The focus of this Blog is to inform educators of various
ways to differentiate assessments to meet diverse student needs within Bates
High School 9th grade. There is need to have a balanced and
differentiated assessment for student learning. Having balanced and
differentiated assessments must include providing knowledge to the Professional
Learning Community (PLC) team on the requirements needed in order to accomplish
this goal. In accomplishing this goal, the Blog describes what it means to change
the outcome or product of a lesson. The description also includes justification
on the importance of changes to the outcome or product. In addition to the
changes of the lesson outcome, the presentation discusses the changing of entry
points and exit points along with strategies used for changing both entry and
exit points. The Blog also describes possible assessments used with a balanced
approach to formative, traditional and performance assessments. Additionally,
the presentation includes a description of how performance assessments support
students’ learning. In support of the students’ learning, there are examples of
uses of performance assessments for various subjects for 9th grade
students. Overall, this presentation helps to determine what students know and
how well they know it through differentiation. The use of differentiated
assessments supports the PLC team in meeting the needs of diverse students.
This Blog is to inform the Professional Learning Community (PLC) team of ways to differentiate assessment to meet diverse student needs for 9th grade students of Bates High School.
Sunday, September 28, 2014
Friday, September 26, 2014
Changes of Lesson Outcome or Product
Changing the lesson outcome or product enable students
to have choices that focus on the way they learn best. Through products or performances,
educators obtain the evidence of student learning by means of viewing how much
students know or have the ability to do. There are three important approaches
to changing the product and they include differentiating the entry points, exit
points, and accountability for student learning. Differentiation is the key to
changing the product where educators change lessons by providing students with
different methods of entering into learning. According to Fogarty and Pete
(2011) by generating many acceptable options for student products, PLC teams
support the differentiated classrooms and take another step toward ensuring
student success. Students can exhibit their best work, their best evidence of
learning, through designing and producing demonstrations of learning around
their strengths (p.103). The use of
differentiation allows students to work on areas of learning through their strengths.
This is important because use all
students do not learn the same or one size does not fit all. Educators must use
different strategies that allow students who have strengths in a particular
area to use their strengths in producing what they learned. This is a method of
changing the lesson outcome or the product. Levi (2008) discusses how it is not necessary
to make the assessment the same for every student. Students vary in their
ability levels, learning styles, and areas of interest, the ways in which demonstrate
what they know should vary as well. Just as students have a need to use
different strengths in learning, they have the same need for different
assessments of product, so they can express their learning.
Changing Entry Points
Changing entry points to learning includes changing the
way in which educators change their methods of learning. Fogarty and Pete
(2011) discuss how modalities are different modes or methods of learning that
provide varying ways to approach the lesson, thus setting a path for possible
or probable ways to the exit the learning (p.103). PLC teams must focus on
those methods of learning through differentiation that motivates students
learning and use them as an entry to their learning future. These entry points
include five strategies of entry with the use of the multiple intelligences. Educators
have the ability of adjusting their methods of teaching that accommodates the
learners’ needs through pairing of students’ multiple intelligences and with Blooms
Taxonomy.
1. The
use of Pre-assessments is a strategy used for 9th grade students in certain
classes where the educator wants to obtain information about students’
knowledge and skills of a specific subject. Levi (2008) discusses pre-assessments as a tool
that provides information of where the student is with respect of what you plan
to teach. Additionally, this strategy provides educators with opportunity of
assessing where students needs in regards to the intended learning.
2. Student/
Teacher Conference strategy as an entry point where the educator arrange a
short talking session with the student to obtain information on the student
learning style. This strategy provides educators with information of how to
start the entry points with each student and to identify students who have
similar interests.
3. The
use KWL charts are another strategy used as an entry point where students use
these charts in a specific 9th grade class that tells the educator
what they know about the subject, what they would like to know, and what they did
learn. This strategy provides educators with vital information to the selection
of the way in which the educator teaches the class.
4. Journals
are another strategy used as entry point; this method enables educators to
acquire information from students about different subjects. Educators can use
journals as a way measuring how students prefer to learn and obtain an
understanding of how students use different multiple intelligences to understand
the learning objective. Fogarty and Pete (2011) depicts that knowledge and
acceptance of these varied intelligences provide a ready checklist of modalities
that teachers use in planning rich, relevant, and rigorous learning options
(p.106).
