Education Consultant Specializing in Assessing Student Learning

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
EU Presidency Conference Effective policies for the development of competencies of youth in Europe Warsaw, November 2011 Improving basic skills in.
Advertisements

Algebra Problem Solving with the new Common Core Standards
Educational Consultant
Moral Character and Character Education
Chapter 5 Transfer of Training
Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 1 Computer Systems Organization & Architecture Chapters 8-12 John D. Carpinelli.
Copyright © 2011, Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 6 Author: Julia Richards and R. Scott Hawley.
Author: Julia Richards and R. Scott Hawley
1 Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 3 CPUs.
1 Assessment as A Catalyst to Deepen Student Learning Keynote Address: General Education and Assessment: Creating Shared Responsibility for Learning Across.
UNITED NATIONS Shipment Details Report – January 2006.
1 1 S ession 3 How to Effectively Implement Learning Objectives.
1 Measuring Progress: Monitoring and Evaluation in WRIA 8 WRIA 8 Salmon Recovery Council November 19, 2009 Scott Stolnack WRIA 8 Technical Coordinator.
1 RA I Sub-Regional Training Seminar on CLIMAT&CLIMAT TEMP Reporting Casablanca, Morocco, 20 – 22 December 2005 Status of observing programmes in RA I.
DRDP Measure Slides by Domain
1 DPAS II Process and Procedures for Teachers Developed by: Delaware Department of Education.
1 What Is The Next Step? - A review of the alignment results Liru Zhang, Katia Forêt & Darlene Bolig Delaware Department of Education 2004 CCSSO Large-Scale.
BUILDING THE CAPACITY TO ACHIEVE HEALTH & LEARNING OUTCOMES
June 13 and June 16, 2011 Analytical and Applied Sciences June/July
1 Mathematics and Science Model Lesson Series Elementary Science Module Developed by the Florida Department of Education.
Southern Regional Education Board 1 Preparing Students for Success in High School.
1 Career Pathways for All Students PreK-14 2 Compiled by Sue Updegraff Keystone AEA Information from –Iowa Career Pathways –Iowa School-to-Work –Iowa.
The Course experience questionnaire (P. Ramsden) Designed as a performance indicator 24 statements relating to 5 aspects 1 overall satisfaction statement.
REVIEW: Arthropod ID. 1. Name the subphylum. 2. Name the subphylum. 3. Name the order.
World-class Standards World Class Education Standards (WCES) are those standards that, when implemented through quality instruction and content, prepare.
Evaluating Training Programs The Four Levels
Mathematics and Special Education Leadership Protocols
NYC DOE – Office of Teacher Effectiveness A
A Process to Identify the Enduring Skills, Processes, & Concepts for your Content Area 1.
© 2012 Common Core, Inc. All rights reserved. commoncore.org NYS COMMON CORE MATHEMATICS CURRICULUM Rigor Breakdown A Three Part Series.
Supporting Rigorous Mathematics Teaching and Learning
Basel-ICU-Journal Challenge18/20/ Basel-ICU-Journal Challenge8/20/2014.
1..
Domain 1: Planning and Preparation
Science as a Process Chapter 1 Section 2.
Assessment Literacy: Formative Instructional Practices
Who are the Experts?Simon KampaSlide 1 Who are the Experts? Simon Kampa IAM Group University of Southampton
Educationeducation Improving Scottish Stirling Mathematics Conference.
1 Using one or more of your senses to gather information.
1 Begin the Transformation: Mapping the Course DOWNLOAD ME!
H to shape fully developed personality to shape fully developed personality for successful application in life for successful.
Analyzing Genes and Genomes
Maths Counts Insights into Lesson Study
Essential Cell Biology
1 Phase III: Planning Action Developing Improvement Plans.
Intracellular Compartments and Transport
PSSA Preparation.
Essential Cell Biology
Immunobiology: The Immune System in Health & Disease Sixth Edition
Energy Generation in Mitochondria and Chlorplasts
Session 2: Informational Text Audience: Science, Social Studies, Technical Subject Teachers.
Comparison of Teacher-Centered and Learner-Centered Paradigms From Figure 1-2 in Huba and Freed, Learner-Centered Assessment on College Campuses: Shifting.
1 Literacy PERKS Standard 1: Aligned Curriculum. 2 PERKS Essential Elements Academic Performance 1. Aligned Curriculum 2. Multiple Assessments 3. Instruction.
The Framework for Teaching Charlotte Danielson 4c: Communicating with Families 1 6/12/201 3.
Educator Evaluation: A Protocol for Developing S.M.A.R.T. Goal Statements.
Examining Student Work. Ensuring Teacher Quality Leader's Resource Guide: Examining Student Work 2 Examining Student Work Explore looking at student work.
Professional Learning
Connecting the Process to: -Current Practice -CEP -CIITS/EDS 1.
Data, Now What? Skills for Analyzing and Interpreting Data
Assessment across A Culture of Inquiry Peggy Maki, Ph.D. Education Consultant Specializing in Assessment Presented at Farmingdale State College September.
Common Core State Standards—Mathematics Introduction/Overview 1 Cathy Carroll
Science Inquiry Minds-on Hands-on.
1 Assessment as Learning Presented at the Teaching & Learning Innovations 17 th Annual Conference University of Guelph May 12, 2004 Peggy Maki, Ph.D.
1 Assessing for Learning Presented by Peggy L. Maki June 7, 2004 Seattle Pacific University Material from Maki, P. (2004). Assessing.
PEGGY MAKI, PH.D. EDUCATION CONSULTANT IN ASSESSING STUDENT LEARNING PRESENTED AT CCRI SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 Assessment at Three Levels: Institution, Program,
1 Assessing for Learning Workshop Presented at CCRI February 23, 2005 Peggy Maki, Ph.D.
1 Taking a Backward-Designed Collaborative Approach to Assessing Student Learning to Explore both Students' Learning Processes and Products Peggy Maki.
Curriculum Report Card Implementation Presentations
1 Orientation Session at 2003 Assessment Conference A Richer and More Coherent Set of Assessment Practices Peggy L. Maki Senior Scholar Assessing for Learning.
Presentation transcript:

