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Georgia Performance Standards Day 2: Learning to Assess and Assessing to Learn 7 th Grade Mathematics.

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Presentation on theme: "Georgia Performance Standards Day 2: Learning to Assess and Assessing to Learn 7 th Grade Mathematics."— Presentation transcript:

1 Georgia Performance Standards Day 2: Learning to Assess and Assessing to Learn 7 th Grade Mathematics

2 Contact Information Georgia Department of Education 1754 Twin Towers East Atlanta, Georgia 30334 Office Phone: (404) 657-9063 Office email: ppool@doe.k12.ga.us Peggy Pool

3 First Grade Takes a Test Think About: What do we assess? Why do we assess? How do we assess?

4 Table Discussion What should we assess? Why should we assess? How should we assess?

5 Stephen Covey Quote “To begin with the end in mind means to start with a clear understanding of your destination. It means to know where you’re going so that you better understand where you are now and so that the steps you take are always in the right direction.”

6 Today’s Assessment Develop an assessment to gather evidence of what students will know and be able to do related to the standard(s) you chose.

7 Performance Tasks & Assessments * often occur over time * result in a tangible product or observable performance * encourage self-evaluation and revision * require judgment to score * reveal degrees of proficiency based on criteria established and made public prior to the performance * sometimes involve students working with others

8 According to Grant Wiggins… What is to be assessed must be clear and explicit to all students. NO MORE SURPRISES! Rubrics must accompany all major assignments and assessments.

9 A rubric is a set of rules that Shows levels of quality Communicates standards Tells students expectations for assessment task Is NOT a checklist (yes or no answers) Includes dimensions (criteria), indicators and a rating scale.

10 Today’s Assessment Rubric

11 Essential Question 1 What should we assess?

12 The “eyes” have it!

13 What mathematics is involved in this task? What standards/elements are addressed?

14 Is This a Good Task? Decide whether this is or is not a good task. Justify your answer.

15 Criteria for Good Tasks Involves significant mathematics Can be solved in a variety of ways Elicits a range of responses Requires communication Stimulates best performance Lends itself to a scoring rubric

16 Standards Based Education Model GPS (one or more) Standards Elements Stage 1 Identify Desired Results (Big Ideas)  Enduring Understandings  Essential Questions  Skills and Knowledge All above, plus Tasks Student Work Teacher Commentary Stage 2 Determine Acceptable Evidence (Design Balanced Assessments) (To assess student progress toward desired results) Stage 3 Plan Learning Experiences and Instruction (to support student success on assessments, leading to desired results) All above

17 Looking for Big Ideas Big Ideas are key concepts. Look for ideas in key nouns found in the standards. M7A3. Students will understand relationships between two variables. a. Plot points on a coordinate plane.

18 From Understandings to Questions “Students will understand that two variables such as x and y can determine an ordered pair (x,y) and they have a relationship which determines the placement of a point on the coordinate plane.” Why is it important to be able to plot points on a coordinate plane? How can I represent a relationship from tables, and/or formulas using points on the coordinate plane?

19 Skills and Knowledge Facts Concepts Generalizations Rules, Laws, Procedures KNOWLEDGE (declarative) Skills Procedures Processes SKILLS (procedural)

20 Skills and Knowledge M7A3. Students will understand relationships between two variables. a. Plot points on a coordinate plane Ordered PairsQuadrants Coordinatesx-Axis Coordinate Planey-Axis Graphing

21 Concrete Semi- Abstract Semi- Concrete Abstract Concept Development

22 Essential Question 2 Why should we assess?

23 911! Emergency 1.Complete the task. 2.Identify the standards addressed by this assignment. 3.Specify the criteria of the assignment.

24 911! Emergency What could you learn about students based on their performance on this task?

25 Accountability The purpose of the Georgia Testing Program is to measure the level of student achievement of the standards identify students failing to achieve mastery of content provide teachers with diagnostic information assist school systems in identifying strengths and weaknesses in order to establish priorities in planning educational programs.

26 CRCT Information Testing

27 Essential Question 3 How should we assess?

28 Assessment vs. Grading Student 1 receives mostly As and high Bs in the beginning; but his/her performance drops off considerably, and s/he receives an F on the final performance test. Student 2 is erratic, receiving an equal number of As and Fs. Student 3 is clueless at the beginning, but by the last few sessions, s/he catches on and performs flawlessly on the final performance. His/her grades are, in order from the first test to the last, F, F, F, F, C, B, A, A, A.

