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Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference October 5, 2010 Waterfront Place Morgantown, WV

Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

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Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference. October 5, 2010 Waterfront Place Morgantown, WV. Balanced Assessment: What Is It? Do You Have It?. Monica Beane Office of Instruction Lisa Youell Office of Title II, III and School System Improvement. Assessment Literacy. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Chief Instructional LeadersTitle I Fall Conference

October 5, 2010Waterfront PlaceMorgantown, WV

Page 2: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Balanced Assessment:What Is It? Do You Have It?

Monica Beane Office of Instruction

Lisa Youell Office of Title II, III and School System

Improvement

Page 3: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Assessment Literacy

We need to provide the language and the tools to administrators, teachers and students so they can communicate accurately

about assessment.

Page 4: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Assessment Literacy

Brooke GodbeySecond Grade Student

Poca Elementary School Putnam County

Page 5: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

In an Effective School System…Continuous (Formative)

Classroom Assessment For Learning

Classroom Level Users(Students, Teachers and

Parents)

Common Formative Assessments Content Level UsersJob-Alike Collaborative Teacher

Teams

Periodic Benchmark Assessments Program Level Users (Teacher Teams and School

Leaders)

Annual Accountability Testing (State Summative Test)

Institutional/Policy Users

(School, District and State Leadership)

Page 6: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Page 11

Page 7: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Critical Questions

• What is the primary aim of assessment?

• Who will use the information gathered?

• What decisions will they make?

Page 8: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Primary Aim of Assessment

The primary purpose of assessment is not to rate,

rank and sort students, but to provide meaningful

feedback that informs decisions.

Page 9: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

A Balanced Assessment SystemAssessment of Learning• Summative Assessment

– An event after learning• Benchmark Assessment

– An event after learning

Assessment for Learning• Formative Assessment

– A process during learning• Classroom Assessment For Learning

– A process during learning

Page 10: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference
Page 11: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

A Balanced Approach

“Teachers involve their students in classroom assessment, record-keeping, and communication during learning. But, when it’s time for students to be accountable for what they have learned, the teacher takes the lead in conducting assessments OF learning.”

-Richard J. Stiggins

Page 12: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Formative or Summative

• It isn’t the method of assessment that tells us whether it is an assessment of learning (summative) or assessment for learning (formative). Many assessment methods – tests, quizzes, performance tasks, writing essays and data gathered through observation of skills and product - can be used either way. How the results are used tells us if the assessment is of or for learning.

Page 13: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Summative Assessment(Assessment OF Learning)

• Summative assessment is the attempt to summarize student learning at some point in time.

• Summative assessments are not designed to give feedback useful to teachers and students during the learning process.

News

Page 14: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Formative Assessment(Assessment FOR Learning)

All those strategies undertaken by teachers and by their students [that] provide information to be used as feedback to modify the teaching and learning activities in which they are engaged.

Black & Wiliam, 1998Advice

Page 15: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Assessment OF and FOR

Learning

Sort Activity:• Assessment for Learning• Assessment of Learning• Not Sure

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Authentic RequestEmail:

“What do you recommend using for formative assessment? We have STAR math in all of our high schools, but am not sure that it has the capabilities of doing what we want it to do. We want a formative assessment for each 6 or 9 weeks. Do you know of a tool that other

counties are using that is effective. Or are they all using Acuity?”

• What is the core issue?• Where is the teacher looking for answers?• What questions would you ask?• What suggestions would you give?

Page 17: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Reflection1. Can you explain the key differences in

summative, benchmark, formative and classroom assessment for learning?

2. Can you provide examples of each?3. Can you explain how the results of

each type of assessment should be used?

4. How will you use this information in your work?

Page 18: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Formative Assessment Strategy:

Laundry Day

Clean Up Any Misunderstandings

Page 19: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

TideSelect this if you believe the tidal wave of information might drown you.

Page 20: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

GainSelect this if you understand the basics of the concepts taught, but are missing some of the nuances or finer details.

Page 21: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

BoldSelect this if you are fairly confident you have mastered the learning targets but still have a few lingering questions.

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CheerSelect this if you are certain you will be successful on the summative assessment

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Self-Assessment Tool

This self-assessment outlines significant commonalities among the practices of

the leaders and professional staff in high performing schools—collaborative

processes and assessment practices that produce quality results for student

learning.This self-assessment can help each school

gauge where it functions on the continuum of implementation.

Page 24: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Ink Think

What is a Balanced Assessment System?

Page 25: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Four Areas of Assessment

• Classroom Assessment for Learning

• Common Formative Assessment

• Benchmark Assessment

• Summative Assessment

Page 26: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Individual Reflection: Ink Think

• Focus your thinking on these 4 areas of assessment.

• Jot down preliminary responses for what each means to you, and how each is important in supporting student learning to raise student achievement.

• Work silently.• Be prepared to record your

responses on wall charts when directed.

Page 27: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Prepare for Ink Think

• Number off from 1-4.

• Re-group with others who have your same number at the paper that corresponds to your number.

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Ink Think

• For your assigned

area, silentlysilently create a mindmap with others in your group. Add to the ideas that others post as well as creating your own.

Summative

Assessment

Accountability

Annual

Page 29: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Move in a Clockwise Direction

• Continue using your group’s marker color. Read through the ideas generated by the previous group(s).

• Add to them; provide examples; continue to expand.

Common

Formative

Assessment

Share results

Collaboratively

developed

Page 30: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Ink Think: Making Meaning

• Return to your original chart.

• Read through all of the ideas; Identify 3-4 dominant ideas that emerge

• Be prepared to share with the large group

Page 31: Chief Instructional Leaders Title I Fall Conference

Questions?