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Where have we been? Where are we now? Transformational Change
Where We Are Going… Growing as a connected learner Creating a collaborative culture Becoming an action researcher Developing our PLN Transparently sharing what we learn as a way of  leading and teaching Culminating Event
Driving Questions What are you doing to contextualize and mobilize what you are learning? How will you leverage, how will you enable your students to leverage- collective intelligence?
How will education in your school, El Paso ISD, Texas, and beyond be different tomorrow because of our meeting today?  You are not a victim. Your are a connected agent of change.
What is Action Research? Action research is a process in which participants examine their own educational practice systematically and carefully, using the techniques of research. It is based on the following assumptions: • Teachers and principals work best on problems they have identified for themselves • Teachers and principals become more  Effective when encouraged to examine and assess their own work and then consider  ways of working differently • Teachers and principals help each other by working collaboratively • Working with colleagues helps teachers and principals in their professional development We are using digital media as part of our action research!
What is Not Action Research? Action research is not what usually comes to mind when we hear the word “research.”  Action research is not a library project where we learn more about a topic that interests us.  It is not problem-solving in the sense of trying to find out what is wrong, but rather a quest for knowledge about how to improve.  Action research is not about doing research on or about people, or finding all available information on a topic looking for the correct answers. It involves people working to improve their skills, techniques, and strategies.  Action research is not about learning why we do certain things, but rather how we can do things better. It is about how we can change our instruction to impact students.
There are 3 Types of Action Research 1) Individual 2) School or district wide 3) Collaborative action research may include as few as two teachers or a group of several teachers and others interested in addressing a classroom or department issue. This issue may involve one classroom or a common problem shared by many classrooms. These teachers may be supported by individuals outside of the school, such as your partnership with PLP.
Principles: the new culture of learning  The old ways of learning are unable to keep up with our rapidly changing world. Because of the fast pace of change- to do nothing means you are sliding backward. New media forms are making peer to peer learning easier and more natural  It is not an either/or scenario. Kids need you to do both. Teach content and create learning environments where they can learn through experience.
Brian Crosby, an upper elementary teacher for 29 years, guides the learning in a model technology classroom in Sparks, Nevada.
Knowledge Creation It is estimated that 1.5 exabytes of unique new information will be generated worldwide this year. That’s estimated to be more than in the previous 5,000 years.
For students starting a four-year education degree, this means that … half of what they learn in their first year of study will be outdated by their third year of study.
John Dewey  "The world is moving at a tremendous rate. Going no one knows where. We must prepare our children, not for the world of the past. Not for our world. But for their world. The world of the future."  Dewey's thoughts have laid the foundation for inquiry driven approaches. Dewey's description of the four primary interests of the child are still appropriate starting points: 1. the child's instinctive desire to find things out 2. in conversation, the propensity children have to communicate 3. in construction, their delight in making things 4. in their gifts of artistic expression.
Students are Individuals Children are persons and should be treated as individuals as they are introduced to the variety and richness of the world in which they live. Children are not something to be molded and pruned. Their value is in who they are – not who they will become. They simply need to grow in knowledge. Think of the self-directed learning a child does from birth to three– most of it without language. As they mature they are even more capable of being self-directed learners.  .
Why we have to do both… Knowledge was valued because it was seen as stable and scarce.Most knowledge was explicit (content driven). It stood the test of time. (speed of light) It isn’t the kind of information that is better learned by being absorbed through experience. Teaching = Transfer of knowledge In the 21st C we learn through tacit knowledge. Experience. Some things just can’t be taught- you have to experience it yourself. As we learn this way we make connections. In a fast changing world explicit knowledge only will not help students succeed.  .
Havewe replaced “doing” with “mastering skills”?  Have we subordinated our student’s initiative to a schedule we designed according to pragmatic factors other than their creative needs? We require them to try and become interested in hours  of listening to talking and there is little time for those students to express themselves.
Three Rules of Passion-based Teaching ,[object Object]
 Help them learn self-government and other-mindedness
 Shift your curriculum to include service learning outcomes that address social justice issues,[object Object]
Building Relationships
Looking Closely at Learning Community Design 4L Model (Linking, Lurking, Learning, and Leading) inspired by John Seeley Brown http://learningcircuits.blogspot.com/2006/06/roles-in-cops.html This model is developed around the roles and interactions members of a community have as participants in that community.