Education Consultant Specializing in Assessing Student Learning What If… Peggy Maki Education Consultant Specializing in Assessing Student Learning Presented at AAC&U’s GE and Assessment Conference, Boston, March 1, 2013

What if….. You became and were recognized as an Expert in Misunderstanding, using your expertise as the basis of systemically collaborating with colleagues to innovate curricular and co-curricular design, pedagogies, assignments, and educational practices to improve or advance All students’ enduring GE learning?

You specialized in learning about ways in which students…… Misunderstand Misinterpret Miscalculate Take unsuccessful approaches to solving a problem undertaking a task or set of tasks

Hold onto incorrect myths, beliefs, misconceptions, or knowledge that, if not addressed early in students’ journey, account for immediate difficulties students encounter or longer term difficulties as they continue their studies.

Have difficulties in moving from knowledge to understanding to transfer and application (depth of initial learning makes a difference— how well do students acquire initial learning?) Land, Meyer, Smith, 2010

You knew when or who else asked your students to draw on, apply, or reuse what you expected them to learn? You knew about the challenges or obstacles or trouble spots your students faced the next time they were asked to draw upon, apply, reuse, or integrate what you expected them to know?

You knew where and how well students traveled with what you taught them or positioned them to learn in your GE classes? You knew no one asked your students to use that learning after your course.

Student A: “I don’t really like history Student A: “I don’t really like history. There is too much to try to remember. And it is all about olden times-- with a lot of dates and different wars and people doing things we don’t do any more. I am finished with that required course anyway.” (inert) Student B: “We learned how to tell the difference between ‘facts’ and how different people filter and interpret the facts depending on their own interests. We also learned to examine texts– to point out and discuss what was left out of the different texts we read. I find that I do that now in my other courses.” (activated)

What if your institutions valued you for Identifying the range of chronological challenges or barriers your students encounter and then Innovating proven practices that chronologically address challenges, barriers or trouble spots students face along the trajectory of their education so that increasingly more students succeed at higher levels of achievement?

Learning more about what you do not yet know, as well as for what you do know Collaboratively designing methods of inquiry into students’ learning and meaning-making processes (inquiry groups, learning circles, learning communities)

Why Become An Expert in Misunderstanding?

What We Know About Learners 30%

Learners create meaning: egocentricity, sociocentricity, narrow-mindedness, routinized habits

Deep learning (ELOs) occurs over time—transference People learn differently and may hold onto folk or naive knowledge, incorrect concepts, misunderstandings, false information Deep learning (ELOs) occurs over time—transference

Threshold Concepts: pathways central to the mastery of a subject or discipline that change the way students view a subject or discipline, prompting students to bring together various aspects of a subject that they heretofore did not view as related (Land, Meyer, Smith, 2010).

Learning Progressions: knowledge- based, web-like interrelated actions or behaviors or ways of thinking, transitioning, self-monitoring. May not be developed successfully in linear progression--thus necessitate formative assessment along the trajectory of learning. Movements towards increased understanding (Hess, 2008).

How Could You Become An Expert in Misunderstanding? Take a backward designed problem-based approach to assessment— With colleagues, agree on what you expect students to demonstrate at the point of graduation (summative assessment) At the point of matriculation use assessment as your baseline lens to identify patterns of initial difficulty (baseline assessment) At a point or points along the trajectory of learning use assessment as your formative lens to track and monitor student progress (formative assessment)

Application/Analysis AAC&U’s Quantitative Literacy Rubric Interpretation Ability to explain information presented in mathematical forms (e.g., equations, graphs, diagrams, tables, words) Representation Ability to convert relevant information into various mathematical forms (e.g., equations, graphs, diagrams, tables, words) Application/Analysis Ability to make judgments and draw appropriate conclusions based on the quantitative analysis of data, while recognizing the limits of this analysis

Assumptions Communication Ability to make and evaluate important assumptions in estimation, modeling, and data analysis Communication Expressing quantitative evidence in support of the argument or purpose of the work (in terms of what evidence is used and how it is formatted, presented, and contextualized)

How Does this Commitment to Assessment Work? Couple your outcomes with research or study questions such as— What kinds of erroneous ideas, concepts, processes, or misunderstandings initially interfere with students’ abilities to reason quantitatively? How long do those ideas, concepts or misunderstandings persist and, thus, inhibit students’ abilities to develop enduring learning?

