The 5 Minute Marking Plan

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Some Questions? What is Assessment for Learning?
Advertisements

Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol
Completing the cycle: an investigation of structured reflection as a tool to encourage student engagement with feedback Jackie Pates Lancaster Environment.
Assessment for Learning Tools and Activities. Links to Tools and Activities Comment-only marking Exemplar Work Student Marking Traffic Lights Self-assessment.
The 5 Minute Marking Plan The big picture? (The purpose of marking for this piece of work / project?) Key marking points to share with students? Common.
Effective Use of Assessment and Data Winterhill School – October 2014.
Footloose Feedback.
Copyright Licence This #5MinPlan (Stephen Tierney) (Ross Morrison McGill)Stephen TierneyRoss Morrison McGill is licensed.
Month BeforeWeek BeforeDay Before The 5 Minute CPD Plan ….print and scribble your way to a well planned INSET Day or CPD Session The BIG Picture Stephen.
Stephen Tierney & Ross The 5 Minute Achievement Plan ….print and scribble your way to Greater Student Achievement.
Peer Assessment Slides Use the following slides to provide a platform for ‘assessment for learning’ in your classroom. This PowerPoint has was produced.
By. A Walk Through Step by step. Planning stage: Big Picture 1.What is the purpose of marking for this scheme of learning/project? 2.What won’t you mark.
Why bother giving feedback?. How not to provide feedback?
Marking has two core purposes. One, students act on feedback and make progress over time. Two, it informs future planning and teaching. Marking has two.
Why do we mark children’s work? More to the point why do they think we mark their work?
Assessment and reporting
“Planning is not about writing endless amounts but more about a thought process” NCSL All lessons at school should be planned. “If we aim for nothing,
Week four, Term Two: what’s going well?
Welcome Feedback Policy
Feed Forward An Approach to Marking from PIXL contributor
VLC Training 2014 Steve Walker
Advanced Higher Modern Languages
GCSE Mathematics Revision 2016/2017
Using this Communications Template
The 5 Minute Marking Plan
EFFECTIVE LESSON PLANNING Teacher Academy
Assessment without levels
Effective A Level languages teaching (ALM1)
In-Service Teacher Training
The Learning Cycle 1 Prepare for learning 2 6 Review – Step back
A2 Pupils make significant progress in Geography
Year 7 E-Me Web design.
Jake Wilson, Action Research Fellowship King Alfred’s Academy
Arrival (Brainwarmers)
1.
Understanding how to peer and self assess
A guide to Paper 1: EDEXCEL certificate English language
PERFORMING ARTS DANCE.
The 5 Minute CPD Plan Stick-ability Structure Outcomes Speakers
The 5 Minute Results Analysis
The 5 Minute Results Analysis
Teaching as Inquiry 2017:  We are evaluators. We assess our impact.
The 5 Minute Results Analysis
Final Research Question
Introduction. Conducting statistical investigations to develop learner statistical thinking.
Feedback and Engagement Policy and Practice
Welcome to Quintin Kynaston Aspiration – Resilience - Community
The 5 Minute Marking Plan
Welcome to Year 10 Information Evening
What is the purpose of it?
Building a relationship with your supervisor
The 5 Minute Behaviour St. Mary’s
(Guidance – Ofsted, updated 12 April 2018,
GCSE Revision In response to a large number of Y11 students asking for advice on how to revise….. Introduction & revision planning Revision techniques.
Using Fresh Grade as Tool to Communicate Student Learning
Year 11 GCSE Revision.
Renewing our Energy Choices Lesson 1
Metacognitive Strategies to help Year 11 Students to Solve Problem Solving Questions in the new GCSE.
Assessment For Learning
Preparation of Evidence for Formal Moderation
The 5 Minute Workload Plan
Advantages of being a tweacher by a self confessed geek.
Feedback with Impact Time effective strategies to make sure that feedback always leads to learning C Ellison S Fullbrook.
Top Ten List of: Coaching Beliefs.
Post GCSE assessment feedback.
The Big Write – Tupton Hall School
Reducing workload with planning and Resources
Great feedback is sometimes impossible to evidence.
Post GCSE assessment feed back.
Encouraging Good Learning Behaviours for Vulnerable pupils
Presentation transcript:

The 5 Minute Marking Plan by @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner “A guide to focus assessment and reduce time spent marking.” The #5MinPlan (Marking Guide) is written and designed by @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported By @TeacherToolkit & @LeadingLearner www.teachertoolkit.me www.leadinglearner.me

