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Title: USING FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT IN THE SCIENCE CLASSROOM


1
USING FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT IN THE SCIENCE
CLASSROOM
  • Presented by Julie West
  • Teaching and Learning Coach/Science Lead Teacher
    Wayne Co. Public Schools
  • juliewest_at_wcps.org
  • 919-330-8417

2
Information obtained from
  • Science Formative Assessment (75 Practical
    Strategies for Linking Assessment, Instruction,
    and Learning) by Page Keeley, SAGE Publications

3
Defining Formative Assessment
  • refers to any number of ways that we can
    uncover student ideas/knowledge about concepts
    important to the unit being taught in order to
    adjust our instruction to the needs of the
    students collecting evidence of understanding in
    order to focus teaching and learning.

4
Lets Assess Your Prior Knowledge
  • Assessment for learning
  • involves teachers providing descriptive feedback
    rather than evaluative feedback to students
  • involves teachers assessing frequently and using
    the results to plan the next steps in instruction
  • involves reporting to others about students
    achievement status at certain points in time
  • both a and b

5
Lets Assess Your Prior Knowledge
  • Which of the following is NOT considered a key
    strategy for improving student learning/achievemen
    t?
  • sharing learning targets/intentions with students
  • providing evaluative/quantitative feedback
  • engaging students in self assessment
  • facilitating focused discussions, questions and
    learning activities
  • utilizing peer assessment strategies

6
Lets Assess Your Prior Knowledge
  • Descriptive and specific feedback should be
    provided to students
  • by the teacher
  • by other students
  • by both the teacher and other students

7
Lets Assess Your Prior Knowledge
  • According to research, which of the following
    contributes most to student improvement?
  • providing assessment scores to students
  • providing comments/feedback to students about
    their work
  • providing both scores and comments/feedback to
    students about their work

8
What are FACTs?
  • FACTs stands for Formative Assessment Classroom
    Techniques

9
FACTs Have Implications for Both Teaching and
Learning
  • Selecting specific FACTs can improve teaching by
    providing a template for a new pedagogical
    practice
  • Not every FACT is appropriate for every
    class/teacher
  • Research into science teaching and learning
    reveals that far too little time is devoted to
    sense-making FACTs can provide a structure
    for doing that
  • Dont grade FACTs use them to provide feedback
    and open lines of communication for further
    thinking

10
Before selecting a FACT, ask yourself these
questions
  • What is this learning goal about? What is it not
    about?
  • What specific ideas provide meaning for the
    concept?
  • What specific skills are part of the scientific
    process?
  • What content is developmentally appropriate at
    the level I teach?
  • What level of sophistication is appropriate to
    expect from students at the level I teach?
  • What terminology should students understand and
    use with this idea or skill?

11
Before selecting a FACT, ask yourself these
questions
  • What types of phenomena can be used to help
    students understand the idea?
  • What types of representations make the content
    comprehensible to learners?
  • What precursor ideas or skills do students need
    first in order to develop understanding?
  • What other ideas or skills contribute to
    students understanding and ability to use
    scientific knowledge and skills?
  • What commonly held ideas or difficulties should I
    anticipate related to the content?

12
  • The learning environment which a teacher
    creates has a profound impact on the success of
    the assessment strategies used (Naylor, Keogh,
    Goldsworthy, 2004, p. 15).

13
Agreement Circles - provide a kinesthetic way to
activate thinking and engage students in
scientific argumentation
  • Procedure
  • Students stand in a circle as the teacher
    reads a statement.
  • The students who agree with the statement
    step to the center of the circle.
  • They face their peers still standing in the
    outer circle and then match themselves up in
    small groups of students who agree and disagree.
  • The small groups engage in discussion to
    defend their thinking.

