assessment & self regulated learning. weighing the pig does not increase the weight of the pig

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Assessment & Self Regulated Learning

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Page 1: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Assessment & Self Regulated Learning

Page 2: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig
Page 3: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Page 4: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Agenda

• Three Students• Instructional Repertoire: CBAM• Instructional Repertoire: Effect Size• Instructional Repertoire: Bloom’s Tax.• Current Research on Instruction

Page 5: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Student 1

Karen is a kind, thoughtful grade-8 student who loves to learn. That said, she has no idea how to function effectively in groups; her teacher puts them in groups at time, but the groups are always to big and end up being friendship groups. Usually one or two kids take over and do all the work. She has never heard of Bloom’s taxonomy and has no idea about social communication or critical thinking skills. Her teacher will at times use rubrics to score their learning.

Page 6: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Student 2

Michael is kind, thoughtful grade-8 student whose teacher is employing Tribes in the classroom. He is developing the skills to work more effectively in groups. They are working on attentive listening and mutual respect. His teacher has begun teaching them Bloom’s taxonomy, but he is finding it a bit difficult, but is starting to get it. The teacher consistently uses rubrics and explains them before the assignment in which it will be used. Last week they worked in a group to design their own rubric to assess their learning.

Page 7: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Student 3Susan is a kind, thoughtful grade-8 student who has developed a deep level of skill in effective group work; she works independently and cooperatively on projects; she understands Blooms Taxonomy and always determines the cognitive demand of questions prior to responding to a question. She designs her own writing rubrics to self assess her learning. She has an extensive repertoire of social, communication, and critical thinking skills that she invokes by choice and not by default. She is part of a group of three that self assess their understanding prior to beginning a task.

Page 8: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Three Assessment Lenses:Connect these to the 3 Students

1. Assessment ‘of’ Learning – Summative assessment/evaluation at the end of a unit of study or end of a course

2. Assessment ‘for’ Learning – Formative assessment/feedback provided during the learning – influenced by the teacher, but can also be done by the students

3. Assessment ‘as’ Learning – Formative assessment/feedback where Students assess their own work; facilitated by the teacher

Page 9: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Instructional Repertoire: CBAM

• Non User• Orientation• Preparation• Mechanical – no student benefit• Routine – beginning to get benefit• Refined – becoming more powerful• Integrative – most powerful

Page 10: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Instructional Repertoire: Significance

• Significance .05, .01, .001 (95/100, 1/100, 1/1000)

• The Problem with significance – controlled by ‘n’ (sample size) – throw out ‘good’ stuff

• Strength: Gives you ‘confidence’

Page 11: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Instructional Repertoire: Effect Size

• Shows the mean score difference between the experimental group and the control group

• Tells us ‘How Much of a Difference’• The Problem with Effect Size – false

confidence

Page 12: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Effect Size

Page 13: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Instructional Repertoire: Bloom’s Tax

• Synthesis• Evaluation• Analysis• Application• Comprehension• Recall

The higher the level of thinking the longer students retain information

They are also more motivated to learn at the more complex levels

Page 14: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

The levels are everywhere …

Page 15: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Focus on Bloom’s Taxonomy

Side A• Ranking Ladder• Venn Diagram• Concept Attainment• Mind Maps• PMI• Academic Controversy• Group Investigation• Concept Maps• Flow Charts

Side B• Framing Questions• Think Pair Share• Place Mat• Jigsaw• Lecture• 5 Basic Elements• Teams Games Tournaments• KWL chart

Page 16: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Current Research on Instruction

• Number one predictor of student achievement … teacher’s instructional repertoire

• Number two predictor of student achievement … principal’s support of teachers becoming instructionally skilled

(Leithwood et al., 2009)

Page 17: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Current Research on InstructionArticle: Four Drivers of Change

1. foster intrinsic motivation of teachers & students2. engage educators and students in continuous improvement of instruction and learning3. inspire collective or team work4. affect all teachers and students – 100 %

(Fullan, 2012)

Page 18: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Current Research on Instruction9 Strong Claims (2012)

1. Effective pedagogies give serious consideration to pupil voice (SRLearning)2. Effective pedagogies depend on behaviour (what teachers do), knowledge and understanding (what teachers know) and beliefs (why teachers act as they do). 3. Effective pedagogies involve clear thinking about longer term learning outcomes as well as short-term goals.

Page 19: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Current Research on Instruction9 Strong Claims (2012)

4. Effective pedagogies build on pupils’ prior learning and experience.

5. Effective pedagogies involve scaffolding pupil learning. 6. Effective pedagogies involve a range of techniques, including whole-class and structured group work, guided learning and

individual activity.

Page 20: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Current Research on Instruction9 Strong Claims

7. Effective pedagogies focus on developing higher order thinking and

metacognition, and make good use of dialogue and questioning in order to do so. 8. Effective pedagogies embed assessment for learning. 9. Effective pedagogies are inclusive and take the diverse needs of a range of learners, as well as matters of student equity, into account.

Page 21: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Feedback

Page 22: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig

Feedback

Page 23: Assessment & Self Regulated Learning. Weighing the Pig Does Not Increase the Weight of the Pig