assessment: formative & summative practices for the classroom nc teach april 2010

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ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

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Page 1: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

ASSESSMENT:

FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE

Practices for the Classroom

NC TEACH April 2010

Page 2: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Think About It! Group Activity with Graphic Organizer

What is the difference between teaching and telling?

What is the difference between assessing and grading?

What is the difference between teaching and learning?

Page 3: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010
Page 4: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

What is assessment?

Assessment for learning is best described as a process by which assessment information is used by teachers to adjust their teaching strategies, and by students to adjust their learning strategies.

Assessment, teaching and learning are inextricably linked, as each informs the others.

Assessment is a powerful process that can either optimize or inhibit learning, depending on how it’s applied.

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Planned and Communicated

Assessment for learning should be built into teachers’ planning as a part of everyday classroom practice.

Learning goals, teaching strategies and assessment criteria should be carefully matched. Students should know in advance what they will learn, as well as how and why they are to be assessed. Teachers’ plans should be flexible so that they can make changes in response to new information, opportunities or insights.

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Planned and Communicated

The planning needs to include strategies to check students’ understanding of the goals they are pursuing and the criteria that will be applied in assessing their work.

How students will receive feedback, how they will take part in assessing their learning and how they will be helped to make further progress should also be planned.

A teacher’s planning should provide opportunities for both student and teacher to obtain information about progress towards learning goals, and use it to direct the learning process.

Page 7: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Your Turn!

As you view the video, take notes on how the teacher gathers, interprets, and uses information to guide the learning of the students.

What was the objective? How does the teacher know if the students achieved it?

Assess the teacher’s behaviors in regards to the planning, execution, and monitoring of the lesson.

Page 8: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Why Discuss Assessment?

A review of the data shows that there is a lot of testing happening in most districts, but that assessment does not necessarily drive curriculum and instruction.

District educators indicated that the timeliness of receiving data impacts their ability to use it effectively.

Educators expressed a frustration related to their ability to analyze and synthesize the data.

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Assessment in education is the process of gathering, interpreting, recording, and using information about pupils’ responses to an educational task. (Harlen, Gipps, Broadfoot, Nuttal,1992)

Page 10: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Individual Activity

Review the Anticipation Guide and respond to the statements or answer the questions.

Watch the video “Research Connections between Questioning/Learning”, and use the Anticipation Guide to answer any questions you didn’t know.

Page 11: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

BALANCED CLASSROOM ASSESSMENT SYSTEM

FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT SUMMATIVE ASSESSMENT

A process used by teachers and students during instruction that provides feedback to adjust ongoing teaching and learning to help students improve their achievement of intended instructional outcomes.

A tool used after instruction to measure student achievement which provides evidence of student competence or program effectiveness.

Page 12: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

FORMATIVE SUMMATIVE

•Occurs During Instruction•Not Graded•Process•Descriptive Feedback•Continuous

•Occurs at the end•Graded•Product•Evaluative Feedback•Periodic

COMPARISON OF ASSESSMENTS

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Possible Assessment Methods

Formative Assessment includes

Questions Classroom Discussions Learning Activities Feedback Conferences Interviews Student Self-Assessment

Summative Assessment

Selected ResponseMultiple ChoiceTrue/FalseMatchingFill-in

Extended Written Response Performance Assessment

Page 14: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Formative and summative assessment are interconnected. They seldom stand alone in construction or effect.

The vast majority of genuine formative assessment is informal, with interactive and timely feedback and response.

It is widely and empirically argued that formative assessment has the greatest impact on learning and achievement.

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1. Teachers value and believe in students.2. Sharing learning goals with the students.3. Involving students in self-assessment.4. Providing feedback that helps students

recognize their next steps and how to take them.

5. Being confident that every student can improve.

6. Providing students with examples of what we expect from them.

Values and Attitudes about Assessment

Page 16: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Formative Assessment

Assessment for learningTaken at varying intervals throughout a

course to provide information and feedback that will help improve the quality of student learning the quality of the course itself

Page 17: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

“…learner-centered, teacher-directed, mutually beneficial, formative, context-specific, ongoing, and firmly rooted in good practice" (Angelo and Cross, 1993).

Provides information on what an individual student needsTo practiceTo have re-taughtTo learn next

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Objectives: Grade 7

1.01    Develop and use ratios, proportions, and percents to solve problems.

4.01 Collect, organize, analyze, and display data to solve problems.

Develop an assessment for one or both of the objectives using the Skittles.

Skittles Activity

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1. The identification by teachers & learners of learning goals, intentions or outcomes and criteria for achieving these.

2. Rich conversations between teachers & students that continually build and go deeper.

3. The provision of effective, timely feedback to enable students to advance their learning.

4. The active involvement of students in their own learning.

5. Teachers responding to identified learning needs and strengths by modifying their teaching approach(es).

Black & Wiliam, 1998

Key Elements of Formative Assessment

Page 21: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Summative Assessment

Assessment of learningGenerally taken by students at the end of a unit

or semester to demonstrate the "sum" of what they have or have not learned.

Summative assessment methods are the most traditional way of evaluating student work.

