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Introduction to aligning classroom assessments
1. V i r tual L essons W i th A she County School s
M ovi ng T owar d Compl ete A l i gnment I n Soci al Studi es
Under standi ng H ow T o A ppl y R evi sed B l oom’s T axonomy
2. Today’s Presentation Will Assist Participants With:
Understanding how to use
the Revised Bloom’s
Taxonomy (RBT) to align
classroom instruction and
assessment to the new
social studies essential
standards.
2
4. Pre-Assessment
Question # 1
How should you use Answer
the table below in The RBT Taxonomy Table
should be used to help
instruction and determine the learning
assessment? experiences and
assessment tasks for
which you ask students to
participate.
06/19/12 • page 4
5. Pre-Assessment
Question #2
True or False? The assessment
below is aligned to the clarifying
objective. Answer
CO: Summarize the change in cultures,
everyday life, and status of indigenous False
An Appropriate Assessment:
American Indian groups in North Carolina
before and after European exploration. Have the student read a passage
that describes changes in American
Assessment: Indians’ culture and lives.
The lives of American Indians
were changed when Europeans Read the passage above and write a
came to the New World . Tell few sentences describing how life
changed for American Indians as a
how farming, hunting and
result of European exploration of the
everyday life within their tribes New World.
changed for the American
Indians.
06/19/12 • page 5
8. Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy (RBT)
Provides a common language for all
curriculum areas by indicating what a
learning or assessment task was
intended to measure
by cognitive type
by type of knowledge
Provides a framework that may “help
teachers plan and deliver appropriate
instruction, design valid assessment
tasks and strategies, and ensure that
instruction and assessment are aligned
with the objectives.” (p.xxii)
9. The Alignment Question
How does one ensure that objectives,
instruction and assessment are
consistent with one another?
?
?
?
10. The Structure of Curriculum
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Learning Experiences/Performance Tasks
Materials and Equipment
Image of students with globe. Image no. 3Q1675 Photo by Will & Deni McIntyre
11. The Importance of Alignment
“Alignment is an even stronger predictor of student
achievement on standardized tests than are
socioeconomic status, gender, race, and teacher effect.”
~ Elmore & Rothman, 1999: Mitchell, 1998; Wishnick,1989
12. Content Alignment
“Does the teacher teach and
assess the factual, conceptual, and
procedural knowledge outlined in
the curriculum?”
What is Written…
What is Taught…
What is Tested…
13. Cognitive Type Alignment
“Do the students get to work and
think at the level the curriculum
prescribes?”
14. Context Alignment
“Are the parameters of the assessment
reasonably similar to the parameters of
the instruction?”
15. Learning occurs best when there is a purposeful
process that creates complete alignment.
16. Let’s Perform A Quick Activity
Directions: Thirteen Original Colonies
2.Virginia
3.Rhode Island
4.Georgia
By yourself, classify the 13 original 5.New York
6.Delaware
7.New Jersey
colonies according to which were 8.North Carolina
9.South Carolina
New England, Middle or 10.Pennsylvania
11.Massachusetts
12.New Hampshire
Southern. (2 minutes ) 13.Maryland
14.Connecticut
17. Now, Let’s Assess
Directions:
Using the map place the 13 colonies with their correct alphabet and
indicate numerically the chronological order each was established from
1 to 13. (2 minutes )
21. Remember
Retrieving relevant knowledge from long term
memory… (verbatim, unchanged by student)
Cognitive Processes:
1.1 Recognizing (identifying)
1.2 Recalling (retrieving)
Remembering is essential for
meaningful learning and problem-
solving.
It is used in more complex tasks.
22. Recall Or Recognition?
Question
What is the effect if the teacher does not clarify the
differences between RECOGNIZE and RECALL when
preparing an assessment?
Answer
The assessment will be
misaligned with the objective and possibly
instruction.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o1RjI7G8rFw&feature=related
23. The line of demarcation among the
6 cognitive categories is REMEMBER
Remember rote learning
All others meaningful learning (transfer)
Rote learning requires students to remember what
they learned.
Transfer requires students to remember but also
make sense of what they have learned.
24. Understand
Constructing meaning from instructional messages,
including oral, written and graphic communication
Cognitive Processes:
2.1 Interpreting Understand cognitive processes are the most
2.2 Exemplifying represented in state standards
2.3 Classifying More cognitive processes are associated with
2.4 Summarizing this category than any other category
2.5 Inferring
2.6 Comparing The learner grasps the meaning of information
by interpreting and translating what has been
2.7 Explaining
learned.
25. An Assessment Example
Cognitive Clarifying Objective Example
Processes Assessment
Summarize CE.PFL.2.2 Read the following article:
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/times
Summarize various types
of fraudulent solicitation
and business practices. or
Watch the following clip:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SsSGZez
Summarize in three
sentences or less the
fraudulent business practice
described in either the
article or video clip.
