7 Strategies Study Guide PDF
7 Strategies Study Guide PDF
Jan Chappuis
Table of Contents
Learning Goals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Connection to Other ETS ATI Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Mode of Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Overview of Seven Strategies of Assessment for Learning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 The ETS ATI Model of Collaborative Learning Teams. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Setting Up a Learning Team . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 How to Use the Study Guide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Learning Team Schedule of Readings, Discussions, and Activities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Chapter 1 Key Ideas, Questions, and Activities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Chapter 2 Key Ideas, Questions, and Activities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Chapter 3 Key Ideas, Questions, and Activities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Chapter 4 Key Ideas, Questions, and Activities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Chapter 5 Key Ideas, Questions, and Activities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Chapter 6 Key Ideas, Questions, and Activities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Appendix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Learning Goals
The book, Seven Strategies of Assessment for Learning, organizes research-based recommendations about formative assessment practices into an instructional framework that can improve student achievement. Through its study you will learn the following: How to help students develop a clear vision of the content standards they are responsible for learning How to offer effective feedback related to your content standards How to teach students to self-assess, peer-assess, and set goals for further learning How to offer focused practice and revision opportunities How to engage students in tracking, reflecting on, and sharing their progress
Mode of Study
Whether you will engage in this study independently, with a partner, or with a team, we recommend that you read each chapter yourself and try the suggestions out in your own classroom, if you have one. We also recommend that, if possible, you team with at least one other person to discuss the ideas presented, the actions you have taken, and effects on student motivation and achievement. Throughout the study guide you will find suggestions related to working through the book with a team, but you can use or modify most of the activities to suit your learning if you are working alone or with a partner.
Chapter Chapter 1: Formative Assessment and Assessment for Learning pp. 114
Key Ideas Defining formative assessment Understanding key research on formative assessments power Understanding what the seven strategies are and how they connect to research findings Developing learning goals in students Clarifying learning targets Communicating targets to students
Strategy 1: Provide students with a clear and understandable vision of the learning target. Strategy 2: Use examples and models of strong and weak work. Strategy 3: Offer regular descriptive feedback.
Understanding the characteristics of effective feedback Selecting feedback options suited to students grade level and kind of learning to be addressed Preparing students to give each other feedback Understanding the impact of self-assessment on student achievement Teaching students to self-assess with a focus on learning targets Teaching students to create specific and challenging goals Identifying typical misconceptions, reasoning errors, and learning gaps for focused instruction Creating short practice assignments to scaffold the learning and make it more manageable Giving students opportunities to practice and act on feedback before the summative event Keeping students in touch with their growth Providing time and structure for students to reflect on their learning Offering opportunities for students to share their progress
Chapter 5: How Can I Close the Gap? Focused Teaching and Revision pp. 129148
Strategy 5: Design lessons to focus on one learning target or aspect of quality at a time. Strategy 6: Teach students focused revision. Strategy 7: Engage students in self-reflection and let them keep track of and share their learning.
Chapter 6: How Can I Close the Gap? Tracking, Reflecting on, and Sharing Learning pp. 149174
Appendix A: Student-friendly Scoring Rubrics, pp. 175197 Appendix B: Reproducible Forms, pp. 201254
For further explanation of the learning team concept and rationale, refer to the article Supporting Teacher Learning Teams published in the February 2009 issue of Educational Leadership and available on our website at http://www.assessmentinst.com/publication/supporting-teacher-learning-teams.
Source: Adapted with permission from J. Chappuis, Learning Team Facilitator Handbook: A Resource for Collaborative Study of Classroom Assessment for Student Learning (Portland, OR: ETS Assessment Training Institute, 2007), pp. 1822.
Planning forms and a sample team meeting log form are located in the appendix of this study guide. One member of a learning team can serve as facilitator, the role can rotate among team members, or a facilitator may be assigned to a group, as when a professional development specialist manages the learning experience. In all cases, it is preferable that the facilitator does the work along with the team.
To offer differences of opinion respectfully To come prepared to the meetings To help each other notice success
Compensation
When learning team participation requires work beyond the school day, it is helpful to seek out compensation options such as a stipend, credit applied toward advancement on the local salary schedule, or college credit. You may also want to connect this study to professional recognition options available in your school, district, or region.
