Tag Archives: Assessment

LLED 320 – What You Wanted to Know & Motivation: Update for Thursday, 8 March 2012

After Rod Brown’s presentation on your upcoming long practicum, we had about 2.5 hours left to do some LLEDing.  Here’s what we wedged in:

What You Wanted to Know

Last class I asked you on an exit slip to mention one item you wanted to know more about.  I compiled the list and touched on a few of those items in this session:

Funny Spinal Tap Quotes & Puppet Shows

Hey, you asked for it…

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lku6S24pWSU[/youtube]

Assessment and Evaluation

I showed the assessment sheet I used in my Humanities 8 class.  Here it is:

Universal Design

I mentioned that the Student Diversity text and my own teaching tried to model the principles of Universal Design – building lessons that allow learners of all abilities and types to succeed without the need for post-lesson “retrofitting” – as a way to meet the needs of EAL learners.

Math Resources

I suggested that you seek out the work of two prominent Math educators:

  • Marilyn Burns – Her books are awesome – check out the classic Math for Smarty Pants – and her Math Solutions website is chock full of Math goodness for Middle Years educators.  C’mon…who can resist the Algebra Zapping Zombies lesson posted on her site?
  • John van de Walle – According to his biography on the NCTM website, he “was a well-known mathematics educator and the author of Elementary and Middle School Mathematics: Teaching Developmentally, a book that continues to be a popular text and resource for teaching grades K–8 mathematics.”  I urge you to check out one of his many other books on Math Ed, as well.

Getting Ready for Prac

I forgot to show this in class but I think it’s important to post up a copy of the UBC Performance Checklist – a document that is filled out by advisors at the mid-point and final conferences:

Motivation

Several of you were curious about how to motivate some of the learners in your classroom.  Seeing as I thought looking at this topic might be useful as you looked ahead to prac, here’s where we spent the majority of our energies for the rest of this session.  We used this process:

  1. 2-Minute write on “What motivates you to do something?”
  2. Debrief
  3. Read & rank the research’s six characteristics of motivation – success, concern, meaning, positive feeling tone, interest, knowledge of results
  4. Poster & present

That’s all for today.

– LH

UBC on iTunes U has Zerbe’s Assessment Lecture from 2011

While the teacher strike led to the cancellation of Richard Zerbe’s lecture on assessment, all is not lost.  The good folks in CMS videotaped last year’s presentation and have posted it in iTunes U for free viewing by all.  Directions for finding the video podcast – courtesy of Amanda, one of last year’s TCs – are below:

“The podcast of his presentation can be found by visiting UBC on iTunes U tand clicking the button that reads “Launch UBC On iTunes U”.  From here scroll down and click on “Education, Faculty of”, then click on “Courses“, and then click on the tab that reads “POT/COMM”.

Enjoy Richard’s engaging, humourous, and informative lecture.

– Lawrence

LLED 320 – Reassessing Assessment, WHERETO, and Lit Circles: Update for Thursday, 23 February 2012

Learning Intentions

By the end of you lesson I hope that you can…

  • Get answers to some of your assessment questions
  • Understand the WHERETO elements in a unit’s lesson sequence
  • Experience one way to teach the Say Something strategy
  • Participate in a Lit Circle discussion group
  • Start your final 320 task – the Lit Circles Journal
  • Experience Six Thinking Hats approach to content analysis
  • Critically consider the pedagogy of Whole Class Novel studies

As it turns out, we didn’t get to the last two.  We should be able to wedge those in during our next session.  Here’s what we did fit in:

Reassessing Assessment

I took some time to answer some assessment-related questions you had about in a previous lesson and questions related to your writing assessment tasks.  In my responses, I referenced Ministry of Education documents that can be found on the Ministry’s Classroom Assessment and Student Reporting page.  In particular, I mentioned ideas in these two documents:

There’s a lot more good stuff here.  Don’t be shy and wait until your summer assessment course to dip into this material 🙂

