The Power of Learning TargetsTransform Learning in the Classroom
Ken Mattingly Rockcastle County Middle School
Stephanie HarmonRockcastle County High School
Representing PIMSER K-12 Outreach
Group Norms
• Start and end on time
• Put cell phones on silent
• Be respectful of all comments
• Everyone participates
• Exercise the rule of “two feet”
• You may not agree with me
…and I’m okay with that!
Who’s in the Room
Please stand for the role that bestrepresents your current position:Classroom TeacherResource Teachers (curriculum coaches,
academic specialists, etc.)Building level administratorsDistrict level administratorsOthers
Our Roadmap for Today
Implications of Senate Bill 1
Ken’s Journey
Stephanie’s Journey
Where have we been?Where are we going?Preparing for Day 2
Tools
• T-chart– Things I want to remember– How will this impact my classroom/school
district?
Why are we here?
Questions you have about Learning
Targets
Why are we here?
• Senate Bill One—March 2009 KRS 158.6453
– (4) (a) The assessment program to be implemented in the 2011-2012 academic year shall be composed of annual student assessments and state and local program reviews and audits in selected content areas.
• (b) The state student assessments may include formative and summative data…….
– (8) Local school districts may select and use commercial interim or formative assessments of develop and use their own formative assessments to provide data on how well their students are growing toward mastery of KY academic core content. Nothing in this section precludes teachers from using ongoing teacher-developed formative processes.
What Does Senate Bill 1 mean for the Classroom?
• A shift in how assessment is used– Formative & Summative
• Becoming assessment literate – SB1 requires that KDE provide professional
development programs that support assessment literacy
Point of View
Senate Bill 1 defines what it means to be assessment literate and the types of assessments that should be included in instruction. Explain what assessment means from the viewpoint of an administrator, a teacher and a student.
Point of View
Table Share
Pair & Share
SB 1 Talking Points
• Assessment Literacy
• How assessments are defined/described
Balanced Assessment
• What does it look like?
• How is it developed?
• Assessment for Learning vs. Assessment of Learning
BALANCED ASSESSMENT
Formative AssessmentFormal and informal processes teachers and students use to gather evidence to directly improve the learning of studentsassessed
Summative AssessmentProvides evidence of achievement to certify studentcompetence or program effectiveness
Targets, Assessments, & Grading
What do I do with targets after I have
them?
Ken MattinglyB.A. – University of Kentucky
M.A. – Eastern Kentucky UniversityNational Certification in Early Adolescent Science
My Job…
1. To show you the process I have taken to incorporate Classroom Assessment for Student Learning into my classroom practices.
2. To give examples of how I used it to sharpen my focus on what my students learn, how they learn it, and how they are assessed.
3. To show you how I have taken CASL and transformed the way I assess my students and report their successes and shortcomings.
I will do that by…
1. Sharing a year-by-year synopsis of my progress.
2. Introducing you to ways of linking targets to activities and summative assessments.
3. Sharing examples of formative and summative assessments that focus on learning targets.
4. Presenting a method for using targets as the structure for a standards-based grading scale.
5. Sharing examples of student opportunities to demonstrate target mastery that allows them to take ownership of their learning.
Rockcastle County Middle School
• 625 students grade 6-8
• 2 teams per grade level
• 70% Free and reduced lunch
• 2007 AI – 95, 2008 AI – 98, 2009 AI – 105
• Science P+D%:– 2007: 70– 2008: 73– 2009: 84
Classroom Assessment for Student Learning
• Assessment of Learning– Summative, documents individual or group
achievement, occurs after learning, sorts students into groups, primary motivator is threat of punishment or promise of rewards
• Assessment for Learning– Formative, promotes increase in achievement, occurs
during learning, help teachers diagnose and respond to student needs, primary motivator is the belief that success in learning is achievable.
» Classroom Assessment for Learning, p. 33
What are targets, really?
• Statements of intended learning.
• The building blocks for student attainment of the standards.
• Principal driver of classroom instructional decisions.
• The framework for classroom assessment practices.
Year One: In the beginning
The Long and Winding Road
What do we want to assess?
• Start with the end in mind.– What do we want students to know and do?– Sources :Common Core Standards, POS, CCD, not
CCA• Turn those documents into manageable chunks
of information– Take standard and break into the learning pieces that
when put together form the scaffolding for performance of the standard (Deconstruction)
– Knowledge, Reasonings, Skills, Products• These are the pieces that give your instruction
direction and you want to assess
Side Note on Deconstruction• Taking standards and
deconstructing them is hard and time consuming.
