Assessment For Learning
Assessment For Learning
Learning is learnable
Yoda on AFL My ally is AFL, and a powerful ally it is. Life creates it, makes it grow. Its energy surrounds us and binds us. Luminous beings are we, not this crude matter. You must feel AFL around you; here, between you, me, the planning, the lesson activity, the reflection, everywhere, yes. Even between the teacher and the student.
Sources http://www.aaia.org.uk/pdf/Publications/AAIA%20Pupils%20Learning%20from%20Teachers'%20Responses.pdf http://www.aaia.org.uk/pdf/Publications/AAIAformat4.pdf http://www.aaia.org.uk/pdf/asst_learning_practice.pdf http://community.tes.co.uk/forums/t/300200.aspx http://www.schoolhistory.co.uk/forum/lofiversion/index.php/t7669.html www.harford.edu/irc/assessment/FormativeAssessmentActivities.doc Paul Black et al, Assessment for Learning, (Open University Press, Maidenhead, 2003) Paul Black et al, Working inside the black box, (nferNelson, London, 2002) Paul Black and Dylan William, Inside the Black Box, (nferNelson, London, 1998) Assessment Reform Group, Testing, Motivation and Learning, (The Assessment Reform Group, Cambridge, 2002) Assessment Reform Group, Assessment for Learning, (The Assessment Reform Group, Cambridge, 1999) My head Other peoples heads
Students write Questions Wait-time Lesson Target Setting Self-assessment Targets Idea Thoughts Devising Questions Improvement Guidance Teach Collaboration X and Y Think through Talking
Students ask Questions Open vs closed Teacher Review One-Sentence Summary Bouncing Learning Journal Comment Follow-up Traffic-Light Revision All you know Discuss Words
Comment-only marking Exemplar Work Student Review Articulate then Answer Wait and recap Redrafting Group feedback Generate and Answer Corrections Communication
Mid-unit assessment Student Marking Traffic Lights Scene-Setting Incorrect Discussion Key features Peer Marking Student Mark-Scheme Laminated Criteria Thoughtful Dialogue
Might Making aims clear 2 stars and a wish Tell your neighbour Muddiest Point Invert the Question Thumbs Group Answers Conveying Progress Feedback Sandwich
What is good?
Talk Partners Regulating Learning Long and Short Term
Self-evaluation
Post-It ABCD Minute Paper
Graphic Organisers
Hands Down Show and Tell Smiley Faces
KWL
Question Stems Active Students Squares
The classroom could have a question box where students drop questions at the end of a lesson. Or, a plenary could involve students writing questions that the class then work on together, or forms the basis of the next lesson.
Comment-only marking
Comment-only marking provides students with a focus for progression instead of a reward or punishment for their ego (as a grade does).
Comments could be made in books, in a table at the front of books, in a learning diary or journal. The latter are helpful for teacher and student to track the progression of comments and see improvement.
Comments should make it clear how the student can improve.
Plan activities and work with feedback in mind let the design assist the process.
Mid-unit assessment
Having an assessment at the end of a unit may not provide time for you to go over areas students have struggled with, or in which there are general misconceptions. Timing assessment during a unit (i.e. lesson 5 of 7) allows time to review, reflect and revisit. It also gives the teacher an opportunity to focus explicitly on areas of weak understanding supported by evidence.
Might
When questioning, insert the word might to give students greater opportunity to think and explore possible answers. e.g.
What is meaning of democracy?
Wait-time
Wait time allows students time to think and therefore to produce answers. Also, not everyone in the class thinks at the same speed or in the same way waiting allows students to build their thoughts and explore what has been asked. 2 types of wait time i) ii) Teacher speaks and then waits before taking student responses. Student response ends and then teacher waits before responding. This gives the student space to elaborate or continue or for another student to respond.
Open vs closed
Closed questions can be useful however are not great at facilitating the use of abstract thinking skills, encouraging talking or eliciting much understanding. Open questions are more likely to do this and thus improve learning. e.g.
Exemplar Work
When setting students a piece of work, show them examples that make it clear what it is they are being asked to do and what they need to do in order to meet the assessment criteria.
Students could mark exemplar work using the assessment criteria. This will help model what is being asked for and how it relates to the process of assessment.
Student Marking
By taking part in the process of assessment, students gain a deeper understanding of topics, the process of assessment and what they are doing in their own work. This helps to make them more aware of what learning is and thus see their own learning in this way. Students could self- or peer- mark homework or assessments. This could be done in pairs or individually with a student-made or official mark-scheme.
Teacher Review
The teacher leads the review of the lesson or unit using questioning to elicit understanding from students. Focus could also fall upon the effectiveness of the lesson at facilitating learning i.e. can students think of ways that it could be altered to improve their learning?