The 5 Minute Marking Plan The big picture? (The purpose of marking for this piece of work / project?) The 5 Minute Marking Plan Re-teach? ….print and scribble your way to focus on student assessment! What? When? Summative marking: to measure (progress) student learning Grading system: How? Why? Formative marking: to improve student learning Common Errors?! Comment system: Key marking points to share with students? THIS TEMPLATE CAN BE EDITED Not sure how to go about marking and assessing student work? That large pile of exam papers/exercise books putting you off marking? Why not use The 5 Minute Marking Plan to help you focus on what ‘you should and should not’ be marking? The #5MinPlan (Marking Guide) is written and designed by @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported What should be changed in activity / SoW? What should/should not be marked? Peer/Self assessment opportunities? Student response to feedback required? Ross McGill 2013 - @TeacherToolkit & Stephen Tierney @LeadingLearner

Context – What does it all mean? The big picture? What is the purpose of marking for this piece of work / project? Try to be clear right from the beginning how the time you spend marking will improve teaching & learning. Summative marking - Grading system: Are you going to use GCSE or A-level grades? Is it levels or have you started to think about a post-levelling world? Is it a numerical mark out of 10 or 20? Does the school, department or phase have an agreed system for teachers to use? Formative Marking – Comment System: Do you have an agreed way of giving comments on students work - WWW (what went well), EBI (even better if), IOTI (in order to improve), three stars and a wish? Have you given thought to numbering / lettering the key marking points, shared with students, so teachers can give comments via numbers / letters instead of writing out comments in full? Will you annotate the piece of work by putting the numbers / letters against the corresponding questions / text? (Also try WWH – What? Why? How?) Key marking points to share with students? This is absolute critical. First of all teachers and then learners need to be clear what marks can be gained for. It’s all about teacher clarity. Sharing the key marking students with learners before they start the work will really help improve their work. Don’t forget to include a bit of “spoof assessment” to help learners understand what the key marking points are. You can give learners two answers of different quality and get them to assess them using the key marking points – can they grade / level the work and give reasons why. Another approach is to give them the different pieces of work and get learners to rank them and identify the main reasons why one was better than the other – can they give you the key marking points? Common Errors – identifying common errors across a number of learners’ work is an important part of diagnostic assessment and links to other parts of the #5 Minute Marking Plan – Re-teach, Student Response to Feedback and What Should be Changed in Activity / SoW . Re-teach – is there an important part of the module, topic, lesson that learners just haven’t got. Don’t worry it happens to all teachers. The important thing is to spot the “gap” in learning and then go back and address it again. Plan the re-teach: What, When, How & Why? Student Response to Feedback Required? – Once you’ve spent time putting comments on learners’ work they must go back and either correct errors or redo areas of their work that needs improvement. A good strategy is to give students time to correct / redo the work during the lesson when the work is handed back – this is a key part of them improving and learning. Think about it, every student has a personalised action plan of ebi / ioti / a wish (or two) to work on. What should be Changed in Activity / SoW – Is there a gap between the learning you wanted and what actually happened when you looked at the work submitted by the learners? Think about the activity or scheme of work – are some tweaks needed or a major rethink? What do colleagues think who have also taught the activity / SoW? This is a powerful way to improve the teaching programme whilst things are still fresh in everyone’s mind. Peer/Self Assessment Opportunities – Learners need to develop these skills and it’s worth investing time in particularly as part of a whole school / department / phase approach. Make sure the learners have the key marking points available to them. Try to get to the point where before you mark a very important learner’s piece of work it has gone “self, peer, self” in terms of assessment & improvement before you look at it. What should/should not be marked – This can be a hard one for teachers. We want to mark everything but quality and quantity can create problems. Go back to “The Big Picture”. Why are you marking, what will add most value to the teaching & learning? The #5MinPlan (Marking Guide) is written and designed by @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported

Key Stage 3 examples 11-13 years The #5MinPlan (Marking Guide) is written and designed by @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported

The #5MinPlan (Marking Guide) is written and designed by @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported

Key Stage 4 examples 14-16 years The #5MinPlan (Marking Guide) is written and designed by @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported

The #5MinPlan (Marking Guide) is written and designed by @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported

The #5MinPlan (Marking Guide) is written and designed by @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported

The #5MinPlan (Marking Guide) is written and designed by @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported

The #5MinPlan (Marking Guide) is written and designed by @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported

Tweet us your example to: #5MinPlan @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner Why not create a subject-specific plan? The #5MinPlan (Marking Guide) is written and designed by @TeacherToolkit and @LeadingLearner. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. Contact us via Twitter. July 2013