Source: Adapted with permission from J. Chappuis, Learning Team Facilitator Handbook: A Resource for Collaborative Study of Classroom Assessment for Student Learning (Portland, OR: ETS Assessment Training Institute, 2007), pp. 3362.
Session 3: Chapter 2 (pp. 1542) Strategy 1 Session 4: Chapter 2 (pp. 4251) Strategy 2
Read pages 1542. Complete Study Guide Activities 2.12.5 if it makes sense to do them individually or with a partner before the next team meeting. Read pages 4251. Read through Study Guide Activities 2.6 and 2.7. Gather required materials to bring to the next team meeting.
Read pages 5383. Read through Study Guide Activities 3.1 and 3.2. Gather required materials to bring to the next team meeting. Complete Study Guide Activity 3.3 if it makes sense to do it individually or with a partner before the next team meeting.
Discuss Study Guide questions 68 and other questions, insights, and issues raised by the reading. Discuss results of Study Guide Activity 3.4. Review Chapter 4 Key Ideas and discuss Chapter 4 Study Guide questions 13 as anticipatory set for Chapter 4 readings. Discuss Study Guide questions 46 and other questions, insights, and issues raised by the reading. Discuss results of Study Guide Activities 4.1 and 4.2 if completed prior to the team meeting. Complete Study Guide Activity 4.2 if not done prior to the team meeting. Discuss Study Guide questions 79 and other questions, insights, and issues raised by the reading. Discuss results of Study Guide Activity 4.3 if completed prior to the team meeting. Complete Study Guide Activity 4.3 if not done prior to the team meeting. Review Chapter 5 Key Ideas and discuss Chapter 5 Study Guide questions 1 and 2 as anticipatory set for Chapter 5 readings. Discuss Study Guide questions 35 and other questions, insights, and issues raised by the reading. Discuss results of Study Guide Activity 5.1. Discuss results of Study Guide Activities 5.2 and 5.3 if completed prior to the team meeting. Complete Study Guide Activities 5.2 and 5.3 if not done prior to the team meeting. Discuss Study Guide questions 67 and other questions, insights, and issues raised by the reading. Discuss results of Study Guide Activity 5.4 if completed prior to the team meeting. Complete Study Guide Activity 5.4 if not done prior to the team meeting. Review Chapter 6 Key Ideas and discuss Chapter 6 Study Guide questions 1 and 2 as anticipatory set for Chapter 6 readings.
Read pages 93117. Complete Study Guide Activity 4.1. Complete Study Guide Activity 4.2 if it makes sense to do it individually or with a partner before the next team meeting.
Read pages 117127. Complete Study Guide Activity 4.3 if it makes sense to do it individually or with a partner before the next team meeting.
Read pages 129140. Complete Study Guide Activity 5.1. Complete Study Guide Activities 5.2 and 5.3 if it makes sense to do them individually or with a partner before the next team meeting.
Read pages 141148. Complete Study Guide Activity 5.4 if it makes sense to do it individually or with a partner before the next team meeting.
Read pages 149167. Complete Study Guide Activities 6.1 and 6.2 if it makes sense to do them individually or with a partner before the next team meeting.
Discuss Study Guide questions 35 and other questions, insights, and issues raised by the reading. Discuss results of Study Guide Activities 6.1 and 6.2 if completed prior to the team meeting. Complete Study Guide Activities 6.1 and 6.2 if not done prior to the team meeting. Discuss Study Guide questions 67 and other questions, insights, and issues raised by the reading. Discuss results of Study Guide Activity 6.3 if completed prior to the team meeting. Complete Study Guide Activity 6.3 if not done prior to the team meeting. Share your work from Study Guide Activity 6.4.
Read pages 167174. Complete Study Guide Activity 6.3 if it makes sense to do it individually or with a partner before the next team meeting.
Session 13: Reflecting and Sharing Session 14: Planning to Share Session 15: Share Fair
Read through Study Guide Activity 6.5. Gather materials you will need to bring to the next team meeting. Set up.
Complete the planning steps of either Option 1 or Option 2 of Study Guide Activity 6.5. Share.