Unit Planning Call Back

The UBD unit planning template I’m suggesting you use for your LLED 320 Integrated Unit Plan mentions the acronym WHERETO in Stage 3 – Learning Plan.  Today we took some time to unpack the elements of WHERETO – in essence, “the key elements that should be found in your learning plan” (Understanding By Design Professional Development Workbook, p. 214).  Here’s a summary:

and here’s the package we worked with in class:

We used a moving tableau strategy to process the material.  Here’s how it worked:

  1. Form a group of 4
  2. Randomly choose a WHERETO letter
  3. Read the information relating to your chosen letter
  4. Come up with 2 or 3 key ideas related to your section.   Ask yourself, what do my classmates really need to know about this WHERETO letter?
  5. Design and rehearse a scene involving tableau and movement – but NO speaking – to visually represent the key ideas from the section
  6. Present and explain your movement piece.

Here are a few shots to summarize your take on the WHERETO elements (Thanks to John and Eric M.):

Reading Fiction – Literature Circles

The Lit Circles model is based on research on what helps students improve as readers:

Here’s how we engaged in the Lit Circles process.  The approach we’re using is the one advocated by Faye Brownlie in the Student Diversity text.  You can get more details in her book Grand Conversations, Thoughtful Responses: A Unique Approach to Literature Circles and in a webcast hosted by the BC Ministry of Education – the same webcast I showed clips from in class today.

Reading Time

I gave you some time to read, exchange books, and find a passage to “sticky note” for sharing in your discussion group.

Getting Started: Learning the Say Something Strategy

Left to their own devices, the students will not spontaneously have great conversations about the texts they are reading.  They must be equipped (Hello, WHERETO!) with the skills for conducting thoughtful conversations.

A great way to develop these skills – a way that has the added benefit of getting students excited about a new box of thematic books –  is to read and consider a poem on the theme.  I modeled that by using the Story Behind the Poem strategy to analyze the poem Invictus by William Ernest Henley.

Here’s the recipe for the Story Behind the Poem strategy I used:

Here’s the handout for the poem.  It’s set up to accommodate the SBTP sketching:

Below is the scene from the movie Invictus that features the poem prominently.  According to the movie’s production notes:

“In the film, Mandela calls upon Pienaar (the captain of the South African national rugby team, the Sprinboks, in 1995) to lead his team to greatness, citing a poem that was a source of inspiration and strength to him during his years in prison.  It is later revealed that the poem is “Invictus,” by William Ernest Henley.  The title is translated to mean “unconquered,” which, Eastwood (film director, Clint Eastwood) says, “doesn’t represent any one character element of the story.  It takes on a broader meaning over the course of the film.”

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FozhZHuAcCs[/youtube]

When you’d had time to gather your thoughts on the poem, I asked a few of you  to Say Something – your connections, questions, imrages that emerge – about the poem.

Say Something is an easy, fun, and interesting strategy that should support effective discussions in the book-based discussion groups. [OK, we didn’t actually do this part because we were short on time but this is what it could look like in a middle school classroom – LH]

Brownlie suggests reminding students of the criteria for effective group discussions at the start of the Say Something and reviewing the criteria again at the end:

  • all voices must be included
  • all students must feel included
  • all students must have their ideas respected
  • the discussion should move us to new understandings

Lit Circle Discussion Group

I modeled a Lit Circle conversation with the members of The Holes reading group and utilizing a Fishbowl strategy.  After a quick debrief, I asked each reading group to meet and engage in a similar conversation.  The discussions were lively and could have run much longer than the time we had left in class.  They used a modified First Turn / Last Turn process that worked like this:

  • Group members mentioned how far they’d read in the book (to make it less likely that one speaker would “spill the beans”)
  • One participant read a sticky note and explained their choice
  • Group members took turns speaking with NO cross talk
  • When everyone had had a go speaking, it was time for free-for-all conversation
  • The process was repeated with a new person reading one of their sticky notes.

