7 Secrets to Effective Online Collaboration - 0 views
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one needs a strong and charismatic leader
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be devoted to the idea, product or project, and committed to one another’s success
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Rubric for Online Instruction - 0 views
ollie_4: Article: Attributes from Effective Formative Assessment (CCSSO) - 1 views
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there are a number of formative assessment strategies that can be implemented during classroom instruction.
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I know that it is too late to change the word "assessment" with formative (and I don't know what I would put in its place), but assessment is so tied to grading in everyone's mind. Formative assessment is not a grade or a "final" of anything. FA strategies help us accumulate data to find where student learning is and how teaching should address the next step toward the learning goal. SP
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Great point, Susie! Maybe we could start a movement against the word "assessment' after formative. :)
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That is confusing - would formative "analysis" or "process" work? :)
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As an "old dog" I try to model learning "new tricks" which includes new understandings. Process is more of a stretch to the teachers I work with than assessment--they are slow to recognize how important process is, and impatient with assessing it.
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Students then need time to reflect on the feedback they have received to make changes or improvements. In addition, students can be encouraged to be self-reflective by thinking about their own work based on what they learned from giving feedback to others.
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Giving students time to reflect and engage in the metacognition act is so important. Too many times, instructors rush from one assessment to the next instead of letting students build a piece and reconstruct it over and over, based on feedback and reflection -- deep learning can occur if we let it.
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Thanks for the reminder. As you have taught me - reflection is important for students of any age!
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Teachers have to get over "covering" the material in order to allow themselves to give this reflection time. We need to learn this too.
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Effective formative assessment involves collecting evidence about how student learning is progressing during the course of instruction so that necessary instructional adjustments can be made to close the gap between students’ current understanding and the desired goals.
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I really like this definition of formative assessment - collecting evidence about student learning and then making adjustments to close the gap between current understanding and the desired goal. This is what I believe good teaching and learning is all about!
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I can already see that this article will be useful to me in working with our data teams this year.
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How Can We Make Assessments Meaningful? | Edutopia - 0 views
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"How Can We Make Assessments Meaningful?"
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When I think about my own definition of a "meaningful assessment," I think the test must meet certain requirements. The assessment must have value other than "because it's on the test." It has value to the individual student who is taking it. It must intend to impact the world beyond the student "self," whether it is on the school site, the outlying community, the state, country, world, etc. And finally, the assessment should incorporate skills that students need for their future. That is, the test must assess skills other than the mere content. It must also test how eloquent the students communicate their content
iCivics - 0 views
Time Maps - 0 views
Google Lit Trips - 0 views
Teacher Seeds - 0 views
How to Create Your Own Online Course: 100 Tools, Guides, and Resources | Best Universities - 3 views
Quality Rubrics / Home - 4 views
ollie4_1: Educational Leadership: The Quest for Quality - 1 views
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students can use the results to self-assess and set goals
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But NCLB has exposed students to an unprecedented overflow of testing. In response to the accountability movement, schools have added new levels of testing that include benchmark, interim, and common assessments. Using data from these assessments, schools now make decisions about individual students, groups of students, instructional programs, resource allocation, and more. We're betting that the instructional hours sacrificed to testing will return dividends in the form of better instructional decisions and improved high-stakes test scores.
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I agree that often we as teachers get "hung-up" on completing all the district and state requirements for assessment reporting that sometimes we lose focus on what is really important. One thing that has been most helpful to our building is having a common vision with our Course Level Expectations clearly identified and a plan for how to get there including both formative and summative assessments along with differentiated instruction for getting there. It is not perfect but the planning, processing and implementing has been effective
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I would agree that having a common vision does help this process, especially for larger schools. We went through that fight several years ago in getting all the elementary teachers in the different buildings to meet the same expectations for certain subject areas. How has the Iowa Core changed your course level expectations or have you got there yet?
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Clear Learning TargetsThe assessor needs to have a clear picture of what achievement he or she intends to measure. If we don't begin with clear statements of the intended learning—clear and understandable to everyone, including students—we won't end up with sound assessments
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This article really gets at the heart of how important it is to have "focus lessons" both daily and longer term so that teacher and students know the learning targets.
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I think this is not only one of the keys to effective assessment, but it is also one that many teachers struggle with. I have seen many teachers who asssess because it is Friday or it is the end of the chapter and they have a certain number of questions because that is what they had on the last test. These and many other very unsound reasons for testing when and how we do are common among teachers. Let's face it, making really good assessments is very challenging and often very time consuming.
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I don't think that individual teachers are the only people guilty of this. When NCLB was enacted. many of the assessments used for measuring proficiency were designed for completely different purposes and were thus not sound proficiency assessments. I am eager to see the new Smarter Balanced Assessments and the new Iowa Assessments to see the changes that have been made.
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Quality Rubrics / Tools for Writing Rubrics - 3 views
ollie1christensen: Iowa Online Course Standards - 0 views
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course provider in most cases, not the course instructor or course creator
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I've taught primarily in the high school setting, with a few summers of adjuncting in a small college, so this differentiation between instructor, creator, and provider struck me as very interesting. I've always been both instructor and creator; I've also felt that the "provider" (the schools I've taught within) gave me as "instructor/creator" a great deal of freedom. It seems though, that with online courses, these three roles could easily be assumed by three different people. Communication and interaction between these three roles would be perhaps even more important!
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But am reading this wrong or do I not understand it well, because I think the provider would be the school or institution giving the credit: high school, college, university, elementary school. Doesn't the CP designation identify the requirements of the institution to provide legitimate and exemplary online instruction?
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(K-12) • Information literacy and communication skills are incorporated and taught as an integral part of the curriculum.
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