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Formative Assessment Institute

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Title: Formative Assessment Institute


1
Formative Assessment Institute
Barb Rowenhorst Jennifer Nehl Jackie Jessop
Rising Pam Lange
2
http//fai.tie.wikispaces.net/
3
Credit Options
  • Remember to sign in each day
  • PTBS Credit
  • Graduate Credit University of Wyoming

4
Outcomes
  • To share successes and challenges of assessment
    implementation.
  • To create criteria for rubric development.
  • To evaluate and develop rubrics.
  • To use technology for rubric development.

5
Agenda
  • Welcome
  • Homework sharing
  • Creating rubric criteria
  • Developing rubrics
  • Technology integration
  • Closure

6
Norms
  • Honor Private Think Time
  • Allow time for individual reflection in order to
    be concise with our comments
  • Allow for a variety of think time
  • Own Responsibility
  • Be punctual (Start on time, end on time)
  • Maintain focus (Minimize sidebar conversation)
  • Share Air Time
  • Share information
  • Respect the signal to refocus

7
September Survey Results
8
Homework Presentations Share successes
challenges of assessment implementation. Pam

9
Review Homework Presentation
  • Review with team
  • 5 minute discussion at your table
  • Challenges
  • Successes
  • If you could make one suggestion, what would it
    be?

10
Structure for Discussion
  • Protocol Save the Last Word for Me
  • Homework Discussion Guide
  • You will be given extra time to fill this portion
    out.
  • Discuss time limits important
  • Facilitator and Timekeeper

11
First Round
  • First Round Grouping
  • 4 to a group
  • Different schools per group
  • Three minutes to group

12
Discussion Guide
13
  • 25 minutes

14
Five Minute Reflection
  • Homework Discussion Guide (bottom)
  • Individually, take five minutes and reflect on
    the information you have learned.
  • Ideas
  • What might you like to report back to your team?
  • Suggestions for your district
  • Ideas that you might use in your position

15
Second Round
  • First Round Grouping
  • 4 to a group
  • Different schools per group
  • Three minutes to group

16
  • 25 minutes

17
Ten Minute Reflection/Break
  • Take a few minutes and reflect on the information
    you have learned.
  • Report back to your team
  • Suggestions for your district
  • Ideas that you might use
  • Chalk Talk
  • Write one assessment suggestion you think that
    everyone needs to know.

18
Analyzing Student WorkTo Create Rubric
CriteriaBarb
19
Show us what good work looks like and what we
have to do to get there. 8-year-old student
20
Analyzing Student Work
  • Provide clear and understandable expectations
  • Provide examples of strong and weak student work
  • Post strong student work on the classroom wall
    for students to use as a guide

21
Analyzing Student WorkRound 1 Social Studies
  • Independently, review each social studies student
    work. (A-O).
  • Sort the work into piles of Advanced,
    Proficient, and Basic/Below Basic.
  • As you sort, takes notes of your thinking to
    remind you how that rating was determined.

22
Analyzing Student WorkRound 1 Social Studies
23
Analyzing Student WorkRound 2 Social Studies
  • As a team
  • Come to consensus on what constitutes Advanced,
    Proficient, and Basic/Below Basic student
    work on this assignment.
  • Develop agreed-upon criteria for each rating.

24
Analyzing Student WorkRound 2 Social Studies
25
Analyzing Student WorkCharts Social Studies
Advanced
Proficient
Basic/Below Basic
26
Lets Do Another One!
27
Analyzing Student WorkRound 1 Science
  • Independently, review each social studies student
    work. (A-O).
  • Sort the work into piles of Advanced,
    Proficient, and Basic/Below Basic.
  • As you sort, takes notes of your thinking to
    remind you how that rating was determined.

28
Analyzing Student WorkRound 1 Science
29
Analyzing Student WorkRound 2 Science
  • As a team
  • Come to consensus on what constitutes Advanced,
    Proficient, and Basic/Below Basic student
    work on this assignment.
  • Develop agreed-upon criteria for each rating.