Lit Circles: Double-Entry Journal Task

One During-Reading activity that really promotes thoughtful engagement with lit circle books is journaling.  In an effort to model this process with you, I’m asking you to keep a Double-Entry Journal as a means to consider the Lit Circle activities we’re engaging in during class time.  The task will be completed in class and it’s due on Thursday, 1 March 2012.  Here’s the handout:

To this point you had experienced:

  • Book Talks
  • Wide Variety of Books
  • Time to Read (in class and at home)
  • Sticky Notes
  • The Story Behind the Poem
  • Say Something
  • Discussion Groups

I asked you to choose two of those ideas and to give me your thoughts on them in the My Thinking side of the journal.  We took 10 or so minutes in class to do this.

We didn’t have time to get to our Six Hats Thinking on Chapter 6: The Whole Class Novel so that conversation will have to wait until next week.

Cheers,

– Lawrence

Inquiry One-Pager, Administrivia, and Unit Planning: Update for Wednesday, 23 November 2011

Inquiry One-Pager

We’ve spent a lot of time this term considering the nature of inquiry and the shape of powerful inquiry questions.  At long last the time has come for you to make a tentative commitment to a question and jot down some ideas about it.  The vehicle for this exercise is the Inquiry Project One-Pager. Here’s the handout:

Once you’ve completed the four questions on this sheet, please cut your writing and paste it into a post on the Initial Inquiry Questions section of our EDUC 310 VISTA site.

Dave and I realize that your question will evolve over time – most likely in response to your experiences on your 2-week prac.  That said we’re looking for a general sense of the direction your inquiry might take at this stage in the game.  Your one-pager is to be posted on EDUC 310 VISTA site by Wednesday, 30 November 2011.

Administriiva

  • EDUC 315 TC Feedback Form: Please complete this form (found in the Get Yer Forms! post below) and submit it to your FA by Friday, 25 November 2011.
  • SRL Consent Forms: Please complete this form and submit it to your FA by Monday, 28 November 2011.
  • LLED 320 Timetable: We agreed to shift the time of our LLED 320 class.  Thanks for your input.
  • LLED 320 Writing Samples: I asked you to grab 4 or 5 samples of student writing that you can use for a writing assessment task in LLED 320 class.  The best pieces for this task are paragraphs, essays, poems, short stories, or any other piece that involves students writing half a page or more.  Please gather these samples from work you do on your 2-week prac or from work your SA does (of has done).   Please bring these pieces to our first LLED 320 class in the third week of January 2012.

Unit Planning

After showing you the UBD unit planning template  (also in the Get Yer Forms! post below) and reminding you that your draft unit plan and full lesson plans for the first two lessons must be submitted by email to your SA and FA by Monday, 5 December 2011, I spent some time presenting a slideshow on assessment.  Here’s that PPT slideshow:

And here’s the video clip I showed to wrap my presentation that speaks to the anonymity of standardized testing:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2NfuniN0Sdg[/youtube]

See you on Monday.

– LH

Little u & BIG U Understandings and Assessment: Update for Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Administrivia


  • LLED 320 Timetable (Term 2): I proposed an alteration to the LLED 320 timetable.  I’ll confirm that it works for you in next Wednesday’s class
  • 2-Week Prac Unit Plan Conference Schedule: We passed around the sign up sheet.  Conferences are held with your FA.  The goal of this meeting is to help you get your head around your upcoming unit by clarifying your KUD and possible assessment.  Please bring your completed KUD table and any ideas you have on how to assess the degree to which your students grasp the KUD
  • 2-Week Prac Unit Plan Template: Here is a copy of the unit plan template Dave and I suggest that you use: UBD Unit Plan Template – Nov 11

KUD & Assessment

Rather than give you a long blurb on the connection between KUD and assessment, I thought I’d let you see an example of how results and assessment are connected and let you draw some conclusions from that experience.  So, here’s what we did:

  1. Looked over the handout: KUD, Performance Tasks, and Differentiating Instruction found here: KUD, Performance Tasks, and DI Handout.  The example related to a Science unit on weather.
  2. Considered what KUD students would need to have worked with in order to complete the assessment task.
  3. Designed another task based on the same KUD that used a different scenario

My goal here was to further clarify your understanding of KUD and show how it’s connected to assessment.  More to come on this in next Wednesday’s class.

