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Developing consistency of teacher judgment

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Title: Developing consistency of teacher judgment


1
Developing consistency of teacher judgment
Accountability
Assessment
Module 2
Data
2
Developing consistency of teacher judgment
Accountability
Assessment
Data
Module 2 Session 1
3
Aims
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • To explore the principles of consistency of
    teacher judgment
  • To reflect critically on the process of making
    judgments by participating in activities which
    support consistent judgments

4
In these 3 sessions participants will
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • Consider the principles of consistency of teacher
    judgment
  • Participate in a common language activity
  • Explore diverse learner demonstrations
  • Collaboratively moderate evidence
  • Identify a range of contexts over time
  • Reflect on Standards as common points of reference

5
Principles
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • 1. A common language for describing learner
    achievement is fundamental to consistency of
    teacher judgment.
  • 2. Learners demonstrate knowledge, skills and
    understandings in diverse ways.
  • 3. Moderation of work product (performance,
    product, project, paper and pen) provides
    teachers with confirmation of their judgments.
  • 4. Consistent judgments are supported by
    assessment in a range of contexts over time.
  • 5. The Curriculum Standards provide a common
    point of reference from which we align our
    judgments of learners achievements.

6
Common language
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • A common language for describing learner
    achievement is fundamental to consistency of
    teacher judgment.

7
Activity 1 Common language - Part A
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • Purpose To collaboratively develop a common
    understanding and interpretation of an Outcome.
  • Activity In groups select an Outcome and discuss
    your interpretation of it. Use the Key Ideas,
    examples of evidence, Essential Learnings, Equity
    Cross-curriculum Perspectives and Enterprise and
    Vocational Education to add clarity to your
    discussions. Using your knowledge of the
    learners within your site, document agreed and
    locally meaningful examples of evidence for the
    Outcome. Ensure that the Essential Learnings,
    Equity Cross-curriculum Perspectives and
    Enterprise and Vocational Education that are
    meaningful within the context, are explicitly
    described.

8
  • Learning Area Society and EnvironmentStrand
    Time, continuity and change

Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • Scope Key Ideas
  • Students investigate earlier times to gain a
    general understanding of Australias history and
    diverse heritage in the context of significant
    world events. Id ? In ? KC1
  • Students use time-lines, calendars and diagrams
    to illustrate and sequence events and processes,
    genealogies and kinship systems. T ? C ? KC3 ?
    KC5
  • Students recognise the importance of collecting
    and evaluating information and source material as
    evidence, consider other points of view, and
    arrive at justifiable conclusions. T ? C ? KC1

Standard 2 Outcomes 2.1 Examines information
from a range of sources about people in different
periods of time and places in Australia, and
interprets them in relation to historical events.
In ? KC1 2.2 Describes and records ages and
sequences using time-lines, calendars and
flow-charts to present historical information. T
? C ? KC2 ? KC5 2.3 Analyses aspects of peoples
lives and heritages in relation to broader social
issues and events, and imagines future
possibilities. F ? Id ? T ? C ? KC1
9
Activity 1 Common language - Part B
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • Activity In the same groups, identify the
    Outcome in the Curriculum Standard before or
    after your selected Outcome (eg see next slide -
    Outcomes 1.1, 2.1, 3.1) and repeat the task.
  • Describe the differences between the Outcomes at
    the Standard before or after your selected
    Outcome. Does this clarify your groups
    understanding of the Outcome?

10
Learning Area Society and EnvironmentStrand
Time, continuity and change
Accountability
Assessment
Data
Standard 1 Outcome 1.1 Identifies differences
between their life and the lives of other
generations in their society and explains some
reasons for this. IdInCKC1
Standard 2 Outcome 2.1 Examines information from
a range of sources about people in different
periods of time and places in Australia, and
interprets them in relation to historical events.
InKC1
Standard 3 Outcome 3.1 Identifies and explains
sequences of change that have occurred in
Australia over time, and recognises various
perspectives on events. FTCKC1KC2KC3
11
Diverse demonstrations
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • Learners demonstrate knowledge, skills and
    understanding in diverse ways.

12
Activity 2 Diverse learner demonstration
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • Purpose To discuss and describe how Outcomes can
    be demonstrated in diverse ways and consider how
    the mode of demonstration (product, performance,
    project, paper and pen) may advantage some
    learners.

