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Assessment in Action: Fall 2012 S tudent A cademic A chievement C ommittee Co-Chairs Erik Huntsinger Pete Turner
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What We’re Learning.. Levels I & II (8:30-10:15) -Think, Pair, Share -Learning College -Bloom’s Taxonomy -Gen Ed Abilities Level I (10:30-11:30) Formative v Summative Course v Program Learning College Level II (10:30-11:30) Assessment Project CATS
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Egg Plant
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Think, Pair, Whole Group Share (Erik)
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Dr. Pepper
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Learning College (Pete) Roots Basic Principles Assessment Connection
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Roots Philosophical beginnings – shift from faculty needs to student outcomes George Boggs Terry O’Banion League for Innovation League for Innovation Initiative (The Learning, n.d.) Learning College Project Vanguard Colleges Exemplars Learning College Principles Purveyors of Best Practices
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Basic Principles “Places learning first and provides educational experiences for learners anyway, any place, any time” (The Learning, n.d.) Focus on teaching and learning Learner centered – college commitment of: Resources Energies Actions - for continual improvement
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Areas of Emphasis – The Learning College Organizational Culture Staff Recruitment & Development Technology Learning Outcomes Student Engagement
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Learning College Assessment ?
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Partner Prediction Turn to your partner and ask: What do you think the connection is between the Learning College and Assessment? When called on to share, say “My partner ____________ predicted:___________”
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So... What is Assessment? The informal and formal gathering of student data to assess student learning. “Classroom Assessment helps individual college teachers obtain useful feedback on what, how much, and how well their students are learning” (Angelo & Cross, 1993)
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Why Assessment? Source: Classroom Assessment and Grading that Work, Marzano, 2006 It’s all about LEARNING!!
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I-pod
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Bloom’s Levels of Thinking
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Domains of Learning
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Bloom’s Levels – Why? Better lesson objective/design Foster creative thinking Better questioning strategies More complete student assessment Familiar w/Terminology EMCC Core Value – Development of Critical Thinking Skills
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Bloom’s Levels – What? Remember (Knowledge) Understand (Comprehension) Apply Analyze Evaluate Create (Synthesize) R U An Apple-Eating Crocodile?
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Bloom’s Levels - Remember Behaviors (Can students recall?): Name List Write Define Repeat Show Recall Questions/Prompts (Eliciting factual answers, testing recall and recognition): Who, where, what, why, when, etc. Describe How, how much Define Which one Reproduce
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Bloom’s Levels – Understand ( Comprehension ) Behaviors (Can students explain?): Summarize Illustrate Describe Paraphrase Explain Questions/Prompts (Translating, interpreting, and extrapolating): Indicate Summarize Explain Define Give example Translate
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Bloom’s Levels – Apply Behaviors (Can students use ideas?): Solve Demonstrate Apply Model Use Construct Compute Questions/Prompts (Use in situations that are new, unfamiliar): Apply Construct Demonstrate Illustrate What would... What uses...
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Bloom’s Levels - Analyze Behaviors (Can students see relationships?): Categorize Contrast Take Apart Separate Compare Dissect Questions/Prompts (Breaking down into parts, relating parts to the whole) Dissect Contrast Separate Distinguish Classify Graph
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Bloom’s Levels - Evaluate Behaviors (Can students make judgments and support them?): Debate Justify Judge Criticize Support Conclude Questions/Prompts (Judging according to some set of criterion and stating why): Editorialize Dispute Defend Choose why Verify Evaluate
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Bloom’s Levels – Create (Synthesis) Behaviors (Can students combine and create a new entity?): Synthesize Invent Develop Compose Imagine Improve Questions/Prompts (Combining elements into a pattern not seen before): Design Forecast Build Predict Make up Hypothesize
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Light Beer
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Level I Workshop Formative v. Summative Course, Program, and College Learning College (again!)
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Assessment and Student Learning Assessments that encourage learning Students track their own progress Specific measurement topics Use Graphs Engage students in self-reflection The method of mounting evidence: Averaging Scores = Final Achievement (Marzano, 2006)
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Assessment, Continued FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT: Used while instruction is occurring Information gathered by teacher to inform instruction SUMMATIVE ASSESSMENT: Information gathered at the end of a unit for purpose of judging outcome
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Whole Class Project Formative Assessments Summative Assessments
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Most Effective Assessment? FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT : “The gains in achievement are … among the largest ever reported for educational interventions” Black & William, 1998 AUTHENTIC ASSESSMENT “Authentic learning mirrors the tasks and problem solving that are required in the reality outside of school“ Ormiston, 2011 Performances/ Demonstrations Simulations/ Role Plays Portfolios w/ Strategic Selections Life-connected Research w/ Exhibitions
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Gatorade
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Course, Program, College Formative or Summative? Course Assessments: Unit Mid-Term Final Program Common Final Student Success College Completion Certificates Student Satisfaction
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Nightmare
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Learning College Characteristics with regards to Faculty Actions: Authentic Assessment Experiential Learning Sharing “Passionate Innovators” Always seeking better ways to increase learning “Collaborative communities of learning and practice”
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References Angelo, T.A. & Cross, K.P. (1998). Classroom assessment techniques: A handbook for college teachers (2 nd Ed.). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Huber, M.T. (2008). The promise of faculty inquiry for teaching and learning basic skills. A Report from the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching: Strengthening Pre-Collegiate Education in Community Colleges. Retrieved from: http://eric.ed.gov/PDFS/ED503130.pdf.http://eric.ed.gov/PDFS/ED503130.pdf The Learning College Project (n.d.). The League for Innovation in the Community College. Retrieved from: http://www.league.org/league/projects/lcp/index.htm http://www.league.org/league/projects/lcp/index.htm Marzano, R. (2006). Classroom assessment and grading that work. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development. Ormiston, Meg (2011). Creating a digital-rich classroom: Teaching & learning in a Web 2.0 World. Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree. Reeves, D. B. (2008). Reframing teacher leadership to improve your school. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development. Turner, R. (2003). A pragmatic approach to educating: Connecting problem- based learning to service learning. Dissertation, Capella University. UMI # 3068397
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Dandelions
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