This year, I am coaching a group of middle school and high school teachers to learn about and practice using formative assessment practices in the classroom. This initiative is being led by a group called Measured Progress and by the Michigan Department of Education. Measured Progress supplies us with coaches we can access through a ning and email. They also provide a study focus for each month and the resources to learn about the focus. I normally post about our formative assessment team meetings on the ning blog. But as that one requires an invite, I thought I should post here as well.
Once again, I am so impressed by my formative assessment team. We had our third meeting on January 22nd in the afternoon of a professional development day. It works so nicely when we can meet during our PD days and not have to worry about meshing schedules to meet after school, or dealing with the hassle of getting substitute teachers for a half day.
The focus for the meeting was descriptive feedback, so we began with a Chalk Talk using the guiding question: Why is providing descriptive feedback at the right time so effective? The comments noted by the team show that they have a good understanding of the purpose of descriptive feedback. We noted that one word that appeared many times in their chalk talk was immediate.
Next we discussed the Fisher and Frey article, Feed Up, Back, Forward, using the Making Meaning protocol. It was a great discussion, affirming what we've been working on with learning targets. There was discussion around the idea of language frames, with a high school language arts teacher asking about how she can learn more about or find examples of language frames. As the coach, I will do more research into this topic, but if anyone out there has ideas, please pass them along!!
We also discussed the point made in the article that the role of the teacher is to ask the right questions. It made a great segue into February's focus on questioning. Like many of the other teams have already mentioned, we are also ready to begin diving into the information as soon as it becomes available.
Every meeting, my team takes time to share one thing they have been working on or a strategy they have tried since the last meeting. This month we saw some great strategies applied in a variety of ways. The high school history teacher shared a geography project rubric that was generated by his students. What a great way to get students invested in their work!
Our high school English teacher shared some examples of a Frayer model that she used as a pre-assessment for a Greek mythology unit. She noted that it helped her focus her teaching by knowing what her students already knew and seeing where they may have misconceptions. She plans to use a sequential alphabet summary form to review the unit. We also offered her the idea to have the students complete another Frayer model and to have them analyze the learning they have accomplished through the unit.
Our fifth grade science teacher used chalk talk as a pre-reading activity for the circulatory system. After reading, the groups did another chalk talk and compared them to see how much they had learned through the reading. This teacher also shared a frustration that some students did not do as well as she expected on their summative assessment. The team discussed whether this was a problem with the test format or the students really not knowing the information. It was suggested that she use her summative assessment formatively, allowing students to go back, fix and restudy after she has added descriptive feedback. Then to give another summative assessment in a different format. Another suggestion was that she conference with those students who did poorly to give oral feedback and try to determine what might have happened in each situation.
The eighth grade social studies teacher was excited to share some collaborating he had done with the eighth grade language arts teacher on a writing piece. Working together, these teachers created a Self-Peer Edit Revision checklist. The checklist incorporated elements of good writing instruction, such as creating an interesting lead and having varied sentence structures. Using terminology of different disciplines across the curriculum will help our students have that transfer of knowledge.
The sixth grade social studies teacher was feeling frustration that she hadn't accomplished much in the way of formative assessment in the past month. But she shared some personal reflecting she had been doing in regards to the way she'd been teaching her social studies. It was fabulous the way she has been pushing her own thinking. She involved her students by having a class discussion about what they wanted to learn about the Western Hemisphere (part of 6th grade curriculum.) Fantastic! And yesterday, she and I sat down together to work on some learning targets for her Mexico unit and she made great progress.
Once again, I am so impressed by my team! We meet again on March 8; it's a teacher marking day so slated to be strictly time for teachers to work in their classrooms. But I think it shows the power of this team process, as well as the dedication by my team, that they want to take some time that day for our next meeting.
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