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TEXAS REGIONAL COLLABORATIVES for Excellence in Science and Mathematics Teaching. Kathleen Jeremiassen Formative Assessment for Engagement & Learning. Conference for the Advancement of Science Teaching Dallas, Texas November 17-19, 2011. Formative Assessment for Engagement & Learning:.
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TEXAS REGIONAL COLLABORATIVES for Excellence in Science and Mathematics Teaching Kathleen Jeremiassen Formative Assessment for Engagement & Learning Conference for the Advancement of Science Teaching Dallas, Texas November 17-19, 2011
Formative Assessment for Engagement & Learning: PART of the WHOLE Kathleen Jeremiassen Irma Dru Hutchison Elementary Lamar CISD
“. . . the most basic elements of an effective lesson: an essential, clearly defined learning objective followed by careful modeling or a clear sequence of steps, punctuated by: efforts during the lesson to see how well students are paying attention and/or learning the material.” -- Mike Schmoker, Results Now
Sounds simple, right? VS Attention Engagement Cognitive -consists of beliefs and values: rigor through higher level experiences and relevance through meaningful work Emotional - consists of motivation and feelings: establishing relationships, classroom environment Behavioral - consists of habitsand skills: procedures, transitions, expectations • Notice taken of someone or something; the regarding of someone or something as interesting or important.
Reality Check? How do the learning experiences we provide make our students feel?
WHAT ARE FAs? FORMATIVE ASSESSMENTS are: • quick checks for understanding • aligned with the daily objective • to provide evidence of learning
WHY USE THEM? • ENGAGEMENT: • TEACHER-TO-STUDENT • STUDENT-TO-TEACHER • STUDENT-TO-STUDENT • HIGHER ORDER THINKING • UNCOVER MISCONCEPTIONS • UNCOVER PRIOR KNOWLEDGE • CONSTRUCT NEW KNOWLEDGE • ONGOING ASSESSMENT OF LEARNING
WHAT IS IT FOR THE TEACHER? • Monitor student progress • Evaluates own practice • Evaluates engagement • Assesses small parts of learning • Engages students in higher order thinking & constructive products • Higher performance on summative assessments
WHAT IS IT FOR THE STUDENT? • Self-reflection • Self-evaluation • Student centered engagement • Student constructed learning, higher order thinking & authentic products • Pieces together parts of learning objectives • Prepares success on summative assessments
Whoever is doing most of the talking…. ends up doing most of the learning.
WHAT THEY PRODUCE: • Non-threatening results for students • Lowers the stakes for taking risks • Creates environment for learning • Direct and Immediate Feedback • Teacher and student • Structured Information • Links instruction/activity to learning • Intervention • Identifies weaknesses in student learning • Narrows the learning gap
Examples of Formative Assessment for Learning: • Individual White Boards • Think Pair Share or Elbow Partners • Four Corner Instruction • Admit Slips and Exit Slips • Response logs for reflective thinking • Graphic Organizers: Mind Maps, T-chart, Frayer Model • Post-it Note responses • Active Votes/”Clickers” • Foldables • Illustrations • Yes/No, True/False, Green/Yellow/Red Cards • Interactive Note Booking • Popsicle stick questioning
Group Efficacy Build community through shared learning experiences
Commit and Toss • Provide student time to answer Prompt • Students “commit” to an answer and “toss” their response in the room (multiple choice, checklist, open response, T/F…) • Students responses are now anonymous and are shared • No response is “right” or “wrong”, just an idea to be explored --Paige Keeley, et. al activity sample
I used to think, but now I know… • Students reflect on their misconceptions or prior knowledge and determine their new thoughts and understanding based on a classroom lesson or experience Foldable
I think, We Think • Provide students time to write down what they think • Provide students time to share in small group and explore each others thinking, report to whole class common thoughts – “Our Class Thinks” Try: How are Weathering & Erosion interrelated?
Concept Cartoon • Students look at cartoon and choose science concept that best matches their understanding • Students justify answer with a written or verbal response
Annotating Student Drawings • Students draw a concept and annotate to show meaning and understanding • Visual representation helps students make sense of their own understanding Try: Life Cycle or Food Web Felice Frankel, PI; Picturing to Learn
Free Sites for Creating Cartoons • MakeBeliefsComix.com • MarvelKids.com’s Create your Own Comics • Pixton • ToonDoo • Strip Generator • Pikistrips
Annotate a Photograph http://serc.carleton.edu/eslabs/climate/2a.html
Ten-Two • For every 10 minutes of whole group instruction, video, audio or other presentation = 2 minutes of reflection and summarizing • Writing notes, drawings, key words Try: Write down what you have learned so far.
Fist to Five • Students show their understanding on a scale from 0 to 5 • A fist means, “no clue”, 5 fingers means, “I understand completely and can explain it to someone”
Two Stars and a Wish • Teacher provides 2 positive comments to reinforce what students know and 1 comment of encourages revision, correction or further improvement
Two things I liked (or noticed): One thing I wish:
3, 2, 1 • 3 key ideas I will remember • 2 things I am still struggling with • 1 thing that will help me tomorrow
Agreement Circles • Students stand in a circle as teacher reads a statement • Students who agree with statement move to the middle, Students who disagree stay on the circumference • Students on the inside of circle face those on the circumference and students pair share their thinking • Teachers ask for students to decide if their discussion changes their mind or stays firm, students are asked to reposition themselves if they changed their mind • Goal is to get all students in center of circle or on the circumference Try: Is global warming occurring?
Agree Agreement Circle Discussion Disagree
Refute or Defend • Analyze statement • Refute or Defend • Justify Try: Environmental sustainability is a global concern.
Missed Conception • Analyze statement about a science concept • Describe why people might think it is true • Help understand misconceptions and develop learning empathy Some people think that putting salt on icy side walks is a good practice because “salt will melt the ice.”
Give me Five • Provide time for students to think about the lesson activity • Five students share their reflection
Looking Back (&Forward) • Students summarize their learning of a concept or skill • Explain how they learned it • Connect learning to process to new knowledge or skill Foldable
Fact First Questioning • Turn questions around from “What” to “Why”, “How”, “Explain the process…” • Elicits deeper thinking and richer response and classroom discussion • Provide wait time • Scaffold questions to support student explanations and elaborations
Odd One Out • Find which doesn’t belong in the group • Justify • Similarities and differences • Relationships • forms, functions, cycles, behaviors, patterns, properties…
Recognizing Exceptions • Target overgeneralizations • Question asks for the exception
Analogies • Students attach own meaning to scientific concepts, functions, structures, etc. to relate to something familiar.
Four Corners • Teacher posts four possible answers or ideas for a question or a concept • Student move to the corner that matches best with their understanding • Students discuss ideas in groups and share with class
Teacher Feedback • Germination of a seed • A blooming flower • Egg -> cracked egg -> chick Picture Feedback
Muddiest Point • Ask what part was most difficult or unclear • Students respond on note card or sticky • Teacher prompts students, “Today we…”
Point of Most Significance (POMS) • Students reflect on lesson or experience and identify key points of lesson objectives & big ideas • Teacher prompts students, “Today we…” Try: Write down the most significant points of Formal Assessments
Lastly… and this takes guts: • “Hot Topic” interest Scale • Parking Lot
Resources • Science Formative Assessment by Page Keeley • Uncovering Student Ideas in Science by Page Keeley • Common Formative Assessments by Larry Ainsworth & Donald Viegut • Working on the Work by Phillip Schlechty • The Highly Engaged Classroom & Formative Assessment & Standard Based Grading both by Robert J. Marzano • Bill McBride:http://billmcbride.pbworks.com