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kwassink

Think Thank Thunk » The Offal Lesson: - 0 views

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    Assessment 2 years to work through for students. Should we stay on assessment. For PD next year too?
anonymous

On assessing for creativity: yes you can, and yes you should « Granted, but… - 0 views

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    A thoughtful post on assessing creative thought.
anonymous

Can Badging Be the Zipcar of Testing and Assessment? | DMLcentral - 0 views

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    Please read this. We've been focusing our assessment efforts on grading, and vice versa. Is grading really how we want to show that we value 'responsible action'?
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    I like the idea. Gives more flexibility, increases the student buy in etc.
anonymous

Deeper Learning: Performance Assessment and Authentic Audience | Edutopia - 0 views

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    One of the most compelling articles for changing assessment I've read in a while.
anonymous

How To Use Multiple Choice Testing As a Learning (not Assessment) Tool | HASTAC - 2 views

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    How To Use Multiple Choice Testing As a Learning (not Assessment) Tool via Recent content http://hastac.org/content
anonymous

Argument-Driven Inquiry - 0 views

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    I'd like to hear how closely this framework ties in with what our humanities teachers are doing in their assessment.
anonymous

Mastery-Based Assessment Builds Accountability | Edutopia - 0 views

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    This sounds oddly familiar :)
anonymous

A Favorite Formative Assessment: The Exit Slip | Edutopia - 0 views

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    There are some great links in this article.
anonymous

Assessments: The Collateral Damage of SBG | Mathy McMatherson - 0 views

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    If you've even considered, or are open to considering, objective/outcomes/standards - based grading you should read this.
anonymous

HABITS OF A MATHEMATICIAN: Portfolio Assessment -      DOING MATHEMATICS - 0 views

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    This is a pretty cool approach to getting kids to focus on the habits and behaviors instead of the individual skills. 
anonymous

for the love of learning: Rethinking Exam Week - 0 views

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    Is this really the best use of three weeks of our school year?
anonymous

Authenticity in assessment, (re-)defined and explained | Granted, and... - 0 views

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    Math specific, but thinking we could all get something out of this
kwassink

From The Schools Our Children Deserve - 0 views

  • Students in classrooms where mathematical thinking is encouraged from a very young age learn how to estimate and predict.  (“How many pencils do you think there are in the whole school?  Is there a way we could know for sure without counting?”)  They acquire basic skills in the process of solving meaningful problems -- often with their peers.  They may use calculators, as adults often do, so that they can tackle more challenging and engaging problems than would be possible if they had to direct their energy to computation.  In contrast to a classroom whose main activities are listening to the teacher and filling out worksheets, such a learning environment is distinguished by students “sitting in groups, discussing ideas, doing experiments, making diagrams, using concrete objects to test their conjectures, following blind alleys, and now and then experiencing the satisfaction of discovering something they did not know before.”[17]
  • When traditionalists insist that it’s most important for kids to “know their math facts,” we might respond not only by challenging those priorities but by asking what is meant by know.  The key question is whether understanding is passively absorbed or actively constructed.  In the latter case, math actually becomes a creative activity.
  • By thinking through the possibilities, students come up with their own ways of finding solutions.  They have to invent their own procedures.  What that means in practice is as straightforward as it is counterintuitive:  teachers generally refrain from showing their classes how to do problems.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • figure out what works and why.
  • Recall that, from a constructivist point of view, one of the most important aspects of a teacher’s job is to know as much as possible about each student’s thinking.
  • A teacher (or parent) for whom the right answer means everything is one who will naturally want to tell the child the most efficient way of getting that right answer.  This creates mindlessness. 
  • The overall conclusion reached by the TIMSS researchers – which somehow didn’t make it into the headlines, or even into the news stories, when the test results were released – was that traditional forms of teaching, and an emphasis on the basics, contributed significantly to the low standing of older American students. 
  • Recall that these conclusions precisely mirror those of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), the major US assessment of student achievement, in terms of math instruction.
  • The research conducted on such programs has been concentrated in the primary grades, and it points to a result that can be summarized in six words:  better reasoning without sacrificing computational skills – an interesting echo of what we’ve just seen about a nontraditional approach to teaching reading (namely, better comprehension without sacrificing decoding skills).
  • They reported that visitors “invariably remarked about the excitement for mathematics displayed by the children as they solved the activities.  Children frequently jumped up and down, hugged each other, and rushed off to tell the teacher when they solved a particularly challenging problem.”  Moreover, they persisted at difficult problems to an unusual degree and took pleasure in one another’s successes.[50]
  • But the tasks must be sufficiently engaging and open-ended so that success is potentially delightful – something far less likely to happen when children are just expected to go through the approved steps to get the correct answers on a worksheet.
anonymous

12 Alternatives To Letter Grades In Education - Louisville, KY, United States, ASCD EDg... - 0 views

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    So many choices, of which letter grades are probably the worst for many, many reasons.
anonymous

The lesson you never got taught in school: How to learn! | Neurobonkers | Big Think - 0 views

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    Some interesting reading on learning techniques. We've now got 'thinking about thinking', why not 'learning about learning.'
anonymous

Iowa Science Teachers Journal - 0 views

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    Some great stuff on using outcomes well.
anonymous

http://ell.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/VennDiagram_practices_TinaCheuk.pdf - 0 views

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    If 'thinking trumps content', why aren't we grading students abilities in these skills directly?
kwassink

Think Thank Thunk » The Case for Binary Assessment: - 0 views

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    Can we please, please, please try do binary grades in 9th grade?
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    Very pertinant after our discussion of what "meeting standard" means.
anonymous

Microsoft Word is cumbersome, inefficient, and obsolete. It's time for it to die. - Sla... - 0 views

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    Amen to this. Please...PLEASE, I'm begging you, consider non-MS Office formats. I hate waiting 15 seconds for Word to launch just to read a text document. Web browsers are great at rendering text. Blogs are so much more interactive.
kwassink

For Exams, is Using the Internet Considered Cheating? | MindShift - 0 views

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    Where does one draw the line for cheating when trying to teach the 21st century skills of research and collaboration?
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