Assessment in It's Many Guises
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Transcript of Assessment in It's Many Guises
Assessment In It’s Many Guises…
Hunting Assumptions About Assessment
in Secondary Schools…
Presented by Jonathan Vervaet@jonathanvervaet
March 31st, 2014 – SFU Secondary Module
“If students have not been told where they are going, it is
unlikely that they will arrive.” – Shirley Clark
Learning Intentions“I can find evidence of current
assessment research in my initial practice.”
Learning Intentions“I can identify ways to use
assessment to inform my instructional decisions .”
Learning Intentions“I can become curious about
something in the research I want to inquire further into.”
“Assessment is the beginning and the end of my teaching. It defines my culture, my relationships, my learning community, my values, and my beliefs about teaching and learning.” - Matt Rosati
Motivation 2.0
True or False:
Rewarding an activity will get you more of it. Punishing an activity will get you less of it.
Harlow (1949)
Radical finding, there was a third drive.
The performance of the task provided intrinsic reward.
The monkeys solved the problem simply because they found it gratifying to solve
the puzzle.
2Harlow (1949)
Rewarded the monkey with raisons.
“Introduction of food in the present experiment served to disrupt performance, a phenomena not
reported in the literature.”
The monkeys made more errors and solved the puzzles less frequently.
Deci (1969) – Carnegie Melon
Soma Block Experiment
Deci (1969)
Day 1 Day 2 Day 3
Group A No reward
CashReward
No reward
Group B No reward
No reward
No reward
Deci (1969) – Carnegie Melon
Soma Block Experiment
“When money is used as an extrinsic reward for some activity, the subjects lose intrinsic interest for the activity.” Rewards give you a short term boost, but the effect wears off and can reduce long term
motivation.
Commissioned vs. Non-Commissioned Art
Blood Donations
Rewards transforminteresting tasks into drudgery.
Offering an award signals that the task is undesirable.
Focus on Short Term vs. Long Term Benefits
When goals are imposed and incentivized…
Focus is narrowed on achieving only that goal.
and…
and…
Here’s the kicker…
It leads to unethical behaviour in an attempt to
reach the goal.aka..
Cheating…
When rewards do work…With routine and mechanical tasks.
You can’t undermine intrinsic motivation in
boring tasks.
Any extrinsic reward should be unexpected
and offered only after the
task is completed.
TOO MANY REWARDS CHANGE “NOW
THAT...” TO “IF /
THEN...”
If it is true that carrot and stick motivators don’t
work and often do harm, what are the implications for us as teachers in our grading and assessment
practices?
Instructional Design
The Science of Learning
Instructional Design
90% of what we know about the brain we have learned in approximately the last 2 years
Instructional Design
The same will be true 10 years from now
Carol Dweck (2006)
Fixed vs. Growth Mindset.
Fixed – Believe they have to work with whatever intelligence they have because it
can’t be increased.
They resist novel challenges if they can’t succeed immediately.
They’d rather not try than be perceived as dumb.
Carol Dweck (2006)
Fixed vs. Growth Mindset.
Growth – Believe intelligence can be built through life.
See working harder as a way to improve.
They persist and try a wide variety of solutions when given novel tasks.
Carol Dweck (2006)
Csikzentmihalyi (1990)
Flow Theory – The exhilarating moments when
we feel in control, full of purpose, and in the zone.
Csikzentmihalyi (1990)
Skill Level
Challenge Level
Daniel Pink (2009)
Autonomy – People need autonomy over task (what they do), time (when they do it), team (who they do it with), and technique (how they do it).
Daniel Pink (2009)
Mastery – Becoming better at something that matters.
Daniel Pink (2009)
Purpose – Humans want to make a contribution and to be part of a cause greater and more enduring than themselves.
Inside the Black Box: Raising Standards Through Classroom
Assessment
When carried out effectively, informalclassroom assessment with constructive feedback will raiselevels of attainment.
We know from research that effectiveassessment for learning can Improve student achievementsubstantially, and helps low achievers themost.
Source: Black and William, Inside the Black Box 1998
The effect sizes, that is the student gains in learning triggered by formative assessment, were among the largest ever reported for educational interventions.
Source: Black and William, Inside the Black Box 1998
Formative Assessment:
5 Key Strategies…
sometimes 6!
Dylan Wiliam “Embedded Formative Assessment” (2011)
Formative Assessment:1.Learning Intentions and Success
Criteria2.Activities Designed to Elicit Evidence
of Learning3.Feedback that Moves Learning
Forward4.Peer Assessment5.Student Ownership of Learning
Formative Assessment:1.Learning Intentions and Success
Criteria2.Activities Designed to Elicit Evidence
of Learning3.Feedback that Moves Learning
Forward4.Peer Assessment5.Student Ownership of Learning
Formative Assessment:1.Learning Intentions and Success
Criteria2.Activities Designed to Elicit Evidence
of Learning3.Feedback that Moves Learning
Forward4.Peer Assessment5.Student Ownership of Learning
Formative Assessment:1.Learning Intentions and Success
Criteria2.Activities Designed to Elicit Evidence
of Learning3.Feedback that Moves Learning
Forward4.Peer Assessment5.Student Ownership of Learning
Formative Assessment:1.Learning Intentions and Success
Criteria2.Activities Designed to Elicit Evidence
of Learning3.Feedback that Moves Learning
Forward4.Peer Assessment5.Student Ownership of Learning
Summative Assessment
Preparing for the ‘TEST’
Summative Assessment Activities- Students demonstrate knowledge /
skills on which they have had opportunity to practice
- Are based on known criteria- Focus primarily on individual student
performance- Usually broader – integrate important
skills and knowledge- Inform report cards
Ken O’Connor, How to Grade for Learning
Triangulation of DataDamien Cooper, Talk About Assessment
Performance Task, Oral Conference, Written Test Data
Authentic Tasks = What Big People DoGrant Wiggins
The Benefits of Formative Assessment
Constantly weighing the pig won’t make it fatter...
The Latin root word for assessment is "assidere" which means to sit beside.
"We must constantly remind ourselves that the ultimate purpose of evaluation is to have students become self evaluating. If students graduate from our schools still dependent upon others to tell them when they are adequate, good, or excellent, then we’ve missed the whole point of what education is about.”
- Costa and Kallick (1992)
Contact Information
Jonathan VervaetEmail:
[email protected]: @jonathanvervaet
Blog: jonathanvervaet.wordpress.com