Join our list Join our forum Join our community Degrees of Transparency and Trust Increasing collaboration and transparency of process
Project/Problem-Based Learning Rigor without sacrificing excitement  Let’s do a KWLhttp://bit.ly/ip0yqT
What is Project-Based Learning? PBL is curriculum fueled and standards based. PBL asks a question or poses a problem that ALL students can answer. Concrete, hands-on experiences come together during project-based learning. PBL allows students to investigate issues and topics in real-world problems. PBL fosters abstract, intellectual tasks to explore complex issues.
How Does Project-Based Learning Work? Select and research topic: Make sure the topic is of personal interest to you and the students and that it is based on their needs and developmental levels. Consult the state and local curriculum guides, teacher’s editions of textbooks, trade books on the topic, and other expert learners. Involve the children in planning. Identify concepts/brainstorm topic: Identify key concepts or subtopics related to the theme of the project. A semantic map is an excellent way to visualize and brainstorm content related to a theme. Use K-W-L with the children for their input about what they want to know. Get ownership through their questions.  Locate materials and resources: Locate diverse materials and resources related to the topic, i.e., children’s literature, films, manipulatives, music, arts/crafts, resources, and people from your Web community. Utilize diverse global perspectives. Plan learning experiences: Develop a variety of learning experiences related to the topic. Include hands-on activities using concrete objects. Plan for small and large group activities, learning centers/stations, independent research, exploration, problem-solving, using both divergent/convergent learning activities.
Use Internet resources and models when gathering materials and planning learning experiences.  Online Correspondence and Exchanges: Involves setting up keypal (e-mail penpal) connections between your students, their online peers, and subject matter experts (SMEs) like scientists and engineers working in the field. Also includes the formation of learning communities. Information Gathering: These projects challenge students to use the Internet to collect, analyze, compare, and reflect upon different sources of information. Problem-Solving and Competitions: Online competitions are projects through which students must use the Internet and other sources to solve problems while competing with other classrooms. Student created learning products are an outcome. WebQuests and Artifact Creation: Online learning activities in which students explore and collect a body of online information and make sense of it – from an inquiry-driven approach.  Online Conferencing: Students use asynchronous and synchronous learning environments or audio or video conferencing software to collaborate and complete various project objectives
Guidelines to PBL Continued Integrate content areas: Use a webbing approach to organize concepts and activities into content areas: the arts, sciences, social studies, mathematics, literature, and technology. The goal is seamless integration of all content area learning within the planned activities. Organize the learning environment:  Consider space, time, materials, learning experiences, teacher/learner roles, methods of assessment and evaluation. Initiate integrated/interdisciplinary study: Arouse students’ curiosity and interest with stimulating introduction. Consider visual display of theme as well as introductory activities.  Culminating activity: Bring closure to the theme by concluding with an event. Incorporate parent involvement, collaboration with other classes both in the school and the blogosphere, and allow students to use technology to enhance learning and celebrate success! Assessment and authentic evaluation: Use assessment and evaluation which may include the following: “kidwatching,” observations, anecdotal records, checklists, conferences, informal interviews, rubrics and digital portfolios.
Question Take a real-world topic and begin an in-depth investigation Start with the Essential question(s). Have students do a concept map with you around the topic. (You have already created one during your planning) KWL Questions from group to research
Plan Plan which content standards will be addressed while answering the question. (I start with my concept map, then I break into a topic map, then I match standards) Involve students in the questioning, planning, and project-building process. (I decide which areas I will teach and then I put them in cooperative learning groups of mixed ability and let them choice their area to become experts)  Teacher and students brainstorm activities that support the inquiry.(I use a tic tac toe activity chart. Groups will choose three to do.)
Schedule Teacher and students design a timeline for project components. Set benchmarks--Keep it simple and age-appropriate. Learning contracts help with individual passions. Learning stations help support exploration and discovery Schedule individual and group meetings with you. Schedule initiating and culminating events well in advanced.