• Decisions often have to be made on what is essential learning.
• There will be differences of opinion on how standards break out.
• Put the book away when deconstructing
• Don’t let this step frustrate you and keep you from implementing AFL.
Learning/Achievement Targets
Statements of what we want students to learn and be able to do.
Student Friendly Learning Target Example
• Standard: SC-07-4.6.2 Students will: – describe the transfer and/or
transformations of energy which occur in examples that involve several different forms of energy (e.g., heat, electrical, light, motion of objects and chemical).
– Explain, qualitatively or quantitatively, that heat lost by hot object equals the heat gained by cold object.
Student Friendly Learning Target Example
1. I can give examples of energy.
2. I can give examples of energy transfer. That means when energy is moved from one object to another.
3. I can give examples of energy transformations. That means when energy is changed from one form to another form.
4. I can describe the exchange of energy between hot objects and cold objects.
Impacting My Classroom?
• Formulated targets for a unit.
• Put those targets on the bulletin board.
• Read them to the students the first day of the unit.
• Never referred to them again.
So What Was The Benefit?
• I had to examine my standards in greater depth.
• I learned what I needed to learn about my content.
• I was more aware of the specifics I wanted my students to know.
• My students had at least a casual exposure to what they needed to learn.
Working Group Discussion
• How would developing learning targets change the instructional environment in your school?
• What challenges do you foresee with developing learning targets?
Year Two: Implementing Targets
Now We’re Getting Somewhere
Students who can identify what they are learning significantly outscore those who cannot.
– Robert Marzano
Clear, Student-friendly Targets
• Turn knowledge, skill, reasoning, and product pieces into “I can” target statements.
• Targets should use student-friendly language.
• Targets should be attainable.• Provide clear, stationary targets for students
to aim at and they will hit them.• Give students a copy of learning targets for
the unit.
Using Targets for Post-Assessment Development
• Matching the assessment method to the type of target.
• Determining adequate sampling size.
• Assessment format considerations: open response vs. multiple-choice, time constraints
• Quality of questions, information value of incorrect answers
Working Group Discussion
• How do you determine the questions that are on your assessments?
• What is the benefit, if any, for common summative assessments?
• How would you have to prepare your faculty for this process?
Year Three
Targets as the driving force of instruction.
Using Targets for Pre-Assessment Development
• Targets can easily be turned into questions for a pre-assessment to see where students are at the beginning of a unit.
• Develop questions that give students an indication of what they are to learn.
• Pre-assessment as feedback throughout unit.
Linking Lessons to Targets
• Each learning experience should be explicitly linked to a target.
• Students are introduced to the target at the beginning and ending of the experience.
• Each learning experience is evaluated for its effectiveness at moving students toward mastery of the target.
Year Four
How can I identify problems before it’s too late?
How do I know my instruction is “good”?
• The students seem to enjoy the activities?
• I think they understand it?
• When I get back their unit test results?
• When the state test scores arrive?
• By the number of parent compliments or complaints?
• What my peers/administrator say about me?
Formative Assessments
• Assessments conducted during learning to promote, not merely judge or grade, student success
• Provide information to teacher and student on student performance.
• Supplies opportunities to make mid-course corrections to learning experiences.
Research on Feedback
• Quality of feedback matters. Specifically descriptive ,criterion-based feedback is better than numerical scoring or letter grades.
• Emphasis on the importance of learning leads to greater learning vs. looking good or being compared to others.
• Descriptive feedback that focuses on strengths and weaknesses is most effective
» Classroom Assessment for Learning, p. 40
My Philosophy on Formative Assessments
• FA does not count as a grade• Feedback is generally descriptive or otherwise
informs on attainment of mastery• Blanks, I don’t knows, IDC’s, etc. are
unacceptable (You have to develop a classroom culture of this)
• Returned to students and compared to “good work” to inform them of where they are
• Followed by a discussion of how to close the gap to mastery
Working Group Discussion
• What are your thoughts on not grading formative assessments?
• How would your classroom have to change in order to incorporate it?
• As a learner, what makes you feel an assignment is worth doing?