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Prereading Questions
1. How would you define the term formative assessment? 2. What forms does assessment information take in your classroom? (grade, symbol, comment, raw score, number, other?) 3. What do you want students to do with assessment information? 4. When students act on assessment information, what do they do?
Closure Questions
7. Which ideas from this chapter were most significant to you? 8. What one action might you take based on your reading and discussion of Chapter 1?
Activities
1.1 Formative and Summative Uses 1.2 What Do You Already Do?
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Recommended Modification
Rationale
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1: Provide students with a clear and understandable vision of the learning target. 2: Use examples and models of strong and weak work.
5: Design lessons to focus on one learning target or aspect of quality at a time. 6: Teach students focused revision.
7: Engage students in selfreflection and let them keep track of and share their learning. 2. Discuss with a partner or your learning team: Which strategies do you currently use most often? Least often?
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Prereading Questions
1. How do you communicate the intended learning of a lesson, activity, task, project, or unit to students? 2. When does this occur?
Closure Questions
11. What activities from Chapter 2 did you try in the classroom? How did they work? What successes did you notice? What modifications might you make?
Activities
2.1 Clarifying Learning Targets 2.2 Sharing Learning Targets 2.3 Converting Learning Targets to Student-friendly Language 2.4 Prerequisite: A Suitable Rubric 2.5 Developing a Student-friendly Version of a Scoring Rubric 2.6 Assembling Samples of Student Work 2.7 Practicing with the Table Protocol for Analyzing Sample Papers
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2009 ETS Assessment Training Institute www.ets.org/ati
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Learning Target
Share as Is?
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Word(s) to be defined:
Working definition(s):
Student-friendly language:
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18
Leave Out?
Criterion
Leave as Is? Convert? Student-friendly Phrase:
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After reading the section titled Selecting Samples on page 43, work with a partner or team to make a collection of numbered anonymous samples that illustrate one or more strengths and problems as defined by your rubric. Make sure the strengths and problems link directly to phrases on your rubric. If your samples relate to a rubric with more than one scale (i.e., it has two or more criteria or traits evaluated separately), identify the criterion that the sample illustrates. Use the chart below to keep track of your selections. As explained on page 43, if you are including your own students work, ask for written permission for their work to be shown as an anonymous teaching example and then make sure not to use it with their class. Grade Level: Subject:
Sample #
Strength(s)
Problem(s)
Notes
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Activity 2.7 Practicing with the Table Protocol for Analyzing Sample Papers
This activity will work best if all team members are familiar with the scoring rubric used. 1. After reading pages 2845, prepare for using the table protocol described on page 46 by doing the following: Select two or three samples of student work and make copies of each for each learning team member. Make a copy of the scoring rubric for each team member. If it is a multi-trait rubric, select one criterion to focus on. You only need to make copies of that criterion, but it is a good idea to have one copy of the complete rubric to refer to in case people have questions about other features of the samples that are not addressed in the criterion you are focusing on. Variations: One or more team members can provide samples all relating to the same scoring rubric Different team members can bring samples relating to different rubrics 2. As a team, review the section titled A Protocol for Using Anonymous Samples with Students on pages 4445. 3. Follow the protocol described on page 46. Allow a different person to act as table moderator for each sample of student work. You can use the form to track your responses.
Sample S/W Score Rationale: Rubric Phrases That Describe the Sample
4. Discuss how you might use the whole-class protocol described on pages 4445 and the small-group protocol described on page 46 with your students. Or, if you have already used one or both, discuss what you did and what you noticed happening with students as a result.
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Prereading Questions
1. When do students in your class receive feedback on their progress? 2. What forms does feedback take in your classroom? 3. What do you expect students to do with feedback information?
Closure Questions
8. What activities from Chapter 3 did you try in the classroom? How did they work? What successes did you notice? What modifications might you make?