"Good summative assessments--tests and other graded evaluations--must be demonstrably reliable, valid, and free of bias" (Angelo and Cross, 1993).

Page 22: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Formative

‘… often means no more than that the assessment is carried out frequently and is planned at the same time as teaching.’ (Black and Wiliam, 1999)

‘… provides feedback which leads to students recognizing the (learning) gap and closing it … it is forward looking …’ (Harlen, 1998)

‘ … includes both feedback and self-monitoring.’ (Sadler, 1989)

‘… is used essentially to feed back into the teaching and learning process.’ (Tunstall and Gipps, 1996)

Summative

‘…assessment (that) has increasingly been used to sum up learning…’(Black and Wiliam, 1999)

‘… looks at past achievements … adds procedures or tests to existing work ... involves only marking and feedback grades to student … is separated from teaching … is carried out at intervals when achievement has to be summarized and reported.’ (Harlen, 1998)

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If we think of our children as plants …

Summative assessment of the plants is the process of

simply measuring them. It might be interesting to

compare and analyze measurements but, in themselves,

these do not affect the growth of the plants.

Formative assessment, on the other hand, is the

equivalent of feeding and watering the plants appropriate

to their needs - directly affecting their growth.

The Garden Analogy

Page 24: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Factors Inhibiting Assessment

A tendency for teachers to assess quantity and presentation of work rather than quality of learning.

Greater attention given to marking and grading, much of it tending to lower self esteem of students, rather than providing advice for improvement.

A strong emphasis on comparing students with each other, which demoralizes the less successful learners.

Page 25: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Self-evaluation

Where would you place your assessment practice on the

following continuum?

The main focus is on:

Quantity of work/Presentation Quality of learning

Marking/Grading

Comparing students

Advice for improvement

Identifying individual

progress

Page 26: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010
Page 27: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Forms of Summative Assessment

Performance AssessmentPortfolioTraditional TestsNC End of Grade/End of Course Tests

Page 28: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

NC End of Grade/End of Course Test

Go to www.ncpublicschools.orgClick on Testing, Scroll down and click on 2008-

2009 Released FormsScroll down and click on the grade level and

content area you would like to review.Spend the next 20 - 30 minutes taking the test and

checking your answers.Grades k-2 - http://www.ncpublicschools.org/

curriculum/mathematics/elementary/

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Implications for classroom practice

Share learning goals with students.

Involve students in self-assessment.

Provide feedback that helps students recognize their next steps and how to take them.

Be confident that every student can improve.

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Page 31: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Formative Assessment:Cooperative Learning

Think about the characteristics of formative assessment.

Does cooperative learning demonstrate any of these characteristics?

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Cooperative/Collaborative Learning

Cooperative and collaborative learning differ from traditional teaching approaches because students work together rather than compete with each other individually.

Collaborative learning can take place any time students work together (individual and group accountability)

In a world where being a "team player" is often a key part of business success, cooperative learning is a very useful and relevant tool.

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Cooperative/Collaborative Learning

Research suggests that cooperative and collaborative learning bring positive results such as deeper understanding of content, increased overall achievement in grades, improved self-esteem, and higher motivation to remain on task. Cooperative learning helps students become actively and constructively involved in content, to take ownership of their own learning, and to resolve group conflicts and improve teamwork skills.

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Formative Assessment

Observing cooperative learning groups in action allows you to effectively assess students' work and understanding. Cooperative learning groups also offer a unique opportunity for feedback from peers and for self-reflection.

Research has shown that when implemented properly, students in cooperative learning classrooms outperform their peers in traditional classrooms.

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Cooperative Structures

Fan-N-PickPlayed with higher-level

thinking Q cards. #1 fans, #2 picks, #3 answers, #4 praises. Students then rotate roles.

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Cooperative Structures

Numbered Heads TogetherStudents huddle to make sure all can

respond, a number is called, the student with that number responds.Paired Heads Together: Students in pairs

huddle to make sure they both can respond, an “A” or “B” is called, the student with that letter responds.

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Cooperative Structures

Pass a Problem ReviewTeams discuss topic written in the middle of

the map, and then cover with sticky notes.Teams record definitions, synonyms or

antonyms, symbols, graphs, etc. to describe the topic or concept.

With the word covered, the charts are passed to another group to see if they can guess the word.

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Cooperative Structures

ShowdownTeammates each write an answer,

then there is a “showdown” as they show their answers to each other. Teammates verify answers.

Page 39: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Cooperative Structures

Talking ChipsStudents place their chip in the

center each time they talk; they cannot speak again until all chips are in the center and collected.

Page 40: ASSESSMENT: FORMATIVE & SUMMATIVE Practices for the Classroom NC TEACH April 2010

Cooperative Structures

Think-Pair-ShareStudents think about their response to a

question, discuss answers in pairs, and then share their own or partner’s answer with the class.Think-Pair-Square: Same except students

share their answers with teammates rather than with the class.

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Assessment

How can you use cooperative learning activities to effectively assess your students?

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ClosureHow has the information shared today

changed your views/thoughts about assessment?

What questions do you still have regarding assessment?

Do you feel confident that you can add the assessment (s) to your lesson plan to increase effectiveness and assist students in mastery of the intended objectives?