Grant Wiggins’ Big Ideas website published my latest article, Formative Assessment: Not One-Size-Fits-All- Feedback.
My book, Formative Assessment: Responding to Students, is available through Eye-on-Education.
Improve student learning through teacher’s decisions and technology – harry.g.tuttle at gmail
Grant Wiggins’ Big Ideas website published my latest article, Formative Assessment: Not One-Size-Fits-All- Feedback.
My book, Formative Assessment: Responding to Students, is available through Eye-on-Education.
You probably use a rubric to assess students. Your rubric is most likely a summative rubric. It tells the students what they did right or wrong (a score of 4/6).
It probably does not show the students what a proficient answer looks like so that they can improve (a formative assessment rubric). Since a formative assessment rubric includes what a proficient example looks like the students move from the theory of the rubric (what I got wrong or the abstract terms in the rubric) to the classroom practice (what does a “good” answer look like in practice) so that the students can change.
In addition, a formative assessment rubric contains suggestions for improvement for any less than proficient area. Students not only see a proficient response but they learn a strategy that will enable them to do that proficient response.
The rubric moves from “a grade” to “an improvement”.
My book, Formative Assessment: Responding to Students, is available through Eye-on-Education.
Recently I’ve been thinking of learning as a road trip. Our students start out on the trip but soon they may take a road that does not lead to the destination. In many classes, the instructors do not find out that the students have been on the wrong road until the weekly quiz or even the unit exam. Formative assessment helps to monitor students as they drive. Students do not have to take the same road (differentiation) but they do need to end up at the same destination. Formative assessments helps identify students who have wandered off on dead-ends, have being caught going around traffic circles, or have taken roads that lead in the opposite directions from the destination. Formative Assessment shows them how to get back on a road that leads to the destination and then monitors that they are continuing on that road. Formative Assessment can monitor when students have stopped for an extended break. Formative Assessment celebrates their success as they arrive at the destination.
How do you use Formative Assessment to help your students reach their destination?
My book, Formative Assessment: Responding to Students, is available through Eye-on-Education.
Some educators feel strongly that schools should use virtual worlds to engage today’s youth. I remember a distant time when teachers had the power to create imaginary worlds in the class. A Social Studies would tell about the Civil War from the viewpoint of a teenager as his middle school students enter in that teenager’s struggles. An English teacher used A Midsummer’s Nights Dream to explore young love for high school students. They understand the world of crazy love, mistaken love, and true love. The play becomes a vehicle for them to explore an important issue in their lives. A science teacher had the students adopt a local stream; they tell the stream’s story throughout the school year. They write as if they were the living stream. Teachers have the power to create wonderful worlds in the classroom. Students can be transported to other places, times, and events and see through the eyes of others. They learn more in-depth and more comprehensively.
Can you create imaginary worlds in your class so that students enter into a different world? Do you transport them to a different realm of seeing and thinking? Get your Merlin’s wand out!
My book, Formative Assessment: Responding to Students, is available through Eye-on-Education.
Long ago when I began a new job, my superintendent suggested I go to TQM training which was being done via videoconferencing. I learned much and changed my department into one that applied TQM to increase our effectiveness while providing high quality service. Then the TQM movement was criticized for being too business like and it quietly disappeared from education. Ironically, many of the TQM ideas and tools have been renamed into more “acceptable” terms such as “continuous quality improvement” (CQI) or “data driven”. The premise in TQM is that you identify the quality that you want and you constantly measure to see if you are obtaining that quality. If not, you change your actions to achieve that quality. TQM builds in success structures (many graphic organizers came out of TQM). Movements such as formative assessment can be seen as TQM applied to student success.
How have you identify the quality of learning you want in your students? How do you build in success measures so that students reach that level of quality in their learning?
My book, Formative Assessment: Responding to Students, is available through Eye-on-Education.