14
Procedure (cont.)
  • After discussion, the students are given an
    opportunity to reposition themselves with those
    who now agree standing in the center of the
    circle, those who now disagree standing on the
    circumference of the circle.
  • The idea is to get everyone either inside
    the circle or on the circumference.
  • This is repeated with several rounds of
    statements relating to the same topic, each time
    with students starting by standing along the
    circumference of a large circle

15
Lets Look at an Example
  • 1. Energy is a material that is stored in an
    object.
  • 2. When energy changes from one form to another,
    heat is usually given off.
  • 3. Energy can never be created or destroyed.
  • 4. Something has to move in order to have energy.
  • 5. Energy is a type of fuel.

16
Lets Practice
  • Form a circle around the perimeter of the room.
  • Consider the statement, The reason most
    beginning teachers give for leaving the
    profession is lack of support by administration.
  • If you agree with this statement, step to the
    center of the circle. If you do not agree,
    remain in the outer circle.
  • Turn to a person(s) in the opposite circle and
    support your reasoning.
  • Now, lets reconsider. If you have changed your
    opinion, move to the corresponding circle.

17
Modifications
  • Limit the number of statements for younger
    students. If all students end up in either the
    middle or outside of the circle, have them pair
    up to explain why they agree or disagree. Often
    there are differences in the justification of
    their ideas, even if both students agree or
    disagree with the statement.
  • This FACT can also be used in mathematics, social
    studies, language arts, health, foreign
    languages, and performing arts.

18
Annotated Student Drawings MTV Make your
Thinking Visible
  • Procedure
  • Choose an idea that is central to the
    curricular topic and that can be represented
    through childrens drawing.
  • Provide a clear prompt for the drawing that
    will elicit the information you are seeking.
  • Provide clear directions for students.
  • Show students an example from a familiar
    topic the first time you use this strategy.

19
Lets Look at an Example
  • In the water cycle task, students were asked to
    draw a picture that would help someone understand
    what happens to water as it goes through the
    water cycle.
  • Draw, label, and briefly describe each part of
    the water cycle. Include the changes in form and
    location of the water.

20
Modifications
  • This FACT can also be administered as a
    small-group assessment, using a large sheet of
    paper or whiteboards. Students work
    collaboratively, discussing their ideas as they
    reach consensus on the visual components and
    annotations that should be included in the
    drawing. Give each student a different color to
    ensure that everyones thoughts are included.
  • This FACT can also be used in mathematics, social
    studies, and health.

21
Cautions
  • It is best to avoid assigning Annotated Student
    Drawings as an out-of-class assignment. Using the
    FACT in the classroom ensures that students will
    represent their own thinking without accessing
    information from other sources. This is important
    since the purpose of this strategy is to find out
    what is in students own minds.

22
Fact First Questioning - a higher-order
questioning technique used to draw out student
knowledge beyond recall level
  • Procedure
  • State the fact first. Be sure to utilize
    proper wait time after stating the fact in order
    for students to activate their thinking about the
    concept.
  • Follow up by asking students to elaborate or
    explain the why behind the fact.

23
Modifications
  • Consider modifying traditional textbook recall
    questions into Fact First Questions.
  • Have older students come up with their own Fact
    First Questions and responses.
  • Use Fact First Questions after students have had
    an opportunity to experience and learn the
    content.
  • This FACT can also be used in mathematics, social
    studies, language arts, health, foreign
    languages, and performing arts.

24
Lets Look at Some Examples
  • A cell is called the basic unit of life. Why is
    the cell called the basic unit of life?
  • Density is a characteristic property of matter.
    Why is density considered a characteristic
    property?
  • The small intestine is an organ of the digestive
    system. Why is it considered part of the
    digestive system?
  • The patterns of stars in the night sky stay the
    same. Why do the patterns of stars in the night
    sky stay the same?
  • Sandstone is a sedimentary rock. Why is sandstone
    considered a sedimentary rock?
  • Bacteria in the soil are decomposers. Why are
    bacteria in the soil considered to be
    decomposers?

