In this presentation you can:
-Clarify the purpose and value of effective feedback to learners
-Identify strategies that improve the quality of feedback to learners, through suggested readings and classroom activities.
Effective feedbackFor feedback to be effective for students, they
need the following :
1 -An understanding of the desired goal
2 -Evidence about their present position in relation to that goal
3 -Guidance on the way to close the gap between the two
“To be effective ,
“If feedback is directed at the right level, it can assist students to comprehend, engage, or develop effective strategies to process the
information intended to be learnt”.
“Thus, when feedback is combined with effective instruction in classrooms, it can be
very powerful in enhancing learning”.
Effective feedback should…
-Focus on what is being learnt
(learning intention) and how students
should go about it (success criteria)
-Occur as the students are doing the
learning
-Provide information on how and why
the student has or has not met the
criteria
-Provide strategies to help the
students to improve
A typology of feedbackevaluative – involving a value judgment
or
descriptive – describing what the student said or did, and providing guidance for improvement
Evaluative feedback
Evaluative feedback involves a judgment by the teacher based on implicit or explicit norms.
Evaluative feedback may take the form of: Approval: “That’s a good essay.” “You’ve done
well”.Disapproval: “That’s not good enough”.
Reward: Gold starsPunishment: “Write it out again”.
Descriptive feedback
Descriptive feedback:
focuses on identified learning outcomes and makes specific reference to the student’s achievement.
looks towards improvement.An example of descriptive feedback:
“That’s a good introduction because you have covered the main points we discussed at the beginning. Now … which points do you think you
should expand on”?
An emphasis on evaluative feedback can affect how students feel about themselves.
It can make the good students feel better (and possibly complacent)
and the less able students feel worse (and the more sure that they will never be able to succeed.)
How we provide suggestions for improvement is critical in ‘closing thegap’ for students.
Improvement is more likely if we use the kind of feedback prompt that best meets the need of the student.
Types of descriptive feedback prompt
*Reminder prompt
* Scaffold prompt
* Example prompt
Remember, prompts need to be focused around the learning intention of the task.
-Reminder prompts:How could you make the description of the character more striking? Remember the rule about circles we talked
about?
-Scaffold prompts:Why don’t you try using a simile to describe how he
eats?
-Example prompts:Why don’t you use a simile to describe your
character ?
Check the adequacy of the feedback
“Do you know what to do next”?
“Is that enough help”?
“What will you do if you get stuck again”?
Written feedbackWhen feedback is given in writing, some students:
-Have difficulty understanding the points the teacher is trying to make
-Are unable to 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.
Marks versus comments
-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.
Conclusion :If you are going to grade or mark a piece of work, you are wasting your time writing careful diagnostic comments.
Findings from field observations:
Teachers give :
-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.
I suggests that:when giving written feedback, teachers highlight two or three successes in the student’s work and one area where some improvement is necessary.
Feedback for improvement -Comments on students’
work should act as guidance showing how the student can improve.
-Develop this by asking students to write in the same way when peer assessing work.
Comment-only marking -Comment-only marking
provides students with a focus for progression instead of a reward or punishment for their ego (as a grade does).
-Comments should make it clear how the student can improve.
-Plan activities and work with feedback in mind – let the design assist the process.