Transcript Document

Planning for Formative Assessment
Online Workshop
Who will find this workshop useful?
• Teachers
• Syndicates / departments
• AtoL facilitators
How to use this workshop:
•
To update, review and/or reflect on formative assessment practice.
•
As a focus for professional development in exploring formative
assessment.
•
To support AtoL in-depth programmes in schools.
What words should I use?
In assessment, as in all areas of education, there are some terms that need to
be clarified if they are to be used consistently and effectively in practice.
What do we want students to know
and be able to do as a result of this
learning experience?
Learning outcomes or
intentions
What will the quality or standard of
work be in order for students to
achieve the learning outcome /
intention?
Achievement criteria or
success criteria
What kind of learning experience will
be appropriate to achieve the
learning outcomes / intentions?
Context or task
The first active element of formative
assessment is …
Sharing the learning outcomes or learning intentions with
students at the beginning of a lesson.
Research shows that:
– not only are students more motivated and task-oriented if
they know the learning outcome of the task,
– but they are also able to make better decisions about how to
go about the task.
The learning outcome needs to be clear and unambiguous, and
explained to students in a way that they can understand.
Where do learning intentions come from?
Learning intentions or outcomes are not selected at random – rather
they arise from the evidence that we already have about students’
learning.
When we know where students are at in their learning we can identify
the next step to move the learning on.
The learning outcome or intention will reflect this learning shift,
showing the students what they are aiming for.
The success criteria will then provide them with a clear picture of what
their work will be like if it is to meet the stated intention.
So how does this work in practice?
Click on the picture to work through an
example based on a NEMP art task
Triceratops:
A NEMP art activity
Dinosaurs - triceratops
Context
Learning
outcome
Animals from long ago - dinosaurs
To complete an observational drawing
Your
Task
Using the picture on the next page
as a model, draw a triceratops (in the
original task a plastic model was
used)
Success
criteria
Before you start, make a note of the
key elements of an observational
drawing that you would be looking for
in a student’s work
Finished?
When you have completed your drawing, use the marking
schedule on the following page to assess your own work.
You can also use the examples of student work to ‘level’ your
drawing.
Marking schedule the triceratops –
observational drawing
Skills
Key Attributes
Mark
Main features of
observed object
Main parts and features observed and
recorded.
Different parts appropriately shaped and
in reasonable proportions
4
3
2
1
Very high
Quite high
Moderate
Low
3-dimensional quality
Appropriate placement and size of near
and far features. Use of shading
4
3
2
1
Very high
Quite high
Moderate
Low
Detail
Fine detail of features observed and
included. Appropriate tonal marking
(texture, pattern, line)
4
3
2
1
Very high
Quite high
Moderate
Low
Expressiveness
Lifelike quality. Confident treatment of
the subject.
4
3
2
1
Very high
Quite high
Moderate
Low
NEMP marking schedule
The triceratops –
low range
NEMP marking schedule
The triceratops –
mid range
NEMP marking schedule
The triceratops –
high range
More about criteria
• How do your criteria match with those used by the NEMP
team?
• How would it have assisted you to have had these criteria
before commencing the task?
• What are the implications for your classroom?
Click here to return to the Workshop
Sharing achievement criteria
Students’ understanding of the task and their achievement
will be maximised if achievement criteria as well as the
learning outcome(s) are shared with them prior to the lesson.
These criteria need to be the main focus of the feedback
given to students.
Task, learning outcomes, and
achievement criteria
Teachers need to separate the task instructions clearly from
the learning outcomes and achievement criteria.
Otherwise the students can begin their work without
knowing clearly the difference between what you want them
to do and what you want them to learn.
Task, learning outcomes, and
achievement criteria
Task:: Students work in pairs to count piles of
objects and match them with numeral cards.
Learning intention: We are learning to recognise numbers to 10.
Success criteria: “So what we’re looking for is that you can
say the names of all these numbers.”
The purpose of success criteria
What are we looking for?
The learning outcome is “using effective adjectives” – it
does not give students the achievement criteria or how
they will be assessed.
The success criteria might be “what you’re looking for
is using interesting adjectives just before a noun”.
Learning intentions and success criteria
Students can be involved in creating the criteria. Learning
intentions and success criteria need to be displayed.
We are learning to…
We’ll know we’ve achieved this
because…
Learning
outcome
To order stories
We know we’ve achieved this because…
• It will make sense
Success criteria
• It will retell the
story we heard
Summary of steps
Clarify the learning intentions at the planning stage.
Make it an expectation for students.
Explain the learning outcome in ‘child speak’ if necessary.
Invite students to say how we will know this has been
achieved.
Write the success criteria.
Clarify with “Why is this an important thing to learn?” (big
picture).
Get students to read out the learning outcome and the
achievement criteria.
How can outcomes and criteria be
displayed?
Some possibilities:
• A wipe-clean whiteboard, with headings written in
permanent marker. The outcomes and criteria can then
be written up after discussion.
• A page on a flip chart, with headings and speech
bubbles. The outcomes and criteria for the lesson are
written or tacked onto the bubbles.
• Student ‘know and do’ sheets
• Your ideas – what would work in your classroom or
curriculum area?
Teacher planning formats that work
Planning formats need to emphasise the learning outcomes or intentions. Shirley
Clarke says that the widest column represents the most important aspect on a
planning sheet.
An example:
Learning
outcome/
intention
Context /
task
Achievement criteria
(what students will need
to do to achieve the
outcome)
Make this the biggest
column
To be able to
create an
effective
characterisation
Describe
a friend
Describe person X
including:
•hobbies and interests
•extrovert / introvert
•attitude to self / others
•likes / dislikes
•typical behaviour
Organisation
details
Notes to
inform
future
planning
Critiquing planning formats
How well do your planners support formative assessment
practice?
– Are learning outcomes/intentions clearly stated?
– Is the context specified?
– Do the criteria give clear indications as to what students
need to do to achieve the outcomes?
Remember that some formats work better for some than for
others!