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Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

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Page 1: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and

Feedback

Page 2: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Outcomes

Participants will:– revisit the Six Essentials: Student Work and Data

and Responsive Instruction– examine ways to engage students in instructional

partnerships.– identify the types of classroom information and

feedback necessary to assess, communicate, and provide interventions for student learning.

– understand the importance of data walls at the classroom level.

Page 3: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Essential: Student Work and Data

•Teachers help students set goals, monitor, and share progress toward individual learning outcomes based on data.

•Teachers know the value and purpose of various kinds of assessments.

•Teachers use the RxNet to track patterns in their students’ performance and modify their instruction.

•Current student work is visible and celebrated.

Page 4: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Essential: Responsive Instruction

Students can explain what they are learning and why and how it connects to what they have already learned. They are able to talk about the quality of their work and what they must do to improve it.Classroom walls display current student work reflecting the content they are studying, standards for exemplary work, posted learning objectives, daily schedule, and class rules.Teachers use research-based and best practices throughout the lesson as they check for understanding and re-teach concepts to provide in-class interventions when students don’t learn.

Page 5: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Classroom Climate Shift

Traditional Classroom Climate to Assessment-informed Classroom Climate

Learning

Expectations

Role of Classroom Assessment

Responsibility For

Learning

Page 6: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Setting the Stage

Classroom Climate GuidelinesTeachers inform students of the ground rules that everyone (students and the teacher) will follow.Guidelines will vary depending on the ages of students involved and the teachers own procedural preferencesExample

Page 7: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Seek Trust Constantly and Nurture it Seriously

Students need to believe the teacher is invested in having all students succeed.Students need to believe the teacher is using formative assessment’s test results exclusively for improved student learning.Students need to believe the teacher is genuinely seeking their collaboration in assuming responsibility for their own learning.

Page 8: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Model and Reinforce Appropriate Conduct

Teachers need to explain and model the kinds of collaborative focus behavior to show students how to conduct themselves.– Role-play scenarios

Teachers are attentive to the interpersonal and individual behaviors of their students.

Page 9: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Solicit Students’ Advice on Classroom Climate

Teacher urges students to offer suggestions on how to “make it better”.– Suggestion box– Plus/Delta

Feedback mechanisms should convey the teachers willingness to thoughtfully consider students’ recommendations regarding classroom climate or instruction.

Page 10: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Assess Students’ Relevant Affective Status

The teacher monitors the classroom climate.– Teachers can use surveys to gain insights

regarding students’ perceptions of the classroom climate.

– Example

Forms and structures to gather students’ perception can vary depending on teacher preference, elementary vs. secondary, and age of students.

Page 11: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Learning Expectations

Substantial learning will occur for all students, irrespective of their academic aptitude.

Substantiallearning willoccur formotivatedstudents whopossessadequateacademicaptitude.

Page 12: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Think About It

What would you see and hear in a classroom where learning expectations are set only for motivated students?

What would you see and hear in a classroom where learning expectations are set for all students?

Page 13: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Learning Expectations

Communicated to all students and families

Responsive to each students’ needs

Rigorous curriculum

Rubrics

Interventions

Page 14: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Responsibility for Learning

Students assume meaningful responsibility for their own learning and the learning of their classmates.

The teacher, as prime instructional mover, is chiefly responsible for students’ learning.

Page 15: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Think Deeper

What would you see and hear in a classroom where learning is assessed through summative tests to assign grades?

What would you see and hear in a classroom where learning is assessed through formal and informal authentic assessments for learning?

Page 16: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Responsibility for Learning

Student led conferences

Peer Review– Student Protocols

Presentations

Page 17: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Role of Assessment in Classroom

Formal and informal assessments generate data for informing adjustments to the teacher’s instruction and the students’ learning tactics.

Formal tests generate data for comparing students and assigning grades.

Page 18: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Data Walls3 Essential Parts

External Data – State

• CST• CELDT

– District• D.W.A.

Internal Data– Classroom– Formative Assessments

• School• Grade level• Department

Inferences and Conclusions– Reflects data analysis results

Page 19: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Data Walls

District

School Site

Grade level/

Department

Classroom

Page 20: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Middle Panel

•Data on Teaching Strategies Associated with

the Content Area

•Narrative

Plan Do

Act Check

Right Panel•Inferences•Conclusions

•SMART GOALS•Next Steps

Left Panel•Tables•Charts •Graphs•Illustrates State/District/School Assessment Scores

How to Organize a Data Wall

Page 21: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Example

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Examples

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Rubric

Page 33: Are Numbers Enough? Classroom Information and Feedback

Thank You!