This document discusses an educator's views on assessment in their classroom. Some key points:
- The educator sees assessment as important to inform their teaching and ensure they are meeting each student's needs. Assessment data is used formatively to guide lesson planning.
- Assessments are modified and tailored to students' literacy and numeracy levels. Additional supports are provided for students still learning English.
- NAPLAN results are seen as providing an independent view of student learning, but the educator acknowledges topics are not always relevant for their Indigenous and ESL students.
- Feedback is mostly given verbally and immediately to students, with the educator modeling and helping improve work in the moment until skills
This document discusses an educator's views on assessment in their classroom. Some key points:
- The educator sees assessment as important to inform their teaching and ensure they are meeting each student's needs. Assessment data is used formatively to guide lesson planning.
- Assessments are modified and tailored to students' literacy and numeracy levels. Additional supports are provided for students still learning English.
- NAPLAN results are seen as providing an independent view of student learning, but the educator acknowledges topics are not always relevant for their Indigenous and ESL students.
- Feedback is mostly given verbally and immediately to students, with the educator modeling and helping improve work in the moment until skills
This document discusses an educator's views on assessment in their classroom. Some key points:
- The educator sees assessment as important to inform their teaching and ensure they are meeting each student's needs. Assessment data is used formatively to guide lesson planning.
- Assessments are modified and tailored to students' literacy and numeracy levels. Additional supports are provided for students still learning English.
- NAPLAN results are seen as providing an independent view of student learning, but the educator acknowledges topics are not always relevant for their Indigenous and ESL students.
- Feedback is mostly given verbally and immediately to students, with the educator modeling and helping improve work in the moment until skills
This document discusses an educator's views on assessment in their classroom. Some key points:
- The educator sees assessment as important to inform their teaching and ensure they are meeting each student's needs. Assessment data is used formatively to guide lesson planning.
- Assessments are modified and tailored to students' literacy and numeracy levels. Additional supports are provided for students still learning English.
- NAPLAN results are seen as providing an independent view of student learning, but the educator acknowledges topics are not always relevant for their Indigenous and ESL students.
- Feedback is mostly given verbally and immediately to students, with the educator modeling and helping improve work in the moment until skills
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ARTEFACT #6
Looking at assessment from the eyes of a teacher
What do you feel about assessment? For me, assessment is very important because it informs my future teaching. Essentially, I use assessments to gain detailed information about what each child knows and can do and then use the data formatively to determine my planning and teaching. Whilst I acknowledge that many teachers are somewhat reserved about standardised assessment I believe that it is beneficial in terms of the independent, valid and reliable data that provides. Overall, I feel very positive about assessment as I see it as an ongoing process and use it not only to measure the success of my students but also my effectiveness as a teacher. I am always using my assessment results to determine my effect size and how possible ways to improve my capacity to enhance student learning outcomes.
How do you support diversity with your assessment design?
I provide students with a different, modified test according to the literacy or numeracy group theyre in. For example, in numeracy, students are in either group one or two and work through comprehensive worded-problems off the board. Group one work on questions which are related to outcomes from year two of the Australian Curriculum, whereas students in Group two work on questions which are related to outcomes from year three level of the Australian curriculum. Basically, I tailor each assessment to include questions pitched at the level of the students, hence I have test A (for group one) and test B (for group two). Students who require additional support are provided with a range of scaffolds and resources to support them to complete assessments. For example, all of my students are learning English as a second language/dialect so are provided with access to our classroom word wall when completing a written assessment. This means that students are enabled to use resources they have access to during daily experiences when they are assessed. I ensure that my documentation (e.g. ELF coversheet) identifies that students were supported and I outline how they were supported.
Are NAPLAN results important to you? Why/why not?
Absolutely! Whilst it can be argued that NAPLAN is irrelevant to my students,
being Indigenous and ESL/D; I cannot overlook that it does allow me to gain a fully independent view of my students learning. The only thing is, most of the time my students are not in a position to show everything they know. For example, the writing assessment (usually a persuasive) is something I teach and students can do when the topic is relevant to them but as soon as they have no idea about the context, they cannot write about the topic. For example, last year the topic asked students to choose a rule in their community they want changed. Firstly this is very open-ended so requires students to know a rule. Secondly, the question is really designed based on white, middle-classed values. For Indigenous students, the concept of rules is not something they really think about too much given that the only rules they really have in their lives at whilst at school. I do think NAPLAN has its purpose though and I work hard to prepare my students to at least have a go. Sadly though, my students would do better on the writing assessment if they wrote Frog, frog, frog, frog and frog. They have used capitalisation, appropriate punctuation and some examples of conventional spelling.6
How do you provide feedback to your students?
For my kids I mostly use verbal feedback which is immediate. There is no point trying to offer feedback tomorrow or in the next session because they very much live in the moment. Usually, feedback I give also involves me modelling exactly what I want and helping them to improve their work there and then. I may have to provide them with the same feedback many times, but one day it just sticks and they dont tend to forget. For example, it took me six weeks to get them to rule up their page and include the date and this came from giving the same feedback everyday- Your introduction (persuasive) is great but you still havent ruled up and written the date.