25
First Word - Last Word a variation on acrostics
  • Procedure
  • Choose a word or short phrase associated
    with the unit that you will be teaching.
  • The First Word is given to the students
    before instruction begins (a pre-assessment).
  • Encourage students to write complete
    sentences based on the letters in the word.
  • Collect the First Words for analysis and
    final reflection.

26
Procedure (cont.)
  • After completing a series of lessons on the
    concept, pass back the First Word assessment and
    repeat the process on a new sheet of paper (the
    Last Word).
  • Students should compare their ideas at the
    beginning of the unit to their current thinking.
    If their ideas have not changed, they should
    revise their prior statement to include more
    details and appropriate terminology. They can
    clarify misunderstandings by completely
    re-writing the statement to be scientifically
    correct.
  • Be sure to model this FACT the first time
    that it is used.

27
Modifications
  • Use shorter words for the acrostic with younger
    students.
  • This FACT can be used in pairs for students who
    lack strong language skills and need the support
    of a peer.
  • It can also be used as a whole-class activity,
    charting the class ideas as the First Word and
    revisiting it to create a Last Word chart that
    reflects the class consensus after a sequence of
    instruction.
  • This FACT can also be used in mathematics, social
    studies, language arts, health, foreign
    languages, and performing arts.

28
Lets Look at an Example First Word
29
Lets Look at an Example Last Word
30
Lets Take a Time Out Think, Pair, Share
  1. Think of one formative assessment strategy that
    has worked well in your classroom and how you
    have used it to guide instruction.
  2. Pair with the person sitting next to you.
  3. Share this strategy with you partner.

31
Fist to Five indicates the level of students
understanding of a concept or procedure
  • Procedure
  • At any point during a lesson, ask students
    to hold up their fingers to indicate their level
    of understanding
  • A closed fist indicates no understanding
    or I have no idea
  • One finger indicates very little
    understanding
  • Two fingers indicates I understand parts
    but need lots of help with others

32
Procedure (cont.)
  • Three fingers indicates I understand most of
    it, but am not sure that I can explain it to
    others
  • Four fingers indicates I understand it
    pretty well and think that I can adequately
    explain it to others
  • Five fingers indicates I understand it
    completely and can easily explain it to others

33
Modifications
  • This FACT can be modified as a three-finger
    strategy one finger I dont get it, two
    fingers I partially get it, and three fingers I
    get it.
  • You can use thumbs up I get it, thumbs sideways
    Im not sure I understand, and thumbs down I
    dont get it.
  • It can be used to group students for peer
    assistance by putting the students who hold up
    two to three fingers together with the students
    who hold up four to five fingers. The teacher can
    then take the closed-fist and one-finger
    responses aside for differentiated assistance.
  • This FACT can also be used in mathematics, social
    studies, language arts, health, foreign
    languages, and performing arts.

34
Human Scatter Plot an immediate way to gain a
visual of students thinking and level of
confidence with their responses
  • Procedure
  • Label one wall (Y-axis) with the answer
    choices (A, B, C, D) and an adjacent wall
    (X-axis) with a range of low confidence to high
    confidence.
  • Ask a question and have students position
    themselves in the room according to where they
    feel they fall on the graph.
  • Have the students representing each answer
    choice explain their thinking.
  • Clarify any misconceptions.

35
Modifications
  • A paper version can be used instead of a human
    graph. Pass the graph, with axis labeled, around
    the class and have students put their initials on
    it according to where their answer falls and
    their level of confidence. With this method,
    teachers also have a written record.
  • This FACT can also be used in mathematics, social
    studies, language arts, health, foreign
    languages, and performing arts.

36
Lets Look at an Example
37
Muddiest Point students take a few minutes to
jot down what the most confusing part of a lesson
was for them
  • Procedure
  • This strategy can be used at any point
    during a lesson.
  • On a half sheet of paper, index card or
    sticky note, have students describe the muddiest
    point of a lesson.
  • Let students know why you are asking for
    this information/how you plan to use this
    information. They will be more sincere and
    detailed in their responses.
  • Use their responses to inform future
    instruction.

