background and context
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Is there a possible mismatch between what we teach about assessment in ITE and what we practice? [email protected]. Background and context. Formative assessment. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Is there a possible
mismatch between what we teach about assessment in ITE and what we practice?
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Background and context
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Assessment for learning is any assessment for which the first priority in its design and practice is to serve the purpose of promoting pupils’ learning. It thus differs from assessment designed primarily to serve the purposes of accountability, or of ranking, or of certifying competence. An assessment activity can help learning if it provides information to be used as feedback, by teachers, and by their pupils, in assessing themselves and each other, to modify the teaching and learning activities in which they are engaged.
Such assessment becomes ‘formative assessment’ when the evidence is actually used to adapt the teaching work to meet learning needs.
Black, Harrison, Lee, Marshall & Wiliam, 2002
Formative assessment
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Key elements:
•Sharing Learning objectives
•Developing success criteria (process and product)
•Use of effective questioning
•Effective feedback
•Pupil self and peer assessment and evaluationAssessment reform group (2002)
…….creating a framework for quality dialogueDiana Pardoe (2008)
Assessment for Learning……..
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Sharing Learning objectives
• Focus on ‘sharing’ – not a meaningless routine
• Focus on the learning• Different types of LO,
chunking the learning - skills/knowledge, process, open, closed
• Unmuddling objectives
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Developing success criteria
• Part of the bigger picture of considering quality
• Negotiated as part of the learning
• Used and referred to – not a tick list
• The ‘light touch’ scaffold
• Linked directly to peer and self assessment
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Effective questioning • No hands up and wait time• Offering range of answers• Giving a starter statement • Starting from the answer • Dialogue not ping pong • Exploratory talk through
paired and group activity • Organisation for dialogue
– pairs, trios, jigsaw etc
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Effective feedback
• On going through the school day
• Informal and formal• Effective marking and
feedback – emotional response
• What’s gone well and why
• What next – why and how.
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Peer and self assessment and evaluation
• Mini plenary/pit stop plenary
• Reflecting using success criteria – beyond the traffic lights and thumbs
• Evaluating the process of the learning – what helped, what didn’t help
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Not all rosy……
• SATs • Data driven practice • Ofsted agenda • Resistance• Time • Uncomfortable
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Higher Education
• Assessment as a single act• Presentations• Essays• Controlled conditions – exams • % marks • Written feedback relating only to the task given –
no easy possibility for feed forward• Modular approach – how do you transfer the
generics and make the links?
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Is there a possible mismatch between what we teach about assessment in
ITE and what we practice?
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Have a look at the responses….sort, group,
discuss
Emerging themes are resonances?
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References • Assessment Reform Group (2002) Assessment for
Learning: Ten Principles [online] Available from: http://www.assessment-reform-group.org.uk [accessed on 3 May 2009]
• Black, P. Harrison, C. Lee, C. Marshall, B. and Wiliam, D. (2002) Working Inside the Black Box London: King’s College School of Education
• Clarke, S. (2003) Enriching feedback in the primary classroom’ London: Hodder&Stoughton
• Clarke, S. (2005) Formative Assessment in Action London: Hodder Murray
• Pardoe, D. (2008) ‘Assessment for learning’ Bristol Head teacher conference. Bristol LA, Bristol. (22.3.08).