Title: Looking at Assessment Through an H.E.T. Lens
1Looking at Assessment Through an H.E.T. Lens
H.E.T.
- Sue Pearson, Associate
- susanpiti_at_aol.com
2Assessment agenda
3The lasting measure of good teaching is what the individual student learns and carries away. -- Stanford Erickson
-- Alan Blinder (Princeton),
4Assessment Definition
- Assessment is the process of gathering and
documenting information about the achievement,
skills, and abilities of an individual.
5Why Do We Assess Students?
- Assessment is used in an educational setting by
teachers to accomplish a range of objectives
including to
6- Learn more about the competencies and
deficiencies of the individual being tested - Identify specific problem areas and/or needs
- Evaluate the individual's performance in relation
to a set of standards or goals - Provide feedback on effectiveness of instruction
- Predict an individual's aptitudes or future
capabilities - Provide for differentiated instruction
7Assessment Tools
- The choice of an assessment tool depends on the
purpose or goal of an assignment.
8Assessment Tools
9TRADITIONAL ASSESSMENTS
- These tests
- rely on specific, structured procedures and
instructions given to all test-takers by the test
administrator (or to be read by the test-takers
themselves). - are either norm-referenced or criterion-referenced
tests. - allow researchers to compare data from large
numbers of students or subgroups of students.
10ALTERNATIVE ASSESSMENTS
- These assessments
- provide differentiation
- may be individual, partners, Learning Club, or
whole class projects/products - can offer choice (in task, product and MI)
- allow for more individual reflection and the
steps needed for improvement
11Balanced Assessment
- Balanced assessment should provide BOTH formative
and summative for information gathering in regard
to students growth and understanding.
12SUMMATIVE ASSESSMENT
- Given periodically at a particular time to assess
what students know and dont know - Means to gauge where students are at a particular
point in time in relation to content standards - Can only help in certain aspects of the learning
process - Taken after instruction
13SUMMATIVE ASSESSMENT
- Tools that help evaluate
- Effectiveness of program
- School improvement goals
- Alignment of curriculum
- Student placement in specific programs
14SUMMATIVE ASSESSMENT
- EXAMPLES INCLUDE
- State assessments
- District benchmark or interim assessments
- End-of-unit or chapter tests
- End-of-term or semester exams
- Scores that are used for accountability for
schools (AYP) and students (report card
grades).
15SUMMATIVE ASSESSMENT
- REMEMBER TO
- Determine/Create BEFORE teaching unit/component
- Base on have-to-knows rather than
nice-to-knows (State standards/skills/objective
s)
16CC
Sam Grade 3 99th Grade 4 91st C
Sam 4/17 Took Test 1-went home sick 4/18-4/22
Absent-strep throat 4/23 Took tests
2-3-4 4/24-4/27 Absent ST relapse
Amanda Grade 3 ELA TEST-77th Subset-reading
comprehension 75th Grade 4 reading comp.
45th
Class Card 10 minute spelling test Class
average 55th
Got to the end of the test and had one row of
circles left over-obviously left one out along
the way which through off all the other answers
Approx. 1 minute after test started, fire
engines, ambulances, emergency vehicles came to
apartment house kitty-corner from-active
fire-kids attention drawn from test
17(No Transcript)
18a.
10.
19FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT
- Part of the instructional process
- Provides information needed to adjust teaching
and learning while they are happening - Informs teachers and students about student
understanding at a point when timely adjustments
can be made - Adjustments help to ensure students achieve
targeted learning goals within a specific
time frame
STUDENTS MUST BE INVOLVED!
20STUDENTS
- Must be involved as
- Assessors of their own learning
- Resources to other students
- Owners of their own work-motivating!
21- Think of formative assessment as practice.
22- Students are not held accountable
- this is practice.
23- Formative assessment helps teachers determine
next steps during the learning process (as the
instruction approaches the summative assessment
of student learning).
24Drivers License
- What if you received a grade every time you sat
behind the wheel? - What if your final grade for the drivers license
test was the average of all the grades you
received while practicing? - In the beginning of learning to drive, how
confident or motivated to learn would you feel? - Would any of the grades you receive provide you
with guidance on what you need to
do next to improve your driving skills?
25Learning is a Two-Step Process
- STEP ONE
- Input Stage Pattern seeking meaning making
- First, the brain must detect/identify a pattern
- Second, the brain must make meaning of the
pattern, including its relationship to other
patterns
26Learning is a Two-Step Process
- STEP TWO
- Output Stage Building programs to use what we
understand - Begins with conscious effort (often with
guidance) - and then
- With practice, becomes almost automatic and
wired into long-term memory.