5. The
use of brainstorming is a strategy teacher’s use as an entry point to obtain
what students know about the subject or express their different opinions on the
subject. This method allows students to collaborate while at the same time
educators can get an understanding of the students’ learning strengths. This
strategy allows teachers to become creative with their use of brainstorming.
Overall, educators learn so much about students through
their individual talents. This provides educators with an opportunity to choose
various types learning methods that meets the students’ needs. In choosing
their learning method, educators have the ability to measure how well students
with similar intelligences work together. Fogarty and Pete (2011) acknowledge
how the concept of different entry points to learning becomes quite manageable
for the teachers in PLC when they collaborate on lessons or units for
differentiated classroom instruction. Diverse learners welcome options for
learning that allow them to exhibit their talents in myriad ways (p.107). These entry points are definitely the key to
the educators’ teaching strategies and to students’ success within the learning
environment.
Changing Exit Points
Changing exit points are somewhat similar to the entry
points where students enter learning in different ways; they use points to
express their learning in different ways. Fogarty and Pete (2011) states how
changing the exit points for expressing what one knows and is able to do, teachers can again use the
spectrum of intelligences as framework (p.107). Using students abilities with
different multiple intelligences allows students to express their learning in
many different ways. Allowing students to select from their learning strengths
enable teachers to differentiate within the expected learning outcome. When
educators allow these students to use their strengths as a form of expression
the can articulate what they learned about a particular subject and they have
the ability to apply that learning in many different ways. Listed are five
strategies that educator use as exit points within the 9th grade
classrooms.
1. The
3,2, 1 summarizer where students state 3 things they learned about the specific
topic, 2 ways in which the information relates to them personally, and 1
question about the materials used. This form of an exit point allows teachers to
analyze what students learned how they could apply that learning in relevant
ways.
2. Ticket
out the Door is an exit point where educators use this strategy to obtain
information on what the student learned within the classroom before leaving.
The educator uses an index card where the student writes a short essay on what
he/she learned in class and passes it to the teacher with their names on the
card. This strategy has the ability of using it through different means, so the
educator must use creativity in supporting the students’ needs.
3. The
use of Graffiti Board of facts as an exit point strategy where educators use a
Smartboard or posters for students to take turns to write information they
learned about a specific topic. Using
this strategy allows teachers to become creative about information they want
obtain from students by letting them express themselves by writing what they
learned, what they knew, and what they want to learn next.
4. Another
strategy to use as an exit point is the Four Corners where the teacher arranges
four different corners labeled with answers of opinionated questions. The students move to the corner where they
most likely agree and from there the teacher can create discussions about the
subject based upon the students’ reasoning for selecting that corner.
5. The
Three Minute Pause is a strategy used in exit points where students express
what they learned about a specific topic. The teacher summarizes the lesson and asks the
students to take three minutes to think about what they learned. The teacher
allows students to write notes or sketches about their learning where the
teacher now discusses with the students.
Overall,
the use of exit points with the multiple intelligences provides educators with
a choice of different strategies that allow students to express their learning.
Educators have the ability to guide the exit points through their strengths and
focus on areas where there is a need for improvement within other areas. Each
of the multiple intelligences is methods that accompany the strategy where
educators use creativity in the way they use those strategies. According to
Fogarty and Pete (2011), teachers guide the exit point decision as students
appraise their own strengths and weakness. In addition, just as it has been
throughout the discussion, teachers working PLCs provide the needed brainstorms
and collegial conversations to create a bank of ideas to offer as a student
choice (p.108).
Possible Assessments
The three possible assessment
used with a balanced approach to assessment includes formative, student
portfolios, and performance assessments. An assessment is the strategy used
within changing the product. Within assessing the product, educators must use
various types to hold student accountable for showing how they learned. Educators
within the PLC must provide different strategies for assessing how students
learn and through those assessment students depict their knowledge of the
subject. Fogarty and Pete (2011) discuss how it is important when teachers
differentiate learning by changing the accountability factor, which does not
mean students are not responsible for their learning. Educators in the PLC
teams provide different ways for students to be accountable for learning
(p.109). Holding students accountable
for their learning begins with three possible assessments.
