To help us work towards our school goal of improving our understanding and practice of assessment, my principal has provided our staff with a copy of Classroom Assessment for Student Learning: Doing it Right - Using it Well, by Jan Chappuis, Rick Stiggins, Steve Chappuis, and Judith Arter. As I make my way through the book, I will be summarizing my learning as a means of organizing my thoughts and getting clarification on particular ideas.
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Classroom Assessment for Student Learning Cover. (Accessed 2016). Uploaded to Amazon; Pearson Education. Available online at: https://www.amazon.ca/Classroom-Assessment-Student-Learning-Doing/dp/0132685884 |
Chapter 8 - Personal Communication
* individual students' personalities, comfort level, language background, etc can influence the effectiveness of this assessment option
Sampling - Gathering Enough Evidence
- how complex/broad is the learning target?
- is the purpose of the assessment formative or summative?
- there are no rules on how many questions to ask; use your professional judgement
Sampling - Hearing from Students
- it is not often that students will participate equally in a group setting
- call on all students (not just those who raise their hand), use clickers, personal whiteboards, etc
Wait Time
- allow students time to think before demanding answers
- reflection allows for more engagement
Instructional Q's & A's
- commonly used during lessons; formative purpose
- be sure to plan questions ahead of time
- be specific if looking for reasoning targets
- encourage more detail, ask for elaboration, build off of other responses
- just keep the conversation flowing!
- Questions for learning
1 ) ask Qs specifically about key points of the target
2 ) students should respond to each other
3 ) model types of responses for students (speculate, reflect, admit you don't know)
4 ) show how different verbs get different answers
* this is not recommended for summative assessment
Class Discussions
- structured conversations; formative or summative purpose
- be sure to plan questions ahead of time
- develop quality checklists or rubrics (see Ch. 7)
- don't rely on your memory; make sure you are recording student responses
- Discussions for learning
* use the 7 strategies for formative assessment
Conferences & Interviews
- often used informally while circulating around the room; formative
- don't need to be used with every students, just those we need more evidence from; use your professional judgement
- be sure to plan questions ahead of time
- avoid "yes & no" questions
- have samples available to clarify
- give students time to prepare
- provide time to review what was shared before concluding the discussion
Oral Exams
- use low level vocabulary
- use 1 set of questions with all students
- develop quality checklists or rubrics
- record and reassess if needed
Journals & Logs
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