Year Five
Into the Grading Abyss
Summative Feedback
• Before using targets: score 65%– Student knows what questions they got
right/wrong– Kept the score and went on, maybe reviewed,
but still went on– No diagnosis of problems and ways to
address them – perhaps taking a test again but no plan as to what to focus on
– No idea on student or teacher’s part of strengths and weaknesses
Summative Feedback
• After using targets: score 65%– Get results broken out by target– Students know what they do well and what
they need to work on– Students have opportunities to work on
identified targets and gain understanding before trying again to show mastery
– Diagnostic tool to show strengths and weaknesses by student and class
Re-testing
• Students have received summative assessment results by target
• Identify targets needing improvement
• Work on target practice in preparation for re-testing
• Re-test only over identified targets
• Evaluate results, rinse, and repeat!
Summary of Targets and Assessments
• Learning targets form the backbone of instruction and assessment program
• LT allow for focused development of pre- and post-assessments
• LT give clear direction to selection and development of instructional activities
• LT provide students with clear learning goals and a format for organized feedback on their performance
My Take Home Message
• Learning targets inform students and teachers specifically what the learning intention is
• They can be used as a basis for instructional design and assessment formulation
• Formative and summative assessments should provide feedback to all parties on how to improve understanding
• Students should be given multiple opportunities to develop and show mastery of learning targets
• Standards-based grading gives students the chance take ownership of their performance
The Teacher I Was . . .
Stephanie Harmon
Rockcastle County High School
BS – Cumberland College
MS – Eastern Kentucky University
Rank I – Union College
“If you grade it, then they will do it.”
The grade should be enough motivation to
get the student to complete the work.
Ready, Set, Change
• Deconstructing Standards
• Learning Targets based on Standards
• Reviewed Units of Study
• Assessments
• My attitude about grading
• Teaching is more deliberate
Year One –Power of the Learning Target
• Why I began Deconstructing Standards
• What I learned from it
• The Power of the Learning Target
• Deconstructing standards is NOT about my teaching; it’s about what the STUDENT needs.
• It IS HARD but worth every moment – once I realized the depth of the standards my teaching became more focused.
Deconstruction of Standards
Combined Curriculum Document
Classroom Assessment for
Student Learning (CASL)
Clear Learning Targets
“Making targets clear to students at the outset of learning is the fundamental underpinning to any assessment for learning practices we will implement.”– Rick Stiggins, Classroom Assessment for
Student Learning, p. 59.
Clear Learning Targets
• Know what kinds of targets are represented in the curriculum
• Know which targets each assessment measures
• Communicate the learning targets in advance in student-friendly language
Chemical Concepts UnitSC-HS-1.1.1Students will classify or make generalizations about elements from data
of observed patterns in atomic structure and/or position on the periodic table.
The periodic table is a consequence of the repeating pattern of outermost electrons. DOK 2
• SC-H-STM-S-1Students will classify samples of matter from everyday life as being elements, compounds, or mixtures.
• SC-H-STM-U-1• Students will understand that the configuration of atoms in a molecule
determines the molecule’s properties. Shapes are particularly important in how molecules interact with others. (stop at shape – personal note)
• SC-H-STM-U-4• Students will understand that not all atoms of an element are truly identical.
Some may vary in their number of neutrons (isotopes) or electrons (ions). These variations result in properties which are different than the more common forms of that element
Knowledge Reasoning Skills ProductsSC-HS 1.1.1
- protons
- neutrons
- electrons
- element
- compound
-mixture
- electron configuration
-Periodic Law
- electron cloud
- nucleus
- Families on Periodic Table
- valence electrons
- Periods on Periodic Table
- heterogeneous
- homogeneous
- molecule
- isotopes
- ions
- group elements based on certain properties
- determine if a sample is an element, compound or mixture
- determine the number of protons, neutrons and electrons in an element
- compare/contrast periodic tables ordered by atomic mass vs. atomic number
Learning Targets
I will group elements based on certain properties.
I will determine if a sample is an element, compound or mixture.
I will determine the number of protons, neutrons and electrons in an element.
I will compare/contrast periodic tables ordered by atomic mass vs. atomic number.
Learning Targets in Daily InstructionDaily Agenda (what the
student sees/uses)AGENDA
I will determine if a sampleis an element, compound ormixture.- Review criteria forelement, compound ormixture.- Sorting Samples- Quick Write: Describe the
method you used for sorting the samples into the categories (element, compound, mixture).
T-chart Time
Year TwoLearning Climate
• Would I want to be a student in my classroom?
• Controlled Chaos
Learning Climate
Ranking Activity
Teachers
Other Instructional
Leaders
My ResultsBEFORE: • #1 - Display effective and efficient classroom
management (e.g., in facilitating cooperative groups, in safe and appropriate use of equipment or hands-on materials) that includes classroom routines that promote comfort, order and appropriate student behaviors.