1. A
method used to balance approach to assessment is the use of formative
assessments. This approach has different variables for educators to use that
measure how well students learning within the learning process. This process
informs teachers and students of where the learning took place and where to
adjust the learning. Levi (2008) discuss how the use of formative assessments done
in so many ways and gives the teacher directions for further instructions.
2. Student
Portfolio Assessments provide a balanced approach to assessments by providing
students’ work within a specific folder. The method used depends upon the
educator and the students but the portfolio assessments offer an opportunity
for educators to assess how well students learned through progression. Fogarty
and Pete (2011) discuss how portfolios provide real or virtual artifacts of
learning that demonstrate growth and development (p.112). This method of assessment provides a balanced
approach because of its uses in learning. Educators can use this assessment
with PLC teams to illustrate how students and teachers communicate, use as peer-to-peer
reviews, and parent to student conference.
3. Performance
Assessments provide a balanced approach to assessment by the use of how
students perform on certain tasks. This assessment demonstrates what students
know and have the ability to do. Educator usually has rubrics that accompany
this assessment where students understand the requirements needed that depicts
how well they learned or performance specific steps. Fogarty and Pete (2011)
state how the performance is the proof that students really understand and can
apply the learning.
Support of Student Learning through Performance Assessments / Summary of the Presentation
Performance assessments support learning by measuring different
means of how well the students learn and able to show what they learned. Kubiszyn
and Borich (2013) discuss how Performance tests also allow teachers to observe
achievements, mental habits, ways of working, and behaviors of value in the
real world that conventional tests may miss and in ways that an outside
observer would be unaware that a “test” is going on. Educators use this type of assessment to measure
how students perform their learning objectives in various subjects. The five examples listed are techniques
educators can use to measure student learning within 9th grade
classes.
1. Within
a 9th, grade foreign language class, students perform a dialogue
where the students carry on discussions in that language about classroom etiquette.
2. In
a 9th grade English class, students edit a composition by providing
the necessary corrections. There are different means of assessing the composition
by allowing educators to become creative (e.g., within groups, individually, or
peer-to-peer).
3. Within
teams, students work on producing a specified science project of Global warming
and present an exhibit.
4. In
a 9th grade African American literature class, students use the Dr.
Martin Luther King “I Have Dream” speech to depict parts of the civil rights
movement.
5. An
interview with a community leader, the students then present their finding of
the interview to the class using various means of providing the feedback.
Lastly, the focus of this Blog is to inform educators of
various ways to differentiate assessments to meet diverse student needs within
Bates High School 9th grade. This is a means of providing a balanced and
differentiated assessment for student learning. Educators use these assessments
to offer knowledge to the Professional Learning Community (PLC) team on the
requirements needed in order to accomplish this goal. In accomplishing this
goal, the Blog describes what it means to change the outcome or product of a
lesson. The description also includes justification on the importance of
changes to the outcome or product. In addition, the presentation discusses the
changing of entry points and exit points along with strategies used for
changing both entry and exit points. There are The Blog also describes possible
assessments used with a balanced approach to formative, student portfolios and
performance assessments that includes guidance for educators use in assessing
students. In support of the students’ learning, there are examples of uses of
performance assessments for various subjects for 9th grade students.
These examples provide educators with information that offer them a means of
becoming creative with the use of differentiation the appeals to the student’s
learning style. Overall, educators have information that offers differentiation
and means of assessing how students apply what they learn to real-world
applications.
References
Diverse
Learners and Classroom Organization- American College of Education Video
retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RB87i48pRhk
Fogarty,
R.J. & Pete, B.M. (2011) Supporting differentiated instruction: A
professional learning communities approach. Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree
Press.
Kubiszyn, T. & Borich, G. (2013). Educational testing & measurement: Classroom application and practice (10th ed.). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Levy, H. M. (2008). Meeting the needs of all
students through differentiated instruction: Helping every child reach and
exceed standards. Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies,
Issues and Ideas, 81(4), 161-164. Retrieved from http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=ip,cpid&custid=s8856897&db=eric&AN=EJ789449&site=ehost-live; http://heldref.metapress.com/openurl.asp?genre=article&id=doi:10.3200/TCHS.81.4.161-164
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