29 What about Sam? Give Sam a grade…

30 How should we assess? What assessment insights did you gain from this activity?

31 Assessing for Learning vs Grading Assessing – Continuous process – Provides feedback to improve student achievement – May be formative or summative – Provides a means of collecting evidence of student mastery of the standards – Provides a photo album of student progress through which student growth can be observed Grading A means of assigning numerical or alphabetical grade to a student’s work to inform students, parents and other stakeholders May be formative or summative Provides an attempt to quantitatively describe student achievement Provides a snapshot of student progress

32 Multiple Representations Pictures Tables WordsSymbols Graphs

33 Types of Classroom Assessment Multiple Choice True-False Matching Selected Response Fill-in-the- blank (words, phrases) Essay Short answer (sentences, paragraphs) Diagram Web Concept Map Flowchart Graph Table Matrix Illustration Presentation Movement Science lab Athletic skill Dramatization Enactment Project Debate Model Exhibition Recital Oral questioning Observation Interview Conference Process description Checklist Rating scale Journal sharing Thinking aloud a process Student self- assessment Peer review Constructed Response Performance Assessment Informal Assessment

34 Matching Assessments with Standards ASSESSMENT FORMAT ACHIEVEMENT TARGET Selected Response Constructed Response Performance Tasks Informal Assessment Knowledge/ Informational Skills/Process Thinking and Reasoning Communication Other: Can assess mastery of specific elements of content knowledge Short answers allow students to apply content knowledge Not a good choice for this target; other options preferred Teacher can ask questions, evaluate answers, and infer mastery; but this may not be time-efficient Can assess application of some patterns of reasoning Can observe and evaluate skills as they are being performed Strong match when skill is oral communication Written descriptions of complex problem solutions can provide insight into reasoning proficiency. Can watch students solve some problems or examine some products and infer reasoning proficiency Can ask students to “think aloud” or can ask follow- up questions to probe reasoning Not a good choice for this target; other options preferred Can observe and evaluate oral & written communication portions of performance tasks. Strong match with some communication skills, especially oral communication -Adapted from Marzano and Stiggins Not a good choice for this target; other options preferred. Can assess under- standing of the steps of a process, but not a good choice for evaluating most skills

35 Emergency 911! Bay City Analyze the five pieces of student work to this task using the steps for “Analyzing Student Work”.

36 Emergency 911! Bay City 1.Generate a rough rubric or scoring guide based on the standards addressed and the criteria for this assignment. 2.Score the work or provide feedback on the work, using the rubric/scoring guide. 3.Plan a strategy for improving student performance based on the work.

37 Rubrics Holistic Analytical Longitudinal

38 Advantages of Using a Rubric Lowers students’ anxiety about what is expected of them Provides specific feedback about the quality of their work Provides a way to communicate expectations and progress Ensures all student work is judged by the same standard Disengages the “halo” effect and its reverse Leads students toward quality work.

39 Basic Rubric Template Scale Criteria Indicator

40 Ugly Rubrics Too wordy so that no one can understand, let alone use them for a fair grade Checklists – Have it, don’t have it Judge the wrong thing so student can just jump through hoops to get a good grade.

41 Pretty Rubrics Are tools Show level of quality of a performance or task Communicate standards clearly and specifically Are given to students to set expectations Show what to avoid and addresses misconceptions Are consistent and reliable Use content that matches standards and instructional emphasis

42 Small group discussion: What has to happen? If you know what a student must understand, how do you check to see if that student understands? What evidence will you use to evaluate the level of understanding? What will you do in your classroom based on the evidence you collect?

43 Today’s Assessment Develop an assessment to gather evidence of what students will know and be able to do related to the standard(s) you chose.

44 Work in small groups. Choose standard(s) and/or element(s) you have used to identify the desired results. Focus on each understanding and write how a teacher could use assessment to find evidence of the student’s understanding. Develop a culminating task and rubric.

45 Self-Assessment Self-Assessment Setting a Goal

46 Field Assignment Redeliver Day 2. Use the assessment you created today with students. Collect work samples to share with the group. Bring student work samples of your task to Day 3. Bring resources to help you develop your unit.

47 Days of Training Implementation Year One –Day One: Standards-based Education –Day Two: Assessment –Day Three: Instruction –Day Four: Unit Design Implementation Year Two –Day Five: Differentiation –Day Six: Examining Student Work –Day Seven: Putting It All Together

48 Contact Information Georgia Department of Education 1754 Twin Towers East Atlanta, Georgia 30334 Office Phone: (404) 657-9063 Office email: ppool@doe.k12.ga.us Peggy Pool


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