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GIVING AND RECEIVING QUALITY FEEDBACK D.S.TRUTER ( SCT )

D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

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Page 1: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

GIVING AND RECEIVING

QUALITYFEEDBACK

D.S.TRUTER ( SCT )

Page 2: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

We will ask ourselves:

What do the experts say about Feedback?

What is Effective Feedback?

What does this look like in practice?

Where does Assessment fit in?

Page 3: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

What is Feedback?

What the experts say…

Page 4: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

What is Feedback?

The simplest prescription for improving education must be…

providing information about what a student does and does not understand, and what direction the student must take to improve.

Hattie (1999)

Page 5: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Feedback by teachers to students is:

evaluative – involving a value judgment

or

descriptive – describing what the student said or did.

Tunstall and Gipps (1996)

Page 6: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Evaluative feedback: involves a judgment by the teacher based on implicit or explicit norms

promotes self-management and independence

Most teacher feedback interactions observed were at the evaluative end of the continuum

eg:“That’s a good essay.” “You’ve done well.” Tunstall & Gipps (1996)

Page 7: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Descriptive feedback:

is task- and outcome-oriented

focuses on identified learning outcomes and makes specific reference to the student’s achievement

eg:“That’s a good essay because you have covered the main points we discussed at

the beginning. Now … which points do you think you could expand on?”

Tunstall & Gipps (1996)

Page 8: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

High quality feedback is not always written

When feedback is given in writing, some students:

have difficulty understanding the points the teacher is trying to make

are unable read the teacher’s writing

can’t process the feedback and understand what to do next

Asking a student to tell you what they think you are trying to say to them is the best way to check this out.

Hawk and Hill (2001)

Page 9: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Findings from Ruth Butler’s research on year 7 students:

• Students given only marks made no gain from the first to the second lesson

• Students given only comments scored on average 30% higher

• Giving marks alongside comments cancelled the beneficial effects of the comments

Research conclusion: If you are going to grade or mark a piece of work, you are wasting your time writing careful diagnostic comments on it.

Wiliam (1999)

Page 10: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

More Research Findings

Teachers give their students too many criteria making it very

difficult for specific feedback to be given

too much information in their marking which students find overwhelming and difficult to take in

Clarke suggests:When giving written feedback teachers shouldhighlight three successes in the student’s work and one area where some improvement is needed

Clarke (2001)

Page 11: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Oral Feedback Prompts

1. Reminder prompt

2.Scaffolded prompt

3. Example prompt

Remember: prompts need to be focused around the learning intention of the task

Clarke (2003)

Page 12: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Reminder prompt:“How could you make this story flow better?”

Scaffolded prompts:A sentence given with words missingA specific focusing directive or an open ended question

Example prompts:“What did he look like? … it would make your story more interesting…”“How did it make you feel? ... happy? … sad?... ”

Clarke (2003)

Page 13: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Some Feedback Techniques

Delayed grades Diagnostic comments Verbal conferencing Challenging open-ended questions Random testing Peer evaluation and discussion Student self-evaluation and

reflection

Page 14: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Feedback should…Cause thinking

Provide guidance on how to improve

Focus on what to take forward to the next assignment rather that what is deficient about the last assignment

Be used by both teacher and student to enhance learning

Be goal-oriented

Page 15: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

What is EFFECTIVEFeedback?

Page 16: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

What is Effective Feedback?Effective Feedback answers three

questions: Where am I going? (What are the

goals?) How am I going? (What progress is

being made toward the goal?) Where to next? (What activities

need to be undertaken to make better progress?)

These questions correspond to notions of feed

up, feed back, and feed forward.

Page 17: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Effective feedback… is specific – both positive and critical is descriptive, rather than evaluative is immediate – given as soon as possible offers alternatives or asks the learner to looks forward to the specific next steps to

improve performance plans for opportunities for the feedback to be

implemented as soon as possible involves the learner wherever possible, in

order to be best understood and acted upon Sutton (1998)

Page 18: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Effective Feedback should…• focus on the learning intention of the

task

• occur while the students are learning

• provide information on how and why the

student understands and misunderstands

• provide strategies to help the student to

improve

• assist the student to understand the

goals of the learning

Page 19: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

What does Effective Feedback

look like in practice?

Page 20: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

In practice this means: Clarifying learning outcomes at the

planning stage Sharing learning outcomes with students

at the beginning of each lesson Involving students in self assessment of

the learning outcomes (meeting the ‘success criteria’)

Focusing oral and written feedback around the learning outcomes (How am I going)

Organizing individual goal setting so that student achievement is based on what students know as well as what they need to aim for to succeed at the next level (Where am I going)

Using rich questions that both challenge and guide the next learning steps (Where to next)

Page 21: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Where does Assessment fit in?

What the experts say…

Page 22: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Where does Assessment fit in?

Formative and summative assessment provides teachers and / or students with valuable feedback information

“It is not the instrument that is formative or summative, it is the timing of the interpretation”

John Hattie, University of Auckland (1999)

Page 23: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Formative assessment takes place during the course of teaching and is used essentially to feed back into the teaching and learning process

Formative and summative assessment are interactive. They seldom stand alone in construction or effect

Gipps, McCallum & Hargreaves (2000)

Page 24: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Assessment is learning oriented when it Is integrated into instructional design so that it

becomes invisible Creates engagement in learning Helps learners to understand what successful

performance looks like Generates information that can be interpreted in

terms of a learning progression Focuses attention on growth rather than well-being Provides a focus for supportive conversations

between learners

Page 25: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Research indicates that improving learning through assessment depends on five key factors:

1. The provision of effective feedback to the students

2. The active involvement of students in their own learning

3. Adjusting teaching to take account of the results of assessment

4. A recognition of the profound influence assessment has on the motivation and self esteem of the students, both of which are crucial influences in learning

5. The need for students to be able to assess themselves and understand how to improve

Page 26: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

What does this look like? Sharing learning goals with students

Involving students in self assessment

Providing feedback which leads to students recognizing and taking the next steps

Being confident that every student can improve

Page 27: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Rate your feedback…

How well do you… Share learning goals with your

students?

Involve students in self assessment?

Provide timely, focused feedback that lead students to the next steps?

Do you have confidence that every student in your classes can improve?

Page 28: D.S.TRUTER ( SCT ). We will ask ourselves: What do the experts say about Feedback? What is Effective Feedback? What does this look like in practice? Where

Assessment References

Clarke, S. (2001). Unlocking formative assessment: Practical strategies for enhancing pupils’ learning in the primary classroom. London: Hodder and Stoughton.

Clarke, S. (2003). Enriching Feedback in the primary classroom. London: Hodder and Stoughton.

Hawk, K. & Hill, J. (2001) The Challenge of Formative Assessment in Secondary Classrooms SPANZ Journal, September 2001.

Tunstall, P., & Gipps, C. (1996). Teacher feedback to young children in formative assessment: A typology. British Educational Research Journal, 22 (4).

Sutton, R. (1998). School-wide Assessment. Improving Teaching and Learning. New Zealand Council for educational Research. Wellington NZ.

Wiliam, D. (1999). Formative Assessment in Mathematics. The Mathematical Association. Equals. Summer Volume 5, Number 2.