What approaches do successful and unsuccessful students take to solve problems that require quantitative reasoning? What strategies do student use to restructure intuitive, yet incorrect, approaches to solving problems that require quantitative reasoning? What conceptual or computational obstacles inhibit students from shifting from one form of reasoning to another form, such as from arithmetic reasoning to algebraic reasoning?

Why do students have difficulty transferring knowledge or skills from one course to another one or to another context? (approaches to tasks, incorrect concepts or constructs?) How well do stand-alone skills-based courses, such as mathematics courses, prepare students to integrate or apply those skills into future course work?

Institutional data (course taking patterns, for example) Identify or Design Assessment Methods That Provide Evidence of Product and Process Direct Methods, Including Some That Provide Descriptive Data about Students’ Meaning-Making Processes Indirect Methods, Including Some That Provide Descriptive Data about Students’ Meaning-Making Processes Institutional data (course taking patterns, for example)

Direct Methods to Learn about Learning Processes Think Alouds: Pasadena City College, “How Jay Got His Groove Back and Made Math Meaningful”(Cho and Davis) Word edit bubbles Observations in flipped classrooms Students’ deconstruction of a problem or issue (PLEs in eportfolios can reveal this—tagging, for example)

Student recorder’s list of trouble spots in small group work or students’ identification of trouble spots they encountered in an assignment Results of conferencing with students Results of asking open-ended questions about how students approach a problem or address challenges

Analysis of “chunks of work” as part of an assignment because you know what will challenge or stump students in those chunks Use of reported results from adaptive or intelligent technology Focus on hearing about or seeing the processes and approaches of successful and not so successful students

Note-taking and Study Strategies of Successful Students Writing beyond what is visually presented during a lecture Identifying clues to help organize information during a lecture Evaluating notes after class Reorganizing notes after class

Comparing note-taking methods with peers Using one’s own words while reading to make notes Evaluating one’s understanding while reading

Consolidating reading and lecture notes Sharing practices on how to organize, think, and memorize content Evaluating one’s own understanding Monitoring the effectiveness of note- taking practices (Yu, 2010)

SALG (salgsite.org): Student Assessment of Their Learning Gains Some Indirect Methods that Probe Students’ Learning Experiences and Processes SALG (salgsite.org): Student Assessment of Their Learning Gains Small Group Instructional Design Interviews with students about their learning experiences, about how those experiences did or did not foster desired learning, about the challenges they confronted

A Framework for Planning Backwards 1. Identify The Outcome or Outcomes You Will Assess 5. Analyze and Interpret Students’ Work and Students’ Responses. 4. Develop a Plan to Collect Direct and Indirect Assessment Results that Will Answer Your Question. 2. State the Research or Study Question You Wish to Answer 3. Conduct a Literature Review about That Question. 6. Collaboratively Discuss Ways to Innovate Pedagogy or Educational Practices 7. Implement Agreed-upon Changes and Reassess. 8. Share Developments within and outside The Institution to Build Knowledge about Educational Practices.

Soft Times and Neutral Zones

What if we…. Collaboratively use what we learn from this approach to assessment to design the next generation of curricular and co-curricular design, pedagogy, instructional design, educational practices, and assignments to help increasingly more students successfully pass through trouble spots or overcome learning obstacles;

And, thereby, collaboratively commit to fostering students’ enduring GE learning in contexts other than the ones in which they initially learned.

Start Early

Dig Deeply

Innovate Systemically

Works Cited Cho, J. and Davis, A. 2008. Pasadena City College. “How Jay Got His Groove Back and Made Math Meaningful.” http://www.cfkeep.org/html/stitch.php?s=13143081975303&id=189465943900 37 Hess, K. 2008. Developing and Using Learning Progressions as a Schema for Measuring Progress. National Center for Assessment, 2008. http://www.nciea.org/publications/CCSSO2_KH08.pdf Land, R., Meyer, J.H.F., and Smith, J. Eds. 2010. Threshold Concepts and Transformational Learning. Rotterdam: Sense Publishers. Maki, P. 2010. 2nd Ed. Assessing for Learning: Building a Sustainable Commitment Across the Institution. VA: Stylus Publishing, LLC National Research Council. 2002. Knowing What Students Know: The Science and Design of Educational Assessment. Washington, D.C. Yu, C. Y. “Learning Strategies Characteristic of Successful Students.” Maki, P. 2010. p. 139.