The teacher could model review by evaluating the lesson in relation to their own objectives.
Student Review
Students review their own learning either in groups or individually. This could be done as a plenary, a mini-plenary or as an activity to help planning for future revision or the remainder of the unit.
Traffic Lights
Use traffic lights as a visual means of showing understanding. e.g. Students have red, amber and green cards which they show on their desks or in the air. (red = dont understand, green = totally get it etc.) Students self-assess using traffic lights. The teacher could then record these visually in their mark book. Peer assess presentations etc. with traffic lights
Self-assessment Targets
Students give themselves targets based on their self-assessment. These learning goals could be recorded somewhere and revisited (i.e. inside cover of workbook) They could be compared to teacher targets and the two brought to consensus if different.
Scene-Setting
Set the scene for the lesson by using a big, open question or problemsolving task that requires abstract thinking skills. Anticipate responses and follow-up so as to work these through.
E.g. A lesson on the Vietnam War could begin with the question
Idea Thoughts
When you have received an answer to a question, open up the thinking behind it by asking what others think about the idea.
Bouncing
Bounce answers around the room to build on understanding and have students develop stronger reasoning out of misconceptions. E.g. Jimmy, what do you think of Sandras answer? Sandra, how could you develop Carls answer to include more detail? Carl, how might you combine all weve heard into a single answer?
Incorrect Discussion
Use incorrect answers as a discussion point. Rather then dismissing something because it is wrong, or saying thats interesting etc. Use the misconception in reasoning to draw the process out into the open. This leads to improving on misconceived reasoning and an atmosphere in which it is OK to be Wrong.
Im glad thats the wrong answer lets discuss it
Devising Questions
Devise questions that Challenge common misconceptions Create conflict that requires discussion Explore ambiguity and encourage discussion and clarification
Learning Journal
Create a learning journal in which students can reflect on and review their learning. It could include plenary activities, a target setting chart, aims and goals etc.
Redrafting
Use lesson time to redraft work. This allows students time to focus on the feedback for improvement they have been given.
It also reinforces the value of the feedback and allows them to work at it in a supportive environment.
Key features
When designing written tasks to go alongside oral work, intend for them to develop and show understanding of the key features of what students have learned.
Improvement Guidance
When making comments on pupils work, treat them like guidance showing how the pupil can improve. Develop this by asking students to write in the same way when peer assessing work. Discuss the notion of guidance and how it differs from other types of behaviour (i.e. prescription, admonishment etc.)
Comment Follow-up
Give students opportunities to follow up comments Create time in the lesson to talk to individual students. Have a written dialogue in the students book. Use a comment tracker or targets sheet to formalise the dialogue in a workbook
Group feedback
Group feedback to a teacher concerning peer-assessment of work can help make the teacher aware of learning needs in a manageable way. If a group feeds back then it draws more attention and presents information that has already been ordered and sorted (meaning less repetition for the teacher).
Peer Marking
Students mark each others work according to assessment criteria. Encourages reflection and thought about the learning as well as allowing students to see model work and reason past misconceptions. Opportunities to do this throughout individual lessons and schemes of work.
Thumbs
Check class understanding of what you are teaching by asking them to show their thumbs. Thumbs up = I get it
Teach Collaboration
Peer assessment requires students to act collaboratively. Indeed, AfL is a collaborative enterprise. Therefore, explicitly teach skills of collaboration. This process can be assisted by discussing collaboration with pupils and making it visible as a part of the classroom.
Traffic-Light Revision
When revising a topic or subject, work through the different areas with students and ask them to traffic light according to their grasp of each. Subsequently, students should be able to target their revision more carefully and engage in it actively, rather than simply reviewing everything they have done or reading passively over their entire notes.
Student Mark-Scheme
Ask students to produce their own mark-schemes working individually or in groups. They can then peer- or self-assess work in accordance with these schemes.
Talk about the purpose of a markscheme with students judgement, communication, standardisation etc.
Group Answers
Students work in small groups to agree on answers when tests are returned or in other situations. The process of agreeing should include reasoning over the validity of the consensus answer, as well as reasoned negation of misconceptions or wrong answers.
(small group work increases the surface area of talk in the classroom as opposed to whole class discussions)
Is France a democracy?
becomes
X and Y
Ask students why X is an example of Y e.g. Why is an apple an example of a fruit?
Corrections
Reinforce the focus on redrafting and comment-only marking by insisting on seeing evidence of student corrections on their own work before looking at it (have to allow time for this).
Laminated Criteria
Make laminated, studentfriendly assessment criteria cards.
Conveying Progress
Find a means of using assessment to convey progress to students and thus make what they are doing more meaningful.