Monitor Facilitate the process. Mentor the process. Utilize rubrics and peer assessment/relfections
Assess Make the assessment authentic. Know authentic assessment will require more time and effort from the teacher. Vary the type of assessment used. Electronic portfolios work well (video, podcasts, and digital pics of work)
Evaluate Take time to reflect, individually and as a group. Share feelings and experiences. Discuss what worked well. Discuss what needs change. Share ideas that will lead to new inquiries, thus new projects.
Shifts focus of literacy from individual expression to community involvement. Students become producers, notjust consumersof knowledge.
Shifts focus of literacy from individual expression to community involvement.
Connected Learning The computer connects the student to the rest of the world Learning occurs through connections with other learners Learning is based on conversation and interaction Stephen Downes
Connected Learner Scale This work is at which level(s) of the connected learner scale?Explain. Share (Publish & Participate) – Connect (Comment and Cooperate) – Remixing (building on the ideas of others) –  Collaborate (Co-construction of knowledge and meaning) – Collective Action (Social Justice, Activism, Service Learning) –
Digital literacies Social networking Transliteracy Privacy maintenance Identity management Creating content Organizing content Reusing/repurposing content Filtering and selecting Self presenting cc  Steve Wheeler, University of Plymouth, 2010 http://www.mopocket.com/
21st Centurizing your Lesson PlansStep 1- Best Practice Researchers at Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning (McREL) have identified nine instructional strategies that are most likely to improve student achievement across all content areas and across all grade levels. These strategies are explained in the book Classroom Instruction That Works by Robert Marzano, Debra Pickering, and Jane Pollock.1. Identifying similarities and differences2. Summarizing and note taking3. Reinforcing effort and providing recognition4. Homework and practice5. Nonlinguistic representations6. Cooperative learning7. Setting objectives and providing feedback8. Generating and testing hypotheses9. Cues, questions, and advance organizers
Step 2- What Tool Fits? Web 2.0 Tools and Marzano Developed by Stephanie Sandifer (author of Change Agency) Web2.0 that Workshttp://web2thatworks.com/index.php?title=Main_Page NECC Presentation http://web2thatworks.com/index.php?title=NECC
Bloom's Taxonomy Blooms Digitally By Andrew Churcheshttp://edorigami.wikispaces.com/file/view/bloom%27s+Digital+taxonomy+v2.12.pdf http://www.techlearning.com/shared/printableArticle.php?articleID=196605124 Andrew has embedded 21st centurized verbs into the new levels of Bloom’s taxonomy.
What are specific strategies you use in your classroom for a particular discipline?
How do you do it?--  TPCK  and Understanding by Design There is a new curriculum design model that helps us think about how to make assessment part of learning. Assessment before , during, and after instruction.  Teacher and Students as Co-Curriculum Designers What do you want to    know and be able to do at the end of  this activity, project, or lesson? What evidence will you collect to prove mastery? (What will you create or do) What is the best way to learn what you want to learn? How are you making your learning transparent? (connected learning)
21st Century Learning – Check List It is never just about content. Learners are trying to get better at something. It is never just routine. It requires thinking with what you know and pushing further. It is never just problem solving. It also involves problem finding. It’s not just about right answers. It involves explanation and justification. It is not emotionally flat. It involves curiosity, discovery, creativity, and community.  It’s not in a vacuum. It involves methods, purposes, and forms of one of more disciplines, situated in a social context. David Perkins- Making Learning Whole
Assessment needs to change. We know this.  Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach 21stcenturycollaborative.com NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT
KWL ,[object Object]
How do you use formative assessment?
What do you wonder?,[object Object]
Shift from emphasis on teaching… NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT TO AN EMPHASIS ON CO-LEARNING
Shift To Shift From Photo Credit :http://www.annedavies.com/assessment_for_learning_tr_tjb.html Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach 21stcenturycollaborative.com NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT
Summative vs. Formative assessment Summative assessment  is commonly used to certify the amount that individuals have learned and to provide an accountability measure.  Summative assessments hold teachers accountable for standardized performance.  They measure how well the teacher taught the curriculum. Formative assessment, in which the assessment is integrated with the instruction (and sometimes serves as the instruction) with the purpose of  deepening learning, can replace summative assessment in many cases. Formative assessment  measures and supports learning, not teaching. NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT
Issues from the literature – consensus? ,[object Object]
It is about working with mechanisms and practices which allow the gap to close between what they are currently able to achieve and what they might be able to achieve
Increasing learners’ active responsibility for their part in the learning process is a main feature across a range of contexts and technologies    …but not much further consensus…differences tend to focus around whether ‘assessment’ is treated as an ‘event’ or a ‘process’.