1. In groups select a Key Idea, an Outcome and
some examples of evidence. 2. Identify other
possible ways that learners could demonstrate
this Outcome (focus particularly on different
modes, eg products, performances, paper and
pen). 3. Consider the learners that could be
advantaged by opportunities to demonstrate
learning in diverse ways.
13
Developing consistency of teacher judgment
Accountability
Assessment
Data
Module 2 Session 2
14
Moderation
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • Moderation of work product (performance, product,
    project, paper and pen) provides teachers with
    confirmation of their judgments.

15
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • Moderation enables teachers to
  • Be sure, make sure and assure others

16
We do not see things as they are.We see them as
we are.
Accountability
Assessment
Data
(The Talmud)
17
Activity 3Moderation
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • Purpose Using a set process, moderate a
    selection of evidence to reach agreement on the
    Outcomes demonstrated.

18
Moderation protocols
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • Learners work product
  • stay focused on what is evident within the work
    product
  • maintain an open and investigative state of mind
  • acknowledge distracters (ie legibility, content,
    incomplete work) but dont allow them to take
    over the conversation
  • look for what is there, not what is not (the
    glass is half full, not half empty)
  • Collaboration with colleagues
  • listen openly and respectfully and expect to be
    listened to similarly
  • explore perspectives that differ from your own
    and learn from them
  • be supportive when listening to colleagues
    comments
  • raise questions, not for the purpose of locating
    definitive answers, but for broadening the
    boundaries of our understandings
  • Critical reflection
  • Why do I notice the things that I notice within
    student work product?
  • What does this say about what I value?
  • What can I learn from and what can I offer my
    colleagues about noticing and valuing other
    elements of learner demonstrations of learning?
  • How does the construction of learning shape the
    demonstration of learning?
  • How can I use this knowledge to advantage
    learners in my class?
  • What can I learn about learners through
    collaborative moderation?

19
Moderation process
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • 1. Read the moderation protocols. (2 minutes)
  • 2. Independently read, observe or view the
    selection of evidence. Make notes about what you
    can see in the work product. At this stage do
    not make judgments about the quality or seek
    further information about the context or learner.
    (5-10 minutes)
  • 3. As a group, briefly share your comments about
    the selection of evidence.
  • (5 minutes)
  • 4. As a group, consider the questions that the
    selection of evidence raises for you. The
    presenting educator should make notes about these
    questions, but at this stage not respond to them.
    (5 minutes)
  • 5. The presenting educator uses the questions
    raised to briefly describe the learner and
    context. (5 minutes)
  • 6. Relate your observations about the learners
    demonstrations to the outcomes within the
    Curriculum Standards using the SACSA wall charts
    (and if needed the detailed band information).
    (10 minutes)
  • 7. From your discussion, list 3 recommendations
    or directions for teaching and learning. (5
    minutes)
  • Is there sufficient evidence to make a judgment
    about the Outcome?
  • Does the selection of evidence demonstrate
    achievement of the Outcome?
  • What further evidence is required to demonstrate
    the Outcome?

20
Developing consistency of teacher judgment
Accountability
Assessment
Module 2 Session 3
Data
21
Range of contexts over time
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • Consistent judgments are supported by assessment
    in a range of contexts over time.

Activity 4 - Individually or in pairs respond to
the following questions 1. What does in a
range of contexts over time mean? 2. How do you
currently provide learners with the
opportunity to demonstrate achievement in a
range of contexts over time? 3. Note some
new ways that you could provide learners with
opportunities to demonstrate achievement.
22
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • In the foreword to Evaluating Literacy A
    Perspective for Change (1991)
  • Garth Boomer wrote
  • Australian teachers for literacy must fight to
    retain both their preeminence and their rights as
    the best judges of how well their students are
    doing. Any schemes that are devised for national
    reporting on literacy achievements must be
    grounded in and informed by the rich judgments of
    the teachers who see children at work every day.
  • (Anthony, Johnson, Mickelson Preece, 1991, p.v1)

23
Point of reference
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • The Curriculum Standards provide a common point
    of reference from which we align our judgments of
    learners achievements.
  • Activity 5 - Group discussion
  • The Curriculum Standards are described as a
    common point of reference. What does this mean
    for our work?

24
Future directions
Accountability
Assessment
Data
  • As a staff, what processes, structures and
    activities will we use to ensure consistency of
    teacher judgment?
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