30
Analyzing Student WorkRound 2 Science
31
Analyzing Student WorkCharts Science
Advanced
Proficient
Basic/Below Basic
32
Analyzing Student Work
  • What might be some ways we can begin the process
    of ensuring there is consistency within
  • departments?
  • grade levels?
  • content areas?
  • building?
  • district?

33
  • Making clear decisions about your criteria before
    you begin to grade papers will help make the
    grading process quick, fair, and accurate. 
  • Using a version of your criteria as a cover sheet
    can help you score the paper and provide useful
    feedback to the student at the same time.

34
Emilys Story Revisited
35
Assessment For Learning
  • The story of Emily emphasizes that if assessment
    is going to be a tool FOR learning, students need
    to know
  • Where they are going.
  • Where they are now.
  • How to close the gap

36
Rubrics Jen
37
Steps in Rubric Developmentwith Past Student
Work
  • Step 1 Establish a knowledge base
  • Step 2 Gather samples of student performance
  • Step 3 Sort student work by level of quality
  • Step 4 Cluster the reasons into traits
  • Step 5 Identify sample performance that
    illustrate each level
  • Step 6 Make it better!!
  • Stiggens, Arter, Chappius, Chappius

38
What makes a good rubric?
  • Performance Criteria
  • Qualities of a good rubric
  • Assessment for and of learning
  • Stiggens, Arter, Chappius,Chappius

39
Performance Criteria of a Good Rubric
  • Defines quality for teachers
  • Describes quality for students
  • Judgments are more objective, consistent, and
    accurate
  • Focus teaching
  • Use of the rubric influences the design
  • Track student learning (Formative Assessment!!!)
  • (Page 200, Doing it Right, Doing it Well)

40
Qualities of a Good Rubric
  • Available in student-friendly version
  • Define various levels of success
  • Aligns to standards
  • Consistent language
  • Contains descriptive detail
  • Not negative at the low end
  • Include only those aspects of a performance or
    product that are most valued.
  • (Page 201, Doing it Right, Doing it Well)

41
The purpose of your rubric shapes the design.
42
R4R (Rubric for Rubrics)
  • Insert snapshot of R4R

43
Rubrics Samples
  • Snap shot of sample number 1 rubric

44
Looking at Sample Rubrics
  • Look at R4R.
  • Based on what weve discussed, review the sample
    rubrics.
  • Determine which rubrics are effective and which
    are weak.
  • You will have 20-30 minutes.
  • (approximately 10 minutes per rubric)
  • Be prepared to discuss your findings.

45
Looking at Sample Rubrics
  • As a group, determine a rubric rating for each of
    the four traits listed on the R4R.
  • Ready to Roll
  • On its Way
  • Not Ready
  • As a group, agree upon an overall rating for the
    whole rubric.
  • Ready to Roll
  • On its Way
  • Not Ready

46
Looking at Sample Rubrics
  • What did you find?
  • Sample 3
  • Sample 2
  • Sample 1

47
Steps in Rubric Development(Using past student
work)
  • Step 1 Establish a knowledge base
  • Step 2 Gather samples of student performance
  • Step 3 Sort student work by level of quality
  • Step 4 Cluster the reasons into traits
  • Step 5 Identify sample performance that
    illustrate each level
  • Step 6 Make it better!!

48
Steps in Rubric Development(Using past student
work)
  • Look at your criteria from Social Studies
    assessments.
  • Review the qualities and criteria for good
    rubrics (200-201).
  • Identify the learning targets, qualities,
    standards, benchmarks, etc. that will be
    assessed.
  • Choose the learning targets, qualities,
    standards, benchmarks, etc. that will be
    assessed as your proficient. This column gives
    the assessor a standard to work from.
  • What would an advanced look like?
  • What would basic look like?
  • Maintain consistent vocabulary, terminology, and
    criteria throughout traits.