Teacher and learner roles Cox et al 2008 (practice-based element of dentistry):      'a feedback process that provides information that can be used to fine-tune or modify what has already been done‘….but by whom? What if… the teacher/tutor is ‘monitoring’ rather than ‘changing’? assessment processes are purely for self-assessment?
Wiliam's 5 strategies
Conversational Framework (Laurillard)‏
[object Object]
 Encourage self-directed learning
 Monitor progress
 Check for understanding

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Passion based elpaso

  • 1.
  • 2. Where have we been? Where are we now? Transformational Change
  • 3. Where We Are Going… Growing as a connected learner Creating a collaborative culture Becoming an action researcher Developing our PLN Transparently sharing what we learn as a way of leading and teaching Culminating Event
  • 4. Driving Questions What are you doing to contextualize and mobilize what you are learning? How will you leverage, how will you enable your students to leverage- collective intelligence?
  • 5. How will education in your school, El Paso ISD, Texas, and beyond be different tomorrow because of our meeting today? You are not a victim. Your are a connected agent of change.
  • 6. What is Action Research? Action research is a process in which participants examine their own educational practice systematically and carefully, using the techniques of research. It is based on the following assumptions: • Teachers and principals work best on problems they have identified for themselves • Teachers and principals become more Effective when encouraged to examine and assess their own work and then consider ways of working differently • Teachers and principals help each other by working collaboratively • Working with colleagues helps teachers and principals in their professional development We are using digital media as part of our action research!
  • 7. What is Not Action Research? Action research is not what usually comes to mind when we hear the word “research.” Action research is not a library project where we learn more about a topic that interests us. It is not problem-solving in the sense of trying to find out what is wrong, but rather a quest for knowledge about how to improve. Action research is not about doing research on or about people, or finding all available information on a topic looking for the correct answers. It involves people working to improve their skills, techniques, and strategies. Action research is not about learning why we do certain things, but rather how we can do things better. It is about how we can change our instruction to impact students.
  • 8. There are 3 Types of Action Research 1) Individual 2) School or district wide 3) Collaborative action research may include as few as two teachers or a group of several teachers and others interested in addressing a classroom or department issue. This issue may involve one classroom or a common problem shared by many classrooms. These teachers may be supported by individuals outside of the school, such as your partnership with PLP.
  • 9.
  • 10. Principles: the new culture of learning The old ways of learning are unable to keep up with our rapidly changing world. Because of the fast pace of change- to do nothing means you are sliding backward. New media forms are making peer to peer learning easier and more natural It is not an either/or scenario. Kids need you to do both. Teach content and create learning environments where they can learn through experience.
  • 11. Brian Crosby, an upper elementary teacher for 29 years, guides the learning in a model technology classroom in Sparks, Nevada.
  • 12. Knowledge Creation It is estimated that 1.5 exabytes of unique new information will be generated worldwide this year. That’s estimated to be more than in the previous 5,000 years.
  • 13. For students starting a four-year education degree, this means that … half of what they learn in their first year of study will be outdated by their third year of study.
  • 14.
  • 15. John Dewey "The world is moving at a tremendous rate. Going no one knows where. We must prepare our children, not for the world of the past. Not for our world. But for their world. The world of the future."  Dewey's thoughts have laid the foundation for inquiry driven approaches. Dewey's description of the four primary interests of the child are still appropriate starting points: 1. the child's instinctive desire to find things out 2. in conversation, the propensity children have to communicate 3. in construction, their delight in making things 4. in their gifts of artistic expression.
  • 16. Students are Individuals Children are persons and should be treated as individuals as they are introduced to the variety and richness of the world in which they live. Children are not something to be molded and pruned. Their value is in who they are – not who they will become. They simply need to grow in knowledge. Think of the self-directed learning a child does from birth to three– most of it without language. As they mature they are even more capable of being self-directed learners. .
