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Friday, 31 August 2012

Step #4: Plan to Involve Students in Collecting Evidence

Step #4: Plan to Involve Students in Collecting Evidence

As you completed Step 2 and created your evaluation plan, the evidence collection becomes clear. Since you need valid and reliable evidence of learning it is important to collect the evidence of learning over time from multiple sources (products, observations, conversations). It also supports student learning if they have responsibility for collecting some the evidence. Getting students involves is easier than it sounds. Consider the Science example shared in Step 1. Consider the ways students can be supported to collect and file the products - in a digital file folder or a paper-based one. A crate or part of a file drawer can  keep the evidence safe as the learning time unfolds.

Learning Destination
Evidence of Learning:
Students collect in a ‘fat’ file folder or something else
Makes detailed, thoughtful observations of activities and lessons using pictures, words and charts


All products – both draft and final work – such as:
·      Notebook pages
·      Journal entries
·      Observation notes
·      Work sheets
·      Self-assessments
·      Evidence in relation to criteria for different products and processes
Note: Important that all work be dated
Is curious about the scientific world and asks questions to help their understanding of what they’re learning and direct their focus for future learning

Makes realistic predictions about the outcome of activities, experiments, and research using observations as a guide

Shows a positive attitude towards Science activities and shows responsibility in activities and group work

Understands the scientific concepts being learning in class and applies them to new scientific situations


If the students are supported to be responsible to collect and file the ongoing evidence of learning then teachers can focus on collecting observations. For example, given the example above, a teacher might choose to make the following on-going observations:

OQP
(O) Observations are detailed
(Q) Questions about scientific world
(M) Makes realistic predictions

ESWUC
(E) Engages productively in activities and experiments
(S) Works by self
(G) Works as part of a small group
(U) Understands scientific concepts being taught
(C) Makes connections to new scientific situations

How to make these observations both possible and practical? Consider setting up your observations using the tools at hand (either digital or in paper form) in the following way:

Names
Week 1
Week 1
Week 2
Week 2
Week 3
Week 3
Week 4
Week 4
Name 1
OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

Name 2
OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

Name 3
OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

Name 4
OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC


Now you can make observations as students engage in being scientists day-by-day in your classroom. Select a few students to observe each day and then take a few seconds to use a highlighter pen to note what you have observed.

Names
Week 1
Week 1
Week 2
Week 2
Name 1
OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

Name 2
OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

Name 3
OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC

Name 4
OQP

ESWUC

OQP

ESWUC


As the term progresses your ongoing observations provide you with the data – the evidence of learning – you need to evaluate the parts of the curriculum that are not evident in products. Because you've take a few minutes every week to record what you have witnessed students actually doing, you can look at the pattern and trend over the term. You can speak confidently to what students are able to consistently and independently do as scientists. Everything else you need to have “proof” is present in the products students have been collected. This is one way to have the evidence  you need to evaluate when the end of the term arrives as well as having students engaged in providing evidence of their own learning to you.

I hope your new school year has a great beginning!

1 comment:

  1. Here's where I think teachers struggle with the messiness and multi tasking involved in AFL and the non product part: the conversations and observations. When I read through the example and looked at the 'T' record of ongoing observation it confused me initially and I wondered how I could be highlighting while coaching and questioning and facilitating learning. Many teachers struggle with this piece. If you make it your own it works. I found that I work better from a seating plan organizer rather than a student list. I also simplify my 'look fors' depending on the focus for learning. I like the way the learning skills can be built into the assessment. Very helpful when evaluation time comes around. Nancy

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