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Setting Objectives & Providing Feedback Chapter 8 of Classroom Instruction that Works by Marzano, et al.
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Of the 9 strategies, Marzano recommends beginning with… Setting Objectives and Providing Feedback "Front loading" units and lessons increases student achievement by 28%ile points! Tell students what they'll be learning. Add feedback into this mix and you'll increase this gain to 32%ile points! So...tell students what they'll be learning, THEN have students set their own learning goals for the unit/lesson.
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Goal Setting Goal setting is the process of establishing a direction for learning. Successful people have mastered this skill to help them realize both short and long-term desires.
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Instructional goals narrow what students focus on Setting goals or objectives can have an undesired negative effect on learner outcomes. If a teacher establishes a goal, students may ignore other important information
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Instructional goals should not be too specific Goals stated in behavioral objective format do not produce effect sizes as high as instructional goals stated in more general formats. Behavioral goals may simply be too specific.
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Students should be encouraged to personalize the teachers goals. Students should be encouraged to adapt them to their personal needs and desires.
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Classroom Practice in Goal Setting Set Specific but Flexible Goals - It is important for a teacher to set goals for students, but it is also important for the goals to be general enough to provide students with some flexibility. Use Contracts - contract with students for the attainment of specific goals, providing students with control over their learning.
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Classroom Resources Using Kidspiration & Inspiration to set learning goalsUsing Kidspiration & Inspiration to set learning goals Kidspiration and Inspiration are two tools you can use to help students visualize goals Use templates that focus on what the student wants to learn – planning and goal setting templates, KWL charts, for example, before starting a research project
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Examples of Setting Goals and Contracts A "contract" is a valuable tool that teachers can use in negotiating terms with students and/or parents which details the specific expectations that the teacher, student, and sometimes, the parent formally agree upon. Learning contracts help the teacher and student share the responsibility for achieving desired outcomes. It also helps increase accountability and provides feedback to the student regarding progress toward meeting the agreed upon goals. Teach-nology contract On-line training and examples of contracts Student contracting on Read Write Think
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Examples of Goal Setting Secrets of Goal Setting Learning Goal Template Behavior Goal Template Daily Goal Template Weekly Goal Template
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Providing Feedback John Hattie (1992) - The most powerful single modification that enhances achievement is feedback.
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Feedback should be corrective in nature It provides students with an explanation of what they are doing that is correct and not correct. Simply telling students that their answer on a test is right or wrong has a negative effect.
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4 Types of Feedback 1.Hand back paper with only % or grade on it - increase of 3 %ile points. 2.Hand back assignment and give the answers - increase of 9 %ile points. 20 3.Give back assignment and explain the answers - increase of 20 %ile points. 20 4.Give back assignment, explain the answers AND provide additional opportunities to improve and learn - increase of 20 %ile pts.
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Feedback should be timely Feedback given immediately after a test-like situation is best. In general, the more delay that occurs, the less improvement there is in achievement.
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Feedback should be specific It should reference a specific level of skill or knowledge. Feedback should be criterion-referenced, as opposed to norm- referenced. It tells students where they stand relative to a specific target.
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Students can effectively provide some of their own feedback Students can effectively monitor their own progress. Students can simply keep track of their performance as learning occurs - a chart of accuracy, speed, or both. Self-evaluation has been strongly advocated
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Classroom Practice in Providing Feedback Providing students with feedback in terms of specific levels of knowledge and skill is better than simply providing students with a percentage score. Powerful tools include – rubrics and portfolios The more specific feedback is, the better. Student-led feedback has many desirable effects.
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Resources Web 2.0 and Classroom Instruction That Works Classroom Instruction That Works Click on Setting Objectives and Providing Feedback Scroll down to Web 2.0 Connections and view chart
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Integrating Technology Objectives and Feedback Technology Chart Bloom's for technology
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Classroom Resources Reading Fluency Chart Math Fluency Chart
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Classroom Resources Bulletin Board of Example Work -- a "visual rubric" that includes "A", "B", "C", and unacceptable quality work
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Portfolios Electronic portfolios - E-portfolioE-portfolio Portfolio assessment checklist - checklistchecklist
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Rubrics Rubrics - Rubistar: create rubrics online Rubistar Reading rubric - rubricrubric
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Other Classroom Resources http://exploratree.org.uk/ http://thinkature.com/ http://writeboard.com/ http://pbworks.com/academic.wiki Google docs Gaggle e-mail
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Conclusion Setting objectives and providing feedback are frequently underused in terms of their flexibility and power. We hope to have given you some tools to help you set goals and objectives with your students and provide them with meaningful feedback.
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