  • 17. Why we have to do both… Knowledge was valued because it was seen as stable and scarce.Most knowledge was explicit (content driven). It stood the test of time. (speed of light) It isn’t the kind of information that is better learned by being absorbed through experience. Teaching = Transfer of knowledge In the 21st C we learn through tacit knowledge. Experience. Some things just can’t be taught- you have to experience it yourself. As we learn this way we make connections. In a fast changing world explicit knowledge only will not help students succeed. .
  • 18. Havewe replaced “doing” with “mastering skills”? Have we subordinated our student’s initiative to a schedule we designed according to pragmatic factors other than their creative needs? We require them to try and become interested in hours of listening to talking and there is little time for those students to express themselves.
  • 19.
  • 20. Help them learn self-government and other-mindedness
  • 21.
  • 23. Looking Closely at Learning Community Design 4L Model (Linking, Lurking, Learning, and Leading) inspired by John Seeley Brown http://learningcircuits.blogspot.com/2006/06/roles-in-cops.html This model is developed around the roles and interactions members of a community have as participants in that community.
  • 24. Join our list Join our forum Join our community Degrees of Transparency and Trust Increasing collaboration and transparency of process
  • 25. Project/Problem-Based Learning Rigor without sacrificing excitement Let’s do a KWLhttp://bit.ly/ip0yqT
  • 26. What is Project-Based Learning? PBL is curriculum fueled and standards based. PBL asks a question or poses a problem that ALL students can answer. Concrete, hands-on experiences come together during project-based learning. PBL allows students to investigate issues and topics in real-world problems. PBL fosters abstract, intellectual tasks to explore complex issues.
  • 27. How Does Project-Based Learning Work? Select and research topic: Make sure the topic is of personal interest to you and the students and that it is based on their needs and developmental levels. Consult the state and local curriculum guides, teacher’s editions of textbooks, trade books on the topic, and other expert learners. Involve the children in planning. Identify concepts/brainstorm topic: Identify key concepts or subtopics related to the theme of the project. A semantic map is an excellent way to visualize and brainstorm content related to a theme. Use K-W-L with the children for their input about what they want to know. Get ownership through their questions. Locate materials and resources: Locate diverse materials and resources related to the topic, i.e., children’s literature, films, manipulatives, music, arts/crafts, resources, and people from your Web community. Utilize diverse global perspectives. Plan learning experiences: Develop a variety of learning experiences related to the topic. Include hands-on activities using concrete objects. Plan for small and large group activities, learning centers/stations, independent research, exploration, problem-solving, using both divergent/convergent learning activities.
  • 28. Use Internet resources and models when gathering materials and planning learning experiences. Online Correspondence and Exchanges: Involves setting up keypal (e-mail penpal) connections between your students, their online peers, and subject matter experts (SMEs) like scientists and engineers working in the field. Also includes the formation of learning communities. Information Gathering: These projects challenge students to use the Internet to collect, analyze, compare, and reflect upon different sources of information. Problem-Solving and Competitions: Online competitions are projects through which students must use the Internet and other sources to solve problems while competing with other classrooms. Student created learning products are an outcome. WebQuests and Artifact Creation: Online learning activities in which students explore and collect a body of online information and make sense of it – from an inquiry-driven approach. Online Conferencing: Students use asynchronous and synchronous learning environments or audio or video conferencing software to collaborate and complete various project objectives
  • 29. Guidelines to PBL Continued Integrate content areas: Use a webbing approach to organize concepts and activities into content areas: the arts, sciences, social studies, mathematics, literature, and technology. The goal is seamless integration of all content area learning within the planned activities. Organize the learning environment: Consider space, time, materials, learning experiences, teacher/learner roles, methods of assessment and evaluation. Initiate integrated/interdisciplinary study: Arouse students’ curiosity and interest with stimulating introduction. Consider visual display of theme as well as introductory activities. Culminating activity: Bring closure to the theme by concluding with an event. Incorporate parent involvement, collaboration with other classes both in the school and the blogosphere, and allow students to use technology to enhance learning and celebrate success! Assessment and authentic evaluation: Use assessment and evaluation which may include the following: “kidwatching,” observations, anecdotal records, checklists, conferences, informal interviews, rubrics and digital portfolios.