38
Modifications
  • This strategy can also be used with homework and
    in-class assignments.
  • It can be combined with a question asking
    students what could be done to help clear up the
    muddy points for them.
  • This FACT can also be used in mathematics, social
    studies, language arts, health, foreign
    languages, and performing arts.

39
Lets Look at an Example
  • A teacher might use this FACT to determine how
    well students can perform a scientific procedure
  • You have been looking for microorganisms in a
    drop of pond water. What is the muddiest point
    for you thus far when it comes to using the
    microscope? I will use the information you give
    to me to think about ways to help you better use
    the microscopes in tomorrows lesson.

40
Pass the Question provides an opportunity for
students to collaborate and examine other
students thinking
  • Procedure
  • Develop a question that will elicit a rich
    explanatory response based on students prior
    knowledge or experience. Questions can also be a
    new application of the concepts students have
    been learning about in their instructional unit.
  • Arrange students in pairs.
  • Write the question on a chart, on the
    board, or state orally.
  • Give pairs two to three minutes to
    collaboratively begin drafting a response to the
    given question. Make sure students know they need
    to develop enough of a response so that another
    pair can follow their thinking, but not so much
    that it doesnt leave room for the other pair to
    complete it.

41
Procedure (cont.)
  • After two to three minutes have passed,
    pairs swap their partially completed answer with
    another pair.
  • The pairs then continue to pick up from
    where the other pair left off. Encourage pupils
    to cross off parts they dont agree with and
    modify or exchange the crossed off part with
    their own ideas. They may continue adding their
    own ideas to enhance, extend, and complete the
    response.
  • When both pairs are finished, they share
    the completed responses with each other,
    defending their reasons for any changes they made
    and providing feedback on each others thinking.
    They also examine whether their ideas converged
    or diverged.
  • The teacher may ask pairs to share some
    examples, providing feedback from the teacher and
    the rest of the class on the response to the
    question.

42
Modifications
  • This FACT can also be used with individuals. An
    individual student starts the response and then
    exchanges with another student for completion and
    sharing.
  • It can also be a written exchange between two
    different classes studying the same topic.
  • This FACT can also be used in mathematics, social
    studies, language arts, health, foreign
    languages, and performing arts.

43
PVF Paired Verbal Fluency partner discussion
or reflection
  • PVF can be used prior to instruction, as a review
    of a lesson, or for reflection purposes at the
    end of a sequence of instruction. It also works
    well as a prelude to whole-class discussion.
  • Some ways to use PVF include having students
    talk about a topic to be introduced by sharing
    what they already know about the topic having
    students discuss a recent laboratory experiment,
    including the significance of their findings or
    having students reflect at the end of a kit-based
    science unit by talking about their key
    learnings.

44
PVF Paired Verbal Fluency
  • Procedure
  • Ask students to find a partner (or assign
    one).
  • Have partners move together and determine
    who will be Partner A and who will be Partner B.
  • Provide the class with a discussion prompt
    or topic to discuss.
  • Announce that when you give the signal, the
    designated partner will talk for exactly 1 min.
    while the other partner listens carefully.

45
Procedure (cont.)
  • Announce switch, the partners trade roles
    and repeat.
  • At the end of the activity, ask for a few
    volunteers to share what they learned from their
    partner or to comment on any learning issues they
    discussed that may need to be resolved.

46
Lets Practice
  • Pair up and determine who will be Partner A and
    who will be Partner B.
  • Partner B, you have 30 secs. to share all you
    know regarding the following
  • The implementation of Common Core and
    Essential Standards.
  • On my signal, switch roles and repeat.
  • Be prepared to share with the whole group.

47
Modifications
  • Students can be paired by using a variety of
    strategies.
  • The time intervals can be changed to other
    configurations such as 1 minute40 seconds20
    seconds, 60 seconds30 seconds10 seconds (for a
    closing statement), or other configurations the
    teacher or students select.
  • This FACT can also be used in mathematics, social
    studies, language arts, health, foreign
    languages, and performing arts.

