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Formative Assessment

Formative Assessment. Formative assessment is the monitoring that occurs throughout the process of learning, providing students with feedback on how they are doing and what their next learning steps are.

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Formative Assessment

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  1. Formative Assessment • Formative assessment is the monitoring that occurs throughout the process of learning, providing students with feedback on how they are doing and what their next learning steps are. • Its purpose is to provide students with the concrete and specific information they need to be able to evaluate and therefore improve their own learning. http://tereomaori.tki.org.nz/Curriculum-guidelines/Appendix-1-Glossary-of-English-terms

  2. ASSESSMENT IS LEARNING:LEARNER EMPOWERMENT THROUGH SHIFTING ASSESSMENT PRACTICES Jennifer Towers

  3. What are our learning goals today? • To understand why formative assessment is beneficial in a science classroom • To leave with practical learning and assessment strategies that you can use in your classroom • To make marking more meaningful

  4. Growing Pains • Background • 1st year – introduction • 2nd year – trial • 3rd year – fully implemented

  5. Formative Assessment: The five big strategies that matter Learners own their Learning www.npbs.com Dylan Wiliam

  6. What does assessment currently look like in your classroom? Please read and discuss “Quality Assessment”from Article Excerpts – Winger, T. (2009)

  7. Workshop Outline • Then • Rationale for change • Now • Where I’ve arrived • How • Logistics and Practice • Labs, Assignments, Projects, Quizzes and Tests • Reflection • Value and Next Steps

  8. Then: 25 • Ranking System • Marks out of 10 or 15 or 20 or 24… • 6/10 recorded in mark book… • Is this meaningful?

  9. Now: • Assessment as and for learning • Students • Play an active role • Owncriteria • Peer and self assess work • Plan improvement with feedback • Track improvement and reflect • Teacher • gives only comment-based feedback • reports most recent & consistent performance

  10. Grading students by comparing their performance to one another distorts individual achievement. Please read and discuss “Standards Based Grading” from Article Excerpts O’Connor, K. (2007)

  11. How: • What does feedback look like? • Feedback using Performance Standards • Who does the assessment? • Combination of Peer, Self, and Teacher • How is the feedback used effectively? • Students using Learning Log • How do you arrive at a percentage? • Turing Evidence into Percentages

  12. How: Science Labs • Feedback with Performance Standards (Rubrics)

  13. How: Science Labs • Feedback with Performance Standards • Peer, Self, Teacher Assessments

  14. How: Science Labs • Feedback with Performance Standards • Peer, Self, Teacher Assessments • Learning Log

  15. How: Science Labs • Feedback with Performance Standards • Peer, Self, Teacher Assessments • Learning Log • Arriving at a Percentage (for labs/unit/term)

  16. …learning becomes more efficient and students begin to internalize the process.... Please read and discuss “Peer and Self Assessment” from Article Excerpts Earl, L. (n.d.)

  17. How: Projects • Science 10 Compound Formation Poster

  18. HOW: Projects • Nutrient Cycle Cartoon

  19. HOW: Projects • Biome Region Report

  20. How: Concepts • Informal Questions (Try This!) • Formal Quizzes as “Checkpoints” and Unit Tests • Feedback with Performance Standards • Peer, Self, Teacher Assessments • Learning Log

  21. HOW: Quiz or Checkpoint 2 2 6 8 Detrivore/decomposer 0 1 1 Mutualism/parasitism 2 4 2 Energy flow/percents 2 17

  22. HOW: Concept log

  23. HOW: Unit Tests

  24. To be effective, feedback needs to cause thinking. Grades don’t do that. Scores don’t do that. And comments like “good job” don’t do that either. Please read and discuss “Provide Feedback that moves Learning Forward”from Article Excerpts Leahy, S., Lyon, C., Thompson, M., & William, D. (2005)

  25. How: Term Reflections

  26. Reflection • Student • As quoted • Parents • Communication • Teacher • Effectiveness • Collaboration • Impact from Chemistry student feedback from Science 10 student feedback “I knew exactly what I had to improve on after the first lab, and was able to improve on it in my second (which is the whole point I think) … Anyway I think it is excellent and has definitely helped me and others improve.” “It is very helpful and it enables us to learn from our mistakes so we don’t do them again. It clearly states what you need to do... I learn what to do different on the next lab.”

  27. My support network: • West Vancouver School District • Michelle Wood, Brooke Moore, Greg Elliott and Mike Branco and my Colleagues at Rockridge Secondary • Marne Owen, Principal Rockridge Secondary • Network of Performance Based Schools

  28. What is your next step? Formative assessment... Classroom practicality.... Meaningful feedback...

  29. Contact • Jennifer Towers, Science and Biology • jtowers@sd45.bc.ca My website https://sites.google.com/site/towersscience10rockridge/

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