Activities
3.1 Responding to Student Work 3.2 Three-minute Conference 3.3 Selecting and Modifying Feedback Forms 3.4 Peer Feedback Discussion
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5. Alternatively, assign a different color of index cards to each team member (one index card per person per sample). Each of you numbers your cards to correspond to the sample numbers and then writes your feedback for each sample on your colored index cards, using the star symbol on one side for success feedback and the stair step symbol on the other side for intervention feedback. After everyone has completed their cards, assign one sample and its pile of index cards to each member and let that person read aloud all of the success comments and then all of the intervention comments. Discuss and attempt to resolve discrepancies for each sample by referring to the definition of quality (description of the learning target or scoring rubric) before moving on to the next one. 6. Have your students do either version of this activity (using only samples not from their class). Share with your colleagues your observations about the effects of this activity on your students motivation and understanding of quality.
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5. Conduct a three-minute conference with your partner (as described on page 82). Let the student speak first and do all of the writing on the Assessment Dialogue form. Partner B, when it is your turn to speak, try to follow the suggestions for effective success and intervention feedback as you make your comments. 6. Switch roles: Partner B becomes the student and Partner A becomes the teacher. Follow the same protocol using the work sample that Partner B brought. 7. Discuss with your partner: What does this protocol do for the student? For the teacher? 8. Discuss with your team: How might you use the three-minute conference in your classroom? What modifications might you make?
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2. Use the form to offer feedback. Bring a few samples of your feedback to your next team meeting to share. If some students were more successful than others in acting on the feedback, bring a sample of successful and unsuccessful student attempts. Discuss possible revisions to the process or the form to make it work well for all students. You can also use the following checklist to determine students readiness to understand and act on feedback.
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Successes:
Possible solutions:
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Prereading Questions
1. Self-assessment takes timewhy might you ask students to do it? 2. What do students need to know and be able to do in order to self-assess accurately? 3. What problems do students have with setting goals that are likely to help them improve?
Closure Questions
9. What activities from Chapter 4 did you try in the classroom? How did they work? What successes did you notice? What modifications might you make?
Activities
4.1 Determining Readiness to Self-assess 4.2 Self-assessment with a Selected Response Quiz or Practice Test 4.3 Selecting and Modifying Self-assessment and Goal Setting Forms
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2. If the answer to one or more of the questions on the Self-assessment Readiness Checklist A is no, then you may want to revisit some of the activities described in Chapter 2 before proceeding with selfassessment and goal setting activities. 3. If the answer to one or more of the questions on the Self-assessment Readiness Checklist B is no, then you may want to revisit some of the activities described in Chapter 3 before proceeding with selfassessment and goal setting activities. 4. Once you have asked students to try self-assessing, if some of them have trouble knowing what to write, you can use the checklist above as a guide to determining what intervention is most likely to help them.
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1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 3. Determine when you want students to use the results to self-assess and set goals: before the learning, during the learning, or as a review prior to a summative test. Check the items on the task to be sure you have an adequate representative sample for your intended purpose. For more information on ensuring an adequate sample, see R. Stiggins, J. Arter, J. Chappuis, and S. Chappuis, Classroom Assessment for Student Learning: Doing It RightUsing It Well (Portland, OR: ETS Assessment Training Institute, 2004) pp. 113114, 129130, 173174, and 197199. 4. Decide whether you want to leave the items on the task in their current order or to regroup them according to the learning target each addresses. Discuss with your partner/team the relative advantages and disadvantages of each option. 5. Create a form for students to use to review and analyze their assignment/quiz/practice test results. Look through the examples on pages 104, 106, 107, 110, and 112116. Select one of these to use or modify, or make your own. 6. Have students use the form to interpret the assignment/quiz/practice test results and set goals for their next steps, following the guidelines on pages 124126. 7. Bring a few samples of completed forms to your next team meeting to share. If some students were more successful than others with this activity, bring a sample of successful and unsuccessful student attempts. Discuss possible revisions to the process or the form to make it work well for all students. Also consider the questions on the Self-assessment Readiness Checklist A in Activity 4.1 to determine if more work with Chapter 2 activities might help.
