which of the following has the potential to serve as a formative
assessment?
1. Embedded Daily Assessments—Examples: Questions, Exit Passes, Student Work Samples
2. Teacher-Developed (collaboratively, when possible) Quizzes, Tests, Exams—Examples: Daily Quiz, End-of-Unit Test, Semester Exam
3. Common Diagnostic and Benchmark Assessments (oftentimes commercially developed)—Examples: Global Scholar, ACT Explore and Plan
School Team Conversation and Planning
WHAT? School team conversation and planning
WHY? To afford time for school team dialogue about and planning related to school and classroom assessment
HOW? Use prompts and questions on School Team Conversation and Planning Guide to help structure team work. Use template to record team insights and commitments. (Green Packet)
Six Fundamental Steps to Using Assessment Results
WHAT? Self-assessment, conversation and planning
WHY? To use Ainsworth’s “6 Steps” to take a critical look at current status and future possibilities in classroom assessment
HOW? Use questions beneath Part I of Team Conversation and Planning Guide & template for recording (p.1- Green Packet)
Activity 2: Formative, Summative, or Both—IQ Triads
WHAT? IQ Triads to generate insights and questions related to the use of summative assessments formatively
WHY? To structure a collaborative conversation that results in richer understanding of the potential of all assessments to be used formatively
HOW? Three individuals from different schools and districts group to process 2 paragraphs from Ainsworth’s book and to identify insights and questions for sharing with home team. (p.5 – Yellow Packet)
Formative, Summative, or Both—Team Conversation & Planning
WHAT? Self-assessment, conversation and planning by school teams
WHY? To consider the potential of increasing the formative use of summative assessments
HOW? Use questions beneath Part II of Team Conversation and Planning Guide & template for recording (p.1 – Green Packet)
Supporting Implementation of Common Core: Workshop Choices
Purpose: To afford individual and team choice in deepening learning about one of four tools provided by the SDE OR additional team planning timeOptions:1. Global Scholar2. ACT Quality Core
3. Insight Tool4. Using Assessments with Math CCRS
ORSchool Team Planning
Common Formative Assessments—Team Conversation & Planning
WHAT? Self-assessment, conversation and planning by schools teams
WHY? To consider the current use of common formative assessment and possibilities for future
HOW? Use questions beneath Part III of Team Conversation and Planning Guide & template for recording (p.2 – Green Packet)
Activity 3: Investigating One Important Type of Assessment—
Table Talk
WHAT? To engage in dialogue with colleagues from other schools about one of three types of assessment
WHY? To learn from other’s experiences and perspectives and prepare to share with home team
HOW? Move to a table made up of members from different schools. With your group, investigate your assigned type of assessment using questions beneath #3 on p.6 in Yellow Packet.
Pre- and Post-Assessments and Progress Monitoring—Team
Conversation & Planning
WHAT? Self-assessment, conversation and planning by schools teams
WHY? To consider the current use of three types of assessments and plan for future possibilities
HOW? Use questions beneath Parts IV, V, and VI of Team Conversation and Planning Guide & template for recording (p.5 – Green Packet)
Activity 4: Rating School-Wide Assessment Practices—Data on
Display
WHAT? Self-assessment and team conversation
WHY? To compare and contrast current perspectives and to use a strategy that you might transfer to work in your school
HOW? Individually rate 8 items; use self-adhesive dots to display your ratings on team templates; use data to draw inferences about current practice in your school. (p.7 – Yellow Packet)
Design Work in Collaborative Teams
1. Move to your content-alike team (subject and grade-level) with which you met during 1st PCN Session.
2. Select appropriate items from “Reader’s Assignment” on pages 156-157 to pursue during your work together.
3. The unwrapped standard(s) that you identified for focus during the 1st PCN session should be the basis for this work in assessment.
Principal Dialogue GroupsMove to designated break-out rooms.
When you arrive, take a seat in one of the chairs in one of the lines.
Pick up information packet in chairs. This will be your study assignment.
Please do not move the chairs or exchange information packages.
Reflection and FeedbackPlease complete the reflection and feedback
form—including the comments for each item.
This is your exit ticket!
We will use your feedback to plan our next QM.
Thank you!
Safe travels. See you next time!