assessment and reporting in the primary school 2015-2016 thursday 8th october

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Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015- 2016 Thursday 8th October

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Page 1: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016Thursday 8th October

Page 2: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Aims

1. Examine types of assessment, their uses and importance to learning

2. Explain the assessments used in Primary

3. Share Assessment and Reporting Cycle for Primary

4. What is important for Reporting? Direction of developments.

Page 3: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Introduction – importance of assessment

The Learning Cycle

Plan

Teach

ReviewAssessme

nt

Page 4: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Part 1

Types of assessment, their uses and importance to learning

Page 5: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Summative Assessment

This is:

✓Assessment OF Learning

✓Most commonly identified - often seen as ‘real’ assessment

✓Summative assessment is a snapshot test at a given moment in time that relies on specific, limited tasks (tests).

✓It is the process of measuring students at a particular moment in time (end of unit, term or year)

Page 6: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Summative AssessmentIts strengths are:

✓Useful for comparison and analysis – standardised against external norms

✓Reliable and repeatable for all who do them

✓Indicates general trends such as areas of strength and areas to develop for particular groups, years, classes

✓Helps measure progress of recall over a set period. Focused on knowledge

Page 7: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Summative AssessmentIts drawbacks are:

✓Tests cannot reflect everything taught - narrow and focus on what’s easy to assess (usually knowledge based)

✓Teachers can feel pressure to teach to the test narrowing what children learn

✓Gives a picture of where a child is at, but not how to get to the next stage

✓Opportunities for correcting misconceptions have passed

Page 8: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Indicative / Cognitive AssessmentThis is:

✓A form of Assessment OF Learning that focuses on future ‘potential’

✓A bank of tests that focuses on 4 cognitive areas (verbal, non-verbal, spatial and quantitative)

✓Used to identify basic reasoning abilities not what they have been taught

✓Useful as it can give an indication of future attainment

✓Not based on curriculum taught so can be different to actual attainment

✓Based upon norms in the UK so it does not always account for EAL profile

Page 9: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Formative Assessment

“Assessment for Learning is the process of seeking and interpreting evidence for use by learners and their teachers to decide where the learners are in their learning, where they need to go and how best to get there.”

(Assessment Reform Group, 2002)

Page 10: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Formative AssessmentIt is:

✓Assessment FOR learning

✓Gathering evidence from a variety of sources over a longer period of time to measure attainment and achievement

✓On-going assessment (integral part of teaching and learning) within the classroom that happens every second/minute/lesson/day

✓Marking (written / verbal feedback), questioning, discussing

Page 11: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Formative AssessmentIts strengths are:

✓It identifies misconceptions immediately and allows instant work on those things

✓Informs the next steps in a child’s learning journey.

✓It is focused and specific to the individual and what they need to progress

✓It takes into account variable performance across a range of tasks

✓It covers more of what a child knows, can do and understands across a larger amount of the curriculum

Page 12: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Formative AssessmentIts drawbacks are:

✓It is not easily comparable across groups of children – it is about what an individual needs

✓It is not repeatable – what works for one child doesn’t always work for another

✓It is difficult to track and moderate

Page 13: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Formative versus Summative Assessment

An example:

136 + 178 =

136 + 100 = 236

236 + 70 = 296

296 + 8 = 304

✓On a Summative assessment at the end of a unit this is simply wrong! It tells us that they have not got a secure grip of the learning? However, it is too late to diagnose fully or improve. It can inform future planning only.

✓For on-going Formative assessment, the teachers identifies this through marking or as they move around in a lesson this is an opportunity to discuss/share, find out what is wrong, teach how to correct and have another go.

Page 14: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Four key aspects of AFLSharing clear learning intentions and success criteria –opens a dialogue of success and improvement

Effective questioning –asking

challenging questions, questions that are worth asking

Effective feedback –focus on the

learning objective, indicate successes, give specific improvement suggestions, allow time for improvements

Pupil Self evaluation –use success

criteria as a constant reminder during lessons, for checking against work, for deciding best achievement and improvement possibilities

Page 15: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Best Practice in Assessment

Use a balance of Summative and Formative Assessment!