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Activity 4.3 Selecting and Modifying Self-assessment and Goal Setting Forms
1. After reading the section titled Three Parts: Self-assessment, Justification, and Goal Setting on pages 99123, look over the self-assessment forms on pages 210220 in Appendix B. With a partner or your learning team, identify those that could be used in your context (grade, subject, learning targets) to help students self-assess. Select or modify one and make a plan to use it by deciding the following: Which unit of study you will use it with What learning target(s) will be the focus of students self-assessment When they will self-assessbefore, during, or after instruction Form Title: Page: Use As Is Modify
Unit: Learning Target(s): Used When? Before instruction During instruction Before summative assessment
2. After reading pages 123127, look over the goal setting forms on pages 221228 in Appendix B. With a partner or your team, identify those that could be used in your context (grade, subject, learning targets) to help students set workable goals. Select or modify one and make a plan to use it by deciding the following: Which unit of study you will use it with What learning target(s) will be the focus of students goal setting When they will set goalsbefore, during, or after instruction Form Title: Page: Use As Is Modify
Unit: Learning Target(s): Used When? Before instruction During instruction Before summative assessment
3. Have students use the forms. Bring a few samples of completed forms to your next team meeting to share. If some students were more successful than others with this activity, bring a sample of successful and unsuccessful student attempts. Discuss possible revisions to the process or the form to make it work well for all students. For self-assessment problems, consider the questions on the Readiness Checklist A in Activity 4.1 to determine if more work with Chapter 2 activities might help. For goal setting problems, review the information on page 124 to determine which part of the process needs more attention.
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Prereading Questions
1. Think of an upcoming unit of instruction. What concepts, reasoning, skills, or products can you predict students will have difficulty with? 2. What have you done in the past to overcome those difficulties?
Closure Questions
7. What activities from Chapter 5 did you try in the classroom? How did they work? What successes did you notice? What modifications might you make?
Activities
5.1 Going on an Error Hunt 5.2 Developing Lessons Around Multiple-choice Items 5.3 Selecting and Modifying Graphic Organizers 5.4 Creating Focused Tasks
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2. Ask one or more colleagues teaching the same content to do this, too. 3. Meet with your colleague(s) to compare lists. Add their problems to your list if you think your students also have them. Once you have a complete list, select the misconceptions, incomplete understandings, and/or reasoning flaws that you want to address in either whole-class or grouped instruction. Consider frequency and importance in your deliberation. Discuss ways to address those problems for which you wont design whole-class or grouped instruction. 4. Use one of the ideas suggested on pages 132133 while teaching to the targeted problems. 5. Meet with your team to discuss the results of the activity you tried.
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4. Format your multiple-choice item to match the practice lesson option you have selected. Refer to the examples in Figures 5.3, 5.4, 5.5, and 5.6 for suggestions. 5. Conduct the practice lesson with students. You may want to bring a few samples of student responses to your next team meeting and discuss the impact of the lesson on their understanding. 6. You may want to create a new item and use the same or a different lesson option if students would benefit from continued practice.
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3. If there is no graphic organizer for one or more of the patterns of reasoning your students need practice with, work with a partner or your team to create one that helps students understand the elements of quality. Begin by developing a clear statement that defines quality and then create a diagram that guides students to include all relevant components. Refer to pages 230242 for examples. 4. Let students use the graphic organizer when they are practicing answering questions calling for the targeted pattern of reasoning. 5. Bring samples of student work to share with your learning team. If some students were more successful than others, bring samples of successful and unsuccessful student attempts. Discuss with your team possible solutions: modifications to the graphic organizer, refinement of the definition of quality, or further use of strong and weak examples, as described in Chapter 2.
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Prereading Questions
1. How do the processes of tracking, reflecting on, and sharing learning work to close the gap? 2. What activities do your students currently engage in that you would classify under the umbrella of Strategy 7?
Closure Questions
7. What activities from Chapter 6 did you try in the classroom? How did they work? What successes did you notice? What modifications might you make?
Activities
6.1 Tracking Learning 6.2 Reflecting on Learning 6.3 Sharing Learning 6.4 What Do You Do Now? 6.5 Reflecting on Your Own Learning 6.6 Sharing Your Learning
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4. Create the form(s) students will use. (Pages 243248 in Appendix B are blank versions of the tracking forms shown in Chapter 6.) 5. Let students keep track of their learning for the duration of the unit or grading/marking period. Consider asking them to share what they think this activity did for them. Keep track yourself of students comments about the activity, about their learning, or about themselves as learners while they are recording their progress. 6. At the end of the unit or grading/marking period, share with your learning team samples of students completed forms or journals. Discuss students comments and reactions to the activity and any changes you noticed in their motivation and achievement. 7. Note any revisions you want to make to the process or the forms. You can focus on continued use with the next set of learning targets you will teach to this class or use with a different class the next time you teach these learning targets.