Link learning between units Use a learning journal Refer to past targets and highlight where the student is achieving this Have a target chart where it is visible how the student has progressed Link assessment to student goalsetting
Discuss Words
When engaged in discussion take key words and look at them specifically. Discuss how they are being used Is there any ambiguity? Is everyone using the word in the same way?
Communication
Ask students to communicate thinking through different mediums not just writing; drawing, drama, maps, sculpture etc. The medium is the message and therefore circumscribes to some extent how communication can take place. Using alternative mediums allows the teacher to see students understanding from different angles.
Thoughtful Dialogue
Dialogue between teacher and students should be thoughtful, reflective, focussed to evoke and explore understanding, and conducted so that all pupils have an opportunity to express their ideas. (Page 12, Inside the Black Box, Paul Black & Dylan William, nferNelson, 1998) Discuss the quality of dialogue with students and ask them to articulate what its purpose is, why, and how (if necessary) it may be improved).
Feedback Sandwich
Feedback can be delivered in different ways, two feedback sandwiches are i) Positive comment Constructive criticism with explanation of how to improve Positive comment ii) Contextual statement I liked.because. Now/Next time Interactive statement e.g. a question based on the work
What is good?
Spend time ensuring that there is consensus between yourself and the pupils over what makes a piece of work good, and how they are expected to achieve it. Use questions such as Can you tell me what makes a piece of work good? How do you feel about comments? Do you always know what you need to do next/think about? Do you know when you have done a good piece of work?
Self-evaluation
Self-evaluation involves learning how we learn, whereas self-assessment is what we learn. To train pupils in selfevaluation, use questions such as:
Think about what has happened when the learning has taken place What really made you think? What did you find difficult? What do you need more help with? What are you pleased about? What have you learnt new about X? How would you change the learning activity to suit another class?
The teacher can model answers to these to show the pupils how to self-evaluate.
Graphic Organisers
Use graphic organisers to help pupils self-assess.
KWL
At the beginning of a topic pupils create a grid with three columns What They Know; What They Want To Know; What They Have Learnt. They begin by brainstorming and filling in the first two columns and then return to the third at the end of the unit (or refer throughout) .
Talk Partners
As a plenary or a starter referring to the last lesson, pupils share with a partner: 3 new things they have learnt What they found easy What they found difficult Something they would like to learn in the future
Post-It
Use post-it notes to evaluate learning. Groups, pairs or individuals can answer: What have I learnt? What have I found easy? What have I found difficult? What do I want to know now?
Response Partners
Paired or partnership oral marking. Pupils invite a partner or a group to discuss or comment on their work.
For it to be effective, students should be aware of learning objectives and success criteria. They should also appreciate the role of a response partner to offer positive and constructive feedback around the learning goals.
Students could be given prompt questions to ask the person who has done the work.
Hands Down
Tell pupils they should only raise their hand to ask a question, not to answer one. The teacher then chooses pupils to answer, therefore gaining information on whether everyone is learning. www.classtools.net fruit machine programme on here where you can input names, save it and play it to choose pupils at random. Write names on lollipop sticks and pull out at random to answer. Write numbers on balls or counters that tally to register or seating position and reuse with every class.
Regulating Learning
Circulating through the room whilst students are engaged in an activity means the teacher can collect information on learning, employ different assessment strategies and intervene where appropriate.
ABCD
Laminate a set of cards so every member of the class has four, with A,B,C and D written on them. Ask questions with four answers and pupils can show you their answer.
Why is it best?
For homework ask students to find their best piece of work and then to tell you why it is their best. This explanation could refer to success criteria, levels, targets etc.
Active Students
Key to AfL is students being active, engaged participants in their learning. Think of ways in which content can be manipulated for these ends, rather than the other way round.
If the content seems boring then make the approach fun or interesting.
Minute Paper
Students identify the most significant (useful, meaningful, unlikely) thing they have learnt during the lesson or unit.
Enquiry Question
Use an enquiry question to stimulate high-level thinking in the lesson or unit. e.g.
Smiley Faces
Students draw smiley faces to indicate how comfortable they are with the topic.
Ready to move on
Squares
When a pupil has finished a piece of work they draw a square on the page. If they do not understand the work they colour it red, if they are so-so then yellow and if A-OK the green.
Muddiest Point
Students write down one or two points on which they are least clear. This could be from the previous lesson, the rest of the unit, the preceding activity etc. The teacher and class can then seek to remedy the muddiness.
One-Sentence Summary
Students write a sentence summarising their knowledge of a topic. The sentence could have to include who, what when, why, how, where etc. The sentences could then be peerassessed, re-drafted and so on.