9

Success Criteria be written in language that students are likely to understand

  • Upload
    samara

  • View
    50

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

We need to let students into the secret , allowing them to become insiders of the assessment process. We need to make provision for them to become members of the guild of people who can make consistently sound judgments and know why those judgments are justifiable. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Success Criteria be written in language that  students are likely to understand
Page 2: Success Criteria be written in language that  students are likely to understand

We need to let students into the secret, allowing them to become insiders of the assessment process. We need to make provision for them to become members of the guild of people who can make consistently sound judgments and know why those judgments are justifiable. Royce Sadler 1998

Page 3: Success Criteria be written in language that  students are likely to understand

Success Criteria

be written in language that students are likely to understand

be limited in number focus on the learning and not on behaviour

created, ideally, with input from students

Page 4: Success Criteria be written in language that  students are likely to understand

Performance Indicators specific aspects of performance which

will be different at different levels adjectives, adjectival phrases,

adverbs and adverbial phrases to describe the one aspect of performance

using numeric references referring to the degree of assistance

Page 5: Success Criteria be written in language that  students are likely to understand

Performance Indicators Analyse the effects of/describe the effects of/ list the effects of

• provides a complex explanation/a detailed explanation/a limited explanation

provides a three/two/one example/s independently applies/

…with teacher support

Page 6: Success Criteria be written in language that  students are likely to understand

Considerations … Are the success criteria in language the students are likely

to understand? Do some of the success criteria need to be explained by

showing students exemplars or work samples? Do the success criteria refer to the specific skills, knowledge

and understanding that you wanted the students to learn? Does the activity you have designed provide the

opportunity for students to demonstrate all of the success criteria?

Page 7: Success Criteria be written in language that  students are likely to understand

EXAMPLE OF SUCCESS CRITERIAYR 5/6 TEMPLE INCIDENT INTERVIEWS Choose two of four viewpoints to the Temple incident - Pilate, Caiaphas, store

owner, follower of Jesus - to record their reaction to the incident. Construct five questions that you would ask both people that focus on what they

know of the incident, why they thought it happened and their personal reaction to the incident.

Record each response under each question. Use the Writing a Newspaper Article Organizer/Rubric template to draft a

newspaper article using information sourced from the News Alert and interview responses

Write a full article, including headline and by-line, using information included in your template. The length of the article should be no more than 250 words.

Use appropriate writing conventions: spelling, grammar, syntax, voice Include a drawing or picture (accessed digitally) with a suitable caption.

Page 8: Success Criteria be written in language that  students are likely to understand

Religion A B C D E

Knowledge & Understanding:

The Church’s authority serves the teaching, pastoral support and leadership of all its members and is directed to the Church’s mission in the world. CHPG 11

Conscience formation is guided by key considerations including prayer, the Word of God, wisdom and authoritative Church teaching. CLMF14

Comprehensive

understanding of the

role that the Word of

God and Church

teaching plays in

formulating a response

to a moral issue

Demonstrated

understanding of the

role that the Word of

God and Church

teaching plays in

formulating a

response to a moral

issue

Formulates a response

to a moral issue which,

while sound in

argument, has some

relation to the Word of

God or Church teaching

Formulates a response

to a moral issue which,

while adequate in

argument, has no

reference to the Word

of God or Church

teaching

Inadequate response

to a moral issue

which has no

reference to the

Word of God or

Church teaching

Routine Tasks:

Ability to identify five pressing moral issues that the Church needs to address in today’s world

Successfully identifies

five relevant moral

issues to which the

Church can respond

Issues identified have

narrow relevance in

today’s world

Issues identified are

irrelevant to today’s

world or are not

moral issues

Articulate and justify the priority given to a contemporary moral issue, in comparison to other relevant issues

Successfully justifies

the priority given to a

contemporary moral

issue

Inadequate justification

of the priority given to

a contemporary moral

issue

Little or no

justification of the

priority given to a

contemporary moral

issue

Inquiry Skills:

Articulate and justify a response to a contemporary moral issue, guided by key considerations in the formation of conscience for Christians and exemplifying how Church’s authority can be exercised. CLMF14; CHPG 11

Insightful and creative

response to a

contemporary moral

issue, guided by Word of

God and Church

teachings

Some insight and

creativity in response

to a contemporary

moral issue, guided

by Word of God and

Church teachings

Sound response to a

contemporary moral

issue, with evidence of

Scripture and Church

teachings

Adequate response to a

contemporary moral

issue, with no evidence

of Scripture or Church

teachings

Inadequate response

to a contemporary

moral issue, with no

evidence of Scripture

or Church teachings

EXAMPLE OF PERFORMANCE INDICATORS

Page 9: Success Criteria be written in language that  students are likely to understand