26. An Assessment Example
Cognitive Clarifying Objective Example
Processes Assessment
Explain WH.6.1 Construct a cause and
Explain how new ideas effect graphic organizer
and theories of the explaining how a scientific
or enlightened thinker’s
universe altered political
ideas impacted political,
thought and affected economic, or social
economic and social conditions in 17TH & 18TH
conditions. century America.
27. Analyze
Break material into its constituent parts and determine how
the parts relate to one another and to an overall purpose.
Cognitive Processes:
4.1 Differentiating [e.g. the relevant from the irrelevant
parts.]
4.2 Organizing [Identifying the elements of a
communication or situation and recognizing how they fit
together in a coherent structure. The student builds
systematic and coherent connections among pieces of
presented information.]
4.3 Attributing [the underlying purpose or
perspective – reading between the lines.]
28. Examples of Assessing Analyze
Cognitive Example Example
Processes Of Learning Objective Assessment
Analyze
The student will Circle the main points in
Differentiating distinguish the major an archeological report
and minor points in on an ancient Mayan city.
research reports.
Organizing Write an outline that shows which
The student will structure a facts, in the book Ancient Maya:
The Rise and Fall of a Rainforest
historical description into Civilization, support and which
facts do not support the
evidence for and against a
conclusion that the decline of the
particular explanation. civilization was caused by
influences of the Europeans.
Attributing Determine if a report on the
The student will determine
decline of the Mayan rainforest
the point of view of the was written from a pro-
environmental or pro-economic
author of an essay on a point of view.
controversial topic.
29. Evaluate
Make judgments based on criteria and standards.
Cognitive Processes:
5.1 Checking [testing for
internal consistencies or fallacies
in an operation or product –
check as you go along]
5.2 Critiquing [judging a product
or operation based on externally
imposed criteria and standards.]
30. Examples of Assessing Evaluate
Cognitive Example Example
Processes Of Learning Objective Assessment
Evaluate
Checking The student will check Watch a television
for internal advertisement for a
inconsistencies in political candidate and
persuasive messages. point out any logical flaws
in the persuasive
message.
Critiquing The student will judge
Evaluate key points in a
the merits of a product,
effect or occurrence political candidate’s
based on specified or
agreed upon criteria speech in terms of the
and standards.
potential impact each point
may have on citizens.
31. When you combine the verbs (cognitive processes) with the
nouns (knowledge) you end up with a two-
dimensional table.
33. Analyze colonization in terms of the desire for
access to resources and markets as well as the
consequences on indigenous cultures,
population, and environment .
33
35. Your Turn To Practice
Directions:
2.Working with a group or a partner, determine where the clarifying
objective you are working with lies on the Taxonomy Table.
3.With your group or partner come up with a classroom assessment
for the clarifying objective.
(5 minutes )
Choose to work with either the middle or high school objective.
Middle School
6.H.2.1 Explain how invasions, conquests, and migrations affected various
civilizations, societies and regions (e.g. Mongol invasion, The Crusades, the
Peopling of the Americas and Alexander the Great).
High School
WH.5.2 Explain the causes and effects of exploration and expansion.
06/19/12 • page 35
36. Some Conclusions About RBT
To solve shared problems in instruction
and assessment, we need a shared
system of classification (an agreed upon
taxonomy).
That shared taxonomy provides a common
way to ensure that instruction and
assessment are aligned with the objectives
and a common language to talk about
RBT is our shared
them.
taxonomy!
Without a shared taxonomy, learning,
instruction and assessment have the
potential to be all over the place.
Say: Currently, there is a disconnect between the cognitive rigor of the content standards that students are to be learning, the cognitive rigor of the actual work students are doing and the cognitive rigor of the summative assessment. The revised taxonomy is a two dimensional system that identifies both the structure of knowledge and the cognitive processes students are expected to demonstrate. With RBT, teachers and administrators are assured of an increased alignment of instruction, assessment and state standards. Say: Our first session today is an effort to clarify the Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy and provide you with enough guidance that you may continue this journey of exploring the taxonomy once this training is over. Our work today, or over the next few days, is not enough to make you an expert in the use of Revised Bloom’s Taxonomy. We will begin that journey today but each of you must chart your own course and set your own pace to mastery.
Making sure that everyone is on the same page is the point.
Say: A major difference between the 2006and 2010 standards is the presence of only one verb. Only 25 verbs will be used in the revised Essential Standards . This will greatly enhance the likeliness of alignment. 6 verbs serve as Categories and the remaining 19 serve as cognitive processes that may be classified in the 6 categories. Other verbs will be incorporated into the standards at the instruction level during differentiation.