48
Caution
  • This strategy may be difficult for
    English-language learners or students who have a
    hard time concentrating or hearing.
  • There is a high level of noise in the classroom
    when many students are talking at the same time.

49
RERUN Recall, Explain, Results, Uncertainties,
New learnings, write 1 or 2 sentences related to
the acronym related to a laboratory or inquiry
investigation
  • This FACT provides a structured opportunity for
    students to reflect on what they did, how they
    did it, and what they learned from it.
  • RERUN helps the teacher determine how well the
    learning goals that were targeted for the
    investigation matched what students gained from
    it.

50
RERUN
  • Procedure
  • Post a RERUN chart in the classroom.
  • Provide time after an investigation for
    students to complete the RERUN while the
    experience is still fresh in their minds.
  • RERUN can be assigned individually or
    completed collaboratively by lab groups.
  • Teachers may choose to have students share
    their reflections with others using PVF.

51
RERUN Chart
52
Modifications
  • Teachers can choose to focus on just one part of
    the RERUN chart for reflection after each lab or
    investigation.
  • New can be modified to ask for a new question
    that resulted from the investigation.
  • RERUN should be used for formative purposes.
    Avoid using it in place of a formal lab report
    and assigning a grade to it.
  • This FACT is specific to inquiry-based science.

53
Three-Two-One students respond in writing to 3
reflective prompts
54
Three-Two-One
  • Procedure
  • At the conclusion of a lesson, provide
    students with a copy of the reflection sheet,
    index card or sticky note and time to complete
    their reflection.
  • Students can be paired up to share their
    Three-Two-One reflections with their peers or
    asked to report out to the whole class.

55
Modifications
  • Three-Two-One can also be used when students are
    learning new inquiry skills or processes. For
    example, the following can be used with
    elementary students who are learning how to
    design their own investigations three ways I can
    investigate like a scientist, two things that I
    would like to do better when I investigate, and
    one thing I would like help with.
  • If more information is desired for a particular
    instructional situation, consider a
    Five-Three-One.
  • This FACT can also be used in mathematics, social
    studies, language arts, health, foreign
    languages, and performing arts.

56
Traffic Light Cups used during group work to
signal when help or feedback is needed from the
teacher
  • Placement of the cup indicates to the teacher the
    performance level of the group - if a group is
    proceeding successfully without the need for
    assistance (green), when a group might like
    feedback or assistance from the teacher in order
    to best continue with their work but are still
    able to proceed in the meantime (yellow), or when
    a group is stuck and cant go any further without
    assistance from the teacher (red).

57
Traffic Light Cups
  • Procedure
  • Obtain green, yellow, and red stackable
    party cups of the same size from a party store.
  • Give each group a set of cups and ask them
    to stack them, one inside the other, with the
    green cup on the outside.
  • The stack of cups is placed in the center
    of their work area where it can be seen by the
    teacher.
  • All groups should start with green on the
    outside. As their needs for instructional support
    from the teacher increase, students change the
    outer color to yellow or red.
  • As the teacher scans the room, students
    with red cups on the outside receive assistance
    first, followed by yellow cups.

58
Modifications
  • Traffic Light Cups can also be used for
    individual tasks.
  • They can also be used to signal time on task.
    Green means the group feels they have plenty of
    time and will finish on schedule. Yellow
    signifies the group may need more time but,
    overall, are close to being on target to finish.
    Red signifies that they are behind and will need
    more time to finish.
  • This FACT can also be used in mathematics, social
    studies, language arts, health, foreign
    languages, and performing arts.

59
  • An assessment activity can help learning if it
    provides information to be used as feedback by
    teachers, and by their students in assessing
    themselves and each other, to modify the teaching
    and learning activities in which they are
    engaged. Such assessment becomes formative
    assessment when the evidence is used to adapt the
    teaching work to meet learning needs (Black et
    al., 2003, p. 2).
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