27ASSESSMENT H.E.T. MODEL
- Assessment is done
- As extension of instruction
- During each phase of the two-step learning
process - For immediate adjustment
28ASSESSMENT H.E.T. MODEL
- At any moment during a lesson, the teacher must
be able to answer 2 questions - Where in the two-step learning process is this
student? - Are there any clues in his/her performance that
will help me ensure that the student learns the
first time?
29ASSESSMENT H.E.T. MODEL
- What we want students to UNDERSTAND is clearly
stated in the key points - concepts
- significant knowledge
- skills
30ASSESSMENT H.E.T. MODEL
- What we want students to DO with what they
understand is specifically described in the
inquiries.
31ASSESSMENT H.E.T. MODEL
- Curriculum for the HET Model
contains the assessment tools for both formative
and summative assessment.
32ROLE OF KEY POINTS
- Conceptual Key Points have GUTS-capture BIG ideas
that apply worldwide - Ggeneralizable
- Uunderstandable
- Ttransferable
- Ssuccinct clear
33ROLE OF KEY POINTS
- Significant Knowledge Key Points
- Provide information necessary to understand the
concept where it can be directly experienced
through the being there location (have-to-knows
of curriculum)
34ROLE OF KEY POINTS
- Skill Key Points
- Describe those basic skills needed to explore,
utilize and understand those big ideas (concepts)
35ROLE OF INQUIRIES
- Formative Assessment
- Any inquiry that meets the ABCD2 rule is a good
candidate for formative assessment.
36ABCD2 Rules for Writing Inquiries
- Always start with the action in mind (verb).
- Be specific with your directions-what is the
inquiry asking students to do? - Connect to the key point.
- Require DEEP thinking and real world application.
- Dont stop writing until you have enough
inquiries for each key point to take students
through mastery to long-term memory.
373 Cs of Assessment
- Correct
- Complete
- Comprehensive
383 Cs of Assessment
- Correct-conforming to fact or truth free from
error accurate - Complete-having all parts/elements
- Comprehensive-of large scope inclusive
extensive mental range or grasp often reflective
of multiple points of view
393 Cs of Assessment
- When washing a car
- CORRECT The outside of the car has been washed
and rinsed - COMPLETE The outside has been washed and
rinsed the windows have been wiped inside and
out - COMPREHENSIVE The outside of the car has been
washed and rinsed the windows have been wiped
inside and out mats have been washed and the
floor has been vacuumed stuff has been
cleared, the trunk has been organized, and
receipts have been collected.
40HET Summative Assessment
- Reserved for assessing completion of the last
(2nd) phase of the Two-Step Learning Process - Should require the same content (need-to-know) of
all students but the format may vary
41Authentic Assessment HET Model
- Norm-referenced criteria are drawn from
- Real life rubrics
- What one needs to understand and be able to do as
an employee, business owner or visitor at the
being there location
42TWO-STEP LEARNING vs. TYPES OF TEST ITEMS
- STEP TWO PROGRAM BUILDING
- Making meaning Understanding (INPUT)
- Detecting Understanding
- patterns the patterns
- Assessment Q What do you want
- Questions students to understand?
- TEST T/F Items
- ITEM Essay Questions
- TYPE Multiple Choice
- Able to use what is understood (OUTPUT)
- Use with conscious Use automatically
- effort guidance and wired into
- long-term memory
- Q What do you want them to do with
- what they understand?
- Demonstrations with Demonstrations
- Real-world situations over time in
- Different settings
43Transforming Inquiries into Assessment Tools
- First, select an inquiry that asks for the most
authentic real-world application of the content
or skill you wish to assess. - Second, tweak that inquiry so it can provide a
definitive yes-no determination. - Lets try one!
44Conceptual Key Point
- A system is a collection of parts and processes
that interact to perform some function. Many
things can be looked at as a system or as part of
a system. To study a system, one must define its
boundaries and parts.
3-5th grade-MTW-Deb Meyer and Sue Pearson
45INQUIRY 1
- 1) In your Learning Club, analyze a bicycle.
Experiment with drawing boundaries which would
define at least three systems within that
bicycle. Draw the boundaries for each of those
systems. Record your findings and explain why you
chose the boundaries you did for each system.
