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Observing the Obvious

Observing the Obvious. Authentic Math Assessments for Young Children. What the Experts Say. National Council of Teachers of Mathematics “Assessment should support the learning of important mathematics and furnish useful information to both teachers and students.”

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Observing the Obvious

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  1. Observing the Obvious Authentic Math Assessments for Young Children

  2. What the Experts Say • National Council of Teachers of Mathematics “Assessment should support the learning of important mathematics and furnish useful information to both teachers and students.” • National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC)

  3. 2 Types of Informal Assessment • Anecdotal Notes • Portfolio Work Samples Photography

  4. Anecdotal Notes • Observation of a child’s actions over time • Not just for assessment • Focus on the process and the product • Contains specific behaviors, not opinions • Beneficial for ELL students • Helps develop instruction to meet individual needs • Shows patterns of growth • Observe, Reflect, Plan – teacher move

  5. Portfolios • “Tells the story of a student’s effort, progress, or achievement” (Preschool Policy Matters, July 2004) • Provide credible and meaningful evidence of a student’s learning • Work samples are not “best” work of a student. They are documents showing the process and product of curriculum objectives. • Student input is valuable • Offers a record of learning over time • Allows comparisons of growth for a student

  6. Picturing Growth

  7. More Growth. . .More Pictures

  8. More Pictures

  9. Work Samples

  10. Work Samples

  11. Work Samples

  12. Use Assessment to Drive Instruction We all agree: • Children are unique • Children develop at different rates • Children learn differently • Brains have optimal windows open for developmental stages • It takes WORK to differentiate instruction!

  13. Ways to Differentiate Instruction

  14. Differentiating Instruction

  15. Differentiating Instruction

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