– Lawrence

EDUC 310 – Richard Zerbe Assessment FOR Learning Lecture: Update for Monday, 7 March 2011

I hope you enjoyed Zerbe’s lecture this morning.  Here’s the link to his Prezi:

Also, here’s a link to a research article related to John Hattie’s Visible Learning book, a text that came up numerous times during Zerbe’s presentation.

Cheers,

– Lawrence

Sims Says, Assessment Evidence, & 315 Bits and Pieces: Update for Wednesday, 24 November 2010

“Sims Says Inquiry Is…”

We started class by considering the EDUC 310 Inquiry Task.  I used a PPT slideshow to structure the lesson, and the presentation aimed to answer three key questions:

  • What are the qualities of teacher inquiry?
  • What’s involved in the inquiry project?
  • What constitutes a good inquiry question?

After recalling your prior inquiry-related knowledge to answer the first question and picking out a few highlights from the EDUC 310 Course Outline and elsewhere to address the second, we discussed the attributes of a powerful inquiry question through the lens of the article “How My Question Keeps Evolving” by Michele Sims.

Here’s the slideshow that supported this lesson:

At the end of this class, I assigned the exit slip – completing the EDUC 310 Inquiry Project One Pager – MIDDLE YEARS COHORT.   On the front of the page are some questions to stimulate thinking about research questions, if you’re stuck at the moment, and some sample questions drafted by Elementary TCs.  On the back of the page are four questions that you need to answer on the handout and bring to class on Wednesday, 2 December 2010.  Please note that, in a manner similar to what Sims experienced, this question may evolve as you think on it and as you spend more time in the field.

If, as Confucius declared, “A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step,” consider this your first, tentative foot forward.  A baby step. if you please.

Oh, that reminds me.  Here’s how Bob (Bill Murray) “baby steps” in the comedy opus, What About Bob?:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p3JPa2mvSQ4[/youtube]

Bob sails, too:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YrbY4hsNh64&feature=related[/youtube]

Here’s the one-pager in electronic form:

In the end, let’s hope your inquiry proceeds more smoothly than this woman’s:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5FRVvjGL2C0[/youtube]

UBD Stage 2 – Assessment Evidence

In preparation for the completion of the unit plan you’ll use on your 2-Week Prac, I presented some information related to the assessment of your desired results via this PPT slideshow:

Here are a few key slides from that presentation, for your reference:

Lastly, here’s a good case for assessing beyond the test:

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCuHTMHRBS4&feature=related[/youtube]

Bob and I will be meeting with you on Monday to discuss your unit planning. All meetings are in SCARFE 1310.  Please bring:

  • Your completed Desired Results
  • Your thoughts on possible assessment tools
  • Any key resources that you may use in your teaching to this meeting.

The Conference Schedule is in the previous post.

At the end of class, I asked you to pick up a handout with samples of and information on how to create engaging and well-constructed Performance Tasks.  Here’s that handout if you didn’t get one or if your dog ate it:

Check out this link for a website with more details on Performance Tasks. For even more info, use Google to search the Interwebs using search terms such as: “performance task” “rich task” “authentic assessment” and “authentic education”.

I did that and found this site – Authentic Assessment Toolbox – that has a huge collection of information on PTs, including a bunch of tasks created for all subject areas in middle school.  Here’s a screenshot so you can see what’s on offer:

That’s all for now.  Bob and I look forward to meeting with you on Monday.

‘Til then,

– Lawrence