Share your findings with at least one other
Learning Club. In your science journal, record
what you learned from this Learning Club. (BK, S,
V, ML)
46Elements of a Measurable Test Item
- Who All students (not just the advanced
students) - What students should know and be able to apply
(the concept/skill described in the key point and
the application as described in the inquiry) - How well Framed by the inquiries and judged
against the rubric(s) of the being there location
and the 3Cs of mastery - When As described in the inquiry (e.g., within
the next 10 minutes, by the end of the day, by
tomorrow morning, by the end of the week.
47INQUIRY 1
- 1) In your Learning Club, analyze a bicycle.
Experiment with drawing boundaries which would
define at least three systems within that
bicycle. Draw the boundaries for each of those
systems. Record your findings and explain why you
chose the boundaries you did for each system.
Share your findings with at least one other
Learning Club. In your science journal, record
what you learned from this Learning Club. (BK, S,
V, ML)
48ASK YOURSELF. . .
- Q1 Is the action required observable and
specific?
Answer-Mostly yes but the action required needs
tweaking. For example, the what is incomplete.
Add Describe the parts and processes of each of
these systems and the functions these parts and
processes create.
49ASK YOURSELF. . .
- Q2 Would this inquiry as written tell you if
each member of the Learning Club understood and
could apply it?
Answer Probably not. Tweak it to make it an
individual task. Change it to read Working
alone, analyze one of the bicycles in the
classroom.
50ASK YOURSELF. . .
- Q3 Does this inquiry provide a time frame for
completion?
Answer No it does not. Add Complete your work
by Friday afternoon (1PM).
51ASSESSMENT INQUIRY
- Working alone, analyze one of the bicycles in the
classroom. Then - Sketch the bicycle.
b. Draw the boundaries for three systems one
which would help you analyze a customers
complaints about brake failure, a second, that
would help you analyze a customers propulsion
problem, and a third system of your choice.
52ASSESSMENT INQUIRY
c. Diagram the parts and processes of each
system. Describe on the diagram the functions
that these parts and processes perform together.
Check your work by physically moving the bicycle
and comparing its movement to the boundaries that
you have drawn for each system.
d. Identify what you believe to be the
part/processes that is the most common cause of
failure of that system. Include this information
on your sketch. Add your work to your
science journal.
53ASSESSMENT INQUIRY
E. Complete your work by Friday (1PM). Before
submitting your science journal to the teacher
for review, check your work against the 3Cs of
Assessment. Make any changes to improve your
work. Make sure it represents your personal best
efforts.
54TWEAKED ASSESSMENT INQUIRY
- Who a student working alone
- What the learner will do/know and be able to
apply define boundaries of three or more
systems - How by analyzing and identifying three systems
of a bicycle and describing the parts and
processes of each of those systems and the
function the parts and processes create - How well framed by the inquiries and judged
according to the 3Cs of mastery - When by Friday at 1PM
55FINAL QUESTION
- Has the student truly mastered this concept
(systems) and wired it into his/her long-term
memory? - If in doubt, ask the student to select a favorite
toy with moving parts. Have the student redo the
inquiry but substitute the toy for the bicycle.
56NEXT STEPS
- Using the HET assessment lens
- Review the state standards/skills-the
need-to-knows - Revisit your Conceptual Key Points for clarity
and big picture focus - Rewrite/Tweak your inquiries so they meet the
needs for both formative and summative
assessment.
57... life is not a multiple choice test, it's an open-book essay exam.
-- Alan Blinder (Princeton),
Alan Blinder, Princeton
58Assessment agenda
59B4E Assessment Resources
- Exceeding Expectations A Users Guide to
Implementing Brain Research in the Classroom
Chapters 16-19 - www.books4educ.com
60Other Assessment Resources
- Rubistar-create rubrics for your inquiries
- http//rubistar.4teachers.org/
- TeAchnology
- http//www.teach-nology.com/web_tools/rubric
s/ - Project-Based Rubrics
- http//pblchecklist.4teachers.org/index.shtm
l
61Schools Exceeding Expectations
- From Ordinary to Extraordinary
- Excellence in Education
- April 27-30, 2010
- Site Columbia, SC
- On-Site District Richland School District Two
- Classroom visitations demonstrating Highly
Effective Teaching (HET) in action - Breakout sessions and focus strands with HET
master associates - Interactive presentations on instructional
practices and leadership approaches - Networking opportunities with other schools
and districts - Developing Effective First Teaching
curriculum and instruction - Visit http//www.thecenter4learning.com/html/ev
ents/2011/see.htm