49
Social Studies Rubric Development using Rubistar
http//rubistar.4teachers.org/index.php
  • Jackie Jessop Rising

50
Steps in Rubric Development(Using past student
work)
  • Take your proficient criteria from the Social
    Studies assessment and write it in the Proficient
    column.
  • Your description should include information
    about three of the following areas religion,
    individual rights, type of government, climate,
    use of technology, geography. What is
    proficient?
  • These will be the working baseline. This
    should be aligned directly to the state
    benchmarks, learning targets, performance
    descriptors, etc.
  • We will write the advanced, basic and below basic
    criteria from the proficient column.
  • What does the Basic criteria look like according
    to the Proficient column? The Below Basic? The
    Advanced?

51
Steps in Rubric Development(Using past student
work)
  • You will have 25 minutes to develop your
  • Social Studies Rubric

52
Peer Rubric Feedback
53
Day Two
54
TechnologyJackiehttp//rubistar.4teachers.org
55
Steps in Rubric Development(Without past student
work)
  • Look at your unit, project or lesson for rubric
    development.
  • Review the qualities and criteria for good
    rubrics (200-201).
  • Identify the learning targets, qualities,
    standards, benchmarks, etc. that will be
    assessed.
  • Choose the learning targets, qualities,
    standards, benchmarks, etc. that will be
    assessed as your proficient. This column gives
    the assessor a standard to work from.
  • What would an advanced look like?
  • What would basic look like?
  • Maintain consistent vocabulary, terminology, and
    criteria throughout traits.

56
Wyoming Standards
  • Grade 4 Fine and Performing Arts
  • 4.2 AESTHETIC PERCEPTION - Students respond to,
    analyze, and make informed judgments about works
    in the arts.
  • 4.2.2 Students recognize and describe the
    skills, techniques, processes, and technologies
    relevant to artistic works of music.

57
  • Proficient
  • 4.2.2 Student recognizes and describes the
    skills, techniques, processes, and technologies
    relevant to artistic works of music.

58
  • Proficient
  • How many traits or characteristics are we
    assessing? Four
  • 4.2.2 Student recognizes and describes the
    skills, techniques, processes, and technologies
    relevant to artistic works of music.

59
Wyoming Standards
  • Grade 11 Pysical Education
  • 11.1 MOVEMENT -Students demonstrate competency in
    movement forms and apply movement concepts and
    principles to the learning and development of
    motor skills.
  • 11.1.1 Students demonstrate movement skills
    as they would be employed in
  • A. rhythms or dance,
  • B. regulation or form team activities,
  • C. regulation or form individual or dual
    activities, and
  • D. lifetime activities.

60
Wyoming Standards
  • Proficient
  • 11.1.1 Student demonstrates movement skills
    and forms and applies movement concepts of motor
    skills as they would be employed in
  • A. rhythms or dance,
  • B. regulation or form team activities,
  • C. regulation or form individual or dual
    activities, and
  • D. lifetime activities.

61
Steps in Rubric Development(Without past student
work)
  • Snag rubric template

62
Steps in Rubric Development(without past student
work)
  • ALWAYS review, edit and improve!!!

63
Suggested Homework
  • Differentiate your rubric use
  • Take this process/dialogue to a team
  • Fine-tune your rubric you developed today and use
    the rubric with your students
  • Evaluate existing rubrics you use

64
Technology Sites
  • http//rubistar.4teacher.org
  • www.rubrics4teachers.com
  • http//landmark-project.com/rubric_builder/
  • http//school.discoveryeducation.com/schrockguide/
    assess.html

65
Suggested Homework
  • Differentiate your rubric use
  • Take this process/dialogue to a team
  • Fine-tune your rubric you developed today and use
    the rubric with your students
  • Evaluate existing rubrics you use

66
Safe Travels
  • See you in February 11 and 12
  • Remember, FAI training is Wednesday and Thursday
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