Page 16: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Part 2

Assessments used in Primary(measuring attainment and achievement – progress)

Page 17: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Attainment and Achievement✓ Attainment - BSJ currently uses attainment levels which go from

Key Stage 1 (Y1) to Key Stage 3 (Y9)

✓ Each level has criterion statements to measure against

✓ These criterion are broad so they are divided into sub levels c, b and a

✓ Achievement - the progress the pupils make through the attainment levels

✓ Each attainment level normally takes around two years to complete

✓ Rates of progress can and do fluctuate – all children are different and age is a factor in progress

Page 18: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Achievement - Progress✓ For example, it is expected that a student will make

two levels of attainment from the beginning of Y3 to the end of Y6

✓ If entering Y3 with Level 2B (expected level at end of Y2), they should achieve at least Level 4B at the end of Y6 (expected level)

Page 19: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Expected Achievement - Progress

Page 20: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Assessments used

To assess where a child is we use a combination of both Summative and

Formative assessment (test result and teacher judgement)

Page 21: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

What formative methods do we use to assess? Why?

We use structured criterion scales (APP/Big Writing/ILD). These:

✓develop and refine teachers’ understanding of progression

✓provide information about strengths and weaknesses

✓enable teachers to track pupils’ progress over time ✓inform curriculum planning

✓help targets to be set and then shared with pupils/parents ✓promote teaching that is matched to pupils’ needs

Page 22: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

What formative methods do we use to assess? Why?

Page 23: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

✓ GL - Progress Test in Mathematics/English (PTM/PTE) - at the end of the year in Y2 to Y6 (and on entry)

✓ CEM - (Aspects/BASE/PIPS) – at the end of the year in FS2 and Y1

✓ GL - Cognitive Abilities Test (CAT) - at beginning of Y3 and Y6 (and on entry)

✓ Mathematics and Reading Assessments – at end of each term in Y1 to Y6

✓ Writing Assessment – 2 pieces a term / mixed genres

What formal summative methods do we use to support / standardise formative assessment?

Page 24: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

✓ Spelling of high frequency words

✓ Letters and Sounds phonic assessments

✓ End of unit assessments for mathematics

✓ Mental mathematics assessments

✓ Times tables / Key Facts assessments

✓ Etc.

These are at the teachers’ discretion and choice as part of the teaching cycle.

Other smaller, short term assessments are used…

Page 25: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Part 3

Assessment and Reporting Cycle for Primary

Page 26: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October
Page 27: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Tracking and target setting✓ Three times a year, assessments in mathematics, reading

and writing are formally moderated and analysed as a whole school

✓ Using the assessment evidence a pupil’s progress is tracked to ascertain if they are on target to achieve age appropriate and predicted attainment levels

✓ Intervention programmes are put in place for targeted groups and individuals

Page 28: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Reporting to Parents✓ Written Reports are issued twice a year: Mid-Year Report in

January and End of Year Report in June

✓ Parent Consultations occur twice a year - Target setting meeting in first half term and Progress Meeting at end of Term 2

✓ Celebration of Learning days occur at the end of Term1 & 3

✓ Meeting with teachers can be organised at other times as required by the teacher or parent (good communication between teacher and parent is crucial)

Page 29: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Part 4

What is important for Reporting? Developments

Page 30: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

BSJ Learner Profile IPC Personal Goals

Report Review

Page 31: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Report Review

Page 32: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Report ReviewWhat should be reported on and in what format? Our thoughts.

✓Academic areas

✓Attendance

✓Personal and Social development

✓Habits that improve learning

✓Children report on themselves

✓Targets / Next Steps are set

Questions:

✓Should there be lots of written comments?

✓Should there be tables / charts / matrices?

✓Should there be effort / progress / attainment?

Page 33: Assessment and Reporting in the Primary School 2015-2016 Thursday 8th October

Thank You