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3. Have students use the reflection form, prompt, or questions. Consider asking them to share what they think this activity did for them. Keep track of your impressions regarding the activitys impact on students understanding of themselves as learners, motivation to continue learning, and achievement. 4. Bring a few samples of students reflections to share with your learning team. Discuss students reaction to the activity and your impressions about its impact. 5. Note any revisions you might like to make to the process or to the form, prompt, or questions for future use.
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3. Explain the process and its purpose to students and to parents. 4. Let students engage in the sharing option you have selected. 5. If students have been involved in a conference, debrief the experience with all participants following the suggestions on page 173. (A full-page version of the Conference Evaluation Form can be found in Appendix B on page 252.) Keep track of your own impressions regarding this activitys impact on students understanding of themselves as learners, their motivation to continue learning, and their achievement. 6. Share with your learning team a few samples of either students written communication or their debrief comments regarding the oral sharing experience. Also discuss your own observations about its impact on students and parents. 7. Note any revisions you might like to make to the form(s) or the protocol for future use.
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1: Provide students with a clear and understandable vision of the learning target.
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Strategy
My Current Practices/Activities
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Strategy
My Current Practices/Activities
7: Engage students in selfreflection and let them keep track of and share their learning.
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Option 2: Sharing with Colleagues Who Are Not Part of a Learning Team
1. Learning team members bring the work they have done with Activity 6.4 to a meeting and each spends a few minutes explaining his or her artifacts and what they illustrate. 2. Each person on the team then selects his or her own artifacts to share with others. The team decides the method of sharing. Here are some options: In a large group setting, such as a faculty meeting, you each can give a short description of the key idea your artifact illustrates and a brief explanation of how you used it and what you noticed happening with students as a result. You can involve the audience in a brief activity that simulates a part of what you had your students do, if appropriate. You can follow the same procedure in a smaller group format, such a department meeting. You can each create a display similar to the one described above, and set the displays up in a room such as the cafeteria or library. You can each give a short presentation to small groups as they rotate through your team members displays. 3. In each of the sharing options, be sure to include a description of the key idea or ideas illustrated and a reflection on its impact.
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Appendix
Team Meeting Schedule Team Meeting Planning Template Sample Learning Team Log Reflective Journal Chart: Seven Strategies of Assessment for Learning
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Date
Time
Location
Facilitator
46
End Time:
2.
Time allocated: Points to address:
3.
Time allocated: Activity # : Activity # :
Activity/-ies (optional)
Materials needed:
4.
Reading:
Time: Location:
Source: Reprinted with permission from J. Chappuis, Learning Team Facilitator Handbook: A Resource for Collaborative Study of Classroom Assessment for Student Learning (Portland, OR: ETS Assessment Training Institute, 2007), p. 60.
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Source: Adapted with permission from R. Stiggins, J. Arter, J. Chappuis, and S. Chappuis, Classroom Assessment for Student Learning: Doing It RightUsing It Well (Portland, OR: ETS Assessment Training Institute, 2004), CD-ROM.
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Reflective Journal
Seven Strategies of Assessment for Learning
Name: Chapter: Thoughts, questions, reactions to what I read: Date: Pages read:
Activity(ies) tried:
Source: Adapted with permission from J. Chappuis, Learning Team Facilitator Handbook: A Resource for Collaborative Study of Classroom Assessment for Student Learning (Portland, OR: ETS Assessment Training Institute, 2007), p. 128.
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Where am I going?
Provide students with a clear and understandable vision of the learning target. Use examples and models of strong and weak work.
Where am I now?
Offer regular descriptive feedback. Teach students to self-assess and set goals.
Source: Adapted with permission from R. Stiggins, J. Arter, J. Chappuis, and S. Chappuis, Classroom Assessment for Student Learning: Doing It RightUsing It Well (Portland, OR: ETS Assessment Training Institute, 2004), p. 42.