  • 30. Question Take a real-world topic and begin an in-depth investigation Start with the Essential question(s). Have students do a concept map with you around the topic. (You have already created one during your planning) KWL Questions from group to research
  • 31. Plan Plan which content standards will be addressed while answering the question. (I start with my concept map, then I break into a topic map, then I match standards) Involve students in the questioning, planning, and project-building process. (I decide which areas I will teach and then I put them in cooperative learning groups of mixed ability and let them choice their area to become experts) Teacher and students brainstorm activities that support the inquiry.(I use a tic tac toe activity chart. Groups will choose three to do.)
  • 32. Schedule Teacher and students design a timeline for project components. Set benchmarks--Keep it simple and age-appropriate. Learning contracts help with individual passions. Learning stations help support exploration and discovery Schedule individual and group meetings with you. Schedule initiating and culminating events well in advanced.
  • 33. Monitor Facilitate the process. Mentor the process. Utilize rubrics and peer assessment/relfections
  • 34. Assess Make the assessment authentic. Know authentic assessment will require more time and effort from the teacher. Vary the type of assessment used. Electronic portfolios work well (video, podcasts, and digital pics of work)
  • 35. Evaluate Take time to reflect, individually and as a group. Share feelings and experiences. Discuss what worked well. Discuss what needs change. Share ideas that will lead to new inquiries, thus new projects.
  • 36. Shifts focus of literacy from individual expression to community involvement. Students become producers, notjust consumersof knowledge.
  • 37. Shifts focus of literacy from individual expression to community involvement.
  • 38. Connected Learning The computer connects the student to the rest of the world Learning occurs through connections with other learners Learning is based on conversation and interaction Stephen Downes
  • 39. Connected Learner Scale This work is at which level(s) of the connected learner scale?Explain. Share (Publish & Participate) – Connect (Comment and Cooperate) – Remixing (building on the ideas of others) – Collaborate (Co-construction of knowledge and meaning) – Collective Action (Social Justice, Activism, Service Learning) –
  • 40. Digital literacies Social networking Transliteracy Privacy maintenance Identity management Creating content Organizing content Reusing/repurposing content Filtering and selecting Self presenting cc Steve Wheeler, University of Plymouth, 2010 http://www.mopocket.com/
  • 41.
  • 42. 21st Centurizing your Lesson PlansStep 1- Best Practice Researchers at Mid-continent Research for Education and Learning (McREL) have identified nine instructional strategies that are most likely to improve student achievement across all content areas and across all grade levels. These strategies are explained in the book Classroom Instruction That Works by Robert Marzano, Debra Pickering, and Jane Pollock.1. Identifying similarities and differences2. Summarizing and note taking3. Reinforcing effort and providing recognition4. Homework and practice5. Nonlinguistic representations6. Cooperative learning7. Setting objectives and providing feedback8. Generating and testing hypotheses9. Cues, questions, and advance organizers
  • 43. Step 2- What Tool Fits? Web 2.0 Tools and Marzano Developed by Stephanie Sandifer (author of Change Agency) Web2.0 that Workshttp://web2thatworks.com/index.php?title=Main_Page NECC Presentation http://web2thatworks.com/index.php?title=NECC
  • 44. Bloom's Taxonomy Blooms Digitally By Andrew Churcheshttp://edorigami.wikispaces.com/file/view/bloom%27s+Digital+taxonomy+v2.12.pdf http://www.techlearning.com/shared/printableArticle.php?articleID=196605124 Andrew has embedded 21st centurized verbs into the new levels of Bloom’s taxonomy.
  • 45. What are specific strategies you use in your classroom for a particular discipline?
  • 46. How do you do it?-- TPCK and Understanding by Design There is a new curriculum design model that helps us think about how to make assessment part of learning. Assessment before , during, and after instruction. Teacher and Students as Co-Curriculum Designers What do you want to know and be able to do at the end of this activity, project, or lesson? What evidence will you collect to prove mastery? (What will you create or do) What is the best way to learn what you want to learn? How are you making your learning transparent? (connected learning)
  • 47. 21st Century Learning – Check List It is never just about content. Learners are trying to get better at something. It is never just routine. It requires thinking with what you know and pushing further. It is never just problem solving. It also involves problem finding. It’s not just about right answers. It involves explanation and justification. It is not emotionally flat. It involves curiosity, discovery, creativity, and community. It’s not in a vacuum. It involves methods, purposes, and forms of one of more disciplines, situated in a social context. David Perkins- Making Learning Whole
  • 48. Assessment needs to change. We know this. Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach 21stcenturycollaborative.com NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT
  • 49.
