So far this year I have created numerous “handouts” to help students overcome learning gaps. I create each handout as I see the learning gap in one student. Then I have the handout for when I see the same learning gap in other students. In my writing course, I’ve created handouts for such topics as topic sentences, thesis statements, plurals, run-ons, and fragments. I had to go down to the “ground zero” in writing the handouts- providing many examples, providing simple practice (with answers on the other side), etc. to guide the student through the learning gap. I only give out the handouts to those students who display the specific learning gap. I’m glad that I’m building up a library so that next semester I will be able to help more students.
Posts Tagged 'handout'
Formative Feedback & Focused Handouts
Published April 16, 2008 Assess , Assessment , assessment for learning , Differentiated , Formative , Formative assessment , formative feedback , handout , learning , scaffold , Student , write , Writing Leave a CommentTags: differentiated instruction, Education, ELA, English, Formative assessment, formative feedback, handout, scaffold, School
Restructuring handouts to be more formative
Published March 25, 2008 Assess , Assessment , assessment for learning , Formative , Formative assessment , formative feedback , scaffold , Structure Leave a CommentTags: Class, Education, ELA, English, Formative, Formative assessment, handout, scaffold, Structure, Textbook, Writing
Originally, I had taken the sections of a writing chapter and reduced them down to their essence for my handouts. However, I found out from my students that they only looked at one section, the actual writing examples. When I asked the students about the rest of the handout, they explained that those sections were not helpful. I had used the book’s terms and “fancy” language which did not explain “how to” do the writing process in terms concrete enough for my students to use.
I’m in the process of redoing the handouts to be the actual steps (and hopefully, the actual order) in doing each type of writing. I would like students to have steps to follow when they need the structure. When students are struggling writers, they need all the scaffolding possible to help them figure out what to do at each step. In order to create the steps, I had to mentally go through what I do in writing each type of writing. That process gave me greater insight into possible learning problems that students might encounter.