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Finally !. Utilizing Student Involvement to Prepare for Final Exams Presented by: Jessica Drogos, Jeremy Vrtis, Marie Gillespie & Kurt Johns. Workshop Objectives. The word assessment means to ‘sit beside’ someone.
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Finally! • Utilizing Student Involvement to • Prepare for Final Exams • Presented by: Jessica Drogos, Jeremy Vrtis, • Marie Gillespie & Kurt Johns
Workshop Objectives The word assessment means to ‘sit beside’ someone. We ‘sit beside’ our students and let them know the things they know/do well. • Understand the power of involving students in assessment. • Obtain methods involving students in assessment including independent reflection and peer review. “Certain formative assessment practices increased the achievement of low-performing students to the point of approaching that of high-achieving students.” • Classroom Assessment for Student Learning , Second Edition p. 22
Formative or Summative • Formative • To inform ongoing learning • Summative • To summarize final learning Classroom Assessment for Student Learning , Second Edition
Formative or Summative • Summative Examples Formative Examples Unit Exams Quizzes • Exit Slips • Final Projects Journal Entries Final Exams Term Papers Reflection Forms Classroom Assessment for Student Learning , Second Edition
Think of a Classroom Unit • How do you express the clear purpose of your topic? • How do you present objectives in student friendly language? Fill in Topics (First Column) Use student centered language • How do you maintain student centered lesson? How do you assist students in achieving their goal?
Keys to Quality Assessment Clear Purpose Clear Purpose Clear Targets Sound Design Effective Communication • Student • Involvement
Clear Purpose For students to be able to improve, they must have the capacity to monitor the quality of their own work. • To do so students must ask… • How can I close the gap? • Where am I now? • Where am I going?
Keys to Quality Assessment Clear Purpose Clear Targets Sound Design Effective Communication • Student • Involvement
Clear Targets • Students can hit any target they can see and that holds still for them. • Are learning targets clear to teachers? • What kind of achievements are to be assessed? Fill in Subtopics (Second Column) • Are these learning targets the focus of instruction?
Keys to Quality Assessment Clear Purpose Clear Targets Sound Design Effective Communication • Student • Involvement
Sound Design Assessments are aligned to match the targets they are intended to measure • Do assessment methods match learning targets? • Are items, tasks, and scoring rubrics of high quality? • Does the assessment control for bias?
Possible Assessment Methods • Selected Response • Written Response Personal Communication Performance Assessment
Target-Method Match Knowledge Reasoning Skill Product Disposition Strong match: The method works for all learning targets in this type. Good match: The method works for many of the learning targets of this type. Partial match: The method works in some instances for learning targets of this type. Poor match: The method never works for learning targets of this type. Classroom Assessment for Student Learning , Second Edition
Keys to Quality Assessment Clear Purpose Clear Targets Sound Design Effective Communication • Student • Involvement
Effective Communication Once the purpose and targets are clear and the assessments are soundly designed, then they must be effectively communicated to the students. • Can assessment results be used by students to guide their learning? • Do formative assessments give students effective feedback? • Do grades tell students if they hit their target? • Do students see the connection between their targets and their results?
Keys to Quality Assessment Clear Purpose Clear Targets Sound Design Effective Communication • Student • Involvement
Student Involvement The decisions that contribute the most to student learning success are made, not by adults working in the system, but by students themselves. • Are learning targets clear to the students? • Can students use the results to self-assess and set goals? Our Third Column • Are students tracking and communicating their evolving learning?
3 Methods of Involving Students in Assessment • Independent Reflection Prior to an Assessment • Independent Reflection Prior to an Assessment Peer Review • Independent Reflection
3 Methods of Involving Students in Assessment • Independent Reflection Prior to an Assessment Peer Review • Independent Reflection
Peer Review • Vocabulary/concept review for the Marketing unit • Instead of the teacher grading their work they graded each other on: • Concept • Eye contact • Engaged audience • The average score increased from last semester by 4%
3 Methods of Involving Students in Assessment • Independent Reflection Prior to an Assessment Peer Review • Independent Reflection