  • 50. How do you use formative assessment?
  • 51.
  • 52. Shift from emphasis on teaching… NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT TO AN EMPHASIS ON CO-LEARNING
  • 53. Shift To Shift From Photo Credit :http://www.annedavies.com/assessment_for_learning_tr_tjb.html Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach 21stcenturycollaborative.com NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT
  • 54. Summative vs. Formative assessment Summative assessment is commonly used to certify the amount that individuals have learned and to provide an accountability measure. Summative assessments hold teachers accountable for standardized performance. They measure how well the teacher taught the curriculum. Formative assessment, in which the assessment is integrated with the instruction (and sometimes serves as the instruction) with the purpose of deepening learning, can replace summative assessment in many cases. Formative assessment measures and supports learning, not teaching. NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT
  • 55.
  • 56. It is about working with mechanisms and practices which allow the gap to close between what they are currently able to achieve and what they might be able to achieve
  • 57. Increasing learners’ active responsibility for their part in the learning process is a main feature across a range of contexts and technologies …but not much further consensus…differences tend to focus around whether ‘assessment’ is treated as an ‘event’ or a ‘process’.
  • 58. Teacher and learner roles Cox et al 2008 (practice-based element of dentistry): 'a feedback process that provides information that can be used to fine-tune or modify what has already been done‘….but by whom? What if… the teacher/tutor is ‘monitoring’ rather than ‘changing’? assessment processes are purely for self-assessment?
  • 61.
  • 64. Check for understanding
  • 66. Create a culture of collaboration
  • 68. Provide diagnostic feedback about how to improve teachingSheryl Nussbaum-Beach 21stcenturycollaborative.com NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT Formative Assessment Can be used to:
  • 69. Technological change is not additive, its ecological. A new technology does not change something, it changes everything" [Neil Postman] Source: Mark Treadwell - http://www.i-learnt.com
  • 70. What does it look like? NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT
  • 71.
  • 72.
  • 73. Appreciation- specific praise linked to affective growth.What makes a difference to student learning? Constant and meaningful feedback -- The Student --Teacher relationship --Challenging goals John Hattie, University of Auckland 2003
  • 74. Feedback Bull & McKenna 2004 (computer-assisted assessment CAA)‏ ‘…assessments which assist learning by giving feedback which indicates how the student is progressing in terms of knowledge, skills and understanding of a subject. In CAA this often takes the form of objective questions with feedback given to the student either during or immediately after the assessment. Formative assessment may be monitored by the tutor, used purely for self-assessment, or used to contribute marks to a module grade’. (p. xiv) What if… feedback is complex (Shute 2008), or a two-way or multi-way process?
  • 75. Sheryl Nussbaum-Beach 21stcenturycollaborative.com NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT Change is inevitable: Growth is optional Change produces tension- it pushes us out of our comfort zone. “Creative tension- the force that comes into play at the moment we acknowledge our vision is at odds with the current reality.” --Senge
  • 76. Evaluating Best Practice … What do you look for during the walk through? How do you tell the difference between chaos and 21st century best practice? What’s different? What’s shifted? Evidence that an administrator may be able to observe in three minutes would include: 1) the level of excitement in the classroom – is it “bubbly” excitement, which may indicate some novelty in using the technology? or is it a “humming” excitement, which may indicate a comfort with technology which is driving student motivation? 2) the comfort level of the teacher with the technology – is the teacher’s use of the technology fluid or choppy? 3) teacher/student collaboration – does the teacher appear to be comfortable with having the students in the “driver’s seat”? 4) student motivation – are the students purpose-driven, using their time purposely to achieve their goals? 5) authentic experiences – could the lesson be conducted just as well without the technology involved? NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT
  • 77. Courage to Shift the way we teach and learnthe art of release… It takes a lot of courage to release the familiar and seemingly secure, to embrace the new. But there is no real security in what is no longer meaningful. There is more security in the adventurous and exciting, for in movement there is life, and in change there is power. ~~Alan Cohen NEW DIRECTIONS IN ASSESSMENT