NOW:• #1 - Create an environment where student work is
valued, appreciated and used as a learning tool, including the sharing of results from student scientific investigations.
• Learning Climate: a safe environment supported by the teacher in which high, clear expectations and positive relationships are fostered; active learning is promoted
URL for Characteristics of Highly Effective Teaching & Learning:
www.education.ky.gov/KDE/Instructional+Resources/Highly+Effective+and+Learning/HETL+Common+Characteristics.htm
Controlled Chaos
Students learn at different rates, in different
ways – research supports this, personal
experience confirms this – why not use it to
the advantage of BOTH the teacher and the
student
Year Three – Grading & Feedback
• Student Self-Assessments
• Formative Assessments – What do they tell me?
• Effective Feedback
• “Why. . . Would anyone want to change current grading practices?
• The answer is quite simple: grades are so imprecise that they are almost meaningless.”– Marzano, R.J. Transforming Classroom Grading, ASCD,
Alexandria, VA, 2000, pg.1.
Grading
Reflect
Thinking about your own school experiences
(as both a student and in your current role) . . . - What do grades represent
to you?
- How are grades assigned?
The Shift
Formative Assessments are just that
FORMATIVE
Grades are based on summative evidence.
(i.e. I stopped grading homework.)
Not grading homework
- more time to provide better feedback on projects and other forms of assessments
- keeping the student involved
Students should be involved in their own learning. Teach them how to evaluate their own progress.
Benefits from Student Self-Assessment– Cognitive achievement – although all students
benefit, self-evaluation helps the lowest achieving students the most
– Motivation – students taught to self-evaluate are more likely to persist on difficult tasks, be more confident about their ability, and take greater responsibility for their work
– Attitude about evaluation – students who are taught and regularly participate in self-evaluation have a more positive attitude about evaluation and assessments from Seven Strategies of Assessment for Learning
Sample Self-Assessment ToolsPhysical Science
Test – Self Evaluation Speed, Velocity & Acceleration
Name: _________________________ As you complete each item on the test, also indicate whether or not you believe your response is correct.
I tem Number
Correct I ncorrect I tem Number
Correct I ncorrect
1 30 2 31 3 32 4 33 5 34 6 35 7 36 8 37 9 38 10 39 11 40 12 41 13 42 14 43 15 44 16 45 17 46 18 47 19 48 20 49 21 50 22 51 23 52 24 53 25 54 26 55 27 28 29
Reviewing & Analyzing Results
Name: ________________________________________
Unit: __________________________________________
Item # Learning Target Confident Unsure Right Wrong Simple Mistake Don't Get It1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950
There is a difference between praise,
guidance and feedback.
Without a learning target, it is easy to give
guidance but not feedback.
The Learning Target allows us to focus on
feedback.
Effective Feedback
• Centered on student’s learning AT THAT MOMENT
• Motivating – corrects without tearing down - Immediate (timely) - Consistent - Specific - Opportunity to improve - Ongoing
Taking Care of Business
Providing Remediation Opportunities
Learning is measured in terms of mastering
Learning Targets – not by the letter grade
Remediation Structure
Opportunities
Grading Practices
• Everything does NOT need to be graded
• The quality of the feedback is what makes the difference in learning.
• They WILL do it when they realize that the purpose in what we do is focused on mastering the content
• Grades based on mastering the content NOT based on behavioral factors
T-chart Time
Year Four - Communication
How did I communicate
the changes in my
grading practices?
Get the Word Out
Concerned Parties:
- Administrators
- Parents
- Students
Methods of Communication:- Open Conversations- Letters to Parents- Syllabus
MY SCHOOL
950 students
75% Free & Reduced Lunch
Student-Teacher Ratio of 20 - 1
Year Five – Refining My Classroom
• Better communication with Students, Parents, Administrators
• Refining the use of student-self assessments and other formative assessment tools
My School
Beginning our 4th year with CASL . . .
More than just compliance – compliance
doesn’t mean that change will occur.
Take Home Countdown
3 things I’ll remember
2 people I’ll tell it to
1 thing I’ll try
Review of Today
• Senate Bill 1 – the need for balanced assessment
• Example of CASL incorporated in a middle school setting
• Example of CASL incorporated in a high school setting
• Reflection – similarities and differences between the two examples
Reflecting in Style
Three ideas from our work today:
Before today I thought:Now I think:
Learning targets are best described as a road map, a recipe book, a lever, or a self-assessment. Pick one and explain
One thing I would tell a friend about this workshop:
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