Descriptive Feedback Success Criteria Learning Goals

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
School Leadership Team Fall Conference West Virginia Department of Education Division of Educator Quality and System Support Bridgeport Conference Center.
Advertisements

School Based Assessment and Reporting Unit Curriculum Directorate
Setting Objectives and Providing Feedback Wilton/Higgins/Burch.
School Development Day, 16 th July 2012 L White E FFECTIVE F EEDBACK.
What is your definition of descriptive feedback?
Trustee Gough Ward 3 Forum TDSB/Provincial Report Card
Overview for Parents and Guardians Fall 2010
K-6 Science and Technology Consistent teaching – Assessing K-6 Science and Technology © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and.
Wynne Harlen. What do you mean by assessment? Is there assessment when: 1. A teacher asks pupils questions to find out what ideas they have about a topic.
Big Ideas, Learning Goals & Success Criteria
Assessment Assessment should be an integral part of a unit of work and should support student learning. Assessment is the process of identifying, gathering.
Growing Success Overview
The NAR flowchart – the moderation cycle
Assessment The purpose of this workshop / discussion is to extend further teachers’ understanding of the Department's Assessment Advice. This workshop.
Session 3 Assessement of, for, & as Learning. Phases of Assessment Diagnostic Formative Summative Assessment.
Formative Assessment A Maryland Race to the Top Initiative Denise Hunt NCSA June 2013.
Science Breakout New Teacher Meeting 6, Year 2 March 31, 2011.
Consistency of Assessment
Do we need to Assess for Learning? Concordia University Michael Pellegrin, MEESR March 2015.
Types and Purposes of Assessment Mathematics Assessment and Intervention.
How do we document evidence of student growth in Healthful Living?
Grade 12 Subject Specific Ministry Training Sessions
The Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat Le Secrétariat de la littératie et de la numératie October – octobre 2007 The School Effectiveness Framework A Collegial.
Using the T-9 Net This resource describes how schools use the T-9 Net to monitor the literacy and numeracy skills of students in Transition, Year 1 and.
ASSESSMENT& EVALUATION Assessment is an integral part of teaching. Observation is your key assessment tool in the primary and junior grades.
Growing Success-Making Connections
Principles of Assessment
NGSS EQuIP Rubric SMD EPO PD
Science & Technology Grades Spring 2007
ASSESSMENT and EVALUATION FOR IMPROVED STUDENT LEARNING:
Adapted from Growing Success (Ontario Schools) by K. Gibson
Thinking about assessment…
PDHPE K-6 Using the syllabus for consistency of assessment © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training.
District Workforce Module Preview This PowerPoint provides a sample of the District Workforce Module PowerPoint. The actual Overview PowerPoint is 62 slides.
+ Assessment. + Assessment For, As, Of Learning (Complete Chart below) Assessment Mode: Written, Oral, Performance (Write, Say, Do) Assessment Strategy.
1. Principles Equity Curriculum Teaching 3 Assessment Technology Principles The principles describe particular features of high-quality mathematics programs.
Integrating Differentiated Instruction & Understanding by Design: Connecting Content and Kids by Carol Ann Tomlinson and Jay McTighe.
FEBRUARY KNOWLEDGE BUILDING  Time for Learning – design schedules and practices that ensure engagement in meaningful learning  Focused Instruction.
Classroom Assessment for Student Learning: Doing It Right – Using It Well.
Fourth session of the NEPBE II in cycle Dirección de Educación Secundaria February 25th, 2013 Assessment Instruments.
Workshops to support the implementation of the new languages syllabuses in Years 7-10.
Exploring Evidence.
Communication Skills: Connecting Personally Sheridan Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning Wednesday, April 27, 2005 Michael Kunka, TCDSB Literacy.
Formative assessment and effective feedback at Manor Lakes College
Summative vs. Formative Assessment. What Is Formative Assessment? Formative assessment is a systematic process to continuously gather evidence about learning.
Clarity about Learning. Assessment For Learning Archway of Teaching Capabilities Clarity about what is to be learnt Learning Intentions success criteria.
P.R.I.D.E. School Professional Day :45 am- 3:30 pm.
Implementing Effective Assessment Adapted from a lecture given by Damian Cooper (in Dufferin-Peel 2011)
The Achievement Chart Mathematics Grades Note to Presenter:
The Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat Le Secrétariat de la littératie et de la numératie October – octobre 2007 The School Effectiveness Framework A Collegial.
Assessing, Recording and Reporting Citizenship A Collaborative Approach.
SUMMATIVE ASSESSMENT A process – not an event. Summative assessment “Information is used by the teacher to summarize learning at a given point in time.
The School Effectiveness Framework
Office of Service Quality
What are competencies?  Emphasize life skills and evaluate mastery of those skills according to actual leaner performance.  Competencies consist of.
Mathematical Literacy Roland O’Daniel, Jo Ann Mosier KCTM October 2007.
The Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat Le Secrétariat de la littératie et de la numératie October – octobre 2007 The School Effectiveness Framework A Collegial.
What do you think? The most effective method for assessing my students is to use a large end of unit test.
Main strand session 17 Session Seventeen Measuring Learning 2: Assessment evidence Jim Rogers.
The Achievement Chart Mathematics Grades The primary purpose of assessment and evaluation is to improve student learning.
Big Ideas, Learning Goals & Success Criteria
(A quick ‘taste’ or overview)
Thinking about assessment…
Student Engagement and Assessment for Learning
(A quick ‘taste’ or overview)
Consistency of Teacher Judgement
Assessment & Evaluation & Reporting Improving Student Learning
Unit 7: Instructional Communication and Technology
Assessment The purpose of this workshop / discussion is to extend further teachers’ understanding of the Department's Assessment Advice. This workshop.
Presentation transcript:

Descriptive Feedback Success Criteria Learning Goals Assessment of Learning Descriptive feedback given to the student, is linked to learning goals and success criteria. Students learn best when they receive frequent feedback which gives them the opportunity to understand what they need to adjust in order to meet their learning goals. “Teachers can ensure that students understand the success criteria by using clear language that is meaningful to the students and by directly involving them in identifying, clarifying, and applying those criteria in their learning. Examining samples of student work with their teachers helps students understand what constitutes success and provides a basis for informed co-construction of the success criteria.” Growing Success: Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario’s Schools, 2010, p.33 “As a result of developing self-assessment skills, students learn to identify specific actions they need to take to improve, and to plan next steps – that is, to define their long-and short-term individual goals with increasing clarity and realism.” Growing Success: Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario’s Schools, 2010, p. 35 Individual Goal Setting Success criteria, based on the learning goals and linked to the expectations, is developed by the teacher and co-constructed with the students. Student Self-Assessment and Peer Assessment “The emphasis on student self-assessment represents a fundamental shift in the teacher-student relationship, placing the primary responsibility for learning with the student. Once students, with the ongoing support of the teacher, have learned to recognize, describe, and apply success criteria related to particular learning goals, they can use this information to assess their own and others’ learning.” Growing Success: Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario’s Schools, 2010, p. 35 “Summative assessment occurs at or near the end of a period of learning, and may be used to inform further instruction.” “The information gathered is used by the teacher to summarize learning at a given point in time. This summary is used to make judgements about the quality of student learning on the basis of established criteria, to assign a value to represent that quality, and to support the communication of information about achievement to students themselves, parents, teachers and others.” Growing Success: Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario’s Schools, 2010, p. 31 Success Criteria Learning Goals “Feedback provides students with a description of their learning. The purpose of providing feedback is to reduce the gap between a student’s current level of knowledge and skills and the learning goals. Descriptive feedback helps students learn by providing them with precise information about what they are doing well, what needs improvement, and what specific steps they can take to improve.” Growing Success: Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario’s Schools, 2010, p. 34 Descriptive Feedback “Implementing assessment for learning and as learning in the classroom can be challenging, requiring a transformation in our perception of the teacher-student relationship, as well as new learning about strategies. Success lies in taking an approach that recognizes the interdependence of practices related to assessment for learning and assessment as learning. By clearly identifying, sharing, and clarifying learning goals and success criteria, teachers lay the foundation for practices such as providing feedback and enabling students to develop skills in peer and self-assessment.” Growing Success: Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario’s Schools, 2010, p. 33 Expectations Learning Tasks, Assessment Strategies and Tools A Guide to Effective Literacy Instruction: Grades 4 to 6, Volume Two, Assessment, 2006. Judy Townson March 29, 2011 The teacher creates learning goals based on the selected cluster of expectations across the strands of the curriculum. Teachers gather evidence of learning that is directly related to an intentionally selected cluster of expectations that is based on student needs. “Learning goals clearly identify what students are expected to know and be able to do, in language that students can readily understand. Teachers develop learning goals based on the curriculum expectations and share them with students at or near the beginning of a cycle of learning.” Growing Success: Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario’s Schools, 2010, p. 33 1